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r^IBASTORIA :h„_. .. giijiijlil B For Infants and Children. : |^§BjHl The Kind You Have fej^,f^^^l 1 Always Bought AVegctablePreparationforAs- m . ■ •-'■•--.- ■ v similatingtheTcpdandßegula- 8 _ , # ling the Stomachs anlßovrels of m "RgSXS th.B M 1 —•—— ■ I Signature //h w Promotes I)igesHon,Cheerful- fi ■'■" /w UP ficss andßest.Contains neither ill n-P Wa< M%w ; Opium, Morphine nor Mineral. p UK #l\*\ lT KotNahcotic. ffl • . AXll HaxpeofOtd-JIrSAMUELPimSER p _ ft \ar\ ALx.Smna * \ \J& m fiotAelUSal*- I *Wf^M A fij. /hue JlcmE ♦ I iS A flh • " » 1 ffi fi-ppirmint - > h§ II ' I fl I Mg§ JHCaianakSoim,* I 'II II ' 111 ' " [farm See- . I |*» 11, v^^ fa 11 H£>fcrj7/w* FTarw. I || tfVa f ' 91 sr\ Si Apcrfeclßemedy for Cons 9 a iP 0.11 Hon,SourStomach.Diarrhoea, ill 14/ Worms .Convulsions .Feverish- lit If Eft ft* £1 lifts* ness and Loss OF SLEEP, ji \J? fQ | (J V 6 } "Facsimile Signature of ' Hl'-v"-'' —. . _'_ &&&zs&x S Thirtu Vp stq J J^^'y QHK; __I Thirty Years Ja\'\\»v.,.,.,>.^ ■ '•..'••■■ t™ "■'• ,y . THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY. V.'-V. I IRK 1011 HI OVEMHER CORN SHORTS ARE SOW HUSTLING FOR THE GOODS 1 31. PHILLIPS' LITTLE COKNEE I enr High Price Mark of 51 Cents j ■- Recorded on the Chicago ...Board, of Trade Yesterday. fc CHICAGO, Nov. Frantic efforts are ing made' -by;„ shorts caught in- the; hillips'. corner to swamp. him with grain ■ . the last day of the option. It is said i bo the purpose to force a reinspection ' this week's receipts which have been aded No. 3, one grade too low to pass 1 contract, ..,_., "There- 'will be big deliveries Friday,** id Charles Sloane, manager for Coun lman & Co., "and lots of corn, will be inspected and pass No. 2. At., a time \.e this when there is a corner, the in lector.s are scared and to be on the -fe side they grade No. 3 if there is any lestio.u about it at all, knowing that c supervising inspectors will go over it id give the right grade.", "They won't get a car of it graded up," id PhJlljps, when he was told of the w tactics of the shorts. "When there a corner on there is always a big de and . for inspection, but it nevei nounts to anything." "On account of the corn corner we are •tting about double the applications for. -inspection that we get normally," said —.—,bert 3. Jones, chief inspector. Four nes cut of five, certainly three times it of four, the supervising inspectors •hold the previous inspection." Vnother plan contemplates the purchase d shipment to Chicago of corn Which is sold by the elevators in Buffalo d Montreal, when they went out of the ai in October. NEW PRICE RECORD. Tifty-one cents marked up on the board lay was a new high price in the No mber deal. Phillips came into the pit rly and listed the price at 4Sc, where it ened. Between 50c and 51c he unloaded ,000 bushels, his total sales for the day ing 240,000 bushels. As he is selling m bought at 3Gc, his day's transac ns netted him a profit better than ,000. Other days this week are said have been equally profitable to him. day's close was 50c. Big foreigners, 10 it is said chiefly constitute the short . crest, are still hanging on' stubbornly. evictions are freely made that the last y of the leal will see November corn oted at 55c. 'This deal differed from others," said •. Phillips today, "in that I have han. m 3 it entirely myself. All the buying 3 selling have been done above hand 3 I have hired no brokers to hood nk the market. I have all along own who was short and how much sy were short. They also know how ich corn 1 have." lie contract corn in Chicago is about »,000 bushels. The inspection sheet lay was again a disappointment to the its, showing only 8,000 bushels trans- red from private to public, elevators. ly 57 out of 926 cars arriving today re No. 2 and only 130,000 bushels of ltract corn No. 2 . were added to the al In Chicago. Coal Fleet Active. CINCINNATI, Nov. 27.-The first boats the sent inn of coal from Pittsburg J ''■■ to arrive today. They are the light ss that left on the first slight rise. SIMPLE SLEEGH FREE 40.00 PORTLAND CUTTER FOR $16.70. i* fste SEND US 97c **4x- t - — fIJM/tf 1 »nd mention this V:) ?Y&-i\ sdv. and we will send >:■•" f/-'=i--Jrf-rf£a:ll youthi.new rs'tFrn. JEW? V*><*^sSSf/ up-to-date PORT \Jr mm^.U.y LAWD CUTTER L*>*^^*LJ>&s£i&tßr ' byireijfht c. O. D- subject to examina /V^^'h'SL tion. Yon can exam ./ s\ \NT\ yJ\t^ *ne I* Rt your freight rjl^ iTi\ vT%Vi H*- - depot, and if found t>iir», Ht N- I "I perfectly satisfactory '^*«*™as»s«W§^s** end the CREAT rCUTTER BARGAIN you ever sew, pay •reia.i* agent or your banker OUR GREAT nCA'N PRICE $16.70 less the 97c sent the order or $15778 and tlie- freight charges end ratter is yours. S PUTTED '« full size, and the very latest style. 