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i-V EH PILGRIMS LOSE TO NAPS In First Came of Series on Home Grounds1, DETROIT NEARING LEAD Won a Game Yesterday While Phila delphia Lost Boston Fastens Hold on the Second Place from , . .'. the Bottom, Boston, Kept." 21. The Pilgrims lost the first of the series with the Cleve land team ''it the Huntington avenue grounds yesterday, the tally being 4 to 1 in favor of the Naps. Cleveland played an exceptionally clean game, making no errors and a total of 11 hits, while Bos ton was charged with two errors and , made live hits. - ,, Yeyjrday'a. American League Garnet. i At Boston, Cleveland 4.. Boston 1. . At Philadelphia, St. Louis 4, Phila 4 dclphia h i , , - At .New York, Detroit 1, New York 0. At- Washington (first game) Chicago .2, Washington 1;- (second game) Chicago 13, .Washington C. . ' Amerfcan League Standing. " i ,. Won Lost Pet. Philadelphia ,..,.,.,80 53 .602 .Detroit. ....... .....82 .55 .51)0 .Chicago '. ,..,...,,83 . . m .. .589 Cleveland 79 HO ,508 New York ,...M 71 .474 fct, Louis ......59 78 .431 Boston ...58, 81 .418 Washington ...44 01 .320 Doves Did Not Play. Chicago, Sept. 21. The game sehed uled between the Dotcs and the Cubs at the National leatrue arounds Tester day was. called oil just before time to play because of rain. This will probably necessitate a aountc-neauer today. Tester day's National League Games. At Pittsburg, Pittsburg 2, Brooklyn 1 At Cincinnati, New York 6, Cincin nail 3. At St. Louis, Philadelphia 8, St. Louis 3. ' National League Standing. Won Lost Pet. Chleasv w. ... v ...... 08 ' 39 .7 1 J Pittsburg ......83 54 .608 New York 79 59 ' ..572 "Philadelphia'.. 74 59 .53(1 "Brooklyn ........ ....63 ,75 .456 ' Cincinnati 56 81 .409 ' Boston" ........52 82 ,3M "'St-'touta :.-."..".41 : ' 07 .297 if " EARLE'S AFFINITY " . ;i QUITS BETHLEHEM. Cnrious Excursionists prive Mis Kutt ' ner 16 Leave For' New York. Bethlehem,) N. ' II... Sept. 21. The I familf .fMtilCAttner, Artist Earle's ; 'affinity," have, departed from their sum f mer place in Bethlehem for their home f in New York, Earle Jiaviug left for the ; iiietropolis last night. To friends they stated their intention of returning next 'summer. The two Kuttner brothers, their younger sister and the young woman cousin of the" family appeared in the best of spirit. . , 5 ,Mis Kuttner arid her mother drove ouiotly to Bethlenem .Tunctlon, there to tage the New lork tram. It is understood that the family left a little earlier than intended, owin to the presence of hundred of exeur , sionists In town. These have visited the ground at the homo . since arriv ing a day or two ago, and the curious inspection proved annoying to -Mrs. ivuttner. CHICAGO KINDERGARTEN TEACHER SLAIN IN BED Mrt. Lillian White Grant Found Choked to Death. Chicago, 111., Sept. 21. Mrs. Lillinn White tirant, a kindergarten teacher in the Chicago public schools, was found murdered in bed yesterday in her home at 5520 Madison avenue. The room showed signs of a struggle, and around the woman s throat was a tightly twist ed piece of linen, with which she had wen choked to ueatli. Mrs. Grant's pocketbook, rifled of its contents, was found, later in the day, in the office of a physician,' fifty feet distant from the house in which' she lived. The police are looking for a negro who did chovses , around the neighbor hood. v ." FOOTBALL SEASON BEGINS. First Of The College Games Will Ee Played Today.. The gridiron season in the east open today with ganiea as follows: -. Carlisle vs. Albright, at Carlisle. . Williams vs. WiUintn, William town. -' " . ; , Pennsylvania vs. Altoona Athletic club, at Altoona. ' , ' . V Bueknell vs. Mansfield Normal, nt LewMnirg. FOURTEEN MINERS KILLED. A Cage Falls from the Top to the Bot tom of a Shaft. Marquette, Mich., Sept. 21-A- cage filled with men, while being lowered into a mine at Negnunee, Mieh,.