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The Yale Expositor, ?. A. Mkkziks, Publisher. YALE, . - MICD The Belgian pigeon which won the great race from Burgos, in Spain, to Brussels, did the 700 miles in fourteen hours. Timber is seasoned by the evapora tion of the water, the extraction of the vegetable juices and the solidification of the woody tissue. The King of Slam has a bodyguard of 400 female warriors. They are chosen from the handsomest and most robust women in his kingdom. Almost exactly half the coal ex ported from Great Britain in the last six months went to the four countries, France, Germany, Spain and Italy. King Edward VIII., that may be, has completed his seventh year and re ceived as a birthday present from his grandfather, King Edward VII., a bi cycle. The Congo is one of the widest waterways on the globe, if not the finest. In some parts it is so wide that vessels may pass each other and yet be out f sight. The municipal counoil of St. Peters burg is to send an electrical expert to the United States in order that he may study the telephone system of this country with a view to reorganizing the one in uso in St. Petersburg. Recent discovery in Jerusalem proves that the ancient aqueduct which brought water from Bethlehem through the Hinnah valley, thought to be the work of Herod, was built by the Emperor Severus, 195 A. D. In scriptions to that effect have been found. Mrs. Lucinda Washington, who is said to be 121 years old, fell down stairs at the poor house at Kokomo, Ind., and suffered a broken arm, but she will recover. She was born a slave in South Carolina in 1779, and remained in one family until her emancipation in 18C3. In a few weeks the women of Nor way will be ready to take part in elec tions as full-fledged voters. A bill conferring the municipal franchise upon women has passed both houses of the Norwegian parliament (Storth ing) and will become a law at the end of the present session. The Japanese Emperor has an allow ance of 12,000,000 a year to maintain the dignity of his office and have a good time. This is equal to $5,479 a day. At the close of the Chinese-Japanese war Parliament awarded him 20,000,000 yen ($10,000,000) in gratitude for the able manner in which he di rected military and naval operations. A few years ago Phoenix, Ariz., the center of the Salt River Valley, was a sagebrush desert. It now has 25,000 inhabitants, with an assessed property valuation of $10,000,000, says the New York Tribune. All this is due to the introduction of water, which, brought in canals from distant streams, has turned the desert into a fertile valley, covered with ranches and dotted with small towns. Captain E. II. Smeed, of East Provi dence, R. I., has Just received a gov ernment medal which was awarded him seventeen years ago for heroism in helping to rescue the crew of a shipwrecked schooner In the harbor of New Haven. Tho medal was mislaid in a secret drawer in a desk in the collector's office at the Custom House of New Haven, and was found only a few days ago. There is a new patient at Bellevue Hospital, New York, the only patient of its kind ever treated there. On the card appears the name of "Bum," a kitten, suffering from dislocation of the spine. A little girl pleaded so hard with one of the doctors to cure her kitty that it was finally taken charge of. Now the doctors are Inter ested in the case, and will do all In their power to save "Bum's" life. The apportionment by lot of thirteen thousand homestead claims in the Kio-way-Conianche reservation last month wa3 a vast Improvement In good sense, order and fairness over the methods by which government land has usually been opened to settlement. Of course there were many disappointed home seekers there must bo when one hun dred and seventy thousand applica tions are filed for thirteen thousand claims but there was no wild rush for choice sections, no trampling on the rights of the weak by the strong, no fighting and no disputes over priority. Tho distribution was conducted rapid ly and in good order, through several days, until the lots were apportioned; and through it all a crowd of twenty thousand people cheered and congrat ulated every winner as heartily as if each member of the throng had been himself the winner ho hoped to be. In England the automobile comes into favor les3 rapidly than on the continent. A London writer calls It "a fad, and an extremely diity, dusty, uncomfortable fad," and a nuisance on the public ways. He thinks'it will lbe many years before "these crude, im practicable machines" displace in the Englishman's affections "a fine trot ting horse and