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, ..... - , " 0 "X The L' Arise Seritinel. CEO. C JACKIAJT, UIIh m4 FmblMMft L'ANSE, - - MICniQAN. HEWS OF ft WEEK TERSELY OUTLINED A. SUMMAET OF THE MOST IM POBTANT EVENTS AT HOME AND ABBOAD. TOLD IN CONDENSED FORM Compltte Review of Happening!' of Greatest Interest from All Parts of the Globe The Latest Foreign Information. . CONGRESSIONAL NEWS. ' The senate took a position In accord with the president and the house of representatives by declaring for a lock canal across the Isthmus of Panama. ' With practical unanimity the house adopted the substitute amendment for the Beverldge amendment to the agri cultural appropriation bill relating to meat inspection,, the objectionable fea ture of former amendments being eliminated and the amendment perfect ed to meet the wishes of the president The iicw inspection bill will author ize an annual appropriation of $3,000, 000 to pay the cost of Inspection. The court review provision will not be con tained in the measure. The words "In . the Judgment of the secretary of agri culture" will not be Inserted. Opposition to the meat inspection . bill in Its prosent form developed in t the senate when Senator Proctor called up the agricultural bill, lie took occasion to object strongly to the payment of the cost of inspection by the government and the failure to require the date to be stamped on the labels. Ho was supported by Senator Beverldge. The president sent iq the senate the nominations of Herbert H. D. Pelrce, now third assistant secretary of state, to be envoy extraordinary and minis ter plenipotentiary to Norway, and Huntington Wilson, of Illinois, to suc ceed Mr. Pelrce as third assistant Bee retary of state. The senate passed a bill granting a pension of $50 a month to Gen. Ed ward 8. Bragg, of Wisconsin. The house passed the bill approprl atlng $25,000 to defray president's traveling expenses during the year. The measure providing for popular election of senators was defeated In the house. A bill passed by the house compels common carriers engaged In Inter state commerce to check baggage to Its destination on transportation of fered, whether in the form of what is known as "spilt tickets" or a regular form of ticket on one line and a mtlo age or other ticket on another line, to the destination of the baggage. The house concurred In the senate amendments to the bill authorizing the city of St. Louis to build a bridge across the Mississippi river. MISCELLANEOUS. William Jennings Bryen at Trondh jem to witness the corona' )c n of King Haakon VII., practical' outlined bis platform for 1908. He sad: "The next election .will decide wh'htr America is to swallow the trusts or the trusts b wallow America. My petition Is that ' n private monopoly Is liuctentilblo and Intolerable. That was In the Demo cratic platform in l'JOO, a plmllar plank was incorporated in th rlutform of 1934, and It lc the only unable poul- tlon." The Wisconsin supremo court sus tained the Inheritance tax law. It Im poses a tax upon every transfer of property, real or personal, lying wlth Q In the Jurisdiction of the state made ' cither by will of the Interstate laws of the state or .In contemplation of the death of the owner and to take effect after his death. The Wisconsin supremo court set aside the decision of thi . lower court which entered a Judgmerl of $10,000 against each ol four rallroids for al leged Incorrect reporting of gross earn Ings as charged by. Ratlrond Commls aloner Thomas. In an opinion handed down by the Illinois supreme court it is held that municipal officers have the discretion ary powers which they may use In granting or refusing a saloon license unless expressly restricted by the lan ! amaze of the ordinance. The Saginaw team withdrew from the Interstate Baseball league. The team will play Independent ball. . Tuberculosis of the lungs and pneu monia were the leading causes of death In the united states, according to a special report on mortality in 1904, Is sued by the census bureau. Two years at hard labor in the state penitentiary at Waupun was the sen . tence meted out to James P. Nolan, who was Democratic candidate for sec retary of state of Wisconsin In 1904. He was accused of embezzling $300. The Farmers' State bank of Clear field, la., was closed by the state bank examiner. Mrs. Carl Bode, wife of a railroad en gineer, was shot and killed at Sallda, Col., by Mrs. Harold Hutchinson, wife of a switchman. Jealousy was the cause of the murder. Lloyd Emerson, 12 years old, of Pop lar Grove, N. 7., who has been vlsit ' Ing his grandmother near Mason City, ' la., wu drowned while bathing. -. Oscv Stevens, a wealthy mine own er and cattleman of Montana, died at Denver, CoL, of diabetes, aged 67 years, lie waa born In Montrose, Pa. The Massachusetts house of repre sentatives voted to expel Representa tlve Frank J. Gethro, of Boston, Demo crat, thua upholding the report of the connnltiee on rules. . Five frame buildings, two residences and three store rooms, were burned at Gladstone. 