{ title: 'Nassau County review. (Freeport, N.Y.) 1898-1921, April 07, 1899, Page 4, Image 4', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071433/1899-04-07/ed-1/seq-4/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071433/1899-04-07/ed-1/seq-4.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071433/1899-04-07/ed-1/seq-4/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn95071433/1899-04-07/ed-1/seq-4/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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leeelee iBUrMKl Seheel Aewelesiee, At* 1 m m , e » ., April M th M M I». _____ ,.r*tinc thn ___________ Heler Oer W« m e« to Atlonlo. •eoepled only for tt# night, rote wlU W m M rtn«IP»A ___ ___ party from >ew t o r t to Atlanta for this occasion—tbs _ for and comfort o f the party to altar by a representative of this partlcolom, tickets and reservation ,o space, address Alex. 8. Thweatt. MObAct, *n Broadway, New York. The average life of a ship Is twenty-six Lam a 's F a m i l y H e d l e l n e . Meow the bowels eaeh day. In order to e# healthy thU Uneeeeeary. Acts gently ee the liver and kidneys. Ouree elek head ache. Price IB and SOo. ______ _ __ There lea new telegraph system capable »f transmitting 4000 words a minute. r la M a e * i purities from the body. Begin to-dey to Bwam orOgn^ CTrr o r T o u n o , | Mi F l u r a X OwmtaT makes eetb that he 1s the S H E S S ks S S tfcsse* o f one EimiwsD dollabs tor e»ch a *4 ererr cam of 0ATAB*H that cannot be eniod by the use of H ali / s C atabbh f'UBi. F babb J. cmmwwr. Sworn to before me and rabeorlbed In my i M i l n r y HadVe Oatarrh Cure la taken internally, and seta directly on the Meed and mucous surface# el the system, Hoad for testimonial!, free. ■old he * 00- To,*do’ °- S S ’t^ & S y ^ S i'sM i the beet. The next Oopgross of German Naturallate will be held at Mnnleh In September. T e C e r e m C o ld Im O n e B a y , Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets AU Dmgglata refund money If It falla to ears. Be. There ere WOO cells In a square foot of honeycomb. Me-Te-Bap foe Fifty Cento. B mream a tehesee habit cure, makes wean mss clraao Meed pure tbs SI All drueelsta Chicago le about to spend 011,000,000 on street Improvementa. child ten tflamros- S8o.» bottle. lemStm'iIoflene tK>n!£L redMeeTn°l£^m Ilea, nUhyn pain, euree wind eollc. M&o botti The Bom an Oathollcs I equipped eollege in Ceylon. Tokt Oanmrete Caodr Ostbartle, lOo or S a # a O . C fail to euro, dr T e C*re eeeetlpettee Weeever. - ------- ----------- \r Cathartic 10 c o t __ Imeelus refund mooey \The Bowthem Baptist Church contributed •110,000 for State mission work last yaar. ■ASBOWSo Dssr Ororn, UL* Msrch SI, USB The Pblladlelphli Oral American flag was made In “Love and a Cough Cannot be Hid.” It ts this fact that makes „ the lover and his sweetheart ' happy, and sends the suf ferer from a cough to his doctor. Hut there are hid den ills lurking in impure blood. “ The liver is wrong , \ it is thought, “ or the kid neys/* Hid it ever occur to you that the trouble is itf your blood? Farify this river o f life with Hood's Bar- wpartlfa. Than illness wjll be banished ; sa d strong, vigorous health will result. Hood's Sarsaparilla la the beat known, beat endorsed and moat natural ot all blood Beadls HUe sure Sver Ulei aaaWrltatlae see the eelvesanrtlele lake wits Seed's OartesertlC A Frephsey. It is paid that one day, when Orom- Vtttwaobnt a mere lad, as he was ly ing on hie bed in a melancholy mood, a gigantic epeotre appeared to him and said, “Thou shall be the great- •at man in England I\ Heath eaya it was a dream; Lord Clarendon and Sir Philip Warwick apeak of it ai a vision. Bet whether dream or vision, it made a profound impression on the yonth, so much so that hie father re quested Dr, Beard—Oliver's school master—to flog him sererely for •‘persisting in the wickedness of each sn aaewtion.\ The flogging only deepened the impression. He told hie nnele Stuart of the prophecy, and wee warned thet it “was traitorona to relate it\ But when he had seated himself upon the throne of England he frequently spoke of the occurrence, end was fully persuaded in hie own mind of its prophetic and supernatural character.—Amelia Barr, in Harper’s Magasine. The Indian population of the United States is 326,464, a decrease in Arty years of only 62,765. Banish pimple* holla, Blotches, blackheads, and that eicklybilioua complexion bytsking Ceaearete,—beauty for ten cents. AU drug gists, satisfaction guaranteed, 10c. 25c, 50c. Of the 94,000,000 people In South America 30,000,000 have never seen » Bible. T e e d ler F le e h . The more tender the leeb, the blackei the braise. The sooner you u se 8t. Jacobs Oil, the quicker will be the cure ot any bruise, and any bruise will dlsappeai promptly under its treatment. The Sebum desert le three times as large as the Mediterranean. Cwwghs L e a * • • C e w e n m p U e e # Kemp's Balsam will stop the cough at once. G o to your d ruggist to-day and get a sample bottle free. Sold In 35 and 50 cent bottles. Go a t once; delays are dan- r y ear. . eggs