-yesterday, fell to the bottom of the tdiaft and four teen men were killed and a number In jured. . Floor Varnish 'v to giro nut infliction must wltjistnnd the trend and euff 14 hum 11 11 feet. The Ronton VartiUh Com puny Imvo studied this question nnd the roult is a floor FluNh Hint WILL stntnl the scuff snd rulis nnd (fiind of the lenlhei olc nnd the wrnpes, dcut. and scratches ol llio steel studded hwl. , , ., ' It's Kynnize Floor Finish V- . P.eynoMs & jPon, Agents. ) ' Blood Humors ' Affect the whole system and - cause most diseases and ailments. ', .- 1 Eliminate , tberu jby. .taking Hood's SarsaRarilla ' U 6r tablets. 100 Ixjset On Io$a4 f j ;f BL; Aj SUNDERLIN, , A " :U Is a Well-Known Driver Throughout - This Section. ' ; - ' . ; E. A. Sunderliu, who accord I g to a news despatch publish in The Times on Wednesday, was seriously hurt and per haps fatally at Steubenville, Ohio, is well known in iiarre, where lie uas anv- en many horses in tb,a past. Several years ago. lie had enarge ot Ned Bailey's horses and used to driven Susan" and "E, h. lvnott" and other horses. Since leaving here he has fovged rapidly to the front as a driver, until he held the reins over Angus Pointer, called the fastest race horse in the world, lie had charge of Whitney's string of horses at Lebanon. Ilia many friends in this city hope that his accident will not prove as serious as expected. sunderlin lias neen in tno employ ot George E. Whitnev of Enfield, N. II., for four years, and hm success has been such as tr""command attention from turfmen the country over, having to date won more races this season than any driver out racing, some 37 firsts in all. His biggest surprise of the year was at Syracuse, when he headed the sum mary of the pacing stake with Jennie W. in fast time over some of the best pac ers in that class. Again last Monday he repeated with .lennie W. at Columbus in the 2:07 class for $3,000 over Kruger, Ailcen Wilson, etc., and the time of the inital heat was 2:04', '2. iSunderlm Was born 111 Chateaugay, N. Y., and is 40 years old. lie began train ing and driving horses when 18. In the eighties he migrated to Vermont and followed the two-lap rings through this state with indifferent success. till 1890, when he engaged with J. E. Bailey of Montpelier, and prosperity began coming his way, as among the horses he raced and marked in the next three seasons were Johnny Knott, 2:11, The Govcrv ness, 2:18U. ' Fifteen years ago Sunderhn was seri ously injured in a race at White River Junction, and for many years after he was obliged to wear around his hotly a harness to support his spine. In that accident he hovered between life and death for more than a week. - ... TOM JOHNSON IS - BEATING BURTON Indications are That The Congressman . Has Tackled Job That Is Too Big For Hira. Washington, Sept. 21. Washington is giving no end of attention to the municipal battle royal in Cleveland, in which Representative Theodore E. Bur ton is trying to defeat Tom L. Johnson for mayor. This contest has drawn the attention of politicians here from the very ontset, and will undoubtedly do so until its close, since national politics of large importance, at k'ast to one party and possibly, to both, hangs upon the results. The more the contest i studied the stranger and less explain able eome phases of it appear. Why Representative Burton was led into this content is something hia best friends say they cannot understand. It is beyond question that many of his warmest admirers advised him not to go into it, but he disregarded their ad vice. It has leen believed here from the outset that Burton would have an uphill fight to defeat Johnson, and tne most recent advices on the situation indicate this is true. In fact, the pros pects for Burton's defeat at this tape of the campaign are such that political friends of his from Cleveland who have been in WashngtAn this week say he will be beaten, and the chances are de cidedly with Johnon. lr. Burton, Mho never was a mas ter hand at politiee, apepars to have been used for the purpose of pulling out of the