111. Los. $4,000. The Republicans of the Sixth Mis souri district nominated William C. Atkeson, of Butler for congress by ac clamation. A LUlclde pact between Mrs. -Mary Behrens, a widow, and Edward Uan eer, who had a wife and five children, resulted In the death of both, and of Peter Behrens, the 12-year-old son of Mrs. Bf hrens, at Brooklyn. Judge Marcus W. Acheson, of the Unit! States district court for the third federal district, comprising Penn sylvonla, New Jersey and Delaware, died suddenly of heart disease In Pitts burg. William Cullen Dennis, of Indiana, has bnen' appointed assistant solicitor to the department of state. Circuit Attorney Soger, of St Louis, has dismissed the charge of bribery against T. E. Albright, former member of the St Louis house of delegates. who was acquitted at Macon after the trial on a charge of perjury. , Fraternal btneflclary associations conducted for the mutual benefit of members, According to a decision of the Nebraska supremo court are not charitable Institutions, act their prop erty and funds are not exempt from taxation. - With a ceremonial moclfled from the. old Norse forms to meet the modern democratic spirit of the country, King Haakon VII. and Queen Maud In the old Trondhjem cathedra- were anoint ed, blessed and given Noi'oy's crowns. The Illinois supreme cou;t granted a rehearing In the case involving the constitutionality of the juvenile court act of a year ao. The drrjslon which Is to be reviewed held the principal provisions of the act to be unconstitu tional. The talcs of atrocities committed at Blalystok are Innumerable. The mob seemed to delight in torturing the vic tims. Strips of flesh were cut from their bodies, children were snatched from their mothers' arms and taken by the legs and brained on the pave ment before the eyes of their parents A band of 300 Pulujanes under Caesa rlo P:stor attacked the town of Burau- en. on the Island of Leyte. They killed five po' icemen, wounded five and cap tured the remainder of the force except the lieutenant, who was in command. Pastor, the Pu'ujan? leader, was killed during the encounter. Mr. Robertson, of Baltimore, general manager of the Western Maryland rail road, his examination being conducted by Mr. Whitney, special counsel for the commission, admitted tho Western Murylai..! Railroad company was the owner of the Davis Coal & Coke com pany. Dr. F. A. Bradley, livestock and meat inspector of Louisville, caused to be seized and sent to a fertilizer works, 2,' 400 pounds of pork loins held In cold storage. After desperate fight at Perlepstlch, near Kochana, a ' force of Imperial troop3 annihilated a band of 12 under Capt. Christe, of tho Bulgarian army. Tho trcops lost two Killed and four wounded. The cable attached to an eight-ton skip lit No. S Fhaft of the Quincy mine at Calumet, Mich., broke and as the car dioimed down th shaft at a tre meftdou? spesd it killed two men and injured anothor. The ;uiy at Cleveland, O., brought In a verdict of not guilty in the case of the ice dealers Indicted for alleged vio latlon of the Valentin anti-trust law. Alexander Mcintosh a half breed, and Mx Leclalr, a guide from the KamlJops, were shot an1 killed at Ha zelton, li. C. Simon Johnson, an Indian, Is accused of the crime. As u result of tho active intervention of tho president the senate will vote to adopt the lock type pt canal across the Intimitis of Panama. Four dead and one perhaps fatally injure !, all white men, is the result of an attempt by three life term convicts to escape from Angola, La., 6ta-te con- vic faim. A Jury at Macon, Mo.; returned a ver dict of not guilty in the case of T. Ed ward Albright, former member of the St. Louis municipal assembly, who had been on trial on a charge of perjury In connection with the Suburban railroad franchise. Newark health inspectors confiscated the contents of Harry Rosenthal's bo logna sausage establishment, a small room In a Jones street leather factory They claim to have found the utensils. machinery and the room In general reeking with filth and vermin. Politicians are eagerly awaiting the first Indication of the policy to be pur sued by the now governor of Ohio, An drew L. Harris, in regard to the ap pointments made by his predecessor. Should he annul those already made and name Republicans In the steed of the Democratic appointees of Pattlson, thcro may be a deadlock. The. supreme court of Missouri in bane overruled the motion for a re hearing filed by counsel for - "Lord" Frederick Seymour Harrington, sen tepced to be hanged for the murder ot Jame3 P. McGann. . i William Bates ot Red Wing, Minn., found a pearl in a clam shell which, is said to be the largest