every ye • m l M eeee SpU an* Smeka IsarLMk Away. To quit tobacco saally and forever, be i Belle, fun of life, serve and vigor, take Ni Boo, the wonder-worker, that makes weak i strong. All druggists. Me or II. Cure gnai teed. Booklet and sample free Address Sterling Re toed- Co, Chicago or New York A man In New York City boasts that he baa tho addresses of 20,000 red-halreV o-To- Try 6r»ln*411 Try Oraln-O l Ask your grocer to-day to show you e paekage of O baix -O, the new food drink th a t takes the place of coffee. Children may d rink It without Injury aa well aa the adult. All who try It like It. Gasne-O bee that rich seal brown of Mooba 01 Java, but Is made from pure grains; the most delicate stomaoh receives it without distress. V the price of coffee. Ite. anil 2So. p er peonage. Sold by all grocers. The Bible was not circulated In Cuba ns til MM. J _____________ w Ed seat# Tour Bowels With Case* ret*. Candy C athartic, cure constipation forever. M b , Me. If c n n fell, d r u r a l ,t , refund money. The number of cities In Massaohusetti has doubled In twenty-live years,, m snm p tlon relieves tin Rev. D. B vchm vxi. n t a r y Si, 1*04. Suicides In Italy have increased fifty pet ant. during the past ten yean. A e w l o - A m e r l e e a F r l e u d a h l p a t M a n i l a . A letter from a marine on H. M. 8. Powerful, now atationed at Manila, which has been received *t Seattle, Waah., says, regarding the friendli ness of American soldiers and British sailors: Oar men and the Yankee soldiers soon became awfully friendly. You never saw such soldiers. Very few of them were in uniform. They wore big slonch hate, with the num ber of their regiment often written on a bit of paper and pinned on. It was a eight to see them come on board. They went along the deck, speaking to everybody, and when we saw them go up to the officers without saluting we felt as if they must drop on the spot. But they didn’t. They offered their cigar cases to our men with “Have a s'gar, boy,” and after they had smoked and talked with u« they took out their card cases and handed us a visiting can}, saying as they did so, “Now be sure you look us up if you're onr way, you know.” T h e A u t h o r o f *‘lly J i n g o . ’* It is rather amusing to those who know the facts to hear people talk of the “ Great Maodermott,\ as if he was really the inventor of the word “jingo. ” That he made it popular is true enough, but the famous song came to him-one fateful morning in 1876, with the milk, by penny post. So it was by no means what ia called a “put-up job.\ Every well-known comique has a biggish delivery of ditties. “We don't want to fight\ arrived in inch a batch. It was sent by a certain Mr. Hunt, who thought it stifflah for the publio. The great one was of another opinion. Being an old naval man him self, he was thrilled at once, and saw its possibilities in a moment. More over, he agreed with its aentimenta, which enabled him to give it with gnato, “ by jingo.\—London News. The KnglUhm an’e R em ark. An Englishman was once persuaded to see a game of baseball and daring the play when he happened to look away for a moment, a foul tip caught him on the ear and knocked him senseless. On coming to himself he faintly asked: “What was it?\ “A foul—only a foul.\ “Good heavens!\ he exclaimed “ I thought it was a mule.\—Argonaut. Nearly sixty-nine per cent, of all Buaeians are uuable to read and write. Italy comes next with forty- two, while in Saxony, Bavaria and Baden there are no illiterates at all. An effort ia beiug made in variona parts of Bnsaia to make elementary achooling compulsory. The present population of the world ia 1,400,000,000. In the reign of the Emperor Augustus it was estimated to 54,000,000. ENEMY III FULL RETREAT Aguinaldo and His Cabinet Sought Safety For Themselves by Flight. T h e L u e t B i v o u a c o f t h e T r o o p s B e f o r e t h e B i g B a t t l e —F i l i p i n o s G iv e W a y B e f o r e t h e R e e l e t l e e e A d v a n c e o f t h e A m e r i c a n s , F i r e t h e C i ty a n d F l e e N o r t h w a r d — R e b e l s M e t W i t h a H e a v y L o s s - O a r C a s u a l t i e s L i g h t —C o u n t r y L o o k s a s T h o u g h I t H a d B e e n S w e p t b y a C y c lo n e —A w f o l C o n d i t i o n o f t h e P e o p l e M a n i l a , Philippine Islands (By Cable).— Malolos, the Filipino capital, was captured on Friday a fter a sharp tight. Aguinaldo escaped and is now retreating into the interior. The battle was begun early in the morn ing by General MacArthur’s division, which forded the river and moved on the insur gent tntrenohments. The rebels fought fiercely for a time, but nothing could withstand the rushes of our enthusiastic troops. The natives were driven out of their trenches. Aguinaldo could not be taken. Ireds of pigs a re to be seen eagerly search- i* for food. Bodies of dead Filipinos are stranded in the shallows of the river or lying in the jungle where they crawled to die or were left In the wake of the hurriedly retreating arm y . These b o dies give forth a horrible odor, but there le no time now to bury IT. REGIS INDIANS REVOLT. R i o t On t h e C a n a d i a n R e s e r v a t i o n in W h i c h th e P o l i c e W e r e B e a t e n . O ttawa , Ont. (Special).