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GLALE .SWEEPS! FLORIDA COAST SeveraJ Vessels Wrccked and a '^Jumber of Lives Lost. DAMAGE ALSO ON LAND lfffamt and Contiguous Towns Along Coast in Path of Storm and Suffer More or Less Damage. ?VV After blowing a cnlo Friday, Satur ' dtly and Sunday, tlio storm predicted fey south Florida broke over Miami Sunday about nightfall. In a few hours Miami and most of tho towns on the east coast Of Florida were cut off from communication with the outside world. Telegraph wires were blown down and tho railroad tracks were obstructed, and not until Wednesday was com, munlcaction restored. Tho wind attained a maximum velocity of 75 miles per hour. The schooner Melrose, with ji erow of eight and four passengers, was wrecked Saturday. Just before sun,set a great wavo swept over the vessel, capsizing it and throwing the pas' Mongers and crew into the sea. Mrs. Hallen, one ol' the passengers, y was lost, but tho crew managed to cling to the sides of the /easel, and Mr. and ^rs. Weller, two other passongerB, found themselves in the water within reach of the yard arm of the foremast when the ship rlghtud herself, the two still clinging to hor rigging. The mast, however, fell and crushed Mrs. Weller. Hor lifeless body was washed overboard, while Mr. Weller had both bones of his right arm broken. The schooner drifted until Monday when all were washed overboard. Mr. Weller grasped a hatch and floated ashora, landing near i# Palm Beach, as did the captain, mate and two colored seasen. ine rour-maRtod schooner, .lames Judge, of Philadelphia, is- aground four mllos south of Palm Beach, having goiKUashore Monday in :i terri!ic rjIo, in which the win! blew from 60 to 90 mile3 per hour. The crew are all / safe. The vessel is badly damaged. It carried no cargo. The tliree-maste-1 bark '/Aon. own ad by A. Hcmmcs, of Emden, (!? rnmny, loaded with 1,000,000 fuct of lumber, from l'ensacola for London, stranded live miles north of the House of Refuge near Fort Lauderdale, about 8 o'clock m Tuesday, and Captain Homines and crc%r of fourteen men, after several hours of struggling, saved themselves oo^ (jle a|(j 0f pi(?cos of lumber and Improvised rafts. In the surrounding country lhe fruit . and vegetable crops were damaged to ^ a considerable extent. -RTl <*V *11 Ui LABOR IN LOUISIANA. I ^ MA? Scuritv ? ,-^itctl Jo ,Colored Population I ffockimj to 1 owns and Cities. I A great scarcity fit labor exist.: in / Louisiana ami the effect is being folt / not only on the plantations, but on the extmsivn luvee work that is in f progress Fortj-nino slate and district contracts, outside <f the work being f done by the federal government, .are f- - 1 under way. They cover ninny nines of new levee and repair work. Most of these contracts are required to be finished' January J, but the contractors are unable to o -tain >aooi, as tho nogroes have been (locking to tho towns and cities. GEORGIA SIATE f AIR UNDER WAV.' Gates are Opi-ned at Macon With Attend ance Larger Than Expectcd. When tlio gates of Central City park at Macon swung open Wednesday morning at 10 o'clock the Georgia stato fair started off with it rush as fair ns one could wish, fairer than was expected. Macon was crowded (o it3 limits! it KPr>m<* that r.ra-%..!^ - ~ on hand from everywhere to see the heat show In tne history of the Central \ City. V I, ' t'NABFE TO I'AY HEAVY INDEMNITY. ,v British Soldiers May Remain ia Tibet longer Than Contemplated. A London dispatch says: Tho demand of Great Britain of nn indemnity of $3,750,000 from tho Tibetanx np pears likely to lend to prolonged Hritiah nnnnnnllAw ?' * u ~ r" * * vvvu|>?iiuu in i in; V'liumoi vauey. Tlio Tibetans declare their Inability tr pay the Indemnity within the three years first stipulated and Grout Britain has now proposed that the payment . he made at the rate of $.">0,000 yearly and that until the whole sum Is paid the British remain In possession oi this valley, which Is the key to Tibet. DESPONDENCY DRIVfS TO SUICIDE. frenchman Fnils to Make Success of Business end Jumps to His Death. Despondent because ho had failed tc make n success of his business :dnce coming to this country a few month ?'f ' i n r? ~ J - ?B./, ? (tm uuunru, a ironcii expert ii , precious Btonos, Tuesday jumped fronone of tho approaches of the new Williamsburg bridge at Now York an I was dashed to death on the stone pavement, 125 foot below. SISTER or KING ALFONSO DMD. One-Time Queen of Decadent Spain Die* in Child-flirth at Mrtdrid. 