10 i ICn BODY is large and- roomy, high I, back and roomy seat. Bracket front and exten ding ■!i-h. >OD WORK is selected. Cutter stock well M and plugged. IRON WORK all steel as an-", clipped knees. Trimmings are serviceable-. »r clo:h, well onholete red and removable when in use. PAINTING. t All nicely painted and lied. ' ding shifting bar for shaft*, ,_ « sleigh, is furnished with shafts, and floor carpet date. 1 SPECIAL OFFER: feft^WSTMS *» interest a special exertion on their SLEIGHS lllser-d FREE one of the above CUTTERB y perron sending cash with the order for SIX re. You can make big money selling these NPLE winter* ORDER ONE- FOR fillAßniiTTT these Cutters to be the latest UUAnMniCC model and design. All orders £• shipped direct from Minneapolis. Where JH accompanies order we will refund money If | r is not rennd as represented. Order at ones, .hey are all gone. Esmomber price. $ 1 6.70 CONCEIIN 18 THOROUGHLY RELIABLE—EniTOS. ' ~\ Roberts' Supply House, Minneapolis Minn* They will be followed in a. few days by" the great fleets from.Pittsburg and the Kanawha, which will bring down nearly 20,000,000 bushels. SULLIVAN'S BURIAL. IMPRESSIVE SERVICES AT THE POSER'S FUNERAL. LONDON, Nov. 27.—With all the pomp arid circumstances which might' have at tended the obsequies of a member, of the royal family, the remains of Sir. Arthur Sullivan, who died here Thursday last, were interred in St. Paul's cathedral to day. , Long before the hour fixed for the serv ice, in the chapel royal, immense crowds assembled in the vicinity of the late resi dence, of the deceased at. St.. James palace, while every point of vantage' around St.' Paul's was { taken up ; hours .prior to the arrival of the cortege. ..... The coffin ='was- embedded in magnifi- ; cent floral tributes sent from.- far .and ■ near in. such numbers that they rilled' four hearses. "'"* The whole service was most impressive and the anthems were especially mourn ful. The audience displayed deep emotion as the strains of ' the anthem, ' "Yea' Though I Walk," from Sullivan's "Light of the • World," resounded through the sacred edifice. ..-;-•• . •■ The preliminary service ended, the procession reformed and proceeded to St. Paul's cathedral, along Pall Mall, the Thames embankment and Ludgate hill Large crowds gathered and the men took off their hats as the hearse passed. After the mourners, who had come from the chapel royal were seated, the dean commenced the service. Sir John Stainer led the choir in singing another selection from "The Light of the World." Archdeacon Sinclair read the latter part of the service and then the coffin was lowered into the crypt, the silence being only broken by the sobbing 0 a few women. The benediction was given by the dean and then occurred what has never before been heard in St. Pauls. Fifty women all dressed in the deepest black and the same number of men, gathered near the coffin, arose from their knees. They were the chorus of the Savoy theater In quavering, trembling tones they coml menced to sing Sullivan's "Brother Thou Art Gone Before Us." A great hush fell on the crowds that had started to leave the building. Gathering courage, the women s voices swelled out until every thl"« ne th VaSt catheJral re-echoed this sad requiem from those who had so Soir ST ft® Hshter lyrics of the com poser they then mourned. As this died away the organ took up the majestic strains of the dead march from "Saul" the choir, clergy and mourners filed out and one of the most impressive national funerals held in England came to an The vault containing the remains of Sir Arthur Sullivan, is situated in the ex treme eastern corner of the crypt, close writer ? mZ °f Dr- B ° yce ' the famous SSKS* V rCh, music of the las t cen t 7' £,^ r I by lie the remains of Sir John Millais, the president of the Royal academy, who died In 1896. HAD TOO MANY $10 BILLS. Prisoners Suspected of Robbing Can adian Hunk at Xapanee. DETROIT, Mich., Nov, 27-James last sk- is^a-sr j-** »-S" hinrf them ' foUnd in their pc ssession $300 in Canadian 510 notes that did i;™ appear to be valld Today i 8 was ascer tained that the notes are a dttV nf $10,000 issue of the Dommlon P bank ' o a f Toronto, which was stolen from the bank branch at Napanee, when it wasSS sen ro ti°Th Ily no r? ol^^ nUmber of montns Led hT hlCh Were stolen w^e signed, but not countersigned. The prisoners claim to have come by the money honestly. - v * me Both prisoners waived extradition and OnSrio a^ FOSS the r,Ver to Windsor, Ontario, by Canadian officers. This af ternoon they pleaded not guilty on the charge of parsing forged money. CHINAMEN IN JAIL. ' Federal Authorities Active in San. pressing Unlawful Immigration PHATTSBURG.N. V., Nov 27 Th. four Chinamen arrested at 7e~Sun* day night charged with having unlaw fully entered the United States were Placed in the Malone jail today ' F C famots^CMnlll^' Who conducted' the lamous Chinese" restaurant at Malone was arraigned before Commissioner uoSi today pleaded not guilty and was nut under. *500 bonds which he furnished and returned to Malone. He will be tSa here during the first week in December The cases against the two Chinamen who were arrested Sunday at KeeSS c o^ Y '' W(ile started here this afternoon and adjourned until the week after1 ™™ The government officials are on thetrai of Ben Boyea, who drove the four rhino men from Thelstave, Quebec to Main™ and are confident of gettingV m as well as the man who drove the two Chfnamen | from x-lemingsford, Quebec, to KeeSSle - —: ■ ' Bishop Hale'« Death Expected S SPRINGFIELD, ill., Nov. 27 -i-V' tele gram from Cairo says Rt. Rev.' Charles" R. Hale, hop of Cairo, is worse and he may die any moment. "V. - \ ;".'