—For the past five years the Indians of St. Regis Reserve have been agitating the re-establishment of old customs, among them being that of electing their own chiefs. They are de term ined to revive their old system of electing a council of twelve chiefs for life. A few days ago a third attem p t was made by Dominion officials to elect five chiefs for three years under the provisions of the Indian acts. Two Dominion policemen were sent from Ottawa to assist Indian Agent Long with the election. When they reached the village school, where the poll was to bo taken, they found it surrounded by over 200 angry Indians, who refused to admit the authorities, and a g eneral fight ensued. The police were kicked and clubbed by the young bucks and forced to ran for their lives. The agent was seized and locked up in the eehoolhouse. The officers state th a t one-third Indians were from the Amerlnan Hogansburg, N. Y. A been sent to Insure tbe Secretary McLean, of the Indian De- cuoants » picked c reserve at sufficient force has carrying out of the upon the dreaded Casquet Rooks, near the Island of Alderney, In a dense fog, and foundered in ten minutes, brer boilers ex ploding with a tremendous report as she went down. It is estim ated that about seventy per* sons were drowned by the sinking of the Stella. The Stella had on bor-rd more than 200 passengers who were going to spend Easter in the Channel Islands. The captain, all the other officers, except tbe second officer, ami most of the grew and many of the passengers sank with the Stella. A b o at in charge of the chief cer capsized, and almost nil its occur were drowned. A few of them were j up by other vessels. Many most pathetic Incidents are report ed. In several cases men lifted their wives and children into the boats and then per ished themselves In their presence. One wife who was thus bereaved lost her roa- The second officer of the steamer, who was among those re c ied, savs that a col lapsible b o at was launched full of people; but he thinks she struck on tho rocks. The S tella, which belongs to the London and Southwestern Railway Company, left , Southam p ton at noon, conveying the first I daylight excursion of the season to the i Channel Islands. There were more than two hundred passengers on board, and the crew numbered thirty-five men. The weather was foggy, but nil went well un til tho afternoon, when the fog became M W I A 1 W lost dense. At 4 o’cloc loomed up through the fog bank, and tho steam er alm ost immediately afterward struck amidships. The Captain,seeing that the Stella was fast sinking, ordered tho life boats to be launched. His instructions were carried out with the utmost celerity, and the women and children were em barked In the boats. Then the Captain ordered the men to look after themselves. A survivor states that he and twenty-five others put off from tho Stella in a small boat. The sea was calm, but there was a big swirl around the rocks. When this boat was a short distance away from the wreck the boilers from the Stella burst with a terrific explosion, and the vessel disappeared, stern foremost, in th The last thing the survivor saw • of the Stella M a n y R e b e l * K i l l e d b y t b e S h i p * ' F i r e i n t o t h e J u n g l e —V i l l a g e s A l o n g th e C o a s t B u r n e d —G e r m a n C o n s u l U p h o l d s M b * tn a f a , lle w p lle t h e B r i t i s h a m i A m e r l - r a u A d m i r a l s ’ O r d e r D i s b a n d i n g H i e G o v e r n m e n t —F e e l i n g A g a i n s t t h e G e r m a n s B it t e r —F o r e i g n e r s L e a v i n g S a m o a —N a t i v e s K i l l a n A m e r i c a n S e n t r y a n d T h r e e B r i t i s h S e a m e n . A p ia , Samoan Islands (By Cable).—The troubles grewlug out of the election of a King of Samoa have taken a more serious turn, and resulted in n bombardment of n a tive villages along tho shore by tho United States cruiser Philadelphia, Admiral Knutz commanding, and tho British cruisers P o r poise and Royalist. The bombardment has continued interm ittently for over a week. Several villages have been burned, and there have been a number of casualties among the American and British sailors CHUCK MAVAI' a ' a . (One of the supporters of M utaafa.) est, but several shore villages were soon In flames. A defective shell from the Philadelphia exploded near tho American Consulate,and the marines outside narrowly escaped. A fragment struck the leg of Private Rudge, shattering It sc badly as to necessitate amputation. Another fragm ent traversed th e . German Consulate, sm ashing the Tracker*?. The Germans then went on board the German cruiser Fa Ike. During tho night the rebels m ade a hot ;tacg on the town, killing three British A B ritish marine was shot in the tarty; another 'oet, while an American led at his post. The bom- ontinulng, the Inhabitants of ik refuge on board oard the Royalist, sailors. A British marine