1 A dispatch from Madrid, Swain, srtys: ^Thft Tnfonlo ',rt T ? ** ' v ?u&tvtiiu iiiai ui UU IjUH iMCrdOdOii, .^princess of the Austrian, sister of King Alfonso and wlfo of Prince Charles, of Bourdon, gave birth to a daughter Sunday and died Monday, i, Th? princess of the Aunt rIns was I ] ^ queen of, SyaJn vtiwll the birth of hoi W) brother, the present King. RUSSIANS STILL HOPEFUL Every Small Advantage Gained by Kuropatkin Seized Upon to Buoy Up Hope. According to Tuesday's dispatches, St. Petersburg has been cheered by tho report that General Kuropatkln ! has resumed the offensive and by the news of the destruction of the Japanese command under General Yamadn, and the capture of Lone Tree hill, which is represented to bo the key to tha position oa tho southwest fronts of tho contending armies. Tliero scorns no immediate prospect w?. u. cusBunun 01 uie lignung mat nnJ baen in progress for tue past ten days, although there are signs that 011 both skies the supply of ammunition is falling short and that the limit of endurance of the troops must have been nearly reached. Advices from Mukden state that tho army is so near that, the environs of tho city have been depopulated. All Mukden are filled with refugee native fic. Tho roads south and southwest of Mukden are fllledw ith refugee nutiv-3 families, trailing homeless toward the sorry streets ol Mukden. The fighting of October 17 was confined to the Russian center at Slianto river, and was mostly artillery fire, the Japanese using big guns and lush explosive shells. During nine days of the fighting the losses were never less than 2,000 per day. The hospitals are hardly able to handle I ho wounded Nevertheless they performed wonders. | The Chinese have deserted all the villages and the troops are using the wood \york of their houses for fuel. too country south Is desolated. Tho Japanese still seem to lie exert ins themselves to force the Russians out of Mukden. A battle is assured in the positions surrounding the town. It becomes more and more evident lhat the resources of the country cannot support a larf.;e army. General Kuropatkin remains with j the troop.having abandoned his head | quarters at Mukden. | BECAUSE OF NEGRO WIFE i White Army Surgeon Will Be Dismissed-Mattcr Up to President Roosevelt. A Washington dispatch says: The surgeon general of the army lias eonI curred In the recommendation of GenI oral Grant thai John J. Smith. a mem- ; ) ber of the United states lin-iniinl i I I corps, stationed at Fort Mot;, N. J.. ; ! who is sai.l to .have married " nesress, ' | "be discharged from the army for "the ! i good of tiio service." This recommendation has heen for- ! I warded,to the secretary of war for his : action. Smith wrote to the war "do- ! i p.irtiiK'iy inquiring if there was any | reason why ho should not. bo permitted ! to marry a colored woman, setting j I forth that her character was good and j j that lie could establish good character ' j fur himself by his record. Anoter dispatch says: President { Roosevelt is face to face with the no* i gro problem in one of its ugliest i phases. Private John Smith, II. S. A., hospital corps, stationed at Fort Mott, New Jersey, has married a negro wo- j man. 11 is commanding officer. Surgeon Shallenbcr. has rocoimv?<?niln#i i?ia <n_. missal. The commanding officer of thn fort refused to indorse thin recommendation. It was approved, however, by tho surgeon general. Smith's plea is that if the constl; \ tional commander in chief thinks a negro good enough to eat with, he .hou'nl not object to a private in the urmv ; marrying a negress. Smith Is a white i mail. GRIAT SUUWI11R Of MUPiMOS. Outlaw Oyomo e:id fifty of His follower* Sl??in by Cflnstabulory. A Manila spooinl of Tuesday says: A force under hleuienant l'ogc;c, constabulary, has defeated a largo mini ber or Pulanjana in the mountains of eastern Samar, killing tho notorious outlaw, Oyomo and fifty of his fol , lowers. Violent Attack of Diarrhoea Cured by Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy and Perhaps