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Windham County reformer. (Brattleboro, Vt.) 1901-1906, July 11, 1902, Image 2

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THE WINDHAM COUNTY REFORMER, FRIDAY, JULY 11, 1002.
1
The
crowning
joy of
ii
and
the
crowning
joy of
o o d is
to have
heal thy
children. But tnere can be no joy in
motherhood without health, and without
health for the mother there can be no
health for the child.
It is of vital importance for women to
know that the health of mother and child
is in general entirely within woman's
control. The thousands of women who
have used Dr. Pierce's Favorite Pre
scription when expecting motherhood,
have testified that it made them healthy
and happy in the days of waiting, made
the baby's advent practically painless,
and gave them health to give their children.
NEW WORLD HAPPENINGS.
EVENTS OF THE WEES IK SUMMARY.
Mrs. W. J. Kidder, of Hill Dale Farm (Enos
burg Center), Knosburjf, Vt.. writes: "During the
past year I found myself expecting: maternity,
and in rapidly failing health. 1 suffered dread
fully from bloating and urinary difficulty. I
was growing perceptibly weaker each day and
suffered much sharp pain at times. I felt that
something must be done. I sought your advice
and received a prompt reply. Took twelve
bottles of Doctor Pierce's Favorite Prescription,
and also followed your instructions. I began
to improve immediately, my health became
txcellent, and I could do all my own work (we
live on a good sized farm). I walked and rode
all I could, and enioyed it. I had a short, easy
confinement and have a healthy baby boy."
The People's Common Sense Medical
Adviser, a book containing 1008 pages,
is given away. Send 21 one-cent stamps
for expense of mailing only, for the book
in paper covers, or 31 stamps for the
volume bound in cloth. Address Dr.
R. V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y.
Alaskan. Indiana Believe They Have Discov
ered Noah's Ark-First Steps in Philippine
Government to Be Taken at Once-Strange
Story of a Yankee Xing of Cannibals Situa
tion in Venezuela The Providence, B. I.,
Trolley Strike Ended-Aguinaldo Free but
Afraid of Freedom.
Rosooe Conkling Bruce of Washing
ton, the colored class orator of Har
vard this year, whose record at the
college has been brilliant, intends to
go south and cast his lot with booker
T. Washington, the famous head of the
Tuskegee Institute in Alabama.
The sultan of Bncolnd, Mindanao,
has sent an insultingly worded letter
to the commander of the American ex
pedition to lake Lanao, in Mindanao,
THE 1'HOIKSSIONS.
fEO. ROBERTS. M. D.. Stiriremi. Surgery
" and discuses of Women a specialty. oflie
8,'i Main street, Hnuse5 Canal street. Tele
phone at house and at llnmks House Pharmacy.
Hours : 8 to 9 a. in., 1 to 3 and 7 to S p. 111.
n R. ALDRICH. M. D., mimi lllock,
p. in
tleboro. otlie
and 7 to 9 i
hours until 9 a.
Telephone liT
Hrat
1 to 3
20-vl
UACON So HOOKER. Attorneys at Law. 12
and 14 I'llery liuilding.
tf
Drs. BOWEN &, TUCKER.
Dr. Bowen. 1 Dr. Tucker.
Residence, Hij;h St. Oftice and lies. Leonard
Office hours at Hluck: ;Hloek. Office hours:
7:3" tog A. M. Till 8:30 A. M.
12 :30 to 2 I'. M. 1:30 to 3 1 SI.
6:30 to S P. l. 7:00 to 9 p. M.
DR. A. KNAPP. Dentist. Hooker Mock, op
posite Hrooks House, lirattleboro.
DR. C. S. CLARK. Dentist,
liruttli-tpoio. Telephone.
Whitney block,
A I. MILLER. M. D.. l'livsiciau and Snr-
geon, Hooker lllock, Hrattleuoro. Vt. Of
fice hours : 8 till 9. 1 to , ii :30 to 8.
GN. GOLDTHWAIT. D. D. S Dentist.
'ortlnicld. Mass.. Mondav. Tuesdav and
Wednesday.
DR. GEO B. ANDERSON, l'hyslcian and
Surgeon. Office and residence, 88 Main
Street, .surgery, in all its branches, a specialty.
Office hours": until 10 a. 111., 1 to 2 :30 p. lu., 6:30
to8evemng. Telephone, "Brooks House." 2tf
rR
-a- tice hours
H. L. WATERMAN. -llKlllot Street. Of-
12 :30 to 2 :M and 6 to 8 p. ill. 4Ctf
WATERMAN So MARTIN. Attorneys
Law, Jlauk Hlock, llrattlelioro, Vt.
TlENTISTRY in a" i,s branches.
traded without pain.
, 83 Main Street.
K. K.
Teeth ex
Kinkead, 28tf
GF. BARBER, D. D. S.. I'nlon lllock, over
Greene's drug store, llrattlelioro, Vt.