w leg by a sentry of his own f was shot in the feet, while sentry wi bardment the town took refuge on b ally crowding the vessel. ,re leaving t’amoa. the Cap- list urging them to go, so re with the m ilitary opera- Porpoise has shelled the vll- aud west of Apia and captured Many peopl tain of the Royr as not to interfe: iuj ured. Americans and British are fighting figure of the Captain lag calmly on the bi last orders. The Captain SCENE OF OUR MILITARY OPERATIONS AGAINST AOUINALDO'S ARMY. (Tho map shows the capital of the Insurgents, Malolos, and the towns which have been captured by United States forces while on their way from Manila to subdue the Filipinos.) _____ _ partm ent, states that the trouble has been caused by American St. Regis Indians, who elect their chiefs for life, and are persuading the Canadian Indians to do the same. Much trouble is anticipated In the attem p t to enforce the law. MERRIAM IS INDEPENDENT. The rebels burned the city and sim u ltane ously evacuated it. General MaoArtlmr was met with strong opposition, tho rebels resisting desperately, but losing heavily. General Hale’s brigade ______________ es troops rested Thurs day night in the jungle, about a mile and a quarter from Malolos. The d ay’s advance began at 2 o’clock and covered * distance of about two and a half miles beyond the Guigulnto River, along the railroad. Tho brunt of the battle was on the right of the track, where the enemy was apparently concentrated. The First Nebraska, First South Dakota and Tenth Pennsylvania regim ents en countered them intrenched on the border of the woods, and the Americans, advanc ing across the open, suffered a terrific fire for half an hour. D i r e c t o r o f t h e C e n s u s H B e F u l l P o w e r to M a k e A ll A p p o i n t m e n t s . W a s h in g t o n , D. C. (Special).--Attorney- General Griggs has advised the Secretary of the Interior that the a c t of Congress ap proved March 3, 1899, providing for the lensus en- taking of the twelfth census, makes •der operations of the D irector of the Cei T A L K S W I T H W O M A N O F M I D D L E A O E TVRBPARE for the turn of life. It is a critical period. r * Ae Indications of the change appear be sure your physl* \*■ o*l epndition is good. The experience is e wonderful eee and under seme circumstances full of menace. Mrs. Pink- ham, of Lynn, Mass., will give you her advice without charge. She has done so much for women, surely you can trust her. Read this letter from M rs . M. C. Gnir- nwo, of Georgeville, Mo.: ••D rab M rs . P i n k h a m The doctor called my trouble ulcera tion of womb and change of life. I was troubled with profuae flow ing and became very weak. Whan I wrote to you I wet down in bed. had net eet up for el* months; was under a doctor's treatment all the time, but it did me no good. I had almost given up in deepalr. but your Vegetable Compound baa made me feel like a new woman. I cannot thank you enough. I would advise any woman who ia afflicted ae I have been to write to Mrs. Pinkham, at I Lynn, Maaa., and get her ad- I vice and be cured es I have | bees.\ Mas. P. H. A lien , 419 N e-| brnska Ave„ Toledo, Ohio, | writes: “ D ba b M rs . P ink h a m Change of life was working on me. My kidneys end bladder were affected. 1 had been confined to the house all sma ller. not able to stand _ on my feet for any length of time. Terri ble peine when urinat ing and an itching that nearly drove me wild. I had tried many reme dies. I told my hue- band I had great faith in yoern and he get me a bottle; a e new on my fourth bottle. I feel that I a * eotirely cured. I oea work all day. lean hardly veaties that M b a woaderful cure is peeeible. Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound is th# beet medicine for woman.\ B e a t we* until yoe are prostrated with the mysterious con- ditiea kaewn as \Change of Life.\ Oet \Mrs. Ptakham's ad vise and lean how other women got through. ‘The More You Say the Lees People Re* member.” One Word With You, APOLIO iuoho w ere opwtjunj uiniLMigau. The enemy’s loss was apparently small, the jungle affording them such protection that the Americans were unable to see them, and In firing were guided only by the sound ot the Filipino shot. The American artillery was handicapped for the same reason. « The provision train was delayed by broken bridges, but the stores of g rain and flocks of ducks in the locality furnished ample forage. The hospital work is re markably efficient, as it has been through out the whole campaign. The telegraphers keep abreast of the line and m aintain con stant connection with the city. The country between Mnrllao and Manila presents a picture of desolation. Smoke is curling from hundreds of ash-heaps, while trees and fences torn by shrapnel are to be seen everywhere. Tbe general appearance of the country is as if It had been swept by a cyc'one. The inhabitants who fled from Marilno and Meycauayan left In such a panic that in most of the deserted houses our soldiers found money and valuables spread out on tables, and in the rooms were trunks con taining other property of