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500,000 Women Have been restored to health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege table Oompound. Their let tors are on Hie prove this statement to be a fact, not a mere boast. When a medi cine has been successful in curing so many women, you cannot well say without try ing it— Ido not believe it will help mo." PINKHAJtfS Vegetable Compound I* a positive cure for all those painful Ailments of Women. It will entirely cure the worst forms of Female Complaints, all Ovarian troubles. Inflammation and Ulceration, Falling ana Displacements of the Womb, and consequent Spina) Weakness, and is peculiarly adapted to the Change of Life. Bntf_s*^ Your medicine cured me of ter- KP rible female illness. ■i • Mas. M. E. Mullek, lA. Concord Sq., Boston, Mass. Backache. It has cured more cases of Backache and Leucorrhcea than any other remedy the world has ever kiiovn. It is almost infallible in such cases. It dissolves and expels Tumors from the Uterus in an early stage of development, and checks any tendency to cancerous humors. . - " ■"' P3gßß_sft* Your Vegetable Compound re p'S__y moved a Fibroid Tumor from my faT"^— r womb after doctors failed to give relief. Mas. B. A. Lombard, 'Westdale, Mass. . __ . : J Bearing-down Feeling Womb troubles, causing pain, weight, and backache, instantly relieved and perma nently cured by its use. Under all circum stances it acts in harmony with the laws that govern the female system, and is as harmless as water. _ Rfe_flß^ Backache left ma after taking I §j§jß_? the second bottle. Your medicine •Bl m. cured me when doctors failed. _?: -=s • Mas. Sabah Housteix, 3 Davis Block, Gorham St., Lowell. Mass. Irregularity, Suppressed or Painful Menstruations, Weak* ness of the Stomach, Indigestion, Bloating, Flooding, Nervous Prostration, Headache, General Debility. " A_^MV^ It is a grand medicine. I ami t."i__3? thankful for the good it has done »W^W me. Mrs. J. W. J., 76 Carolina Aye., Jamaica Plain (Boston). Mass. Dizziness, Faintness, Extreme Lassitude, " don't care" and want to be left alone " feeling, excitabil. ity, irritability, nervousness, sleeplessness, flatulency, melancholy, or the "blues," ana backache. These are sure indications of Female Weakness, some derangement cf ths Uterus. . P__tf__^ I was troubled with Dizziness, J |3B_y Headaches, Faintness, Swelling - tar^~T Limbs. Your medicine cured me. . Mas. Sabah £. Baker, ' . ■ Buckaport, Me. The whole' story, how«wr, is told ln an ' illustrated book which goes with each bot tle, the most complete treatise on female complaint* ever published. p__B_*fc For eight yean I suffered with J rjSffiy' 'womb trouble, and was entirely I WW^^m cured by Mrs. Pinkham's medicine. I Mas. L. L. Towns, I Littleton, N.H. I Kidney Complaints and Backache of either sex the Vegetable Compound always cures. C_a_______B ,< The Vegetable Com- Lfdla E Pinkham's pound is sold by »n B '.. ■**»_,,7 *,*lnm 5 I druggists or tent by 1 Liver PIUS CUre I mail, in form of Fills I MpiflML . I afeWbS '- I SlCk Headaohl, 2&0. B Corrt'jxmdenctfreell ___________U______l ***vertd. You can address in strictest oonfldenee, ' LIBIA E. PIKKHIM MED. CO., Lynn, Mais. Minneapolis News. Ames Turned Down. Not an alderman came to the support of Mayor Ames, whose veto of the "annual budget was presented to the council last ' night. The resolution was passed over the mayor's veto by a vote of 23 yeas. Even Aid. Rand voted against his honor. Plenty of Loss. The local sawmills have an ample sup ply of logs, and will be enabled to con tinue operations until the river freezes over. On Oct. 1 about 330.000,000 feet of logs had been turned over to the Minne apolis mills by the boom company. One hundred and five million feet went to St. Paul. The company estimates that at the close of the drive it will have handled 400.000,000 feet of Minneapolis logs and 145,000,000 for St. Paul. About 50,000,000 feet will be received by rail In Minneapolis. Xo-rse Press Association. The annual convention of the Norwe gian-Danish Press association assembled in the city yesterday and elected the fol lowing officers for the ensuing year: Christian Brant, of St. Paul, president; S. Sorensen, of Minneapolis, first vice £ resident; H. Stress, of Sioux Falls, S. ' second vice president; M. S. Rasmus-" sen, of Minneapolis, secretary, and L. ' Stauhaimer, of Fargo, N. D.. treasurer. It was decided to accept the invitation of the Northwestern Scandinavian Sing ers' association to meet with that body at their convention next summer in Sioux Falls, S. .D. "To California ln Through Cars Twice a Week." On Tuesdays leave Minneapolis 9:30-1. m., St. Paul 10:00 a. m., via North _ Western Line to Omaha,-.-thence via" Union Pacific and Ogden-to San Fran cisco and Los Angeles, with no travel on Sunday. -■■■ On Saturdays leave Minneapolis 9:30 a. m., St.- Paul 10:00 a. m., via North-West ern - Line to Kansas City, thence via Santa Fe Route, through New Mexico to Los Angeles. _ " Sleeping car berth $6.00. .Each berth large enough to accommodate two per sons. .. - _>^*-A; These are the two most popular routes for California travel, and if you contemplate visiting there, maps rates and informa tion . will be furnished free at No 382 Robert 7- St.. St. Paul; No. 413 Nicollet Avenue, Minneapolis, or ■ address T. W Teasdale, General Passenger Agent St Paul. ' ' Meats! Meats! Meats! Good Weather, Largo Quantities, Fine Quality. . PRICES that are. Right, and will enable you to buy at .1 THE PROVISION CO. '____?• IHE rflUfldfUlt UU« MINNEAPOLIS. Choicest Poultry, Fish and Vegetabhs—BULK OYSTERS. yy A:-.. A | Our Butter !"___*_•_- Has a fine assortment of Creamery and VHI Dll L IVI mJtSkt La li.jiry v ttor at prices that will suit you. KILLED FOR MONEY I AN AGED COUPLE BATTERED TO DEATH WITH AN AX AT FREEPORT, ILL. y ALLEGED MURDERERS CAUGHT Daniel Fauke Under Arrest at Grand Forks, N. D., Charged With ' Crime of Aug. 24, 1900. . . A-- -*. ■ ■■- GRAND FORKS, N. D., Oct. 11.