-' THE ST. PATH, GLOBE, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1900. fill IN MY FEARS ARK EXPRESSED OF A GEN ERAL DUTCH UP RISING 00M PAUL KRUGER IN PARIS Feature of the Venerable Boer Leader's Day Was the Presenta tion of a Sword of Honor for Cronje. LONDON, Nov. '28.—The Daily Mail publishes* this morning the following alarming dispatch from Cape Town: . "The anti-British feeling in Cape Col ony is assuming dangerous proportions owing to false stories spread of British barbarity in Orange River Colony and the Transvaal. Loyalists fear that the Dutch congress next week will be the signal for a rising and they demand that martial law be proclaimed through out the colony. "The situation is declared to be graver than at any previous period during the war." • Referring editorially to its Cape Town advices the Daily Mail adopts a most serious tone asserting that the anti- British movement is accentuated by the withdrawal of troops from Cape Colony and calling for vigorous action by the British government. KRUGER'S BUSY DAY. PARIS, Nov. 27.—Mr. Kruger began a busy day this morning by making an official call. Before 9 o'clock he de parted from the hotel scribe," driving in a landau surrounded by Republican guards and by cycle policemen to visit the Premier M. Waldeck-Rousseau. He was accompanied by Dr. Leyds, Dr. Van Hammell and Delegate Fisher. The party was met at the entrance to the premier's salon, by M. Ulrich, director of the cabinet, who introduced the visitors to the prime minister. The interview took place in M. "Waldeck-Rousseau's pri vate study and lasted ten minutes. At half past eight o'clock the Premier ac companied by M. Ulrich returned the call. The officials of the municipal council of Paris and of the general council of the Seine were received at 10 a. m. by Mr. Kruger in the hotel Scribe. Im mediately after the visitors had departed Mr. Kruger drove to the hotel de ville. He received an ovation from a large crowd massed in the square in front of the edifice. Mr. Kruger was conducted to the debating hall, where he was given the arm chair reserved 'for representa tives of governments.' The municipal councillors and the people in the public galleries loudly cheered the distinguished visitor. Vice President Escudier de livered an eloquent address, saying Paris had given Mr. Kruger a welcome worthy of his noble character and the grandeur of his cause. He also said: FRANCE WANTS ARBITRATION. "You have heard the heart of Paris beat. It is the heart of France.. lit the peoples speak and speak loudly, and arbitration will impose itself, as neces sary satisfaction to justice and civiliza tion." The president of the general council spoke in a similar strain. . Mr. Kruger replied in energetic tones, thanking the speakers for the sentiments expressed.. He said he was deeply grate ful, for the welcome, which was a con tinuation of and. a : crowning of that France had already given him. . Sin^e he landed, the former president added, he lnd been on a rising wave of'acclama tion. He was Very thankful for what had been done and for what they wished to do for .j him a.nd his .people, who were still struggling and were not yet de feated. Their resistance continues and will still continued They will ever struggle for independence, liberty and justice. Continuing, Mr. Kruger said: "Ah! Why cannot they hear your ac clamations? It would redouble their" cour age." .. Mr. Kruger also said he hoped l^ey would yet know them, one day in the future, when they had recovered their independence. He regretted arbitration had been refused and he would never cease to demand it. - • • The Boer leader was then shown through the superbly decorated halls of the hotel de ville. Once he appeared at a window and was enthusiastically cheered. As he drove back to his hotel he was accorded a warm greeting on the road. The president of the municipal council tomorrow will propose in the council a vote in favor of arbitrating the Trans vaal disputes. SWORD FOR GEN. CRONJE. Henri Rochefort, accompanied by a deputation including Deputies Millevoye and Paulin Meria, Senator Provost de Launay and MM. Cope and Lemaitre, to day presented Mr. Kruger with a sword of honor destined for Gen. Cronje, now a prisoner on the Island of St. Helena. M. Rochefort, in handing the sword to Mr. Kruger, spoke of the heroism of the Boers and expressed the hope that "the syndicate of thrones" will some day be overthorwn by a "syndicate of the peo- pie." During the day a thousand students formed in procession in the Latin quar ter, each school preceeded by a banner and the whole headed by a magnificent bouquet of chrysanthemums, tied with ribbons of the French and Transvaal colors and inscribed: "The students .of Paris to President Kruger—for the Fatherland and Right." The students marched across the Seine and were loud ly cheered on their way to the Hotel Scribe. Then President Krager appeared on the balcony and saluted them. This evening Mr. Kruger and Dr. Lydes drove to the foreign office, where they were received by the minister of foreign affairs, M. Delcasse, with whom they had an interview lasting three quarters of an hour. On their departure