value. They were not molested by our soldiers, but the Chinese, who slip in between tbe armies, are looting when they can and have taken possession of several houses, over which they raised Chinese flags, some of which were torn down. The roads are strewn with furniture and clothing dropped in flight by the Filipinos. The only people remaining behind are a F o r L o s s o f H i s F o o t . BIS.OOO. The jury in the suit of Professor Joseph Hesse, a prominent organist of Providence^ R. I., against the 8t. John Street Railway Company at 8t. J o h n , N. B., for 1100,000 damages for personal Injuries entailing the lose of a foot, returned a verdict of 325,000 for tbe plaintiff. bridge and giving his last orders. The C perished with his vessel, owing to the suction caused by the sinking steam e r being very great in- Tbe disaster Is generally attributed to tbe high speed at which the steam er was traveling In the fog. THREE MEN HANGED. T w o W h i t e s a n d a N e g r o E x p i a t e • M u r d e r o n t h e S a m e S c a f f o ld . B ir m i n g h a m , Ala. (Special).—Thomas Johnson and Richard Hale, white men, and Sam Rivers, a negro, wore hanged at Troy a few days ago from THE SUPREME COURT HOUSE AT APIA, SAMOA. I f g s s i l l E p i S Mvere, with an s x and robbed tho place of ^ e r e . t o « Samam Cook,ook, a fanarm whho j tho their rescue, eft for dead and the house set afire. Cook recovered in time drag out tl bodies of the twoo women,omen, outut thehe hououse $3000. S C a f overseer, w slept in a hack room, was aroused by th cries of the women and ran to the ir rescue. Ho was knocked down l th e houi officers to a conference on bon tdclphiu, when the whole situatloi 'artfu lly canvasseji. The upshot was a resolution to dismiss the provisional Oov- ument, and Admiral Knutz issued a oclamatlon calling upon Mataafa and w o t h was destroyed. Many arrests were made nnd lynching was threatened several times. Finally Sam Rivers, under arrest icton, declared that Johnson and proclamation calling upon f ais chiefs to return to their homes. M ataafa evacuated Mullnuu, the and made his headquarters, and the interim H e rr R ob », the German Cons x'lainatlou, supplen e town he went into at Apia, ntlng the i s j m t m m B l i p s ; ihem'snd wafeb \ w M ’/y .be crime. All three were convicted. Malletoa prisoners from the WAnds to •ellglon which tfcerf tmd been transferred by the iu nrl provisional Government. The Americans 1 then fortified Mullnuu, where 2000 Mnlleto- tns took refuge. The rebels—the ad herents of M a taafa— barricaded the roads within the municipality and seized the British houses ultlm atum Independent In all respects save In th# mutter of accounts, which are made sub ject to the regulations of tbe Secretary of Interior. nder this ruling the Director is a u thor ized to make all appointm ents, to perfect plans for the taking of the census, to rent quarters, to make contracts and to per form all other acts necessary to the carry ing out of the law, Independent of the Sec retary of the Interior. T h r e e L tv e e L o s t In * W r e c k . The steam er Roweua Lee sank in the Mississippi River a few days ago near Tyler, Mo. Three lives were lost. These three were M. T. Kelly, the mall clerk; Mrs. mbers. a passenger, and an unknoa :rlm e. All thre e were coni All of tho condemned professed on the gallows. The hanging was vate. Both whitq men leave famlllt CUBAN DELEGATES IN WASHINGTON. S e c r e t a r y H a y R e c e i v e s T h e m a s P r i v a t e C i t i z e n s O n ly . W ashington , D. C. (Special).—Secretary of State Hay has received unofficial y tho delegates sent to Washington by the Cuban Assembly to obtain authority for tho raising of a larger ram of money for tho payment of the Cuban soldiers than tho 13,000,000 offorod by the United States and agreed to by General Gomez. Secretary Hay and tho delegate* bad n long conversation, a t tho close of which the Secretary plainly and emphatically told them th a t the United States Government would not consider any proposition look ing to the increase of the amount of money agreed upon, nor would any action of thn Cuban Assembly toward Issuing bonds be indorsed. The delegates were received by Secretary Hay as private citizens, and no official recognition will be given them. After the interview the Secretary informed the President of what had taken place, and Mr. McKinley gave his approval. ) --------------------------------- ALASKAN EXPLORERS TO SAIL. T h e G o v e r n m e n t to L a y O u t a T r u l l F r o m C o p p e r R i v e r to E a g l e C llj-, S ea t t l e , Wash. (Special). -Captain Abor crombio Is in Seattle arranging for the Alaskan expedition which will sail In a few days on a steam e r chartered by the Gov ernment. The first duty of ‘the• explon will be to care for the scurvy stri< era in the Cooper River country. The expeattion will consist eighty men, including scientific the Interior and Postofilee de; An ultim at was then stmt to them irderlng them to evacuate and threateu- ng them , in the event of refusal, with a io m b ardment. This was