fire the chestnuts of the traction interest in Cleveland. This is what friends of his who advised him to keep out of the mayoralty say. WOMAN TORTURED . UNTIL SHE DIED. Then Leader in Faith Undertook to Bring Her Back Again to ' Life. Chicago, III., Sept. 21. Five persons, members of tue Sect of Parhamitcs, are under arrest in Zion City, accused of tor turing to dcalu Mr. Letitia f Sreeubaugh, 64 years old, to show their belief in the religion they profess. . Those under arrest are Walter and Jennie Green lia ugh,' tfie son and daugh ter of "the woman j Harold Mitchell, Mrs. Harold Mitchell and a Mrs. Smith. All of theni are accused of manslaughter. Mrs. tireenbaugh had leen for 20 years sutlerlng from paralysis and rheuma tism, The Parhamitcs believe in diabolical possession of the body by evil spirits. The condition of Mrs. Creehbnugh con vinced those under arrest that she must bo possessed of the devil, and they un dertook to exenisa the evil spirit. The arms of Mrs. (ireenbaugh, stiffened by rheumatism, . were jerked and twisted, Rnd her neck was twisted until, she shrieked . wjth pain. The five worked over, the 'victim until she 'died. ' . After that, according to ( Ireenbaugh, Mis. Smith became the lender in a ''resurrection ieene" in an attempt to restore the, woman to life. DELAYS WEDDING TO LOOK UP GROOM. Connecticut Widow Investigates Stories About the .Mao She Was to I , Wed. Williniiuitif, ft., Sept. 21. Pending the report of a committee of friends who have undertaken to investigate certain atones that have reached her ears within the past few days, Mrs. Adeline Mason, a comely voting widow of this place, has recalled temporarily the invitations which she hud sent out for her wedding to William" Clemens today. Clemens, who, it. is said, asserts that he is a cousin of Murk Twain, lives in North Woodstock. Yt., and to facilitate their inquiries the members of the rom inittee have left here for that town, f .The yong widow refuse to divulge the nature ol" the talcs which prompted her determination to at least postpone her Wedding and, with the exception of afew (dose friends 'of the young Woman, the town is still in ignorance of the 'charges which 'reached: her". These few friends, it is said, carried the stories to Mrs- Mason. ' - 7 ; "l ".' . CANNERS WANT . . AlORIbTIME Declare the New Pure Food Law Confiscatory r- NEW CONSULS INSTRUCTED By State Department Great Interest in the Lake to the Gulf Waterway Peonage in North Carolina 1 , Is Decreasing. Washington, D. C, Sept. 21. Canners of foodstuffs wee heard Thursday by the board of fomlaniij. drug inspection against the regulaflorifor the enforces ment of the food and drug act, which provides that the rules in regard to la bels shall go into effect after Oct. 1 next. The regulation requires that af ter that date the principal label used on any package or , can sha" state, the substaneo of the package and the. name of plaeo of manufacture. ;This regula tion has been exttiujed from time to time, and canners now want a further extension, canners represented at the hearing asserting that they had half a million dollars' worth of labels on hand which will be worthless if the regula tion becomes,, effective at this time. These concerns declared the law to le confiscatory. The board will submit its recommendations to the secretary of ag riculture. ' Training the New Consuls. In a miniature consular office in the state department, modelled after those 6f the United States" in ,-foreign coun tries, candidates who passed the last ex amination to establish an eligible list from which to fill vacancies in that ser vice are receiving instruction as to their new duties. - Establishment -of this con sular school is another, step, by the de partment to make its consuls active business agents, useful to the govern ment and the country. Formerly an appointee was given tnirty days's leave under pay in which to prepare to go to his post. By the new procedure this thir ty days will