—(Spe cial.)— Fauke was arrested here today, charged with having murdered Mr. and Mrs. John Bobb ' near Freeport, 111., on Aug. 24, 1900. The Bobbs were old people, in humble circumstances, and the husband was blind, deaf and almost help-, less. The bodies were found in the morn ing almost hacked to pieces with an ax, both skulls being crushed and some of the arms nearly severad. They had about $100 which they had laid away for funeral, expenses, and it was gone and the prem ises had been ransacked. The Bobbs had no enemies, and there seemed to be no motive for the crime. Suspicion pointed to Fauke, who had been seen about the place, and who, on the night of the mur der, had asked the way to the farm of William Huffman. Huffman had just sold a farm for $10,000 and taken the money home with him, and Fauke is believed to have intended to kill and rob him and to have mistaken the place. He disap peared and was hot located until two weeks ago, when he was seen at Pipe stone, Minn., going under the name of. Austin. Deputy - Sheriff Price, of - Free port, started after him, and has followed him since.7 He is a tough character, has a record of two reformatory sentences and was suspected of a Wisconsin mur- A-7T- A Fired on by Highwaymen. SIOUX FALLS, S. D., Oct. 11.-(Spe cial.)— Charles Hall, a Minnesota woman, who,' with her husband was traveling through the country in a cov ered wagon, arrived here in a badly wounded condition as the result of an adventure with highwaymen. While en camped for the night near. Pipestone, Minn., their tent was entered by two men, who thrust revolvers in Mrs. Halls face as she arose from her bed. The visitors ordered her to throw up her hands. At the same time they fired their revolvers. A bullet struck Mrs. Hall In the arm. Several other shots were fired but none of them took effect. When Mr. Hall attempted to eject the men they also covered him with their weapons, anu, after ransacking the contents of the tent, departed. 7v i7-A7~ Hastings Happenings. HASTINGS, Oct. 11.—(Special.)—Mayor E. E. Tuttle has received his commis sion as postmaster and -has taken pos session oi the office. The "Oberammergau Passion Play' in moving pictures will be given at St. Boni face's church next Sunday evening. William Weidner has formed a partner ship with Charles Gilby in the black smithing business on Vermillion street. Miss Celestine M. Schaller left for Chi cago today for a visit. Mrs. a. T. Williams left for Glasgow, Mont., yesterday . _ Yawps From Yankton. YANKTON, S. D., Oct. 10.— (Special.)— Sidney J. Cornell and Miss Myrtle M. Talcott were married here yesterday. Miss Talcott is a daughter of J. M. Tal cott, a wealthy lumber merchant. Mr. Cornell is the local agent of the Ameri can Express company. Alonza A. Ball, of Gayville, and Mrs. Eliza Dailey, of Albany, Mo., were mar ried here yesterday. A. C. Nelson, who was arrested at Min neapolis the past week, is well 'known here, having been in the employ of tho Yankton Music company at this point. His wife and two children are living here with her mother. Sent Up for Life. DULUTH, Minn. Oct. 11.—James King, who was convicted of murder in the sec ond degree for killing William Carlson, a bartender at Hibbing, on Aug. 24, was sentenced to . life imprisonment in the state prison at Stillwater by Judge Dibell. He was indicted for murder hi the first degree, but the jury, after hav ing been evenly divided, between first and second degrees, reached a verdict of mur der in the second degree. King is a woodsman,. forty-four years of age,, was drunk when hi* killed Carlson, and has spent two years in Stillwater * prison for counterfeiting. 7.7 ' .* " • Shaw's Sew Position. BROOKINGS, S. D., Oct. 11.—At a meeting of the regents of education held at the state agricultural college last " night. Prof. Thomas Shaw, of Minne sota, was elected to the chair of animal husbandry and agriculture. This car ries the directorship of the United State 3 experiment station at Brookings, S. -. D. In the department of animal husbandry Prof. Shaw enjoys a national reputa tion, and stands at the head of his pro fession in this country and Canada. If he accepts the position tendered him he will take charge at the end of the fiscal year, in June. ":',A; Ay Crawford Will Stick. - HURON, S. D„ Oct. 11. — (Special.)— £atest Jicks oj the Jelegraph. .New Ameer Friendly to England. . SIMLA, Oct. 11.—Habib Ullah"."Khan, [ the new ameer of Afghanistan, has offi cially informed Lord Curzon, the viceroy of India, that he will follow in his fa ther's footsteps, hoping that the friend ship - existing between the Afghan and British governments will continue to in crease. - ' UylyyAAy . TP-yyyA; Mexican Outlaws Sentenced to Hans. DALLAS,- Tex., Oct. U.—Gregorio Sortez, the Mexican outlaw*, for whom an exciting man-hunt was kept up for two weeks in the lower Rio.Grande val ley last spring, i was today convicted at Karnes City of murdering Sheriff Morris, of Karnes- county, and - sentenced 7to hang. - • ' --Ay A Congregational Council. PORTLAND, Me., Oct. 11.—The Nation al Council of the Congregational church ; will -. meet here tomorrow, and already many delegates from distant points have arrived. This body embraces the: entire country, and all places In America An which the Congregational church has a foothold will be represented. The coun cil meets in the State Street church to morrow, and the sessions will continue until next Friday. — '■ I Porter Visits Abdul Hamld. CONSTANTINOPLE, Oct. 11.—The' sul tan received in private I audience today Gen", Horace Porter, United States am bassador to : France, and. * Mrs. Porter. To the former' he. presented a valuable souvenir, and upon the 7 latter he con ferred the : grand* cordon of Chefakat. Later in the day 7 Gen. - Porter ■ and Mrs. Porter ■ took tea in the Yildiz park. - Fireman Scalded to .Death. /.. ROANOKE. Va., Oct. 11.