ignored, nnd the rebels com- nenced an attack in the direction of the Jutted States and British Consulates about splendidly together; but there is a bitter feeling against the Germans. Two men, a British and a German subject, have been arrested as spies. The bom bardment of the jungle was for a time very hot. Z e l t n e r e H e l d F o r D o u b l e M u r d e r . Coroner Trlchler.at Bowling Green,Ohio, has completed the Inquest iu tho Hoyts- vtlle tragedy and holds John nnd .Paul Zeltner for m urder in the first disgree, finding them jointly guilty pf the m u rder of both £. H. WestenhttTdc and Wittenmeyer. The brothers were fore Mayor Campbell and bound c out bail. “ H o n o r T h y F a t h e r a n d T h y M o t h e r . ’’ In a cose of n husband suing for damages for the alienation of his wife’s affection at Pittsburg, Penn., Judge White refused to allow a girl to testify against her m o ther’s character, saying that it would be in viola tion of the commandment to \to honor thy father and thy m o ther.” E x - S e n a t o r G r a y A p p o i n t e d C i r c u i t J u d g e . President McKinley, at W ashington, has appointed George Gray, formerly United States Senator from Delaware, to be United States Circuit Judge for the Third Judicial Circuit. Every farmer who makes a specialty of fancy stock J takes pride in exhibiting the finest product of his farm. T e show to best advantage, the natural colon of the wool Of hair must be brought outj the white In particular must be snowy white and not tinged with dirty brown or yellow. A BREEDER SAYS OF THE IVORY SOAP; “ I have used It for many years and find It for all prac tical purposes superior to anything I have ever used. . . . It leaves the skin soft and dear, furnishes life to the coat, produces a beautiful growth . . . and leaves It smooth, glossy and free from harshness. I use It with luke-warm rain water, which I find Is the best. This forms a rich, oily lather, and helps loosen all stubborn scales and blotches of the skin. O n . W o m e n ' . A d i l s d B u r d e n . I was taking my dinner one day at s mountain farmhouse on the head waters of the Cumberland Kiver, and the lady of the house, who had foe children playing around the front of the establishment, was inclined to re pine at her hard lock in having so much work to do. “I run this here whole farm,\ she said in a tone which indicated that she was ready to resign. “How many acres have you?” I in quired. \A hundred and forty; twenty in wheat, sixty in corn, ten in medder an’ paster, an' the balance scatterin' an' woods.\ \Got any stock?\ “Ten head uv cattle, two cows, six hogs and work critters fer the place.\ \And you run the whole busi ness?” \Indeed I do; every hide an’ hair uv it,\ ehe sighed. \Don't you hire some help?\ “In course, but 'tain't hired help that takes the load of’en a body.\ There was philosophy in that state ment, and I paused a minute. “Haven’t you got a hueband?\ I next asked with a good deal of sym pathy. “Yes,” she responded very slowly, “but I have to run him, too.\— Washington Star. W h e r e C o n e u s n p t l v e e A r e R e l i e v e d . A sanitarium for consumptives has for years been in existence in Nor- \rach in the Black Forest of North- estern Germany. The windows of the houses are kept open night and day; from some of them, indeed, the sashes have been removed. Thus, sleeping or walking, the inmates are always breathing the finest outdoor Q u i c k G r o w t h o f a n O a k . On Mr. J. W. Overstreet's place, near Tifton, Ga., la an oak twelve feet fonr inches in ciroumferenee fifteen inches above the ground, and eleven feet in oironmferenoe as high up as a man can reach. _ It has a spread of branches 'df about seventy-five feet. The oak was set out'jnet twenty years ago. Monkeys Held le Be Rests*. Because monkey are held to bo snr - red by the Hindoos, a native M W . paper warm the British not to kill them off, es hes posed. Tho monkeys ere so ons that they ere crowding f towns and villages, bet the object to their ilsughtw. They that banishment is bed enough r the poor thing.\ The Island of Melts hes a ; lion of 158,836. The l deaths last year was 5647, in eight victims of leprosy. South Dakota hes a eurplne money in the State Treasury, ceutly took up 170,000 of boada nql 'j due until 1910. During 1898 the New York, Nee Haven and Hartford Batlroed I 2,079,463 pieoea of baggage. i.vir sick*. wwm*.er J S f f n H t J O U M CONSTIPATION. w Blrrltag leeeefly Ceepney. CMnnf »Mwtrnofc fttib I I0-T0-BA0 ngfe. Official fa l l Quids m sr la t e K ditbd at Hewat OaAawios. IC E IO O E N T S e P09TSI ami rescued well as the c iera, a passenger, am ,n. The Ora Lt rreck when th all tbe other explorers rleken min- Interio r an d Post office d epartments. The principal business of tho expedition Is the construction of a trail from Copper River to Eagle City, a distance of 330 miles, which it is expected to complete this season, thus establishing au all- American route from tidewater to the in passengers, as American rou te terior of Alaska. A G e n e r a l A n a r c h l o t A s s e m b l y . The