lie spent here, under in struction which will enable him to take up his work, familiar, at least, with the manner in which the work of a con sular ollice should be conducted. Interest in Lakes to Gulf Waterway. According to John Barrett, director of the bureau of American republics, the people of the middle west are manifest ing great enthusiasm over the posfibil ities that the Panama canal, with a navigaMe waterway from the hikes to the gulf, would open to them. Mr. liar rett, who hs just returned from that region, says that even in rural communi ties the people are alive to these possi bilities, and they will demand from their representatives in the next Congress some action toward obtaining this out let for their products. "It is these peo ple." said Mr. Barrett, "who make the material that the people of Latin-America want. The greatest demand, ,for in stance, is for machinery. The middle west manufacture greater amount of farm machinery than any other section of the world. The bulk of this is now sent to the Atlantic seaboard, and from there shipped to South America.' The buyers pav more for it, and the produc ers make less profit than if it were sent direct and the long and expensive hauls were avoided. ' MYSTERY IN GIRL'S DEATH IN HOME OF MILLIONAIRE. Beautiful Artist's Body Found in Board- ed-Up New York Mansion. New York, Sept. 21. That Mrs. Mar guerite Carter, mysteriously shot dead at millionaire John J. White, Jr.'s East Fiftv-Seventh street home early yester dav, was a suicide the coroner's officers say there is no doubt. . The shooting occurred aitout 4 a. in. White sum moned a physician, who found the Wo man dead. The house was boarded up for the summer, but White had slept there, as he did lrequentiv. His wife arrived from Bar Harbor just as Mrs. Carter's body was leing ear ried away. The investigation shows that Mrs. Carter occupied a magnificently furnished Twenty-Sixth street studio, where White otten visited her. I lis wife, one of the New York Hoff man, was deeply interested in educa tional and chkntable work. Of Mi. Car ter, less is known. She is said to havt been young end beautiful. She had nu merous acquaintances, too, in theatrical circles. .' White seems to have sent for her on Thursday "night to come to the house, where ho was on. the verge of a break down from heavy drinking and nervous ness. She killed herself in a front room of the houso while L. ( Iceland, a mas seur, was caring for White in the. hit ter's apartment. White expected his jfclfV'rionia soOh, but did not look for, her i yesterday. There was a painful scene m her ar rival, 1 TIRED OF HUSBAND. And So Mrs. Keroyshi Gave Him a Dose " of Arsenic. i Philadelphia, pa., Sept, 21.Because Frank Keroyshi, aged 40 years, refused to obey his wife's order to leave her, sho poisoned him with arsenic, accord ing to otHcials of the coroner's ollice. The widow, together with her sister's husband, Joseph Dur'rock, were arrested Thursday, charged with the crime. ' hen the woman came to this coun try from Poland hist December, both her husband and lurrock were in prison sej-ving a sentence of 10 months for lar ceny. She went to friends and after ward conceived the idea, the police say,, that she would be happier with Dtirrock than she could bo with her husband. 1 After the men were released froih prison, the trio went to live together. The wife commanded the husband . to leave, but he refused, She ollcred him sp.-tO if he would go, but still he declined. Finally, the, officials, of the coroner's olfico, say, thn wiftr was Seen to put something in n clriitk of vhinkcy which her husband drank. KdOyshi became III, told bis friends that vhis wife had threatened to poison binr, and died in three days; "" -r... A city chemist found epough, arsenic in his viscera to H)i :tov'a.,' t EZRA AND PS-CART GQT ,3000 1;15S ;Tp, PRESIDENT Meeker, Rich Farmer of . 