a Life Saved. I "A short time ago I was taken with a violent attack of diarrhoea and l>r< lleve I would have tiled if I had not gitten relief,' says John J. Patton, a j loading citizen of Patton, Ala. "A friend recommended Chamberlain's I I Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy. ; I bought a twenty-five cent hottlo and after taking three dosos of it was on1 tiroly cured. I consider It the best j ; remedy In the world for bowel comJ plaints. For sale by Pickens Drug Store, Karlc's Drug Store, T. N. Huni tor. Llbertv. teeth, bad breath. Rydale's Liver ' Tablet!) will relieve any of tlieso symp- \ tonrm In a few hours and spoedlly cor- ' rect the trouble. They act upon the liver, bile, bladder and duct, intostines 1 and bowels as a stimulant and, tonic. Those who uso theso tablots And their action perfopt and results satisfactory. Fifty chocolato coated -tablets in each . box. Trlco, 25 cents. tf ' MEMPHIS ALSO SffKS III T If R RAlfS. Icnnpntcfi City Appeals Her Cr.*? to the Interstate Commerce Commission. The Interstate commerce coin mis slon at Washington. Thursday, heard prgumonts In the dlsputo boiwoon thi> | Memphis freight bureau and the fit. I Louts Southwestern railroad as to a j rate from Memphis* to points In Ar- ! kansas and cott< .? rates from Arkansas point# to Momphis. Symptoms of Liver Disease. Sick headache, constipation, bilious* noss, melancholia, dizzlnoss, dullness and drowsiness, coated toncuo sllmv \ RURAL MAILS CAUSE DEFICIT Enormous Sum Needed for Special Department. THE CABINET IS ADVISED "V Postmaster General Wynne Makes Known What Expanses Will Be During Next Fiscal Year. A Washington special says: A good part of tho time of the cabinet meeting Tuesday was consumed in hearing a report from Secretary Metcalfo, indicating what progress ho had mado towards carrying out tho president's instruction^ rosnoctinir ihe officials in volved in the General Slocum disaster. Secretary Tatf. also presented to tho attention of the president and tiia cabinet the subject of legislation for the canal zone. lie also told of what had been accomplished toward smoothlng'down tho dillleultiog that had ariaen between the canal zone authorities and tho Panama government, and it is expected that a formal statement will be soon issued defining the policy wtlinh tlli? irnvoi'iiinnnt ic In Iiflfiiit tn. ward tho zone. I'oslmn!-;tor General Wynne took up with the president th?> estimates of appropriation for the postolllce department, submitting to the president the final figures of t lie estimates. Increaso of Twelve Millions. Tho total amount estimated for th? needs of the department is $183,718, 495, as against an appropriation tor t ho current fiscal year of $170,815,990, tho Increase in the estimates for the ensuing year over the appropriation for the current year being $512,902,496. For the service in general, which cans the service outside the city of Washington, the figures for the post tuuuLvi ui ;> WIIII;U a11UW IK) 111" crease over tho current year. On tho contrary, there is a reduction of $ ">,000. Fn the office of the first assistant, whore tho salaries of postmasters and renewals aro allowed, the increase is .?2,!t:i7,:i0i>, which is In exact proportion to the growth of business based on previous experience. The increase in the bureau of the second assistant for the transportation of mails m $ >".'> 771 TIIIJ ;,wlI.il,? pected growth in tho volume of mail matter to bo handled 'during tl?o next flsr al year. The total estimated for this ofllco is $70,928,500. The increase in tl.o appropriation for the office of third assistant, who has charge of thft printing of stamps and stumped envelopes and for the account of the department, is $130,000, tlio total being $ I ,s5ri(5U(*. The increase (?.;tiiuated for the office of the fourth assistant, included $100,550 for postofllro inspectors, $1,151,575 for free delivery service and $0,003,1100 for rural worvlce, a total increase of $7.2.?7,425. Nearly the total deficiency which congress will bo asked to provide for the department for the current ye.ir is included in the amount asked for in tho rural free delivery. The total postal revenue for tho year ended .luno 30. 1901, wns $143,o."2,(>21. Tho estimated revenue for 1905 on tho basis of <) per cent In. crca.se is 50,;of,o. Tho appropriation for 1905 is $17(?,S-',5.