Dutch Anarchists have decided to hold au inturnatlonal assembly coincident with the peace conference at The Hague, Holland, to which all of the foreign An archist chiefs, notably Sebastian Fnure, will be invited. They say their aim Is to A m a t e u r M a t a d o r G o r e d to D e a t h . * rm At a u am ateur bullfight given a t the town of Pojos, Mexico, the matador, Rafael Lon- pass a resolution approvit armament and the abolition lea. ley say the ir aim Is proving universal dl nlversial dls- reinsta of standing malls. R u s s i a n S t u d e n t s ' D i s o r d e r . In consequence of a renewal of tho stu dent disturbances at St. Petersburg tho Russian Government has closed ilm Uni versity of St. Petersburg and dismissed all the students. At the same time an order has been issued that all applications for ado through the th a t al National and minor -S : pictures of pleyers. New Playing Rule* a I h r C«UV>S» iV S,M ■U T ..I AWWU A. O. SSALBINO w Ywrk. D s . v e r A BNOSa, Deever. C U n g * ^ .H E CARTER'S! we do—we don’t 1 know how to. We can make poo endteheaper ii hut WW won’t. inny booklet\ Ho UTTER'S IN Is the #.«< that cqn Ua 3 made. It costs yoe a i l <4 more |han m s to Msk* Irk Plctww^Ret.| jj IK CO.. Beat—. f N . g o t l e t l n g . C u i B i u . r c l . l T r e e l y . T h e H a w a i i a n A t t o r n e y G e n e r a l . Henry E. Cooper has been appointed At torney-General of Hawaii. His commls- __ _ sfsaasylatitaai kalnOvdnee SflOM w * • r * Mmd V,ri0 IMMIFs AN tobE N flO M M ffl witness he' was sworn ered to him at Honolulu, a in by Chief Justice Judd. T h e F i g h t In B o livia. The Federalists, or insurgents, in the Ituiirwotloo In Bollvl. have occupied the ; , n insurrection in ouuwita ^ ^ city of Cochabamba, capital of the depart- j ment of the same name, nnd General , Alonzo, tho President, has returned with | 11 the Government troops to Or of operatic N e w s y G l e a n i n g * . has reached Vigo Coun property is being soug D i e d a t O n e H u n d r e d a n d N i n e t e e n . Michael Shea Is dea l In Indianapolis, ! Ind., a t the advanced age of 119. He was i born in Ireland and wa* a friend of Daniel O’Connell. Shea was married when he was ; fifty-eight years old ami leaves children 1 s ixty years of age. after. Baron Curzon is the eleventh Viceroy The work of surveying tho line of the India since it wai handed over to the II Kow Loon-Cantou Railwtv in China has Government iu 183< been started. Sir Henry Irving is tho only living a P r o m i n e n t P e o p l e . The King of Italy is a confirmed vegeta- Italy's budget for the year is now ex pected to be a surplus Instead of a deficit in tbe revenues. The task of taking the census of 1900 will require about 45,000 persons. Work will he begun In July. Suits to millions of dollars' worth of property In the heart of Sioux City, Iowa, were decided adversely to the claimants. Bandits have renewed their activity in the Province of I inar del Rio, Cuba. States tram Sir Henry Irvin g is tho only Hvi ho has received honorary degrees nt tiie niveraltles of Cambridge ami Dublin. II- doctor's d egiee at Glasgow University. Governor Roosevelt expects to visit klahomulahoma too attendttend the meeting of the universities of Cambridge au is about to have conferred up' i d egiee a t Glasgow Uni Ok t a Rough Rider G. A. It., of Oklahoma, held in, Guthrie iu June. Al r . « h . r s . d S o . n o t h l l . o K . d . | T h , „ „ „ „ o f , b e V n l , Jim Reed, a negro, who murdered Susie ports Scandia and Ariz R E n B E r r Z*. ,|ng8 decree forbidding the prosecution of j Cuban or Spanish troops for acts for or mother I It is proposed to divide the historic ' •ains • ‘ ‘ to build- A a s t r t a n T o w n S t r i c k e n W i t h th e G r i p . The city of Brunu, capital of the r*r.> yetnber 27. It is propo pl of Abraham, at Quebec, into build ing lots. Every historical association In Canada has declared against the proposal. The Massachusetts gy;*y moth commls- rlnce of Moravia. Austria, Is stricken with ! iion wants the Legislature to appropriate euza. Over 20.fO0 per- *200.000 this year for the prosecution of Its exterm ination of th i epidemic of influenza. Over 20,000 per ns are afflicted and the death rate is eu- erm ination th e ocuerla D r o w n e d a s H ie W i f e L o o k e d O b . Captain Fred Farrow of the barge Clin- tonia of New York was drowned a few days ago at Norfolk, Va., while bis wife stood upon the deck of the vessel, powerless to save him. Tbe ship ley far out iu the stream awaiting her turn at the pier, when the captain hoisted sail en the lifeboat and went ashore. When returning he bed almost reached tbe b arge and bis wife came to tbe rail to welcome him. when a flaw of wind struck tbe boat and overturned it. It carried heavy ballast, and. with Us occu pant. sank almost Instantly. Captain F a r row s home was In Brooklyn. rtgkt Lives Lest la a Wreck. The sebooner Thistle hes been wrecked off Cepe Madge, British Columbia, and eight lives lost. ^ company Is shipping steel rails to Scotland. An- ____ other concern In the Htate has a contract