M. Delcasse conducted Mr. Kruger from the staircase. STUDENTS RIOTOUS. An incident similar to the one * that took place in Marseilles occurred on the arrival of the students procession at the Hotel Scribe. An upper window of the Grand hotel opposite was opened and a handful of small copper and silver coins was thrown down. The students in censed at the insult, wished to attack a shipping office which is on the street level, but the police interfered, pointing out that the shippers had no connection with people above them. Ultimately the shippers were persuaded by the police to close the office in order to avert further incidents. ;v'.i A delegation of four students entered the hotel and presented a bouquet to Mr. Kruger, who, accompanied by them, ap peared on the balcony, arousing great enthusiasm among the students, who now numbered two thousand. A consid erable body of the students stationed themselves below the window from which the money had been thrown, singing anti- English .songs and shouting "down with the English." No uisturbance, however, occurred. ■■-.■'- When the attention of Dr. Leyds wa? called this afternoon to the statement attributed to Mr. Jamuel Pearson, form er commissary general of the Transvaal army, and cabled from New York that Mr. Kruger would probably soon pro ceed to the United States, he replied: "The rumor is without foundation. Mr*. WinslovF's Soothing Syrup Has been used for over FIFTY TEARS by MILLIONS OF MOTHERS for their CHILDREN WHILE TEETHING with PERFECT SUCCESS. It SOOTHES th« CHILD SOFTENS the GUm£ ALLAYS all PAIN. CURES WIND COLIC, and is the best remedy for DIARRHOEA Sold by druggists in every part of the world I?„f!.Y re-« nd 'ak ; for r "Mrs. , Winslow's Soothing Syrup." and take no other kind Twenty-five centa a bottle. s;•-..,..■"* • - Nothing has yet been decided regarding ! .such a move." v . . . I .;'-■>.> -■■...-•'::;.. :—__V;/-i;'. . ' t .:: _; SENTIMENT IN BRITAIN. Parliament Has Many Mo men to an Questions to Face. NEW YORK, Nov. 27.— dispatch to the Tribune from London, "says: The meeting of parliament -nekt'^tveek will not occur too soon. The public is dazed and bewildered, by the contusion which prevails both in South- Africa and China. The trend of events will be clearer when the ministers are in their places to an swer questions and " the " leader writers are provided with cues by 'those behind the scenes. A war costing $?,'SOtXOOO week ! ly is going on and nobody iseems .to know when it is likely to stop;. Every body is in a critical mood, — Lord Rob erts is sharply criticized for a mistaken policy of, leniency; there is an amazing outbreak of invective and abuse directed against Gen. Kitchener; ' there are re- monstrances in Liberal >: joHrrnals r-"-'• and from pro-Boer platforms against the barren policy :of ~burning- farms and starving the burghers in the impoverish ed Dutch territory, and Lord Salisbury is attacked for neglecting ~'?tb inform France and other powers that the two republics have been annexed - and that the Boers are no longer entitled to recog. nition as belligerents, when they are merely rebels, guerrillas and bandits. - When so many games at cross purposes are in progress it is impossible - for the public to know what is going on. The only point on which there is general agreement, in that the French govern ment has maintained a correct attitude during the last week and that the Eng lish people have no reason to complain of the reception to Mr. Kruger. Lord Salisbury has clearly acted with some intelligible motive in :. refraining from altering the status of' the Boers from belligerents to rebels. TO ASSASSINATE BOBS. Conspiracy to Explode a Mine Un- der a. Church Frustrated. - LONDON, Nov. 27.— war office pub lishes the following dispatch from Lord Roberts, dated Johannesburg, Nov. 26: "As reports of a plot against my life will probably reach you, I think you should I know the facts. It is believed there was a plot in existence, and five Italians, four Greeks and one" French man were arrested, Nov. 16, and are now awaiting trial. Their intentions were to explode a mine under St. Mary's church during the morning service at 10 o'clock, Nov. 18." • . : -I-.' Lord Roberts, cabling from Johannes burg, under date of Nov. £6, .reports a number of encounters with-the: Boers at widely separated points, -.lamwhich the British captured some cattle and ; a few prisoners and suffered slight casualties. The most serious affair was an engage ment with the forces of : @en. : Delarey, numbering about 1,000 me% with three guns, who opposed Gen. Clements' march toward Rletfonteln. The Boers, the dis patch says, were completely, dispersed. LORENZO MARQUES, Ndv! ':27.— A de tachment of eighty mounted Portuguese troops, with two guns, crossed the river this morning: to Catembtf: It is re ported that : Gen. Dewet is; in Portu guese territory and in that district. OOM PAUL: EXCITED. . Krager Angry Because Britain Re-.' fuses Arbitration. '■*•; ' I/ONDON, Nov. 28.