—In a wreck -on the Norfolk & Western j railroad, near Dublin, -Va., today, Frank -Lavender, - a fireman on a Cripple Creek passenger * ; engine was scalded rto death. Hanging from the: cab - window he * begged pite ■ ; 8 THE ST. PAUL GLOBE, SATURDAY OCTOBER 12, 1901, - PROVE IT ANY TIME.... BY THE EVIDENCE OF ST. PAUL '";.' 'PEOPLE. - 7'y;.7' i- The dally evidence citizens right here at home supply in proof" >ulli cient to satisfy, the greatest skeptic.' No better ■ proof can -be had. 7 " Here la a case. Read Iti Mrs.; M. Salvus, of; 196 ", Martin . street, says: "A remedy which did as I much ■ for; Mr. W. B. j Boyd :as * Doan's ■ Kidney 7 Pills deserves to be brought ** to the ; notice • of , anyone . suffering " from kidney .:_ complaint or any of its consequences," particularly that far too prevalent, backache. -Mr.- Boyd procured Doan's ?- Kidney Pills at F. M. Parker's drug, store and took a course of the treatment. _- Not only were the pains in * his back dissipated, but other indications of weak kidneys were strengthened." For sale Aby all dealers. *■ Price,- W cents. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. V., sole agents for the United States. A Remember the name, Doan's, and take no substitute. The attention of Coe 1.7 Crawford, of this city, was called to a dispatch say ing that he would withdraw from the, senatorial compaign, when he; replied: "There is no truth in the report; I shall not withdraw; ■ in fact such a thought has not entered my mind. lam in the race to stay. My friends in every part of the state are . enthusiastically at work, and there is every reason to' be lieve that the next legislature will name me for United States senator. I have no idea how such a report originated, and assure all that it is wholly unwar ranted and false." m MURDERER PAYS THE PENALTY Wronged "Wife Stayed by Guilty Man to the Last. CHICAGO, Oct 11—Gecrge Doiinski, convicted of murder, was hanged here today. The crime for which Doiinski paid 7 the extreme penalty was the murder of his brother-in-law, Anton Lisle, a year ago. Doiinski became infatuated with Mrs. Lisle, his wife's sister. That his clan destine wooing might not be interfered i with, Doiinski sent his wife on a visit to his parents in the old country. \ His wife out of the way, he wished to marry, Mrs. Lisle, . who seemed to return his love. Lisle, however, became suspicious. Nov. 27 the two men met in a pasture north of Irving Park. When the police found Lisle's body . there '-. were four j bullet wounds in it and the throat was cut. Do iinski was arrested, but he declared that he and Lisle had quarreled about money matters and that he had been compelled to shoot his brother-in-law In self-de fence. The evidence against Doiinski, while mainly circumstantial, i was : suf ficient to convince the Jury that murder had been done in order that Doiinski might marry Mrs. Lisle. =A v -7'Meanwhile Mrs. Doiinski, in Europe, heard that her husband had been arrest ed, but the report also said that it was for her own murder. Supposing that she could get him out of his predicai*»j>nt. by appearing and thus disproving the charge that he had killed' her, Mrs. Doiinski, with her infant, hurried back across the Atlantic and arrived in Chicago only to discover the real state of affairs. She did not abandon her husband, however, but ciid all in her power to aid him. She vis ited the jail yesterday, and when she learned that the supreme court had re fused to grant a supersedeas she fell in a faint. Doiinski made his last confes sion to Father Rapouz yesterday, and spent the night in a barber chair, alter nately dozing and gazing at hfs image In a mirror. - - TRIAL OF CALEB POWERS. Mounted Sheriffs Are Scouring .he Country f«-r ' Jurors. '- GEORGETOWN, Ky., Oct. 11.—Ten men were accepted by - the commonwealth to day as jurors in the case of Caleb ; Pow- . . ers, charged with being an accessory to j the murder of Gov. Goebel. They are, : however, subject to peremptory chal lenge by the defense, and the jury is by no means completed. Judge Cantrill or dered mounted sheriffs to go over into Bourbon tonight and bring in a special venire of 100 men by tomorrow morning at 9 o'clock. Today's morning and after noon sessions of court were consumed in the examination of jurors. 7 The commonwealth has used two of Its five peremptory challenges, and the de fense has fifteen,7 which it has -not- yet begun to use. -It Is probable that -the special venire will be exhausted tomorrow and another will have to be made before the jury is finally accepted. . . Not before Tuesday will the submission of evidence begin, if by that time. Court.- will; probably be hi session day and night from now till the finish of the trial.; a*; The prospective jurors now in the box are mostly countrymen from distant pre cincts in Scott county. _ t*m . 517.50 to Buffalo and Return ' _ On Monday's Wednesdays and Fridays during October the Wisconsin Central railway will sell excursion tickets to the Exposition 'at $17.50 for the round trip. City Ticket office, 373 Robert street, St. Paul. A A ously for help, but the bystanders were powerless to aid him, owing -to the es caping steam. - Prof. - Shaw's Sew Job. BROOKINGS, S. D., Oct. 11. — Prof. Thomas Shaw, of Minnesota, has been elected to the chair of animal hus bandry in the state agricultural college, which also carries with it the director ship of the United States experiment station at this place. Prof. Shaw en joys a national reputation, and is a lead-' er of his profession in this country and Canada. . - A* Federation of Labor. ' WASHINGTON, Oct. 11.-The 7 "formal Snn,,^! lssued today f.