76, Amaierf : ' 1 -.1 it . . ' i ' !: i Broadway; .Wants President Roose- ' l-l ;' ': 1 i -"" - - .v- k velt to Preserve the Oregon Trail. i Qyster Bay, N.' Y., Sept. '21. Ezra Meeker and his, oxcart are on their way here today. i-Jzra is coming to see the president, if ho can, and to tell him, if he saw him, that "it would be a mighty good thing, I'm tellin' ye, for you, Mr. President, to have the government fire serve the old trail 'cross the country." It is not probable that tzra Will see Mr. Roosevelt, except, perchance, from alar. ' All Broad wav gaped in Wonder- and curiosity when Meeker's "prairie schoon er," drawn by two slowly moving oxen and preceded by an aged man with a flowing white beard, completed its jour ney of 18 months across. the continent by marching the length of that: street to'$outh Ferry in New York. . Seldom have the denizens of the great White Way' witnerssed sudi a unique and picturesque sight as ww presented lijj' the old wagon looking hfiich like a ghost of forme days, as it passed between the rows of tall buildings and surrounded on every side by whiwlng autoniobilcs.' and all of the evidences of modern civilisa tion. ::: " . The nroeress of the prairie schooner throughout the length of the street was heralded by. a crowd of hoys ami men, many of whom had doubtless never be fore eCn a yoke of oxen, and on every block it passed business Mopped tem porarily, and crowd lined the hide- walks.-, s ... Meeker for the past j-ear and a half has been traversing the old Oregon trail from Puyalhtp, Wash. He is a man of wealth and 70 years old. The last time he rod the Oregou trail was in 18."), when as a young man ho migrated to the west from hia home in .Ohio, His purpose in making the trip to the east is to arouse public sentiment in favor of a bill, which he will have introduced in Congress at its next ses sion, to build a permanent concrete romi along the route of the Oregon trail, in commemoration of the pioneers who con stituted the advance guard of civiliza tion to the west and who traversed the trail, LIPT0N ON WAY TO CONSULT ON RACE Will Use Best Endeavors to Have the . New Rules of the New York Yacht Club Govern.'. ' Iondon, Eng., Sept. 21.Sir Thomas Upton sailexl from Liverpool Thursday for New York on the liner Baltic. When he arrives be will have a consultation with the 'Officials of the New York Yacht club regarding his challnga for a race for the America's mp and the conditions under which it will be sailed. Sir Thomas hojs than an agreement will lie made to race under the new rules of the club, and that the "freak" type will not bo insisted upon in the boat that is to meet the fourth Shamrock. Members o the Royal Irish Yacht club deplore ti reported dissension in the New York Yacht club as to Wether America should rc Sir Thoujas ' Lip ton's challenger with a freak or a real boat." It, is !,id that'll the members of the New YorfiTclub favor a racing ma chine have their way there will lie no race. Apart from the question of raeing. Sir Thomas declares that the New York Yacht club should not fores British chal lengers to Wild boat to compete with American freaks which are not yachts in the real sense. Irish yachtsmen con tend that so long as America races with freaks she wil "almost necessarily retain the en p. They agree with Sir Thomas' opinon of the Americans as sportsmen, and believe that in the end the New Yorkers . will favor an American boat built on the lines of the New York Yacht club rules, , ARRANGING FOR A -'''; ; , NEW CONFERENCE Peace Delegates Propose That the Next Meeting Be Left in the Hands of the Powers. : The llnsue. Sent. 21. All the heads of the various delegations present at the international peace conference met Thursday morning under the presidency of M. N'elidoff of Russia, and unani mously adopted the following resolution in repnrjj to the convening of future conferences: "The conference recommends to the powers the convocation of a third con ference within a period similar to that which elapsed between the tormer con fereiices, leaving the exact date to be fixed 111 