fresh-water pearl In existence. Its worth is estimated at from $10,000 to $100,000. , Singleton C Has do w has been arrest ed In Plnar Del Rio on an extradition, warrant, charged with defalcation by the Spauldlng Manufacturing company. of Conway, Ark. . While the northern portion of the province of Chl-Ll Is suffering from the most severe drought since 1900, the southern extremity la experienc ing serious floods caused by beavy ralni. ' . ... John Murray Dowle, 80 year old, ot Essex, la., arrived In Chicago to testify before Judge Landls In the United States court, where a suit to determine who owns Zlon City Is be ing tried, that he Is the father of John Alexander Dowle, the "flm apostle." - By a decision of the Nebraska su preme court the last chance of tho state of Nebraska to recover $500,000, tho amount of the defalcation of for mer State Treasurer Joseph 8. Bart ley, has gone. At West Plains, Mo., Henry Mize, a wealthy farmer, died from the effects of poieon. J. P. Bremmer, his son-in-law, who was accused by Mlze of hav ing given him poisoned water, baa been arrested. Fines amounting to $20,000 and costs aggregating $5,000 are to be paid by the International Harvester com pany for breaking the Arkansas law. The corporation admitted It violated the anti-trust laws of the state. The National League of Republican clubs placed the organization on rec ord as unalterably opposed to all com binations in restraint of trade. The resolutions adopted before adjourn ment reaffirmed allegiance to the his toric principles of the party and con tained eulogies of many of the lead ers, among the greatest of whom was placed President Roosevelt Robert Olyphant, James C. Holden and Charles E. Miller, members of the Mutual Life Insurance company's old committee on expenditures, have re signed from the board of trustees. Freedom for a man who pleaded guilty of selling merchandise valued at nearly $100,000 which did not belong to him and appropriating the money, and six years in prison for another who stole 25 cents were the portions meted out to two prisoners in New York. . For the first time In COO years Trondhjem, the ancient Norse capital, welcomed Its own king. King Oscar was crowned there In 1873, but it has been six centuries since Norway, as an independent nation, installed Its mon arch there according to the rites of the old vikings. In 1299 it was Haa kon V. who ascended the throne. The finance minister announced In the. house the dominion government on the advice of the British consul at San Francisco had forwarded $80,000 of the $100,000 voted for the relief of the suf ferers. Freddie Muth, tho seven-year-old boy who as kidnaped from school, was found In a vacant house in West Phil adelphia and returned to his parents. John Joseph Kean, a member of a re spectable New York family, one time bookkeeper of the Harlem bank, a stockbroker and more recently a real estate agent, is the abductor. Twenty years of hard labor In soil tary confinement In the eastern peni tentiary was the sentence pronounced Tuesday on John Joseph Kean, the ab ductor of little Freddie Muth, of Phila delphia. The Massachusetts senate passed to be engrossed the bill providing that eight hours shall constitute a working day for a public employe. The executive committee of the Mld Contlnent Oil Producers' association Issued a circular to members of con gress condemning the section of the rate bill which relates to pipe lines. Ernest II. Denlcke, who on April 20, during the progress ot the San Fran cisco fire, killed an unknown man on tho water front, was dismissed. The killing was justified because the vic tim was a looter. At Llssola, near Monostlr, a Greek band murdered eight Bulgarians, in cluding two priests. Ansa Zedln, who gave states evi dence at the recent trial at Riga of 38 revolutionists, which resulted In the Imposition of seven death sentences. was killed by three unknown men J. B. Blnns, formerly a lieutenant in the United States army stationed at Fort Davis, committed suicide by Jumping overboard from the steamer Ohio while the vessel was en route from Nome to Seattle. Despite the rumor that the miners In the district in which Indian Terri tory is Included would not return to work, the mines were reopened. Neither side Is claiming a victory In the settlement of the Ohio mining con troversy, but both operators and min ers express satisfaction that the strike has been ended. John M. Pattlson, governor of Ohio, died of chronic Interstitial nephritis at his home In MUford, IS miles east of Cincinnati. State Insurance Commissioner Wolf declares that he will eject between 20 and 30 fire insrance companies from California unless they , comply with the law requiring them to furnish him with lists of all their San Francisco policies or give extensions of time for the filing of losses. . . Edwin HIgglns, who, during Presi