-t the twenty-first annual convention of the American Fed eration, of; Labor to be held at St. Thomas _college, Scranton, begin ning at >'10* o'clock Tuesday morning, Dec. 5 next. y The committee on credentials will meet five days previous to . the conven tion and the executive council three days previous. Texas Town Destroyed by Fire. i P-r^tf'ASi Tex * °ct "--Insurance men at Dallas have been - informed that near ly- all the town of Alba, 100 miles east of «*!i , ,-l' wa, * destroyed by :an incendiary fire last night. It is reported that only two business houses .of the seventeen are bu A large quantity of cotton was also •burned.. ■ - _.-• • . Yale's - New Organ. NEW - HAVEN. ,- Conn., Oct. 11.-Yale university., has awarded to a Boston firm the . contract for a large organ to be plac «,! n. tlc new auditorium by funds fur nished Jjy. the Newberry : family sof De troit. he specifications were submitted by Profs. Sanford and . Jepson after a visit to Europe, during which many of the large European organs -were examin ed. The new organ, which, it 13 belied/ will be- the finest in America, and will have been between 4,500 and 5,000 pipes.- J, • A New„ Trial for Miller. '" v 7 NEW YORK,: Oct. 11.-The appellate di vision of the : supreme court; of Brooklyn handed down an opinion today granting a new trial to William 7F. Miller, manager of .the - defunct * Franklin J syndicate. of Brooklyn,- which - induced people to in vest on promise •of 520 per cent, profit per annum. -Miller.was convicted on -April 30 1900, and sentenced*, to ■ ten years at hard labor in Sing Sing by County Judge Hurd. -'.7 Pat Crowe in Demand, OMAHA Neb. Oct. 11.—The case of James Callahan, charged with perjury in ?iS^ cstll3?2 Ny before the Jury, which lis tened to the charges against him of kid naping j Edward ; Cudahy's 7 son % last De cember, i comes up ; tomorrow in the 'i dis-* trict ? court, : when arguments * on" a plea in bar will -be - heard. Efforts ; are being made to secure ; Pat Crowe -as a witness. FIVE NEW BISHOPS ''• '- ■" '•• "* "•■-*- "^ '''""'"--«-: I a ■ '.;'■■- '■»t*v- V," a '-a^^ CHOSEN BY HOUSE OF BISHOPS OF THE PnOTfeTAXT EPISCO .;-::\.r-':'7^^rAi*'-'*&ar^fEi(xiox. r'."7.' ON MARRIAGE AND I DIVORCE . . - - .-•*«.- * --■... House of Deputies' struggles With All Important Canon on the - Subject Throughout '- * y: the Session. ■■ ■" 7 " ' — SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. 11.-The ques tion of marriage and divorce was before both houses of the triennial convention of the Episcopal Church of America today. The bishops adopted a 'substitute for the proposed canon 37, 7 providing : for . the dis cipline of persons marrying ' again r after beings divorced. .The" principal ." change , made by the substitute is the provision that • such person may receive ; the sacra ment on the written consent of a bishop. The house of deputies began the eagerly awaited j debate on section 4 of the; pro-' posed S canon 36, which virtually prohibits the remarriage in the church of- divorced persons. The discussion -will be con tinued on Monday. The only vote reached during the day was on a proposed modi-■; fication of Dr. Huntington's': amendment providing for determining the cause of divorce in the case of a divorced person applying to be married. This was de feated. y " , . Five missionary bishops were voted for and named today by the house of bishops to the house of deputies, where the final election must take place,-as follows: .7 i y District of Hankow, Rev. James Addi son Ingle, -D. D. '••" "•'■'- ■- ■:-> 7 - - A District of the Philippines, Rev. Charles H. Brent, D.D. ry- _ . .• .' - ' District of Olympia, - Rev. Dr. Frederick • Keator, D. D. y, —.A . - District of * Porto n Rico, Rev. - William Cabot Brown, D. D. y- •- ■~- * ~ District of North Dakota, Rev. Charles Campbell Pierce,. D. D. . . THE NEW BISHOPS. Rev. James Addison Ingle, .chosen to. be bishop of newly created district or Hankow, was graduated 7 from" the | Uni- . versity of Virginia in 1888 and. soon after ward went to China as a missionary. For some years he has been in charge of the church at Hankow. A j,^:-.^- Charles H. Brent, first missionary bishop of the j Philippines, is a native of Ontario, and a graduate of the Toronto Theological school. Since 1892 he has been assistant minister of St.Stephens" church, Boston, and St. Paul's church, Buffalo, and has also served in West 7 Boston. He is a high church man. 7. Rev. Frederick Keator, who will go to the Olympia district, is at " present of St. John's church in Dubuque, lowa. He is " a member of the present house of bishops and is about forty. -'^'rAAAAi~A-cAy:'' -7 Rev... W. Cabot Brown, chosen, for the new district of ' Porto Rico, and ad jacent islands, is a native of Lynchburg, Va. For: some time he has been in charge of a mission in Brazil. Rev. Charles Campbell Pierce, chosen for missionary bishop of North' Dakota, is at present chaplain "of the Twenty second infantry U. S. A. He went to the" Philippines soon after the commencement of hostilities there, and for : a time was post chaplain at Manila^ He was active in the promotion of educational work in the" islands, until ill health compelled his return to this ' country about a year ago. . - BITTER FOE TO SCHLEY Continued From First Page. tiago de Cuba with his whole.command, etc.'?" 77 y- : A-AAyA " ; -AA : "That is the telegram I referred to." : "Did I understand you to say .that that caused * the belief that the Spanish fleet' was in Santiago?" : :' 7 "No; oh, no! What caused the be lief was the information received from Capt. Allen,: of.the signal corps, who was in charge of the telegraph office in Key West. He : informed . Lieut. Staunton, who was :in Key . West jat : noon on the 20th, . that j this Information .... had come over night from Havana." "Could "■ I interrupt - you just 7 a «minute. Was No. 7, the dispatch referred to (the 'Dear Schley' dispatch),"7 being. sent in answer to this inclosure?" 