every for 33,000 tons for Australia. German-Americans have met in Chicago and adopted a plaq for the formation of a permanent union .to oppose tbe much- talked-of Anglo-American alliance and si lence criticisms of Germany. A new central prison ts about to be erected in tbe Immediate viclntiy of Constantino ple, by order of the S ultan. The cost is ea- timated et 1200.000. The plans have been prepared in Europe upon the most ap proved models. Arrangements have been completed whereby e band of forty Creek Indians will be sent to Parts i n 1900 to give exhibitions of the game of \tolt”—e sport which com bines the principles of golf sad shinny with the hntnm y ot foot Veil. Guthrie iu Jun e. At tliHt tun- it permanent organization of the Rough Riders will be effected. J. Proctor Knott bus given up liD law practice to talc** the .'hair of litw in c-u tr - College, Danville, Ky. Joseph H. Choate. Jr., hns appllftl f r adm lttan-e to the Middle Tempi*, In Lon don, for a study of law. Tbe Right Hon. Jam es Bryce, author of \The American Cochmonwealth, ha* b«*en sleeted President of the AI pin- Club. Rear-Admiral Kautz, who is n <w at S*8i on, it a n Oiilo-msn e ixt) yenre an Annapolis classmute of Admiral D-wey with whom, as a midshipman. !i- n ide first cruise on the old frigate Colo re 1 Admiral Sehlev is a mathemati 'iau who can do most of his work without th** aid ' paper. Iu Liverpool some years ago h** trium p h antly basted • ; r dees light Ling -alculator ' wh-• was exhibiting th -r- Francls ~B. Loomis. tL** Unite l state* inister to Venezuela. i« popular with •err class of people in that country. Emperor William of Germany has nounced bis intention of visiting Eugii lath e summer, to be once more pra Cowes during the August yachting uchamp. t and Comimander-in-Chief siting England ugu st yacbti Earl Beaucham p, who has been appoints 1 overnor and Commander-in-C of the nor and Com dony of New South Wales, 1* tbt# young- t of England'sngiand’s colonialolonial Governors.overnor H- E c G born iu 1972, and was educi p o inted i trte t jud [-Senator Alien to a vacant judgeship. He was elected to that position for four years in imfl i.m re signed in 1*93 when chosen Sefflior, and how resumes the place he gave up six 'T ’H E pleasant method and beneficial effects of the well-known remedy, S yrup of F igs , manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Company, illustrate the value of obtaining the liquid laxative principles plants known to be m e d icinally laxative and presenting them in the form most refreshing to the taste m d acceptable to the system. It is the one perfect strengthening, laxative, CLEANSING THE SYSTEM EFFECTUALLY, DISPELLING COLDS AND HEADACHES, PREVENTING FEVERS, OVERCOMING HABITUAL CONSTIPATION PERMANENTLY. Its perfect freedom from every objectionable quality and substance, and its acting on the kidneys, liver and bowels, gently yet prom ptly, w ithout w eakening or irritating them, make it the ideal laxative, In the process of m a n u facturing figs are used, as they are pleasant to the taste, but THE MEDICINAL QUALITIES ARE OBTAINED FROM SENNA AND OTHER AROMATIC PLANTS, bv a m e thod known to the California Fig Syrup Company only Id order to get its beneficial effects and to avoid im itations, please rem ember th e full name of the Company printed on the front o f every package. Consumers of the choicest products of modern commerce purchase at about the same price that otheii lay for cheap and worthless im itations. To come into universal dem and and to be eveprwhere considered the best of its class, an article m u st be capable of satisfying th e w ants and tastes of the best informed ourebasers. The California Fig Syrup Company having met w ith the highest success in the manufacture ind sale of its e x c e llent.liquid laxative remedy, S yrup o r F ig s , it has become important to all to nave t knowledge of the Company and its product. The California Fig Syrup Company was organised more than afieen years ago, for the special purpose of manufacturing and selling a laxative remedy which would be nore pleasant to the taste and more beneficial in effect than any other known. The greet value of the remedy, as a medicinal agent and of th e Company's efforts, is attested by the sale of millions of bottler innually. and bv the high approval of most em inent physicians. As the true and genuine remedy named S vrup o r F igs is m anufactured by the California Fig Syrup Company only, the knowledge of that fact ‘viH a ssist in avoiding the worthless im itations manufactured by other parties. (AUF3RNIA JTG SYRVP (£ ^ / s v i t i u e , * * e> ^ FW /'Sc'Q V 0 R K > * For Sale by All Dru^ishs , Priqe $ 9 $ Per BofHej T,Tnf.7r*y I’WlwtW r malaria , chills a i Grippe A Live# I KNOWN e s y M — wee. 5M9RSX! rriS. sTe s •»»*» •• BICYCLE™:™; MW. AMMO CtcLi O'). r i V a in IT will lo t bwet.SM M l I Uv., e t a to r s . r«r IvM M p ltataill IV E N T I O N m ^ ^ l RHEUMATISM u!«h££t. ■ 1 A l.F.XAMliBfr B B H B tiXf o r Knew Thyself a i h - t * p m p m m k f s nam e Befit medical aa(k«f. rJ S A W V B # I p ' s \ ' 1