a smart trap." No doubt the horse Is here to etay, and no doubt the automobile is still in its clumsy beginning; but Just wait a little, till the problem of a light and cheap storage-battery has been solved. I NEWS IN HGI A Detroit Man Goes Without Food Forty-One Days. FOUR CONVICTS OUT OF PRISON Many Thing Have Happened la th State In the I.ant Few Ilaya and They are It rl fly Given In Condensed Form for lluay Headers. The Belle Wle Suicide. Tlie man who committed suicide on Belle Isle Park. Detroit, by shooting himself Is undoubtedly Trunk Wood ward, of Grand Rapids. Chief of Po lice Harvey (). Cnrr. of that city, tele grnpliod that Woodward had been missing since Sunday. Carr's descrip tion tallies exactly with the body of the suicide. Woodward left 5rand Rap Ids on an excursion Sunday, taking with him his Rambler wheel. Near the suicide's body was a Rambler bicycle. Woodward wore a light suit, as did the suicide, and also weighed about lliO pounds. Rut the point which seems to make tho matter conclusive is the fact that Frank Woodward, or (irand Rapids, had a 11 user nail missing from the little finger of his right hand. So has the unknown. Frank It. Woodward was a farmer and fruit grower residing with his brother a few miles north. He was a bachelor, aged 41 years nd had for some time been iu poor health, which caused despondency. He left home Sunday morning about 4 o'clock with his wheel and when night came, and lie did not return, examination of ids room was made. A paper was found upon which was written a farewell to his brother and family. Ilnitnl mid Dlawrneef ul. It is a'lleged that some of the state troops in camp at Manistee acted in a very reprehensible manner, in fact committed acts of btutality that are almost beyond belief. There lias been an official investigation on an alleged outrage said to have -boon committed on a lielpless"wonifiu during the state encampment by dissipated soldiers. The governor's secretary is reported to have said that: "The facts appear to be that one nlgiit during the en campment several soldiers raided a bad house and took one of the inmates out for a little fun. Her clothing was stripped oft", and she was handled rather roughly. Each of the boys took some of tho remnants as a sou venir, and beyond the few bruises the woman sustained there was nothing more we could find out. It was a bad case and we have investigated it thor oughly from the very beginning. The soldiers did not intend to do any harm, but in their frenzy or delight for that kind of sport, they went too far, and would have been severely punished if any thing very serious could be established against them." Let Out nt Prison. Governor Bliss has directed the re lease from the state prison at Jackson and the branch prison at Marquette of the following convicts: Rrainard Nelson, a convict in the state prison at Jackson, convicted in the Circuit Court of (irntiot county of manslaughter, and sentenced June '2, lpoo, to two years and six months; pardoned. George L. Green, convict in the state's prison at Jackson, convicted in the Circuit Court of St. Joseph county of criminal assault and sentenced Oct. 15, IS02, to Imprisonment for -0 vears; sentence commuted to 1- years. John W. Hall, convict in the state's prison nt Jackson, convicted in the Kalamazoo county Circuit Court of at leinptcd criminal assault and son- imw.iwl fi-.f- ' IK'u: lik Itnnrisonnicllt for 10 years; sentence commuted to i ix years and two months. Leonard Lutonskl, a convict in tho branch prison at Marquette was paroled. I lie ii ton Ilnrlior'n IWk Factory. The great sugar beet factory at St. Joseph, which cost complete $:iJO.OOO, Is the cause of one of the biggest chan cery cases ever tried in Berrien coun ty. The defendants are the Wolverine Sugar Co., the Fanners' A: Merchants' bank of Benton Harbor, and the Northern Trust Co.. of Chicago. The plant was built by the Dyer Co., of Detroit, nnd equipped for business. The Wolverine Co. gave plaintiffs notes and mortgages for $107,700, upon which tho interest has never been paid, and they now ask the court to sell tho big plant to satisfy their claim. For the last two years the oper ators have failed to secure enough boots to run tho factory, as the beets failed to mature, nnd t ho growers re turned to tho fruit industry. As a last resort the owners went to Shelby, Ind., whore they contracted for 4.000 acres of beets for this season's run. Hopes were entertained that the factory would resume operations under satis factory conditions in a few weeks. Chnrn.ed With Anon, Isaac Wheeler, of Lapeer, was ar rested Thursday morning charged with