7-A ■■*'■. "Yes. That was sent after receiving this dispatch." ~- .A AA '• A'" "The admiral \ then, telegraphed ; the de-; partment practically a paraphrase of this letter No. 7?" ...; A .; . PLAIN ORDERS TO SCHLEY. '"This dispatch and,th telegram to the department j paraphrasing .-" it were pre pared on the night of the 19th, and were sent, that night, j§ X :i think. At noon oi the 20th, . Lieut. Staunton saw Capt. Al-" len in Key .West,' and "Staunton was again sent to Key ,, Wept and came back with the assurance from Capt; Allen that the ] Spanish fleet r was there. Then the doubt ,in .'Admiral' Sampson's mind j was removed, _ and ;he then wrote a dispatch to be sent by the Marblehead, which we were expecting to get off hourly. She, however, was delayed,''and: the - flagship■ got under ; way at 4 o'clock in; the morn ing of. the 21st and went over to Ha vana. . . From there, as there was this \ possibility; of a lofeger delay j in Etna j Mar. blehead's departure than was expected," he sent the Eagle and th% Hawk with a copy of this dispatch and supplementary dispatch' to Commodore Schley, also with verbal : instructions to the commanding, officer of the: Hawk to move at once to ward Santiago." ." . -A"-" "Is this the dispatch you refer to, No. 8? On the 21st the following instructions were "written at Key ./est. for Commo dore Schley and sent at 3 a. m. to the Marblehead to be . delivered With all dis patch: ': 7 ' "GO TO SANTIAGO." ■" 'Spanish '■■ squadron probably at San tiago de Cuba, four ships 7 and three tor pedo boat destroyers. If you . are. satis fied they are not at Cienfuegos, proceed with all dispatch, but cautiously, to San-: tiago de Cuba, etc,' "Is that the dispatch that was sent to Commodore Schley after the doubt was j removed in' the mind of, Admiral Samp son- where the Spanish fleet was?" "Yes." •'.-•• - -■■•:...;•:.;-.■...a . _." .'-. "You have stated that he 7 became cer tain on- this subject" ''--" '"■ ~~~- ■-■ -'■ '•■"';. A.: "He 'became assured, or -at least '; my; Impression is that he felt', assured after the reception of the second word from Capt. Allen in regard to the matter. That was :on . the s evening of the 20th."" "-.A.-: '; "Was that an 7 assurance, may I ask you, of whether me Spanish fleet was at Santiago or whether it had gone into San tiago?" AyV- ' ***: ~ "At Santiago." " -: A _. "Doesn't •it staff* anything: about hav ing gone in and come out?" .7. A 7 -■'■ " "No. That they Were Jthere." '.;. 7At this' point in' Capt. Chadwick's tes timony the court Adjourned for the day. x END 1$ FAR OFF. ' After the witnesses iof yesterday ;had; been re-called ' today In . the \ Schley 'court: for the purpose of correcting ;their. testi-< mony, Lieut." J. H. Holden* was re-intro ,duced ', to '.. continue his Examination. ,;.: V CapL Lemly had supposed that vhe would be able 7; to conclude ■ the presenta , tion of the J government's side, of the ; case 7 by the close of : this - week, ? but 1- he ; now finds7that '- he will _till have several wit nesses 7on '"} his ' list when * the * court ■' ad-7 journs tomorrow. In 'all A probability "7 he'; .will A consume the -* greater *; part Cof > the i first : half 'of 7 next week.'-.: Mr. Rayner esti- 1 mates * that ! the court will ?be : able :to • con clude I its work before '■ the middle of No vember. 7 - r -a - i 7 l When :. the - court was .7 called toy order, Capt. Lemly made a brief- explanation of i one jj of j his j statements [of 1: yesterday con : cerning the statement received : from Com-; mander 7 Marix. He had said 7 that the statement y was ; "unsworn." v- - -/- Ay -'. "I -would like it to. appear,"-- he said, "that although "these are ; sworn, they 7 are not, being .in the_shape of depositions 7 t and \ex-parte /statements, 'A such sworn : evidence ? as": is 7- usually admitted A before the court, but V came jin ; with " their ; full value merely 7 because there was no ob jection on either side." - Among the witnesses called early in the" ' day for ;' the f purpose *• of * correcting 7 their testimony was 7 Admiral H. -C. Taylor. ■While;he was on .the: stand he was. ques tioned as ,to whether he " had received; in - formation that the * Spaniards were com-" ing out of the '. harbor of Santiago before 7 they made their appearance on the morn ing of July 3. -The question was asked by Capt.* Lemly and the answer was: "None whatever.'' . . - Mr. Rayner—You" did not get a mes sage . from the .Vixen in reference to smoke coming out'of the harbor? ~ "None." •.;.-' ■..-.. TAYLOR SAW NO SMOKE. '•, Capt. Parker— Your attention was not called to smoke?' A "Not at all, sir." 7 ". '; " A "Do - you remember anybody." on your vessel who did observe smoke and re ported ,'it to ."you?" *A >* "I do vnot 7 remember." ..' Capt. .Lemly' read a report from Capt. Merrill-.- Miller ." formerly of the Raleigh, concerning 7 the -accuracy of the stadi meter.'This report was dated in 1895, and stated ; that the stadimeter had been found to give accurate results In measure ments : of: less than 800 yards, but not so when 7.the distance was . greater. In • one case," the 7 writer noticed an error of 200 yards in a 1,600 yards ; measurement. 