common accord oy th powers. The conference calls the attention of the powers .to' the necessity of having the work of the eonleretico prepared a sulti cient time before, its meeting so that its deliberations mav be tken with the indispensablo authority and rapidity. "To attain this object, tmj conference think it very desirable that about two years before the probable date of con vocation a preparatory committee to be entrusted by the? governments with the collection of the different propositions to be submitted to the conference, snd the gathering of matters susceptible of being embodied 111 International regula tious, and that the committee prepare a program ma about which the govern ments will agree early enough to have it earnestly studied in each country The conference recommends that this commit tee ,1e also entrusted to propose a system of organization and procedure for tho conference." ' ' Tlib resolution will lx submitted for approval to the plenary sesion to be held today. , . FREED ON ONE CHARGE. Immediately, Put on Trial on Another , -: Accused of Assault. .-' IWfon. Sent. 20. -Lorenzo' I). Per kins, ex-deputy muster of the house of pnri'pei ion. after a xcnsat ioual trial, was found not guilty today of brutally a- - - - . I - 1 . , T..- SUUIMllg 1. lA'WIS IjHIlg U piisonci. j er- tin. ia now ot! trial eliarired with as saulting Edward ( F. Kane, another prisoner. KIKGSFOtarS OSWEGO Silver Gloss Starch For M ywiT flip I"-! fnr nil VlntU of mnrrjilnir. ilMy b. I.oilr.l In 8nirii,l tin,') gr H-l with rold wut'-r l.iitrlriK lio ImiIIIiipi. 1'alfT lOTf WTr,'vt rr-RllllB. !' lift UVtwt fnr All Ittl- fu in:-, tUlit wmU, Kin, tUs. All gr(K:r;, T. HirlGSFORI) A 80N, 0(H. V. ' nauosL 7akch Company, luccsnors. nil i EVERY KIND OF EHTERTAIIiLlEfIT PROVIDED - : THE State Fair Commission, undci whose management the first annual ertnont WaW i'air is to De held, has inau2urated a most liberal policy a policy that assures to the public the ereatest fair in an respects that has ever taken place in Northern New En-land. The grounds are ideal, tbe accommodations commo dious, the exhibits the largest, the entertainment the best. Nothing has been left undone. 1 he public win be surprised delighted. Come and bring the whole family. MAMMOTH GRANDSTANDS WITH ROW OF COMMODIOUS BOXES 10 IDEAL RAGE TRACKS FOR TROTTING O AUTOMOBILE; RACES mm fa MM 1 LSI ' AUCTION SALE OF LIVE STOCK ON THE LAST DAY OF THE FAIR ; This is a novel feature and sure to interest all lovers of blooded stock that attend. The last day of the fair will be found as intercstinz as the second day and the first day will be interestine, too! THE PLACE THE DATE WM te R TUESDAY WEDNESDAY i THURSDAY I flW RATF wi" c e'vcn rom rai'roa tt'on on tQc several divisions of the Boston and Maine and LUIl nftlCO tjjC ccntra Vertnont railroads as well as on the Woodstpck railroad. The new State fair railroad from White River Junction to thr grounds will handle the largest crowds. 1 THE FAIR that a PRESIDENT WILL CAMP. OUT. Mr. Roosevelt to Hunt Deer and Wild cats in Louisiana Swamps. Oyster Hay, Sept, 21. Far from the wene of official routine and free for a little from the details attendant upon the multitudious resjxdvsibilitie asso ciated with the office of chief executive, President Roosevelt will enjoy f seven teen days in camp. This is to be tne nearest approach to a genuine vacation that th president has allowed himself. Though nominally on his vacation at Oyster Day, this summer, there have w-en but lew hours in men oinciai business of some sort has not intruded. A physical and mental recreation, as complete as his cares will permit, is now arranged. Presideut Uoowxelt will pitch his camp in the northeat-tem cor ner of Louisiana, on or about Oct. 5. The esact sxt is yet to lie determined. The plan provide for a camping trip," but everyone who. know north eastern Louisiana known that the cane brakes shelter gaino worthy of a hunts man of presidential caliber. Tho-o wH will have the good fortune to make pleasant the president's camp expect that the monotony of camp life will oc casionally be broken by a hunt. Wiiilo'the details of tie trip have not been thoroughly worked out, the main features were announced by Sec retary Ixdi yesterday. "The president will leave Oyster J!av for Washington . . U" 1 ..' , . .... . 