{I9S. leaving a deficit. for 1905 of $1 1.310.93S. Tho estimated revenue for 1906 is $170,590,515, estimated exp< nditures, $ls3,7 IS,195, estimated ('elicit $13.157,95 0. The current appropriation by congress for t lie free delivery service ffir'tho current year is $20,81 1,000, and the estimate of tho appropriation needed for the snnie purpose durin* the next fiscal year is $20,S22,'J?JO. Birthplace of Noosevclt leased. Tlie house at So. 28 Ha si Twelfth street, New York city, in \vli li President Roosevelt was l:o;n, lias been leased by a republican campaign club. The latter was organized only recently. but has a membership of moro than 160. lit 1.1 N Kill \R DAY >.T I AIK. World's Imposition Officials Honor lllind. Deaf and Dumb Young V\ oni.in. Helen Keller clay, named in honor of Miss Helen A lama Keller, r>f Alabama, who, born deaf, dumb and blind, lias acquired national fame througn her educational success, and J ho only person in whoso honor tho Louisiana Purchase Exposition Company has do tdgnated a special day, was celebrated at. tho world's fair ground Tuesday with cxerclses participated In l>y prominent educators of th<? doaf. dumb ant! blind from all parts of the United SlaLea. HRL DbSfKOYS CO IION WAPHimiM Building nnri Tour Hundred Botes Reduced to Ashes in Porr\, Tui R. I<. Marchman's iron ware' on. o at Perry. G?., was burned Sunday afternoon about 3 o'clock. Origin of tiro <u nnlfn.m.. fnt ,a uiinukitii. i iicrt: whs in" naii'h nr cotton burned, with nliout $15,000 insurance on cotton. Tlio loss on the building Is $1,800. Mr. Marchnuui was doing busi' v ;; on Mio .same lot when his warehouse and .'500 bales of cotton were burned Janurary 15, 1003. IXtCUTt All Til/ 1)1 (>t M R VTf S. Novel Proposition Discussed at Meeting o' Notionrl Prison Congress. At Wodnosday'a iionaioii <;f the X : tloual Prison congress, at Qiilncy. Hi. an animated discussion was m.j!" when I)r. Henry Ha'cli, of Quiney, i vooated tho 1/iflletlng of 'ho death i alty on degenerates a a m< mi -- o. preventing tho spread of degeneracy. i i : 1 " MnHMWMMWWMmMHBMmiCOMMMMnHBMVJH LYNCHERS TRAILED DOWN Six White Men in South Carolina Arrested and Jailed on Charge of Murdering Negro. A Columbia, S. C., dispatch nays: | Four months ago Kitl Bookurd, a no gro, was lynched at Eutawville, IJcrke !y county. The man was so brutally butchered in cold blood and without provocation that Governor 1 Icy ward j recognized it as a case in which a test) of the law could best bo made. When the local authorities failed to discover the perpetrators, tho governor employed two Pinkerton men and these, j under tho direction of an oflicer of the , agency, have been engaged for throe I months with tho result that on Mon, day J. II. Palmer, S. A. Eadon. Pink Martin, It. Martin and A. Puuler were arrested and placed in tho peniten; tiary at Columbia for safe keeping, tho 13erkely jail being insecuro. Three days ago a young man implicated in tbe killing, witness for the Male, was brought in aud is also con t fined. Warrants were at once issued for six men, all who participated in . the lynching of Bookavd. Tuesday night the solicitor telegraphed the governor he could not sol 1 loeal autlioritiesKTAOIN ETAOIriiw local deputies to undertake to serve tno warrants. The governor had four men sent from Charleston and stout! ready to send a company of soldiers if there was resistance. Five of the six men were taken Wed nesday and the others will probably j he captured. Iiookard was taken from the guard house in Eutawville, lied hand and i'cet, stabbed to death, his I body mutilated and then sunk in t;ie river. The town marshal is one <i those implicated. WILL NOI MOVF AS INCH. j Southern Rood Mokes tniphatic Answer to Atlanta freight Bureau. The ultimatum, of tho railroads ic | tho city o? Atluntu and the Atlantu I Freight bureau was presented Wednes (lay afternoon by J. S. H. Thompson i general agent of the Southern railway, during the session <;f the special com| mil too in the following declaration: "The Southeru ralhvay does not in i teiut going in'o a discussion of 1 lio j freight rate question with either this | or any other committee of the general council. So far as Nelson si roi l is concerned we were trying merely to I move our freight depot a quarter or a | mile nearer the cltv. If council pro ! poses to put into the i;rant any such ! conditions ns is proposed by the A'. Ilanla freight bureau, I toll you right ' now that the Southern railway will not move an inch and will remain | where it is now." | The ultimatum of the railroads did not disturb the equanimity of the mem bora of thf> committee and it served ( only to increase the zeal of tne luis-.j ness men and strengthen their state, nients. . xii%j iiiv vtciiib v, a.