burning a house nnd household goods In Rich township. The property be longed to his wife. Wheeler and his wife quarreled recently and Mrs. Wheeler went to live with her father, Richard Kelch. while Wheeler boarded with Flam Johnson. Mrs. Wheeler se cured a house where she intended to live with her brothers, and moved her household goods Into it. Wheeler says he was nt Johnson's at the time of the fire, but Johnson says bo was not. W. F. Edmonds. is president of the New Haven Savings bank, which suc ceeds the B. R. Moore Banking Com pany, Otto L. Sprngue, n druggist of Owosso. has been named by Gov. Bliss ns deputy oil Inspector for the Twelfth district. John Wet more, of Ferrysburg, Is dead from the effect of being kicked by a colt several days ago. He leaves a famllj-. Attorney-General Oren has filed n quo warranto bill against the Insurance corporation known ns the League' of Eligible. Fasted Forty Days. Charles L. Klein, of Detroit, suffer ing from a stomach trouble and tired of taking medicine on t ho advice nnd under tho direction of a physician fasted forty-one days. His chief trouble was u stricture of the Intes tines. From the very first the doctor tried to persuade his patient to fast, but succeeded In doing so only a little over six weeks ago. The fast began July 5 and ended August 15. The physician says that he bus a number of other patients who are. fasting, In cluding a consumptive. Tills last case is the first opportunity the doctor has bad to make a fair trial of his meth ods on diseased lungs, and he says that the result, after two weeks, Is en couraging. He uses very little medi cine, confining his treatment almost entirely to water. Smallpox lie Hn. Frank Vinton, a traveling salesman for the Werner ' Grocery Co., Is sick with smallpox at his home at Wil liamsburg, Grand Traverse county. II" broke out on Monday when he made a trip to Rapid City and Kalkaska, coining to Traverse City in the even ing nnd being driven to Williamsburg by a livery. Thursday night a physi cian diagnosed the case ns smallpox. Vinton is quarantined In his house with liis wife and eight children. He thinks lie was exposed at Manceloiia. MINOR MICHIGAN MATTERS. Giles Grice. a wealthy Niles farmer, died from heart d'ense. The Standard Vehicle Company has broken ground for Its building at Pon tine Capt. W. S. Logan, the first white Isiy born in Kalamazoo county, is dead at Mitchell, S. D. Standlsh school expenditures for tho pasi year have been $:t.(143 4."; re ceipts. JM.l'Tl 04. The state military board has pur chased a six-Inch breech-loading rifle of modern design. A hot spring has been discovered at Mackinac Island near the water works, 101 degrees Fahrenheit. John O. Beldler, an lS-year-ohl De troit boy, is under arrest for setting ids father's house on tire. A new company has taken charge of tho Adrian gas Avorks nnd tho price of gas has bv'cu reduced to $1 (K). Lewis Sperry, of Bervillo, has just discovered that live head of cattle were killed by lightning Monday. John T. Vornorof Marshall, has a tomato vine which stands over nine feet high and is four feet across. Mrs. Ora Dixon, residing on a small farm, lias just been left n fortune of $10,000 by an uncle in New York. Paul Wcsitoff nnd Henry Ilahn, of tho Flats, nre under arrest charged with selling liquor without n license. Leonard Green. 17 years old. of Faton Rapids, died of injuries from a beer lHittle being thrown at his head. The board of state auditors has caused it to be understood that Junk ets will not be paid for by the state. Rev. A. J. Richards, one of tho old est members of the Detroit conference of the M. E. church, died Saturday at Petoskey. Lloyd Van Wagoner, of Owosso. aged ', may lose his eyesight from a powder explosion. He will be dis figured for life. A thief stole a .' year-old unbroken cojt from tho farm of John Redmond, near Durand, and got away safely with the animal. It Is estimated that .10.00!) people visited St. Joseph Sunday, but tho number of marriages performed fell below the average. Mary Stewart and Dan Whitman, fearing arrest for Illegal cohabitation, walked from Lansing to Jackson, and eluded the officers. The .'5-year-old daughter of Mr. nnd Mrs. Ralph Oshorn. of Hamilton town ship, aie ten medicinal tablets timl died within 110 minutes. There is not a bouse In Tekonsha for rent, and people are driven to the necessity of cither buying property or moving into the country. The hearing of Dr. Probert. of Niles. for whom a requisition from Indiana lias been sent to Gov. Bliss, has been postponed to September (!. Herbert Musselman. of Branch coun ty, struck Benjamin Noble because