1 t li...... . tne.xt icfineuny, anu on me louowingj Sunday will start on his western and sc.uHirm speech making tour. . At Memphis, Tenti., on Oct. 4, the sj eechniaking programme will be in terrupted and the lre.iuent will start for th camping grounds, lie will break camp )ct. 21, going directly to Vicks LurjT, Mis., to make his pro'inifcd epeech there. Th return t Vanhing ton will, immediately after, le begun rnd the White House- will be reached in the afternoon of Uct. 23. 1,020,600 SETTLERS ON LAND ; " ', . ARE NEEDED IN 3 STATES Places Also Open for 341,845 Men, Wo en and Children. , Washington. I). 0., Sept. 21. In a re port of the work of the division of infor mation of the bureuu of immigration, made to Secretary Straus of the depart ment of commerce and labor, Chief T. V. Powderly points out that, reports from governors of state and other offi cials hIiow that 2Sfl,4(H) men, women and children can be employed at from $3 per week to $.1.50 per days fropi individ ual employers, report show places ex ist for 1 ,:).) aliens at $1.25 to $U per day; from commissioners of labor and state lwiards of agriculture places exist for 84,130 men at If 1 8 a month to $i per day. Commissioners of agriculture in three states say that l,02rt,i00 settlers on land ar needed, and Chief Powderly is now seeking more exact information a to kind of work, house rent, and the like, lie lias named Insjmetor Philip 1,'owen to take charge of the work of the di vision In New York. Agents 'with olliec in several large centre.-! are 'recommended and also agents to'. travel on Chipboard, and adviwi' im .migrants. where to go.' i . ..-: 0 4i,,jM4tti ( L i f i '. ' . V ; M- .. 1 '. "-. " ' i -f '.IN'' pREMiuMS-$5,aaa.co for trotting. : J Handsome Slyer CUps'in Uorss Department. More money and 'more Valuable Prats than at'any previous .Vermont fair. '. , . SOME OF THE FEATURES ; ; Spirited Racing Every- Afternoon United States Exhifctt Morgan Horses ' No Premium to be Given this. Exhibit. - 'I Thrilling Obstacle Aatompfcile Races ; V ' Big Aqaaritfm Vermont, Fish ' College Football Games - Charles Taylor, J 02 Years Exhibition Drive Horseback Riders' Toarnameat Novel Sheep Driving Contest Apdale's Bears, Dogs and Monkeys . Norwich University Cadets in Manoet vers The Crcat Nelson in High Wire Acts DeRenzo and LaDae on Revolving Pole and Many Other Thrilling Acts iver function So 11 o is SURE to ELEVATE FARMING BRYAN TO ADAMT : : HE'S A CANDIDATE Nebraskan Roused to Action By The Growing Boom of Lewis Stuy vesant Chanler. Washington, Kept. 21. William J. Bryan, fearful of tbe ground idipping from under his feet, has at last de t rinined to come out without further ' de lay and announce his willingness to aj.ain become the candidate of the Dem ocratic party. The Nebraskan haa been roused to action by the growth in the outh of the movement in favor of lewis Stuyve-iant Chanler, lieutenant governor of New York. Mr. Brj'an in the very near future will take the public into his confidence 'H all questions which are to Itecome issues in the. next campaign, and in a statement will dUcne the tariff, tru.