> (innuii'u liy i ir business men ami manufacturers of for the purpose of showing the mem hers of the committee the discrimiua ' Hons against Atlanta in favor of other ; cities. They Rave the members of the com mi!tee 10ft or more specific cas<.s oi | discrimination on various kinds oi good a. Rliir.lliu crttc t 11 pr nmi mmi tinivni > i\vj ui ?/ ? ^ r?iv%jr i? Prominent (ieorqia Merchant and Farmer Meets With financial finbarrassment. ('hailcs Br'ghnm, a merchant. an*l planter *?f BurU county. CI .v., lias file 1 with the clerk of the United Hiate.v court, at AuRiista petition in o.rnl. ntptcy and the nchedulc show.-; thai ' it fill,. l\f til/, liiooi.1 /?... . ll>~. 1... over boon in the loenl oo::rts. The total liabilities are Riven as 77, HO."*, j and the total assets as $. >.2 5 7.07. Of ' the liabilities $ 1 ;<.081 are securd1, an<i the remainder, $2f,,.11.1.?">!?. an- i'rpo enred. The petitioner com hi< fed <oii! try stores at CMrard and Stanley. both viuufcus in nun;' . Til'! Mi- ran . xtensivc farms in both Hurke ami Screven counties. On tin* list of creditors, firms and merchants of uvcry city in 1 Mm vicinity and ninny northern citicj ar'o represented. i Suicide Prevented. j The startling announcement that a preventive of suicide had been discovered will interest many. A run ' down system, 01 despondency invariably precede suicide and something has be< 11 found that will prevent that condition which makes suicide likely. At me nrsi mougiit or self destruction, take Electric Hitters. It being a ureal l tonic and nervine, will strengthen the nerves and build up the system. It's also a great Stomach, Liver and Kidney regulator. Only GOc. Satisfaction guaranteed by Pickenv Drug Co. ( ASF GOiS IU tiKiiifK COURT. I Jemison Habeas Corpus Affair nt Macon to Bo Passed Lpou, At a meeting of I lie city council of Macon, fJa., a report was roa<i from | City Attorney Wlmberley statins that . tiie famous Henry Jcmison case woul.i be-carried directly to tho .supreme court, coming as it does under the provision for linlmna mrmu ...KJ-u permits the in tn Lo carried to the ?upremo court without casing'Through the court of appeals. GOVF.RNOR IfRRFIl.'S I0TA1 VOfF. Ritllot* Ca?t by Georgians for C hief executive Were 67,703 in NumberGovernor Terrell, of Georgia, recoived 07.70"". voles in the reeent stnto election. These are known to bo the iigures, airno\iKii no oflieirl consolidation of the governor's votj was nmdo public along with the ?ote of other stnte house officials. Tiiu reason for II.to lo ll.nl ..~ii ? - *? v...o .o mm, i in > un- mi me governor is sent under separate t?ealnd cover a<luros?ctl lo the president of the sonato. > ? < r % * COLOMBIANS T" MAKETHREATS' Schedule an Attack cn Panama. On Seceisnn Anniversary, 1 r ADMINISTRATION UNEASY > \ Another Battalion of Marine Will Re will be commended by l.'viitonaut Col- , onel Thomas N. Wood. The exact . number of men in this n -w battalion . has not boon decided on, lmt 11 proba- bly will be of about the saui" .-;ize as j tho battalion now on ?ne is! unl. whkth | is to be brought home ami dispersed , unions the marine birr: ' wv c Sent to Isthmus to ReiLVw One t Nov/ Stationed The C? I fl f A Washington special s iv.j: Amerlv can marines will bo retained on tlie t I isthmus of Panama for ihe present, prepared to meet any emergency r which may arise us ihr wmhIi ?f c disgruntled eh nr ts in the now re- 1 public. This delusion was reached ! | Thursday and orders have been issued < for a new battalion of mr.rines to t?o 1 to the island, about November 15, to relieve the battalion whleh has been there for a year. The ? w battalion i northern pari of the I r.it? states. i That the situation on she isthmus