7 y" Lieut. Adelbert Althouse, formerly i. watch and division officer on the battle ship Massachusetts was then called. He L then detailed the movements of that ves sel in connection with the flying squadron. He said that at Cienfuegos the vessels lay six to ten miles out at night, going nearer in the daytime. .7 : Lieut. . Althouse said that ,on the day of the bombardment' of the Cristobal Colon he had been in charge of the three- > inch turret of the Massachusetts. He said that the ship had not. been to ex ceed three minutes 7 in: passing the en trance 7 to, the harbor "on the. first: pas sage and that only two shots we j#■ then fired. The instructions were to make the range 7,000 yards, but the shots fell short and the range was increased on the re turn trip to 8,500, and then to 10,000 yards. Asked what was 7 developed as to the strength of the land batteries by this reconnoissanee, .he said that to * his mind it was shown they were very weak. In reply to a question as to whether he. had made any : notes concerning - the engage ment, he replied: -"No; we went in under instructions to sink the Colon." A .His orders had been to direct his fire at that vessel. - When Lieut. Althouse was excused^ Capt. Lemly introduced as evidence the reports made by Commodore Schley to the secretary of the navy of the engage ment of May 31. In one-of these dated June 3, Commodore Schley said: „ ."Reconnoisance was intended principal ly to injure and destroy Colon. The fire was returned without delay by the heavy bateries to the east and to the west on trance; large caliber, long range; recon naisance . developing satisfactorily the presence of the Spanish squadron lying' behind island near inner fort as they fir ed over hill at random. Quite satisfied the . Spanish fleet is there." ADMIRAL DEWEY'S NEPHEW. _j Lieut. P. O. Dewey, nephew of Ad miral | Dewey, who was a watch officer on the Massachusetts, was the next wit ness. a He. placed the distance of the blockading line under Commodore Schley from the mouth of Santiago harbor from five to eight miles, | the distance "being about the same,; day and night. 7 There was, he said,' no particular formation of the * vessels. - The. examination on this point was as follows: Capt. Lemly—When you were at the western end .of the blockade with ' the leading vessels .making the turn, . what orders were there for attacking if you saw the enemy coming out of the en trance? •-■■■•■"_■-. -7 ''1: do not believe we '. could have seen the enemy - coming out. 7 There were no orders I have any knowledge of." -. --•'Why..,dogyou think you 7 would not have seen the enemy77:comings out if such had been the : case?" - -AA* "Owing to the darkness and the dis tance from the harbor. " -For instance, when vrey were at the westward end of the-line the ships could have come out and stood to the eastward without out. being any the wiser unless they showed lights." : "How about the reverse of that prop osition?" . "I think it would have been the same In either case." Capt. Lemly then asked: "Did you have any conversation with the com -7 manding officer of the ! flying ' squadron, or anyone in his presence in relation to •the fire on the Colon or otherwise?" Witness replied: "I was told shortly -before we started in to the entrance that the • commander wished to see the turret officers in the pilot house. "I went to the pilot house and the commander said that he intended to go in a few moments and ; have. a 'try." at the Colon, and that ihe ; hoped we would sink her. I asked what 7 speed we would make, and was told, | 'about ten knots.' . I remarked at the j time that I - thought that was giving us little chance at the Colon, as she would be in sight between the . headlands only ! a couple of minutes | and that ■ the | smoke from the ; guns probably would make our ; fire very slow. To the best of my recol lection the commodore stated we would have to do the best we could; that the speed would be ten knots." FUTILE -BOMBARDMENT. Describing the range at which he had fired his ; guns on that occasion, he said at first ;it was 7,000 yards under orders and then he had increased it to ~ 9,500 ; yards, but that all the shots fell short. He said that the Spanish shore batteries had not given the American ships much trouble on that occasion. "None from . the Colon came near," he said, " but two - or- three [ shots from the battery fell near."' - A "What conclusion did you arrive at as to the shore guns?" A \ "I : did not think they were of very ■ large caliber, 7 not "over six-inch." -. 7* y ;A In reply to a question by the court: as to :whetner-he was ordered to direct his fire on the Colon or on the batteries. May 31, he said his orders were to direct his fire =on . the Colon, but he could not say as to who gave the orders. -' Lieut. Francis •'. Bough ton, who was a watch : and division • officer on : board the i Marblehead T during Commodore * Schley's i blockade of Santiago, was then called. 'He said that . during that time the ? Mar-. blehead and the -Vixen were .on picket duty between the shore line and the line of the blockade,' the Marblehead , being , stationed three ; miles from the shore and to the i. westward, six miles from the 7 Morro. He would not attempt to - say how far outside the squadron; was, but he could not see the ships after nightfall. The court asked: r . "Was the Marblehead in such. position at \ night [ while on picket duty off Santi -7 ago that the ; enemy's vessels; would have i been seen ; had they attempted to leave the harbor?" . A 7 CERVBRA COULD HAVE ESCAPED. * Witness : replied: "That * would depend upon a great many circumstances, the state : of ; the"•" weather, . the '* course they ■ took and the success in keeping their 7 ships dark 7 and quiet." -,-: Admiral , Dewey—The Marblehead was ion picket -duty. "iy Could she 7 have r seen the enemy coming? A '."-'''.*"" A "If the enemy had : kept : close to; shore • and we were three miles off, as we were , during' most of the 7 time, we : could not •' ~ have, seen them; if . the enemy ; had stood south from the entrance, which would _d H) 17 ¥1 *1 IT! C-\ \TI _3t (ft LIQUID iiii JDildliltJliilC O BETTER I THE MODERN STOVE POLISH -811 YET * I bigger box, BrlinantXlean,EasilyApplle(UbsolutdyOdorlesS; Cgl fireproofu! dAME PRICE .-.•._,.". ^„ mM _*'^^ „.„ „. __TT^,,,, -**~J? r»^a »■ I. have placed 7 them :> about < four miles off, we j. could not have seen them provided they kept reasonably; dark and 7 quiet." Mr. ; Rayher-rWhat was the purpose of the picket boats being there if they could not see the enemy? * -"They were supposed to be there, I presume, for 7 that • purpose." £' "Then, if they were there for that pur pose, what was it that would have * pre vented them from accomplishing this ob ject?" * y. A - "The fact. that they 7' could not see a vessel if it, ran at a distance of from -two" to7.two and a half miles off at night.' .'