of a dNputc over a dollar, and the jus tice assessed him $S for the job. Mrs. Charles Sherman, of Benton Harbor, lias fallen heir to a share, which she estimates at $loo.ooo. In a million dolbir estate in Cleveland. Wm. Osgo-jl. cf Jackson. w:n t lUor suddenly 111 ai Miehig.m Center and died soon a ft?; belli.? removed t lis homo. He h-uv an aged Mother. The secretary of state has sent to tho county clerks lO.ooo hunters' licen ses to bo issued this fall. Figuring on past experiences that number will be needed. F. Buekmnn. one of the well-known merchants of Gladstone, attempted to commit suicide by banging. He recent ly failed in business and became des pondent. The worst hall and wind storm Es canaba has ever bad visited it Thurs day, breaking plate glass fronts, over turning trees, fences and doing much damage to t'.ie farmers. A big raft of pine logs has reached Saginaw from Canada, which finishes the Importation of Indian reserve land timber, ns tho Canadian governnienr has forbidden any more. I Mrs. Ada Rundell has caused tho ar rest of Conrad Mehlenbachen. the Owosso saloon man who escaped the charge of Detroit detectives, for sell ing liquor to her minor son. Twelve loaded ore enrs on the South Shore road got away from the pocket tenders at the Cambria mine Thurs day nnd ran down a steep Incline, col liding with other cars nnd demolish ing about 25. Four men who were on the cars, Jumped for their lies and two more were seriously injured. Tho wrecking train was called and worked nil night to clear the tracks. The ac cident will cost the railroad company about f.1,000. Mrs. Manwnrrlng. mother of Frank Mnnwnrrlng, tho treasurer of the Port Huron CIgarmakers' Union, who Jt Is claimed skipped out with $J10, has paid the shortage to tho union. Because tho new law Is not opera tive before Sept. 5, duck-hunters may shoot four days under tho old law, when the open season began Sept. 1. The new law prohibits shooting until Oct. 1. Henry Vanncss, an Indian from the Sarnia reservation, says ho was en ticed Into a Port Huron alloy and rob bed of $10. Joe Henry Is under arrest charged with purloining Reuben's money. The Detroit & Toledo Shore' line Is being pushed north from Monroe at the rate of a mile a day. Believers In the steam road theory point to the ab sence of 'any signs of overhead con struction. John Morrison, a Grand Trunk pass enger conductor, while examining an air brake coupling nt New Hamburg, was crushed between the coaches, and died from his injuries later in the day at Toronto. Miss Bertha K. Bailey, a loader In Reading society, nnd Moron D. Carrol, of Chicago, were married and at once started for Havana, where the groom Is stationed as private secretary to Gen. Wood. Port Huron Is to have another ship yard for construction of stool boats. Tho yard will bo run in connection with Dunford's dry dock and will In1 located on the property south of the lower dry dock. Mrs. Lillian Beatty. of Reading, ob jected very forcibly to her husband accompanying a certain young lady, so when she met them together she dealt tlse young woman a blow which rend ered her unconscious. It took two guards with muskets to enforce the smallpox quarantine near Tekonsha. ami then an inmate of the house escaped. One of tho guards Is said to have h it his post one night and driven into the country to attend a dance. A special election will be held Sept. 10 to decide upon tho question of bond ing for $8,000 for building a garbage crematory and additional stone walks, and laying surface pipe for sprinkling tho principal park drives on Mackinac Island. Dr. W. B. Church, of Marshall, who was charged with practicing medicine without a license, was acquitted. He will now be tried on a charge of mal practice, preferred by Bornt Van ..audi, who asks $15,000 for the death of his wife. Dr. J. II. Richardson has commenced suit against the defunct Citizens' Na tional bank at Niles for $2,000. Dr. Richardson says be loaned the bank $1,400 on July S, 1S00, the day of the failure, and that lis claim wa$ reject ed by tho comptroller. Anna S. Lang, wife of Postmaster Lang, of Houghton, has commenced suit for the purpose of recovering a three-fourths Interest in 100 acres of land, being a portion of the Kearsarge mine, now claimed to be owned by the Osceola Consolidated Mining Co. As an evidence of tho scarcity of labor in southern Michigan, it is worthy of note that a train runs from Jackson 10 Union City every day, a distance of 45 miles, to pick up men t:i work on tho railroad. Tho train makes the trip night and morning, and has done so for a month. Arthur Ilardwich. a P.ittle Creek youth, attempted