i? ] | still not nil that could bo desired ia , I the news which came to Washington ; , I Thursday in a personal letter from an j oflicial now in Panama. While the Pan- 1 , ama government is entirely loyal, it seems that there are certain disgruntled elements on the isthmus, and in view of th<> ease with which revoln- I Hons are started in Central and South ! America, it is the official opinion in. I | Washington tlir* tne marines should j remain there for tli?? present. It is hoped that the mission of Secrotary Taft will have a far-reaching of| feet in bringing ail elements on the | isthmus Into harmonious ncmrrl with Ill is government's policy. Colombian?! Concentrating. There is a rumor current in Colon that a largo hotly of armed Colombians has boon con.'or>,rato 1 near Culcbra with the intention of making an at- j tuck there on November A. the first anI | nlversary of the kaccssiun of Panama j from Colombia. Tl<r < nral zone au i ' ? i i i" ii < ; v l t i) t I * i i I I ; . ] ? \ r. drill in fro:il -.f t' ?> jiranil wu.rt, folIiUVimI with 1* "? : \ ' an xiut'isi; rai'cs. It is tho inif.uiosi o, t!??* North (ioor-i.i Fair \ks'vi:u i:m l<> hold a f.ilr fin N'i;illy at Ohickainau^a. BOTH ARMIfS ?lli) BY FOG. Thursday's Disp.itch.'s from Scat of \V?ir Only lolri ol Quietude. Thursday's dispatches from the Fai East state tint with the eonairy on volopod in Illicit fog and the roads tn wrotehed condition, activity is. for th?' tim^ being. Impossible for the Japan , cso or Russian army south of Mukden ' Thorn have been several brisk sklrm j ishfK .in;! some surpriseft of a minor ! character, hut tlit* lifting of the fog must proiodo any notable conflict of i the histilo forces. No official repo'n from ihe commander at I'or; Arthur' later than October 10 has reached SI Petersburg. ' JIM HI I MAN SlfKS M1N1SIKV. ( I , I Slayer of f>on/rtle?> Makes Applic ?tion l? Join the Metlir>dist f.onlerence. .lamoB H. Tillman, the former iic.i j| tenant governor of So th Carolina who, while i'l office, killed Kdlwr N. t (}. Gonzales, in Columbia, lias decided ' to enter the Methodist ministry, nti.' | haa written a prominent divine in | Roanoke, Va., tol!in^r <1 im thnt lie li.ij applied to the Methodist oonforeiici I for admission. BRITISH CONSUL GOES 10 THf RfSCUT. 1 idword's Representative at Jacksonville i Aids His Shipwrecked Countryman. TiritIsh Vice Consul budlow loft | lachsonvillo, Fin., Thursday for Hobe j sound to arrange transportation and rollof for remaining members of tho crow of tho Hrillsh aehooner Melrose, which went to tlu bottom with four of tho crew and two passengers during j tho recent storm. J , I 1 RAINS BAR HOSTILITIES. aps and Russians T king Temporary Rest From Go y W irk Owing to the Elements. A St. Petersburg special says: For lie moment heavy rains and washed oads have compelled a suspension of j perations In Manchuria. Thero was i ittle lighting Wednesday and none j vhatever Wednesday uight. The flash of enthusiasm over tho j apture of Jjono Tree hill and Shakhe, ' ho repulse of the atiacha of the Jap | ineso left and the hard drubbing given | lencral Yamada, with the capture ol' 1 ourteen additional guns has given vay to a calmer and sober appratsenent of the partial successes. Tho heavy rains and consequent bad oads have made military operations ! m either sldn extromclv difficult if jot Impossible. The interruption, ac- j :ording to latest advices, ir, being util- j zod by botli Russian and Japanese .omman.iers in making now dispo.si- ; ions of forces, and now objective i joints are likely to develop when ac- i iVrt i .? ? v v>tM luiii/iin aiu 1UOUUICU. Tho enforced cessaion of operations jy tho bad woather, if the Japanese jft'onslvo had really exhausted itself, , jives both armies a ehanee to breathe md pull themselves together and would seem to insure as much bene- , fit to one sido as to the other for practical purposes. When operations re- ; commence they will assume an entire- i ly now phase, with now dispositions *nd objectives. Last week's battlo i lias ended, and it goes Into history as i i Russian defeat. Win n operations | sire resumed a new battle will begin. A Tokio dispatch states tbat. tlie Japaneso government will seek to make representations to St. Petersburg through the American