—The Paris., corre- . spondent of the Daily Maif^ir^s that he had a conversation with.', Kr.ug*er.. yester day and that the ..Boer, statesman "grew excited and vehement when, the reporter., hinted that England would ignore all at tempts to secure arbitration, and would fight any combination' of powers.rather j give up' the republics./-"Mr. Kruger in ' sisted," 'says the ' correspondent,tT "that ; Mr. Chamberlain had signed -The "Hagtie convention and could not withdraw. He said that ' England had earned a ■ just punishment; and-that vif there was a' Gcd she should be punished;"'; 'v j-' ' ; ' The Vienna correspondent 6'f the Daily Chronicle says he hears 'that President Kruger has petitioned the : growers for ar bitration under The. Hague; thai two : powers acceded to his Tequest, but that all the others rejected the petition. GEORGE W. WILSON DEAD HEAD OF THE IXTEKXAL UEVEME BUREAU PASSES AWAY. WASHINGTON, Nov. George W. Wilson, director of internal revenue, died this forenoon In his apartments at the Riggs house, of Bright's « disease, complicated with asthma. He has been dangerously ill for several . days past. There were with him at the time of his death Mrs. Wilson, his daughter, Mrs. Pardonner, and several of his ■associates of the treasury department.' A" The funeral will be at Hamilton, 0.7 on Thanksgiving day. The ' party, : in cluding Mrs. Wilson, Mr&I? Pardonner and Chief Deputy Williams, I will leave, here tomorrow over the C. & O. at 3 p. m., going via Cincinnati to Hamilton, where the interment will take place. Funeral services, conducted under the auspices of Columbia Conimandery No. 2, Knights Templars, of which -Col. Wil son was a member, will be held in the Riggs house at 1 o'clock tomorrow. No formal services will be held at Hamil ton, 0., except at the grave, where the Masonic burial service well be read by officers of the blue lodge at Hamilton. * George Washington Wilson was fifty seven years of age, and a it;:«fce of Ohio. He entered the Union arm,' when eigh teen years old, as a private "in the Fifty fourth Ohio Volunteer infantry.and served through the war, coming out a first lieu tenant. In 1866 he took w> the practice of law, and in 1869 entered the internal revenue service. He served in various capacities, rising from one important po sition to another, when. he became the head of the bureau. Conimssioivr Wil son was regarded as the most thorough ly Informed man on ■• internal revenue subjects who ever entered the govern ment service, and was consulted on all measures affecting the revenues that have been before congress for many years. : . c ■ .. POPE'S HEALTH IS fIOOD RUMORS OF HIS DEATH WHOLLY UXPOBXDED. LONDON, Nov. 27.—The report of tn a death of the pope ' which reached "'New York today, was based on Paris rumors, circulated by a small news agency.- The pontiff was. quite well yesterday, when he received in audience the princess of the Asturias, eldest sister of the king of Spain. The pope, received a liumber of bishops today and presided" c&er-la'-two hours' meeting of the Gongjfeation-' of rites. ■ ifs/* h --."-;';■.■..-■-.' ■■- -<». - ■ -W- __ r^---;;:-;_ STATE SOVEREIGNTY Involved in War Tax Decision by Georgia -Supreme Court. j s - ■ . ATLANTA, Ga., Nov. 27.#T^lsupt cmc court of Georgia - today hernial down a decision affecting not only the-mar stamp tax but involving a question, of state rights. ] The point involve^ wis whether or not a lease contract which did not bear the special stamp required by act of congress is admissible Vast, evidence. The supreme court ruled that congress while it has the right .to* levy/ taxes through a stamp act has not the right to prescribe rules of evidence : for state courts, which would' be conceded ■If a document not bearing a stamp were de nied admission as evidence. ■- ,:-"- --_ The | court in the decision" rendered by Chief Justice Simons, adds that under our. system of -government' the states re tained all powers'of sovereignty which were not granted to the federal govern ment by the constitution. \ SAILORS WERE DROWNED SCHOONER MAU3IEE VALLEY IS WRECKED IN LAKE ERIE. DETROIT, Mich., Nov. 27.—A report reached here tonight from Amherstburg that Capt. F. B. Hackett, of the tug, Home Rule, on his return there from t'n e Point Pelee middle ground in Lake Erie, stated that the schooner,"which had been aground there since Sunday was the Maumee Valley, of Toledo, and owned by Henry Scanlon, of that city. Capt. Hackett is said to have picked up wreck age leading him. to believe that the ill fated vessel was the Maumee Valley. The schooner has disappeared and Capt. Hackett is quoted as saying that he be j lieves the waves dashed the vessel to pieces and that the seven sailors who were lashed to the rigging have been drowned. .What leads marine men to believe that it is the Maumee Valley which is lost, is the fact that she and the schooner Arthur, also of Toledo, left Buffalo on the same day last week, bound for To ledo. hTe schooner Arthur is reported to have arrived safely, while the Mau^ mcc Valley is missing. BOYS WENT SKYWARD. NITRO-GLYCERINE IN A BONFIRE KILLED FOUR. WHEELING, W. Va.. Nov. 271— Leaserville, W. Va., twenty miles above Wheeling on the Ohio river, twenty boys built a fire on the banks of the river and were watching the water rise. Among the debris thrown on the fire was a can partly filled with nitroglycerin. A terrific explosion followed. Three boys were killed and fourteen injured of whom four may die. The dead: Harmer Finley, aged thirteen, son of a poor widow; Willie Da vis, aged nine years; Robert Finley, aged eighteen years. The injured: Harry and Herman Arbogast, Willie Nangle. Wi I Blackburn, Will Cussick, James Johns, Theodore and Alexander Gilchrist and Charles Thomas, Ralp and Thomas Kin ney, Joe Webb, all boys under twenty one years of age. Of these Will Nangel and Will Blackburn may die. As the result o fthe explosion an infant child of Mrs. Dury's died a few minutes after wards. PLOT TO KILL M'KINLEY Alleged in a Communication to Ho- . boken, 3f. J., Police. ' NEW YORK, Nov. 27.