to exterminate Iwd bugs with gasoline, but came near ex terminating himself. Ho held a lamp In one hand, when ho opened the gaso line can. and It exploded. He was frightfuily burned, his skin peeling off. His recovery is doubtful. On several occasions a substance resembling blue vitriol has been found lu the yard of Frank Pieszak. of Bay City, and once one of bis children was caught In the net of placing some of the stuff in its mouth. It hns boon proved to bo poisonous, nnd the police are trying to find out who placed it there. Selig Solomon, of Alcona county, hns sent State Land Commissioner Wlldey a check for $700 in payment for lumber taken from Agricultural college bands in that county, lie says tho trespassing was not done by his order, and an effort will bo made to locate the guilty parties and prosecute thorn. The following five graduates and former students of t he University have been appointed on the. second call for teachers for the Philippines: Frank Pshick, Saginaw: Chas. A. Val lanec. Fowlersvillo. N. Y.: G. B. Schuello.-. Niles. Midi.; G. N. Trem per. Pontine. Mich.: F. E. Welch, Or chard Lake, Midi. Victor Toskkilla was shot through the heart, nnd the arm of a fellow named Saqkari was shattered, as the result of a row early Wednesday nt the Halfway saloon, between Houghton and Atlantic. Tho parties nre Finlant'ors, one of whom been me involved in a drunken quarrel. Tosk killa's assailant was Matto Saakarl, a brother of the wounded man. Henry 11111. of Monroe, has been in poor health for some time and recent ly signed what purported to bo nn agreement between himself and 11 medical company by which the latter agreed to cure him for $70 nnd bis wife for $40. The contract turned up in tho form of a note for $110 in the hands of A. L. Beard, who has brought suit to enforce Its payment. Michael Kennedy, of Niles, Is suing bis son Richard for $10,000 damages, alleging that he was falsely Impris oned at St. Joseph's retreat near Dear born, for a period of five years, nt the instigation of his son, on a trumped up charge of insanity. Ho says ho was not given n bearing before n pro bate Judge, ami was not ndjudged in sane by nnj' court. Iu a Port Huron tomato patch there is a yellow nnd black spider t lint writes real writing on Its web. Mon day the word "William" was clearly outlined, nnd the next day 1 lie word "Minnie" replaced it. By many this Is considered nn omen of death, and all the Williams nnd Minnies In town are on tho mix Ions seat. This writing spider Is the greatest attraction Port Huron bis had since the completion of the tunnel. Wellington L. Belyen. of Port Hu ron, claims that. In ejecting him from a Rapid Railway car. tho conductor nnd niotormnn used a. poker, nnd has cued the company for $5,000 damages. NS Ml III Mild. Philadelphia Reports a Steamboat Horror. C0LUMBIA1N A TERRIBLE STATE A Colored lllshop (Uvea Startling Adrtco Coal Mlueon Fire. Facta, Fancies and Happenings From Various l'arta of tha Country Ilrleflr Told. Advise nrnndln? Aaaaultera. Bishop Turner, of the African Meth odist church, so report from Atlanta, tia., states, gives as his view of the method to stop assaults on white wo men tho following method: "African emigration would bo best for the negro and best for the white man. There Is an Irresistible conflict between whites nnd blacks that noth ing but separation can put an end to. Our children are generated nnd nur tured under a malignant and misan thropic spirit that will wreck the country and make our civilization a hissing and a byword. "If it is a fact that the negro will not lot the white women alone, then white men owe it to their manhood and honor to got rid of him: ami if they will open up a highway to Africa millions of the black race will go. Rather than shod so much blood, and possibly some Innocent blood, you had iM'tter enact laws to brand those fools and scounditls and crop their ears and banish them to Africa. "If tho country will turn over all these criminals that they are burning, hanging and shooting, to 1110. and brand their cheeks and carry them to Africa, I will give the world another Rome, or establish a country like Aus tralia, which was founded nnd built up by Fnglisli cutthroats and penal convicts." The Colombian Revolution. A Panama dispatch says: "Plots nnd counter-plots fill the nir. There Is war here of the most hideous kind nnd strife that tears the country asunder, In which brother is pitted against brother, friend against friend and nelghlior against neighbor. Fer tile fields have been devastated. Once thriving towns have boon decimated in imputation and villages have boon