einbaw>y ; against the alleged use of Chinese uniforms by Russian troops, iu violation i of the usages of war. Piwcln io .1. inoiuuiiiK nit- urgaiuzaiion of the second Mauchurian army, and General Grippenherg, who will supplant General Kuropatkiti, is actively at work organizing the forces which j ho will take to tin; Far IOast. He does j not underestimate h.s task. On the contrary, he says that Russia will re ! quire 000,000 fresh troops in Manchu- ] rla in order to make headway against I the Japanese. In his letter appointing Grippenherg, | tne czar wrote: "The intense energy with which Japan is? conducting the war. and the stubbornness and high warlike qualities displayed by the Japanese, impei me to make considerable additions to the strength of my forces at the front in order to attain a decisive success * within the shortest possible time." ' nnni . m...... ?-- - ruuL IN IIIL IOILS. Ilcn Brumby Arrested in St. Louis for Attempting to Pass I orged (.hecks. Benjamin H. Brumby, of Marietta, Ga., pool ehami)ion of tho soutn, and a ; contestant in the tournament being held in St. Louis for the world's chain- pionship, was arrested Wednesday night charged with having attempted to MISS a forcfijl rhr?r lr fnr the National Hank of Commerce, Tues- ; day afternoon. When searched at polico headquarters private checks ot the DoKorost Wireless Telegraph Company, lined out to aggregate $3,000, and purport ing to ho signed by Abraham White, 1 president, were found in nis pocket. Ho admitted having stolen the blank cheeks with llie inuniion of passing! them on the Commonwealth Company. Urumby prosonted the check for f."i20 to I'aying Teller .MetJirk at tin jank Tuesday, and when Met) irk ioubted the signature of T. S. llonderon & Co., brokers on the chock, !niml)V rrontofi pnnalilnMi>iA I *.*A? IH" . lent by making a clash through the doors o? i ho bank and escaping. When his room was searched later skeleton keys and a bull's eye lantern wero found. Brumby admitted having served two years in the Jefferson City penitentiary for a hotel sneak job at j the l.aclede hotel, in 1 SOS, and later serving n term in San Francisco. Brumby stated that ho owned his downfall to gambling. I Cholera Infantum. This disease has lost its torrors since Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and l)inrrhoea Remedy came into ir^neral ; use. Tho uniform success whir at tends tho use of this remody in ill cases of bowel complaints in children has mado il a favorite wherever Ita ; value has become known. For sal? by j Pickens Drug Store, Karlo's Drug Store, T N. Hunter, Liberty. tf j THIS JARRtD Ttlt CAROLINIANS. \cgro WaH Smtiqqicd Into Slipper Room By Party From Connecticut. The visit of Governor Chamberlain, >f Connecticut, with his staff and his sscort, tho Governor's Foot Guard, has created a sensation because at Greensboro, N. C., it became known to th> residents that some of the men In tho ,>aity had, without tho knowledge or ionsent of the hotel proprietors, taken i negro with them to supper. Up to | ho time of this discovery there had | seen preftt e.hoering for the visitors. SIX I IVES f AM N BY HAMfS. Holocaust in Brooklyn tenement Supposed Work of I ire-Buns. Six lives weer lost, nearly a score of persons wero injured and the loss ot more than a hundred thousand dollars were endangered in an early morning tenement hoimo fire in the Williamsburg section in Brooklyn, N. Y., Mon day. With one exception all the dead are children, and of eight who were | bo badly hurt that they wore removed to a hospital, tho oldest is a fourteenyear-old girl. Incendiaries are thought been responsible for tho fatal lire. The Cause of Many Sudden Deaths* rhere Is a disease prevailing fn Ihfe:, country most dangerous because so deeep?? I j 111 II Esj|prX\\ l've* Many suddciv rVvl iy,-l deaths aie caused by it ? heart disease, tv/mI .^7^)z^-s Dncumonia. hoar* V\y"J H' T\ failure or apoplexy ' uyjl vT^^l r are ?"en l^c itesote '/v\^Vri kidt,cy dirveaso. '* 1 I vl rh' kidney trouble is zV^"~ir?> i \ \S i" 1 lowed to advance th? Fv*-?: VI "^?