-ts, railroad, federal and state power, and other questions of vital interest. He u likely to lie silent for the jress ent, however, on the question of gov ernment ownership, on which his party i.i not altogether ready to share his view. Before he gives his fctatcment'to the world Mr. Bryan will submit it to a party conference, which is to be held at an early dale in either Omaha or Chi cago. Further delay i not considered wiae by Jlr. Bryan, who is anxious to know exactly where he stands with the party, 60 that he may get ready for what promise to bo th hardest light in many years. Hit friends who have been turning up here this week, ai-o alreadv busy with their plans and it U eaid that the Nebraskan will be asked to again had the Democracy. Jt is the. firm be lief of these, friends that Jlr. Bryuil can gain a victory next year for 'the Irty. ONE SEAMAN KILLED. . Fell Through Hatchway on Battleship ' New Jersey. Boston. Kept. 21. The battleship New Jersey arrived hero yesterday afternoon bringing tho Isidy of an ordinary sea man, Charles Prank Gehrig of New" York, who was killed Thursday night by fall ing through the hatchway on the upper deck. The transfer of "the laxly and six sick men to the hospital started the rumor of an explosion, but this is de nied. ROOT GETTING READY. Secretary in Washington Preparing for - Mexican Trip. Washington, 1). C, Sept. 21. (secre tary of State Boot is expected to return to Washington today. He will remain hero only long enough to conclude ar rangements for his Mexican trip. He will leave here on Sept. 23. Assistant Secretary Bacon will return before Mr. Boot leaves here. 'he-Newest JOT and B o f I . - '- - FOR THE LTITUDE ! OBJ TO ALL CRIMINALS. Attorney General Bonaparte Would Apply Capital Punishment Chicago, Sept. 21. Attorney Reneral Bonaparte, in an addres yesterday be fore the National Pripon Warden's as sociation, demanded the death penalty as a punishment for habitual criminals. Obedience to the law be declared to be the primary purpose of punishment. Mo defined at length the relation of criminals to society. "Js'ie primary pur pt;.se of punishment,- he said, is to assuro tliedience to the law. When inflicting punishment the state looks not to tho past but to the future, not to the indi vidual who has disobeyed and now uf ftrs, but to all the individuals who ma hireafter fear t disobey by reason of his sufferings. "We have developed a class of men who pass a very large part of their r" adult years in one after another prison, using their intervals of liberty only to devise and perpetrate new crimes," he f.id: "The habitual criminal, it must be remembered, is a product of modern c'vilizntion. Our ancestors would hava hanged him for his first felony or if by any chance he escaped this fate ho would have almost surely have died of some of the maladies then prevalent in prisons while awaiting trial for the sec ond. I would not have men hanged to day for a trilling theft but I would have modern society cease to nourish and shelter its proved and inveterate enemies. "JSome yearn since I suggested that an attempt, to commit a capital erim ought to be made . itself capital and that when the man has been already thrice .convicted of major, crimes upon bis conviction of his fourth offence of the like grades he should 'lie liable to the dcatlr penalty. I -have seen no reason to repent of these, suggestions." CH0ATE OPTIMISTIC. Says Peace Conference Sowed Some Good Seed. Washington, D. C.,; fU-pt. . 2t. The state department yesterday received dispatch from Mr. Choatethe head of the American delegation to The Hague, indicating that the conference will close on Oct. :. Although not all that Mr. Choate had hoped for was accomplished, he expresses the belief that the seed, was planted which will produce fruit in the future, and that, on tho whole, the caus of international peace has been ad vanced. YELLOW FEVER IN CUBA. Three New Cases Reported Yesterday in Santa Clara District. Havana, Sept. 21. Three pew case of yellow fover are reported in th Santa Clara Province, ami the spread of the malady is causing great alarm. Two of the cases are so-called immune. The doctors are beginning to doubt tiis theory the disease cannot be contract ed twice. The old Ayer'a Hair Vigor was good, no question about that. But your own doc tor, the one you have great confidence in, will tell you that Aver'i liair Viiror. new Improved formula, is far better. The one freatspeciflcforfallinghairanddandruff. Of ail our mariratliini. Imlf ui.