dent Johnson's administration was acting governor of Utah, died at Wash ington, aged 62 years. Since 1885 he has been a government clerk. Mrs. Alice Olsen was awarded $25, 000 damages at Butte for the death of her husband In the Michael Davltt mine. Olsen met his death from a blast fired, it Is alleged, by employes of the Helnze Interests, operating the Rarus mine, adjoining Uie Davltt The national divorce' congress com mittee having in charge the drafting of a statute on a uniform divorce law will meet in St Paul September L . The heavy surplus of flour . sent to San Francisco by eastern sympathis ers has been sold by the finance com mltteee to the Globe Milling company. Of the lot 12.000,000 pounds sold at $3.60 per barrel and 1,600,000 pounds at 13.t1. . After rescuing four sewer diggers at St Louis, Charles Basoll met bis death by waiting la a trench filled with sew er gas until the last man bad been raise 1 to the surface. ' '. ' TERRIBLE ITCHING SCALP. Eczema Broke Ont Also on Hands and Limbs An Old Soldier Declares: "Cuticura Is a Blessing;' "At till times and to all people I am Willing to testify to the merits of Cuti cura. It saved me from worn than the tor ture of hades, about the year 1900. with itching on my scalp and temples, and after wards it commenced to break out on my hands. Then it broke out on my limbs. I then went to a burgeon, whose treat ment did ine no good, but rather aggro vated the disease. I then told him I woum go ana see a physician in Erie. Ine reply was that I could go anywhere, put a case of eczema like mine could not be cured; that I was too old (80). I went to on eminent doctor in the city of Erie and treated with him for six months, with like results. 1 had read of the Cuticura Remedies, and so I sent for the Cuticura boap, Ointment, and Resolvent, and con tinued taking the Resolvent until I had taken six bottles, stopping it to take the Pills. I was now getting better. I took two baths a day, and at night I let the lather of the Soap dry on. I used the Ointment with great effect after washing in. warm water, to stop the itching at once. I am now cured. The Cufcicura treatment is a blessing, and should be used by every one who has itching of the frj"! c?nt. y an'r more' snd thank Uod that He has given the world such a curative Wm. H. Gray, 3303 Mt. Vernon 6t., Philadelphia, Pa., August 2, 1903." One on the Doctor. A Baltimore physician who boarded a crowded car in Charles street, no ticed a woman standing and a big Ger man sprawling over twice the seat area that ' was necessary to him. ' In dignantly the physician said to his: "See here I Why don't you move a little so that this tired woman may have a seat?" For a. moment the Ger man looked dazed. Then a broad smile spread over his countenance as tie answered: "Say ,dt's a joke on you, all rlghtl Dot's my vlfe!" Low Rates to California. . To accommodate summer tourists to Cal ifornia the Union Pacific has authorized the very law rate of one fare plus 12.00 tor the round trip to either San Francisco or Lob Angeles. Tickets on sale June 25tU to July 7th, with final return limit Septem ber 15th, 1900. Aiuo other low rates to California points during the summer. In quire of W. G. Neimyer, (1. A., 120 Jack sou Boulevard, Chicago, 111. "There Is one advantage In this busi ness' mused the expert gardener, as he stood In his orchard. "It is graft ing all the time, but you can always get the public to swallow It" Balti more American. What the world needs Is men who do more of their work by day and more of tholr dreaming by night Lewis' Single Binder straight 5c cigar. Made of extra quality tobacco. Your deal er or Lewis' factory, Peoria, 111. Few girls would Improve their Intel lects at the expense of their shape. You can generally slzo up a man by the things he doesn't do. Save the Babies. MORTALITY is something frightfaL We can hardly realize that of : all the children horn in civilized countries, twentytwo per cent., or nearly , one-quarter, die hefore they reach one year ; thirtyseven per cent., or more than one-third, before they are five, and one -half before they are fifteen! We do not hesitate to say that a timely use of Oastoria would save a ma-' jority of these precious lives. Neither do we hesitate to say that many of these infantile deaths are occasioned by the use of narcotic preparations. ' Drops, tinctures and soothing syrups sold for children's complaints contain more or less opium, or morphine. They are, in considerable quantities, deadly poisons. In any quantity they stupefy, retard circulation and lead to congestions, sickness, death. Oastoria operates exactly the reverse, but you must see that it bears the signature of Chas. E Jletcher. Oastoria causes the blood to circulate properly, opens the, pores of the skin and allays fever. 