■."■'- "•'.'■..- "How far was • the Vixen from the shore?" "I do not know." "What was the distance between your vessel and the Vixen?" "I cannot say." "Are you prepared to say then that if the enemy had come out - of. there neither you nor the Vixen could not have seen him?" ,7:1 "I "answered the question as put by the court that we ;on the j Marblehead J could not have seen the enemy coming out un der the I conditions I have named—first, in keeping close in under the land, and, sec ondly, in steering due south from the harbor." "What sort of nights were there?" "I do not remember particularly. I do not remember any gales and particularly bad weather." " Lieut. Boughton was still on the stand when the court took its noon recess. When the afternoon session of the court began. Mr. Rayner continued his cross j examination of Lieut. Boughter. The ■ lieutenant said his estimates of the dis tance his ship was out from the Morro or from land at Santiago was BASED ON AN ESTIMATE, and not on measurements. He said he had. not informed Capt. McCalla. his commanding officer, of any fear that the Spaniards might escape, for the reason that h e considered Capt. McCalla as well informed on that point as himself. He had received no general orders as to the distance out for the Marblehead, the cap tain, of the vessel fixing the distance from time to time. When Lieut.- Boughter was excused, Lieut. Ernest Bonnett, who was flag lieu tenant on the New York in 1898, was call ed to the stand. He said that when the North Atlantic squadron arrived off- Santiago they found the flying squadron there. They stopped about seven miles directly south of the harbor, and the witness said he had seen the Cristobal Colon in the harbor. He also said that almost immediately after wards the vessel moved to the westward, back of Cay Smith. This last statement, however, was stricken from the record on the ground that such testimony previous ly had been excluded. Witness said the flying squadron was at that time in irregular formation. Capt. Lemly said that he had called Lieut. Bennett not only for his direct ex amination, but for full cross-examina tion, in accordance with the precept. Mr. Rayner stated, however, that he had no questions to ask, and the witness was ex cused, being succeeded by Lieut. Charles C. Marsh, who was flag secretary to Ad miral Sampson during the Spanish war. Lieut. Marsh testified concerning the forwarding of dispatches by the Dupont and the lowa from Key West on May 20. These messages were from Admiral Sampson to Commodore Schley, and one of them was the memorandum by Capt. McCalla - concerning the A insurgents at Cienfuegos. Questioned as to the correct ness of his memory, witness said that his mind was refreshed by the records of the commander-in-chief as to his correspond ence. * LETTERS ALL COPIED. Every letter was, h e said, press copied -as soon as written, and he therefore con j sidered the order in which letters were copied as a certain record: of what had transpired in the way 7of letter writing. Other records were produced, which, he said, were corroborative of : this. From these records he found that the "Dear Schley" letter had been sent on the Du -7 Font, | M-iy 20. He . also found from t his record that a dispatch of May 21, saying. "The Spanish' squadron was 'probably at Santiago,' had - been forwarded by the :Marblehead. This is the dispatch dated at Key West, in which Admiral Sampson said to Commodore- Schley: "If you are satisfied that they (the : enemy) are not at Cienfuegos, proceed to Santiago," etc. He also identified. a dispatch: of May 21, dated at Havana, and urging the commo dore to get away from Cienfuegos before daylight: of May 23, as * - the '■ "Spanish would probably be still at Santiago." The latter dispatch, he said, had been written after the dispatch from Key West of the sAme date. y Mr. Hanna asked: "Would it have been possible that - the ..'Dear Schley' letter cculd have been 7 sent on an earlier date than this: letter of: May. 19, transmitting the McCalla memorandum?" "I should say not, the McCalla memo randum being press copied in the book on a prior page." On cross-examining the witness. Mr. Rayner . said that counsel for "Admiral Schley would admit the receipt of one copy of the McCalla memorandum, but that. there was a dispute as to the other copies.. He tried .to get witness to say that the lowa had carried a duplicate of the "Dear Schley" letter, but he would not do so. He held, however, to the state ment that the McCalla memorandum had been carried in duplicate .by both the Dupont and the lowa. He had, however, ho written evidence that "either the Hawk or the Marblehead had carried the memorandum. ""We were likely to be on the safe side in such mat ters," said witness, "and to have chucked in the memorandum, but the Marblehead had not been relied on to carry the dis patch." - Mr Rayner questioned witness at some length on this point, saying: "I want to call your, attention to this: Dispatch No. 8 was received on May 23 by the Hawk. It is j in evidence here* that ■ the : Hawk carried No. 8 to Commodore Schley, and this letter commences: 'In reply to your No. 8 letter, I would state," and so on. Then |it says: % 'Regarding inclosed in formation from McCalla.' Now, don't that refresh your memory upon the point * that when he received No. 8 from the Hawk he . received with it the Inclosed information from Capt. McCalla, which is the memorandum?" — > "He ! probably did. He might have re ceived it half a dozen times. That Is not the first time it was sent." ."A "Does not that settle It that he got it from the Hawk?" A . '-' 7 -A; "I do not y know that it necessarily does." Lieut. Marsh was then excused. At 4 p. m., with Capt. Chadwick on the stand," the Schley court adjourned. REVOLUTIONISTS VICTORS. According: to Story Coining * From Cindad Bolivar. A NEW YORK. Oct. 11.