wiied out of existence. Bauds of armed men occupy every highway and traffic is practically at a standstill, while frantic women mourn their dead and hungry babes clamor for food. Great battles must soon bo fought, and upon tho results will depend not alone the supremacy of the clashing parties in Colombia, but also, perhaps, the Integrity of the territory of throe neighboring republics Venezuela, Ec uador nnd Nicaragua. A Colon report states that the gov ernment is alleged to have already spent not less than $l'J0,OO0.000 lu silver to suppress the rebellion, and the Liberals are said to have expended an oven l.irger amount, although their volunteers nre supposed to serve sole ly for patriotism and to receive no pay. A Terrible Illanater. Twenty-eight dead and i: Injured is t'o awful record of a wreck on the Great Northern road near Nyack, Mon tana, Friday. Passenger No. M had just gone down the mountain and had reached tho level when Ls wild cars loaded with shingles shot down from above and crashed Into the rear of the passenger train. The special car of Assistant General SuiH'iintendent Downs and a coach filled with labor ers were crushed like egg shells. Tho debris of the wreck caught tire and a horrible scene followed, as those In the two cars were either killed out right, slowly roasted or crushed to deatii or seriously burned nnd crushed. Mr. Downs, bis son and cook were caught under the debris and burned to death. Slavery In the I'hllipitltie. Hong Kong mail nd vices state that the Manila Times has caused a sensa tion by exposing what It terms the wholesale slave trading existing at Manila under tho very eyes of Ameri can military and police otliccrs. It is said that immorality Is wholly respon sible for tho practice which Is carried on at Manila and other cities on tho archipelago. Poverty-stricken Filipino parents are alleged to ho selling their daughters and sometimes their sons. Tho Chinese are tho principal purchas ers, but Filipinos of wealth nre not In frequent1 buyers. There is said to lo regular markets where slave soiling Is carried on monthly. (J iris sold range from 10 to 15 years of age. They do net question the right of their parents to soil them and become absolute slaves. Thirty AVere Killed. The not result of the explosion of the boilers of the steamboat City of Trenton on tho Delawnro river Wed nesday will be probably "0 Months. Tho steamer made trips dally between Philadelphia nnd Trenton, stopping nt Burlington. N. J.; Bristol. Pa., nnd other points on tlio'wny. The scenes in the house, of correction hosplta! were pitinblo. Men nnd women wife the flesh hanging from their limbs and bodies bore their suffering like stoics, nnd some even smiled while the doc tors laved the raw and bleeding flesh with cooling lotions. None of the in jured wns nble to give nn account of the disaster. Chief Engineer Murphy, who wns on watch when the accident happened, reported to t ho officials that tho boiler which exploded carried only 150 pounds of steam. Services nt the Winona Bible confer ence begin at sunrise and continue u most hourly till 10 o'clock at night. While committing a burglary at t lie house of Thomas F. Schley, a travel ing salesman of Columbus, O.. the burglar doped Mrs. Schley and the par rot. Patrick Malady, who, ninny years ngo, wns convicted and sentenced to life imprisonment In England for com plicity iu tho Fenian plot, for which the three Irishmen known to history ns the "Manchester martyrs" were ex ecuted. Is dying In St. Michael's hospi tal, Newark,' N. J. AVna .Shaffer lloneatf ('barges that the national officers of t he Amalgamated Association had mis represented the attitude of tho United States 'Steel corporation toward organ ized labor. In order to get the members of the association out on strike were made by former Vice-President J. D. Hickey at a meeting of the Bay View lodge, Milwaukee. In a cool, unimpas slonod manner, Mr. Hickey gave the members of the lodge the result of his recent trip to Pittsburg. The situation as summed up 'by Mr. Hickey Is that tho strike is practically lost, as 72 per cent of the mills are working. Mr. Hickey w ent Into details to show that Secretary Tighe and President Shaffer had misrepresented the facts when they appealed to the members of the association to strike, on the ground that the steel corporation was determined to crush organization and ruin the Amalgamated Association. Mr. Morgan offered Shaffer four ad ditional mills for which he was will ing to sign tlie scale as an experi ment, nnd then he told Mr. Shaffer that if the organization kept faith 1n these four mills and lived up to