1 v- AVfcgetabtefreparatiouTorAs similatlng iricFoodandRcula liiig ihcStucactBarelDovvds of Promotes DigesUonChcerfuI ness and Itest-Contalns neither S)ium, Morphine nor Mineral. OT NARCOTIC. UttymefOUSrSAMXUTTCmJt jUx.Smnm hfnmSd- A perfect Remedy forConstlpa llon.SouxStomach.Dlarrhoea Worms onvulsions Jeveriih ncss and Losa OF SLEEP. Fax Simile Signature of , WTXY YT)T"T. EXACT COPY OF WRAPKR. sw TEETH THAT WERE USELESS Puzzle to" the, Man Who Had Sud denly Sustained the Loss of Them. Harry Leon Wilson, author of "The Spenders," was domiciled for a summer In Connecticut with a colony of artist and writers, all of whom had to go Into the clt7 every day relates the Saturday Evening Post Wilson was doing nothing but loaf ing. He loafed artistically, and from time to time met and had fun with some of the natives of the place. One day be found two men In the road who seemed congenial, and he struck up an acquaintance with them. He proposed a drive and they got a surrey and two horses. " "Can you drive?" asked Wilson. "Sure." one of his sudden friends re plied, "I am a fine driver." They got aboard and started down the road. Before they had gone halt a mile the team was frightened by a passing automobile and ran away. Th'e driver valiantly steered the horses Into a telegraph pole and Wilson and his two friends were thrown belter skelter Into the road. Wilson slowly gathered himself to gether. One of his friends was sitting In the ditch rubbing his bruises and the other stood , In the middle of the road gazing in tearful misery at two front teeth which he held in the palm of bla hand. ' "Pretty lucky escape, wasn't It?" asked Wilson, for want of something better to say. "Yes," replied the man with the teeth, weeping afresh, "but please, oh, please, tell me, what shall I do with these.?" - Pitied Pitcoe, ' A man who bad started with a friend on a week's automobile tour stayed away two weeks. When finally they got back to town, he went home, and his wife received him coldly. What he dreaded was a scolding and an upbraiding. "I am so glad to be back with you here, dear," he said; "but I pity Pitcoe. Poor old Pitcoe?" "What Is the matter with , Pitcoe?" said the lady, sharply.y'Ah. poor fel low," said her husband, "at this mo ment his wife is giving him the very deuce!" And that wily speech got him off. ' Went with the Suit Muggsy Where did yer git t watch? Gaffer Got It wid a suit o' clo'es. : "Aw! go'n; de clothln' men ain't glvin' away no watches like that wid suits o clo'es." "Well, dls was a second-hand suit what belonged to a gent what was In swlmmln'." Philadelphia Press. There Is always room at the top, of course, but sometimes It's a whole lot more sociable at the bottom. Puck. Letters from Prominent Physicians addressed to Chas. H. Fletcher. ss SSSiH presc'Sor0! &ffiuK5I a2rW 1315 3 lu use. Tie formula contain, nothing del.twloS. ' mosTSellcaM eludSE kind, being ssf In the hinds Tf P.r.nti T.nd effsetWela ?LTfi!RLU!?hiM tbl fsct of the Ingredients belnj know through the prtnttni C formU-T5i jrrspper 1. on. Kood and sudden mm for the rZShCot I know of Its good Qualities and recommsad It cheerfully." Wdso GENUINE Bears the S9 The Kind You Melliyavs BoiMt I i In Uco For Ovor 0 Yoarc. ' . 1st Tum nmmrnt, n flood Teat of the Eo. , Suburbanite (to visitor) On.how are you? come ngnt in. uon i nana the dog. Visitot But won't he bite? "That's JuBt what I want to see. I only bought that watchdog this morn ins." La Rive. You may have observed that dress makers never seem to tire of their ef forts to Improve on the work ot na ture. ' ' Talent often regards with envy the well-filled stomach ot mediocrity. ALL HAIL PE-RU-IIA. A Cos if ST0UACI1 CATAnnu. 5 1 Miss Mary O'Brien, 806 Myrtle Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y., writes: "Per una cured me In five weekt ot catarrh ot the atomacb, after suffering for four years and doctor in ir without effect In common with other grateful ones who have been benefited by your discovery, I say, All hall to Peruna." Mr. H. J. Henneman, Oakland, -Neb., writes; " I waited before writing to you about my sickness, catarrh of the stomach, which I had over a year ago. ' There were people who told me it would not stay cured, but I am sure that I am cured, for I do not feel any more ill effects, have a good appetite and am getting fat r " So I am, and will say to all, I am cured for good. " I thank you for your kindness. "Peruna will be our home medicine hereafter." Catarrh of the stomach Is also known in common parlance as dyspepsia, gas tritis and .indigestion. No medicine will be of any permanent benefit except it removes the catarrh. A 'Great Tonic Mr. Austin M. Small, Astoria, Ore., writes . " Durin? the hot weather of the past summer I lost my appetite.- I tried Peruna, and found it pleasant to take, a splendid appetizer and a great tonic." I i v 4 QASTORIA ALVAYO Signature of mmmaat er. tWTMRerrv. i