—The police of Hoboken, N. J., have received a letter alleging the existence of a plot to as sassinate President McKinley. The writer of the letter gave in his communi cation the name of the alleged chief conspirator which the police refuse to make public at this time. WASHINGTON, Nov. 27.—Chief Wilkie of the secret service, said that the gov ernment had no information whatever on the subject. - SCRANTON, Pa., Nov. 27.— the night of July 1, 1897, two men who were prowling about the house of a promi nent coal operator, just outside the city limits in Dunmore borough, were sur prised by two Dunmore policemen, and one of , the officers, Patrick Keys, was shot and seriously-though not fatally wound ed. The prowlers " escaped. The next morning a dynamite bomb, to which was fastened a leather strip by which it could be hung to a • doorknob or nail on the side of the house, was picked up at the scene of the shooting. . ' ' A year later a letter was received by the, Scran ton police announcing that Jean Guilhot and' Francois Merler, machinists; were under arrest in Montreal on .--us picion of having shot a policeman while attempting to blow up the house of a wealthy coal operator.. -•- . - -The suspects were brought' here. They confessed, • and were sent to the Eastern penitentiary at. Philadelphia last June for five years. Neither was over twenty five i years of age. They had 'been in Scranton only a few months when they committed the crime. They worked as laborers in the mines, but were well ed ucated. ti GOT AWAY WITH $50,000. Seaboard Air Hue Defalcation Is Officially Confirmed. - ATLANTA, Ga., Nov. 27.—A special to ,the Journal. from Portsmouth,-Va., says: "Vice President E. St. John, of the Sea board Air Line stated today that E. D. •Lukenbill, former agent of the Seaboard at Fernandina, Fla., was short in his accounts $50,000." —■ » , OBITUARY. _ NEW YORK,. Nov. 27.-Robert E. A. Dorr, president of the Mail and Express company and publisher of that paper, died at his home in this city today. Death as due to a complication of diseases Mr. Dorr had been in ill health for about six months. ; SOUTH BEND, Ind.r Nov. 27.-David Sleeper, ex-mayor of this city and former member of the Indiana legislature, died nere today, aged seventy years For many i yearS he was a leading Democratic PORTSMOUTH,. N. H., Nov. 27.-For mer Mayor George E. Waller, who was a delegate to the committee that nomi nated Lincoln in 1860, and who was a Lincoln elector from this state, died at his home today in this city BiS T, KE ' Utah ' Nov- 27--Henry W. ■tsigler, who was a member of the Mor mon battalion working at Sutter's mill race in California when the dbcoverj^of gold was made in 1549, is dead at St George, Utah. He was seventy-five years' LEAVENWORTH. Kan.. Nov. 27.-Dr J. T\ . Brock, a noted surgeon, died at his home* He served through the civil war^ith the Sixth Ohio volunteers. SAN JOSE, Nov. 27.-George G. Smith who was surveyor general of Nebraska under res nt Hayes and later' city attorney of Omaha, died here last night for bffiThSti. b,e J Je Cmc to san Jose for his health, about six months ago. BALTIMORE,. Nov. 27.-Paul H Earl sixty.years old, a prominent financier of Birmingham, Ala., who has been under Tow* "l ,? r several months at the m« n ?n I? opkltts hospital, died last night §S»SS 61S «*»«»** at ™re thai Kentucky at, a Standstill. FRANKFORT. Ky., Nov. 27.-The Ken and thri V» at this, point to afk-SSoBS: 2vfn ♦£ reare "° longer fears of flooding even the lower part of the town Wp ports from lumber potato u P the rlv-r EL tha^ * he "PorteS enormous loss of logs and lumber have been exaggerated to some extent. "-asseidiea Damage In West Virginia. ■ PARSONS, W. Va., Nov. 27.-Hteh wa tor has done thousands of dollars of damage, in this country during tte r>a2 thirty-six hours. Water nut SS p«?i fires in the court housf basement am! surrounded the school house compel ling adjournment of court and school Sold Its Sawmill. CHIPPEWA FALLS. Wis., Nov 27- The French Lumbering company, of thto ,>, has disposed ■of ■ its - sawmill Tnrf other property at In?ram Tm" and |er^onfSSS^ h^^^^ ■■11l s****^..-***^*^—-^^^ IM|l|| m Hereford's Acid Phosphate | For Dyspepsia. S§ Strengthens the stomach, assists di gestion, relieves distress and the feel- ! ■ I ing of exhaustion and dizziness. ,\ V Genuine bears name Horsfoxd's on wrapper. .' 