\ Itl 1r-'i ~ kidrcy -poisoned ji ~ ~~* blood will attack the ?J?S^ vital organs or the kidney ; themselves break down and waste, av/ay coll by ccll. tsmuuer troubles most always result from' a derangement of the kidneys and a cure ij obtained cj-iicki^t by a proper treatment of the kidneys. If you are feeling badly you can make 110 mistake by taking Dr. Kilmer's Swamp?Root, the great kidney, iivtr ard bladder remedy. It corrects inability to hold urine and scalding pain in passing it, and overcomes that unpleasant necessity of being compelled t<> , go often during the day, and to get up many times during the night. The nild and th? extraordinary effect of Swamp-Root is soon reali"id. It stands the highest fcr its won? clcrfI cures of th-i inost distressing eases. Sv/ainp-Root is pleasant to take and sold, by a!i druggists in fifty-cent and one-dollar tolls all about it, both Homo?rswiTmp-nost. sent free by mail. Address Dr. Kilrr.cr & O.. n;~~v M v M.i.fMju.wu, m. i. y/nsn v/rmng mention reading this generous offer i:i litis paper. Don't make any mistake, but remember the name. Swamp-Root, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root, and the address, Binghamton, N. Y., on every bottie. KEtiROI.S IN RIOT AT A CIRCUS. iilick Employes o> No >,son's Circus Mix Wiili ( iilarnit Cilui'nt nt P.r..n.u,.ri A regular riot raged In Brunswtclt Monday night at the Robinson circus grounds between negroes connected with the circus and local negroes. Fifteen or twenty shots were fired and it is believed that several wer? ii iiM M.I The circus negroes fought with spike hammers, and it is stated that several local negroes were knocft( d to the ground. Police officers soon arrived ami wore compelled to ftre several shots before thoy could entirely quiet the trouble. Two or three of the participants have been captured and placed in jail. Bad blood had existed between the ctrcas and local negroes since the arrival of the circus Sunday morning, when in a fight the circus chief of police was almost killed by a Brunswick negro. 1 ? *4 Get Your Money's Worth. You Ret your money's worth whom you buy Elliott's Emulsified Oil Liiniment. A full half pint bottle costs but 25 cents, and you get your money back if not satisfied with results. Use It in your family and on your stock, fou'll not bo disappointed. tf COLLEGE RIMOVAI CAR KILO 10 COL H T. Injunction to Prevent Athinto Securing I oc.ition o) Institution. Atlanta's chances of securing tlx* li i tc Presbyterian University havo boon end ing<-rod by an injunction to prevent the removal of the Southwest v.-i n r I '-*si>y ion;!n i niversuy from Clarksvillc to Atlanta granted by Chancellor Stout. If those fighting the movement tn consolidate the two branches in Atlanta, are able to delay the removal for a year or so by keeping tho matter in the courts, then the chances are that the university will never be secured by Atlanta. Puts an End to it All. A grievous wail nfHmiw a u result, of unbearable pain from overtaxed organs. Dizziness, backache. Diver Complaint, and Constipation. Hut thanks to Dr. King's New Dlfe Hills, they put an end to it all. They arc jjcntle, but thorough. Try them. Only 25c. Guaranteed by Piekena Drug Co. tf C9L0KED DIVINt PaSSLS A WAV. Bishop Clinton, ol the A. M. F. (bi.?-ch. Dies Alter Fifty Years ol Service. J 4u)p Isoni C. Clinton, of tho Afrtc:i) 'thodlst Kpiscopnl church, die! Wmh lay at Lain a: 8. C., agoi 74 yoar.i. He had 1 r SO year* in the ministry, hav; hed when a slave before tho civil .v., . Hl? ju riSfllCtion ? xtoililn.l nv? Florida and Western North Carolina. I And nothing better for liver rangement and constipation thsui Chamberlain's Stomach a?d IMver Tablets.?L. F. Andrews, Pes Moines, jowa. For sain by Pickens X>rug Co. A $!>0,000 Bla/e in PadMcak. The harness and saddle manufacturing establishment of E. Rohko;>ff A* Co., at Padueah, Ky., was burned Wed> ncsday morning. The loan is $&Q,0<X\ partly eovcred by insurance. Tk* Arc is thought to be of incendiary Rin. Jra Harris Named to Succeed ttadie. President Houset'elt has appointed Ira Harris ns supervising inspector of the steamboat Inspection aervico of tho second district of New York, la piaco of Ilobort S. Itodle, removed. ? ?i, jg Si nm. n n r [m mi*. nrr-n I SCOTT'S EMULSION ?trvt? m '/ t > car:y the w?jakentd aw3 ^ < i . i system along until It can fincS ? 4 firm siiiip ?Mn ordinary food. ( /4 m 1 !->r five rArnplo. ? Jfl : ' '/ HOW NIC, Chcmlsti. /$& Ncm "<V' ' ^ ' ^ 'fly1