the agreement be would pledge his word that in two years every mill In the combine would bo included in the con tract with the Amalgamated. This was the most reasonable proposition that has ever been made to the asso ciation and it was clearly the duty of President Shaffer to have accepted it then and there. The Continent Atnrmeil, Senator Chauncey M. Depew. speak ing of the Inroads made upon European commercial life by American competi tion nnd energy, said: "There is a genuine scare on the continent almit tho competition of American manufac turers in their markets, and cabinets are consulting If any combination Is practical which will prevent the impor tation of American goods and check our invasion of the east, which has been opened at such vast expense and effort by European governments. I heard a Russian statesman say, 'Con cert of action may be impossible, but Russia. In rcsiMuise to discriminating duties, has shown how each country in its own way can stop this competition.' Tills unfriendliness Is not likely to re sult in war. The relations of European governments are too Intricate and un certain among themselves for anyone to take that risk, and combination is impossible." Snntnaon I'nnonnd Mentally. The attorneys for Admiral Schley have been privately Informed by the friends of Admiral Sampson that his health Is such that he will not be able to appear as a witness before the court of Inquiry. A news dispatch from Ad miral Sampson's home guardedly Inti mated the real situation. It said: "He is gaining in physical strength, but bis mental health continues to steadily fail." In other words, it is suggested that his mental state is such that he Is not competent to give testimony. For more than a year rumors have been coming from Boston concerning Samp son's mental Indisposition. Recent re ports seem to give substantial corrob oration; for instance, friends are now saying that bo cannot remember in tho afternoon what he said or did In the morning. Schley's attorneys, discussing this development, say they will insist upon the certificates of naval surgeons to tho effect that he is unable to come to Washington. Tried to Kill Pope I.eo. A dispatch from Rome reports that an anarchist, whose Identity is con cealed by the police, was captured In the Vatican garden Monday. The man curried a revolver and a dirk and has admitted that ho intended to assassin ate tho pope. The prisoner denounces Leo as "A spiritual giant, keeping mil lions of men iu thralldom." NEWS IN BRIEF. Alpine Pas. Colorado, justified its ! name Thursday by producing a fall of snow. Senator Geo. F. Hoar, of Massachu setts. Thursday celebrated bis 75tli birthday. Dr. Cihlas' yellow fever serum, as a preventive. Is a dead failure. A-"protected'' patient lias died in Havana. Sampson may have to face a court martial because of his peculiar con nection with Mac-lay's venomous at tack 011 Schley. Richards, the Columbus, Mo., mur derer nnd assaulter, has not been caught and the posse pursuing him Is becoming discouraged and returning home. Tho transport Bnford will sail from Manila September 5 with troops to bo stationed at military jiosrs in tho east. She will come by way or tlie Suez to New Vork. Representatives of tho various Cath olic societies of tho United States will meet nt Cincinnati December 10 for tlie purpose of forming a permanent federation. United States Collector of Customs Ilooy has been re-arrested nt Tucson. Aiz.. on additional counts in connec tion with the Chinese conspiracy case. Ills bond was raised to $5,000. President Richardson and Secretary Gilmour. of the United Mine Workers, predict that at least 00 per cent of tho 4.000 coal miners In the Pittsburg. Ka . district will obey the strike order on September 1. Marguerite Lyler, of Chicago, nged .1. Is heiress to $100,000 and a lot of trou ble. Her mother Is dead nnd the wo man who had her In care has lost her. Kidnapers have got her. Her father, who hud boon divorced from the moth er, is living nnd may know something abnt tho case. Count Boson tie Tnllyrnnd Porigord. whom Helen Morton, daughter of the former (New York) governor, is 1 marry, is a cousin of Count de Cas-tell.iM'-. brother-in-law of the (builds, of New York city. He is a well known figure In Paris society, nnd In a great J measure has supplanted bis father, j who for over a quarter of n century I has been known nmong his following I ns Prince de la Mode. I Herman Deilim. nlias Charles Moy j ers, tho diamond thief who made n I unsuccessful nttempt to rob n Detro't I Jewelry store of diamond ring valued I nt $4.ooo. Is wanted in Hamilton, O., j yu a similar charge.