1 WARTS AND WEEDS. THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN WISHING AND WORKING. It is popularly believed that warts can be wished away. But the farmer who sat down and tried to clear ! his field by wishing the weeds away would soon find his crops gone. It takes working to get rid of weeds, and the man with the hoe must put in many a long day before he can take a well earned rest. It is a singular fact that a great many people treat certain forms of disease as warts are said to be treated—by wishing. This is especially so in the case of . > ■ ■ : •. ~~ coughs. "I wish this cough didn't bother me so," they say. «I wish my cough didn't keep me awake so much," and so on. It never seems to occur to them that it takes active measures to get rid of a cough ; that a cough is like a weed, growing right along, and the longer it grows the deeper it strikes its roots. If a man heard the alarm of a rattle snake near by he'd jump aside at once to avoid the attack and then seek to find and destroy the dangerous reptile. The cough is a danger alarm as much more significant than the rattle of the snake as the disease it heralds is more dangerous than the snake bite. FEW PEOPLE ARE KIIXED by snake bites each year. Consumption slays its thousands and tens of thousands annually and it is the fatality of con sumption which makes the cough that heralds it a danger signal to be promptly heeded. Don't wish the cough would stop. Stop it! "I had long been a sufferer from chronic catarrh of the head," says Chas. T. Stone, Esq., of. Whitford, Chester Co., Pa. "About last May it developed into a very disagreeable and hacking cough, with soreness and fullness of the chest. Doctors here pronounced it bron chitis. I tried several doctors and took different remedies without receiving any benefit whatever. I then consulted Dr. R. V. Pierce, in reference to my case. The! first bottle' of his ■' Golden Medical Discovery ''Stopped the cough. I used several bottles, with Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy, and have since had no" symp tom of ' a return of the cough." "Last .spring. I had a. severe attack of pneumonia which left me with a very f bad cough, and also left my-lungs in, a very bad condition," writes John M. Russell, Esq., of Brent, Cherokee Nat., Ind. Ter. "I had no appetite and was so weak I could scarcely walk. My breast was all' sore with running sores. I got two bottles of Dr. Pierces Golden Medical Discovery which I believe saved ' my life. I cannot express my gratitude to you. lam able now to do very good work." The surest - way to stop a cough is to use j Dr. i Pierces Golden Medical Dis- Saloon Robbed. FARIBAULT. Minn., Nov. Baum's saloon, on Main street, was broken into and all the change in the till, amounting to about $4, stolen. The thief entered through the cellar door and showed fa miliarity with the premises. The police heard some one in.the building, but they supposed it was the proprietor. Green Bay Gazette Changes Hands. GREEN BAY, Wis., Nov. Walter E. Gardner has sold the Daily Gazette to Junius W. Hill, of Richland Center, who will take possession next week. Mr. Hull is a newspaper man of considerab'e expe rience. He was formerly connected with daily papers at Chippewa Fills and else where. — -Admits He's a Bigamist. ASHLAND, Wis., Nov. Eugene New 2-Knee SAMPSON SLEDS, $10-77. New SHANITE BOBS, $13.77 Per Set. \^^s^ «** R X|i ann7 n b°fil? 17.57 per set. NEW CUTTERS FROW3 *!»•" SI 4.0Q up. Send at once 2 cents and receive our large 9'^xiaw; . s^^ ~ ' •• ,C\ 96 page cutter. Boh, Farm Wagon. Spring Wagon. Phaeton.' Road^^g^^^w^, Cart, Buggy and Carriage Catalogue. It will tell you what y^n^^W-- ■ S?,™. «J?t y 0r y°ur Roods and you trill probably order your goods of us when you receive the catalogue. Send for free Furniture Catalogue. Send also for StovoQttotbgu,: T- M. ROBERTS' SUPPLY HOUSE; Minneapolis, Minn. . -._?£?£3LHs*iS? J?" IHW9TRH. STAGE roB FORTY TEARS and although I am sixty-two Mart old MB to almost perfect health. Time has not sat lightly upon my shoulders and myprofessionone' hateaasesi aTreat strain on its members, both physically and mentally.* From a physical' standpoint lam vounge* than was ten years ago. 1 hen I could neither sleep nor eat well and Indigestion was constantly with me I lost flesh and my nervous condition was very bad. This condition was brought abontbytneßegular Urine th.Tt alraort - member of toellß**"^ profession is subjected ,°- Road **" is both unpleayLt^r^e^>o^heStn!' Biding in sleepers, often sitting up half the night to make a train, eating hurriedly at railroad counter? m Z^^^^l^^^^S &E2ZS&. cooked food served up at hotels in small towns, countedl with the hard and wearing work incidental to the profession, all combine to wreck one's nerves and stomach Such wo« my condition. My nerves were unstrung and at times I thought I had no stomach i™in atoostoonstaS; rlta and was forced *0 diet, limiting myself to the simplest and most easily digested dlshe* La* A^r^3te?hl?fn» Mfiered in this manner for over nine years, I was at Asbury Park. fL changedid notbeneflt'Se»]exrocteff h»ri I,^*ttl^4 l<i^T m attt ck, 0/, nei7 OUS P™»tration. A friend advised me to trVßlnan. Tabul" saWrfe he S? d i. 11SeL tliemandfound o^ch relief. I was very skeptical, not belie-rinsr that they couW^eaßveood afrer? on Z^JaZV***** a*mlne. but I tped them. Much to my surprise I was relieved aHnoe 1 "kfnuVn"tc"take one a day and sometimes two, and within a few weeks was almost well. I gained ta flesKwas able"o sleen milA-l*- X and^SSlSßenS d «d l W d ™\°J* bl* «>' »>mort "^ rt!»h T *«&&. My nervous condiHon^ton'el B^r^T^b^reZv^ ' w"«ber came I felt 5" weJl " 1 ever did- The promptne*. with which keet him «?r r^™™™^^* 111 ?sr- The > tone one » entire astern and not only put one in good condition but -Keep him so. I recommend Bipans to every one, and especially to members of the profession* "°uulon _»»• k« w'iS^s7^it l w«- health that '!"'N-S will not benefit. Send five cents to Hip.