—Advices from Ciudad Bolivar announce that the Vene zuelan revolutionists commanded by Gen. Geronimo -7 Rlvas 7 have attacked and de feated ' the Venezuelan government troops under 7 Gen. Arostegui, 7 near Barrancas, in the state of Bermudez, and that Gen. Arostegui. has been taken prisoner. It • is . further 'announced that the Venezuelan troops' have joined arms - with '.the revolu tionists.. Government : troops from San. Felix, commanded by Gen. Africano, sus tained a defeat : near that 7 town tat the hands of the revolutionists . under Gen. Vilada. - A • —■—— .ii Thronßli Tourist Cars. The old familiar way—tried and proven. See .Minneapolis & St.. Louis Agents.for lowest rates to California. STRENUOUS LIFE SO OFTEN KILLS Thousands Worn and Sick ia Body and Mind. : : AA ■ ' '■'• - Hew Strength and Life to One Ileal Remedy. Ablest of All Physicians Freely Give Advice. . It is truer today than ever before that one man is no better than another unless he does more than another. When, recently, in J the y most learned medical review in London, the organ of the great English college of physicians and surgeons, it was proved by exhaus tive statistics that, despite the drain upon nerves and blood incident to the modern, strenuous: life—despite the fact that diseases of the nervous system ap pear earlier and oftener among working people than formerly, nevertheless, with in the past five or six years the average life of Americans was materially longer than it was a decade ago—the editors of! the review pronounced it as their firm opinion that this undoubtedly resulted in no small degree from the discovery a few years ago by an eminent American phy sician of a positive cure for diseases of the nervous system, which had promptly been put within the reach of the public in MR. F. G. CROWELL. that country, and was being used mora and more generally as a family remedy. One of the physicians, a member then and now of .the royal staff, in forward ing a copy of the article to the proprie tors of Paine's* celery compound, enclosed a long and somewhat technical letter, in which he said: "We are thoroughly convinced that no remedy yet known affords so certain re lief from that class of disorders which modern conditions of working and living now breed, as your Paine's celery com pound." Certainly one remedy is no better than another, unless it accomplishes more than another. And .Paine's celery compound is pre eminently the best remedy known to med icine for the cure of ailments that result from impaired nerves and consequent im pure blood. The rheumatism, neuralgia, sleeplessness, indigestion, lack of strength that a bottle of Paine's celery compound so rapidly dispels are but temporary con ditions if the relief that this remedy af fords is properly given. Mr. F. G. Crowell, a regent of tha State University of Kansas, a typical example of the strenuous life of today, a college graduate with a later master's degree from Columbia, who resigned from the prosecuting attorneyship of Atchison County after four years to engage in the grain business with" the famous Green leaf-Baker Grain Company, is one of tha thousands of such young men who owe a debt of gratitude to Paine's celery com. pound,.and to use his own direct words, "found it all that it is represented to be." , 'AA:;-^,.* iAA7:;.~ryy7. When A everything else has failed, Paine's celery compound makes the sick well. It needs but a single trial to con vince! TROUBLE FOR SALISBURY. ■ -7 ■ . , _—: '"• Indicted in Three Courts in Grand Rapids Water Work*. Scandal. Ay • GRAND. RAPIDS, Mich., Oct. 11.—In dictments were today returned by the federal grand jury against City Attorney Lant K. Salisbury and Stilson V. Mac- Leod, | former paying teller of the old National bank, and manager of the local clearing house. MacLeod was Indicted on several counts, charging violation of the United States banking law In connection with issuing a worthless certificate of deposit, and Salisbury.-is charged with being an accomplice. . These cases are an echo of the Kenton county grand Jury Investigation into the Grand Rapids water supply scandal. Salisbury has now been Indicted In three courts, the district court at Chica go/district court in Grand Rapids and in the federal court here. The charges are all different, but all have to do with the water scandal. An indictment was also returned against C. Alfred Saerch, for mer assistant cashier for. the Fourth Na tional bank, for alleged misappropria tion of funds. _ _ More Honors for Larkin Soap Com pany. BUFFALO. Oct. 10.— (Special.)—Tha Pan-American Exposition has awarded six medals for supreme merit to the va ried products of the Larkin Soap Com pany of Buffalo,. whose factory to family thirty days* trial plan is known as tho Larkin idea in the homes of the entire country. _ . "-'■::■■ -* Buffalo and Return . '. Via "The Milwaukee." Visit the Exposition and travel via th» C. M. & St. P. Ry. to and from Chi cago. tYii,Tl'llfflmpl"WUlMlWllilWW^*EMUkf Win 1 Lowest. rates for . excursion. tickets, good for fifteen days, twenty . days and thirty days. Apply at "The Milwaukee" offices, or write J." T. Conley, Asst. Gen. Pass. Agent, St. Paul, for .the 7 Milwaukee's Pan-American folder, one of the best Exposition guides <-«t. published. - ~~"~—.^ Pacific Express Renamed. Oct. 13th, via Soo Line, leaving St. Paul - 9:05 : and Minneapolis 9:45 daily, through train for Pacific Coast points. Glenwood Express will leave St. Paul 5:05 p. m. r^nd Minneapolis 6:15 p. m. Rhinelander Local will leave Minneapolis 8:55 a. m. and St. Paul 10:00 a. m. All local: trains will leave station, sth Aye. 'No. and Washington, Minneapolis, Saturday,.-Oct. 12th, at 7:00 p. m., and run -as: far as Glenwood. 3