* . Chemical Co, S°«^?i ™, fiT^AV Tt°S k ' fori°"PP *"d !,«» testimonials. R-1-PA-N-S. 10 for 6 cent;, .• is pe*kTta for ta^^^n^inr^Plß^ who are willing to sell » standard medicine at a moderate profit? They peia and prolong Ufa. s Owgifwieiiftf. *oteih» word B-l-fANa with* packet. . Accept no•uhiutuui coverv. It cures obstinate . and deep seated I coughs, bronchitis, '.] bleeding of the lungs and other diseases of the organs of "respiration, which if neglected or unskilfully treated find a fatal ter mination in consumption. In hundreds of cases a cure ha? been effected by the use of "Golden Medical Discovery" after all other means and medicines had failed to benefit and doctors had said, "There is no hope." «sre is no hope." UP HOPE. "■■ DON'T GIVE UP HOPE, Let every one who suffers from respir atory and pulmonary diseases cherish hope until Dr. Pierces Golden Medical Discovery has" been given a fair and faithful trial. It always helps. It al most always cures. Ninety-eight per cent, of those who use " Golden Medical Discovery find in it a perfect and per manent cure. Even the two per cent, acknowledge benefit and help from the use of the medicine. "I want to say a word in favor of your grand medi cine," writes Mrs. Priscilla Small, of Leechburg, Arm strong County, Pa. "About three years ago I was taken with a bad cough; fca3 -Sweats.. «pouid take coughing spells and have to sit up In bed at night for an hour at a time. When I would walk up hill I could hardly breathe; would get all stopped up in my throat. I did not try any doctor but I saw the advertisement of Dr. Pierces Golden Medical Discovery and decided to try "it I took three bottles which cured me. When ever people tell me they are sick I say to them, 'Why don't you get Dr. Pierces medicine ? It cured me and will cure others.' " A GREAT FREE OFFER. Persons suffering from chronic forms of disease are invited to consult Dr. Pierce by letter, free. All letters are held as private and their contents guard ed by the samejtrict professional privacy observed by Dr. Pierce in personal con sultations at the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y. Ad dress Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. • This offer is not to be confounded with those offers of "free medical ad-, vice," which are made without any evi dence of medical qualification or profes sional standing. For more than thirty years Dr. Pierce, as chief consulting physician to the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, of Buffalo, N. V., as sisted by his medical staff of nearly a score of physicians, has treated and cured many thousands of men and women who had been given up by friends and physicians as incurable. Dr. Pierces success has been founded on the fact that he cures so-called "in curables." There are thousands of men and women to-day, living in the enjoy ment of perfect health, who bless the day when they wrote the first letter to Dr. Pierce. Who can wonder that these people are enthusiastic over Dr. Pierces, medicines and advice? Write to Dr. Pierce. It may be to you as it has been to many others—the first step to health. ' Dr. Pierces Golden Medical Discovery contains no alcohol and is entirely free from opium, cocaine and all other nar cotics. It is a true bodybuilding, flesh forming, strength-giving medicine.. __. Sometimes a dealer tempted by the little more profit paid by less meritori ous preparations, attempts to sell a sub- j stitute .medicine 'as., "just as good." as Dr. Pierces. The only way in which to get the cure - you seek is to insist upon. the medicine which cured others, Dr. Pierces Golden Medical Discovery. * A GOLD MINE FOR 21 CENTS. :;. ! Who wouldn't jump at such a chance? Yet "wisdom is better than gold," and that mine of wisdom, Dr. Pierces Com mon Sense Medical Adviser, 1008 large pages (in paper-covers), is sent free on receipt of 21 one-cent stamps to pay expense of mailing only. For the cloth bound volume send 31 stamps. Address Dr. R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. Monteroy, the man rested a few days ago for bigamy, today confessed his gu it in the municipal court, upon being con fronted with his first wife, who was Mis 3 Lydia Adams, of Bay C.ty. He was bound over under $1,000 bonds. Mcßride Wants Heavy Dnnagex. ■MITCHELL. S. , D.. Nov. 27.-The trial °* X- H- Mcßride's suit against forty citizens of Mitchell was begun today. Mc- Bride asks $25,000 damages for the de struction of his printing office nearly five years ago. . Asphyxiated by Coal Gri«. WAUKON, 10., Nov. 27— Ephriam, a merchant in this city, and his wife were overcome by coal gas in their homo today. Both are unconscious, but may recover. 7