TAMES C0NLAND. M. D.,
s
l'hvsician and
Surgeon, Itrattleboio, Vt. Office in Crosby
Hlock. Residence, No. 3 Walnut Street. Office
hours : from 8 to 9 a. 111.. 1 :30 to 3, and 7 to 9 p. 111.
1E0. H. G0RHAM. M. D.,
Whitney block.
Main Street. Utattleboro. Practice limited
to the diseases ot the hye, f.ar, Ihroat and
Nose. Office hours : 9: 30 to 12, 1 to 4 p. in., Tues
days and Fridays only. Remainder of week at
in which he threatens to beam oti'en
sive operations in August. The sultan
is at present strengthening his posi
tion. Gold Heels, son of A. J. Cassett's
The Hard, owned by "Diamond Jim"
Urady, won the Brighton Heach handi
cap race Saturday in the fastest time
2 minutes 3 4 3 seconds ever made
bv a thoroughbred over a mile and a
quarter circular course. Twenty-five
thousand people witnessed tne race.
Western New York was swept by a
terrific rain and wind storm Sunday
morninir. Rivers and creeks rose rap
idly, overflowing their banks and
sweeping away houses and barns and
livestock. The loss will reach into hun
dreds of thousands of dollars. One
life was lost and many narrow escapes
reported.
The four larger of the six new ship9
of war authorized by the naval appro
priation bill, will be named Louisiana,
Connecticut, Tennessee and Washing
ton, at Secretary Moody's suggestion.
The two gunboats will be named the
Paducah, at the earnest solicitation of
Representative Wheeler of Kentucky,
and the Dubuque.
Robert Holbrook, an aeronaut, mak
ing a balloon ascension at Mount Ver
non, 111., July!, dropped 400 feet from
his parachute and was instantly killed.
His fall was supposed at the time to
have been accidental, but developments
indicate that the yountr man deliber
ately planned and executed a novel
suicide through despondency over a
love affair.
Thirteen persons were killed and
nearly 50 injured bv an electric car
wreck at Gloversville, X. V., Friday.
A closed car ran away down a steep
grade and overtook and collided with
an open car on a curve at the foot of
the mountain, .throwing the latter from
the track and overthrowing it. The
killed are all residents of Gloversville,
excursionists who spent the day at the
resort at the top of the mountain.
B. W. Pyle, owner of one-third the
city of Greyton, Nicaragua, has com
mitted suicide by shooting himself in
the head in the Garfield Park Sanita
rium, Chicago, where he came a year
ago for treatment. After investing
his fortune in the Central American
city, living for 1) years in hopes that
the United States would build a canal
through Nicaragua, seeing another
route adopted, and finally becoming
totally blind in his 7:id year, he be
came depressed.
Miss Mabel Ward, aged 18, of Mil
ford, Mass., who to win a box of
candy, wagered with a youth of her
own age some days ago, that she would
dare to attempt a parachute descent
from a balloon, made an ascension Fri
day niirht at Hoae Lake park, Woon-
President Charles M. Schwab of the
United States Steel coi poration and his
wife will spend 8100,000 in giving poor
children of New )'ork an outing at
Richmond Beach, Staten Island, dur
ing the hot weather this summer. Mr.
and Mrs. Schwab have no children.
Relics and souvenirs of "ther White
House at Washington are in great de
mand, now that the interior of the an
cient mansion is being dismantled.
The hand-made nails, said to have
been imported from England 100 years
ago, are especially prized by the sou
venir hunters, and pieces of board, lath
and even plaster are picked up by
sightseersvhenever opportunity offers.
The Boston & Maine railroad is look
ing up Pennsylvania bituminous coal
land and will endeavor to buy a fuel
supply large enough to render the road
safe against possible fut'ire squeezing
uy ftieni, com comoinauons. vt uu coal
of its own the company will be able,
not only to meet its own requirements
at a large saving, but also to supply a
big part of the local demand along its
lines.
Members of the Senate committee on
Porto Rico and the Pacific islands will
go at once to Hawaii to investigate
economic conditions there. Among the
subjects to be investigated are taxation,
water rights, finance, the land ques
tic land the banking system. The com
mittee is to make a report with a view
to the enactment of general legislation
for Hawaii at the next session of Con
gress. The Chicago Inter-Ocean says that a
combination of all the gigantic com
panies controlling the packing indus
try of the United States has been con
summated with John D. Rockefeller as
the central figure in the financial part
'Six deaths and a score of prostra
tions was the heat record in Pittsburg,
Pa., for the 24 hours Monday.
A strike of Chicago freight handlers
called out 9,000 men Mondav, serious
ly curtail ng the handling of freight.
No prospect of early settlement is in
sight. ' "'
The Cheyenne Indians are holding a
council of war over an order by the In
dian agent prohibiting them from prac
tising the tortures incident to their
sun dance in which 2,000 Indians took
part Inst week. This is the first time
the dance has been stopped by the gov
ernment. The white people near Cal
umet, Oklahoma, are frightened and
the war department has been notified.
The London society of fine arts has
awarded to Alexander Graham Bell of
Washington, ). C, its 11102 medal.
The decoration is known as the Prince
Albert medal and each award requires
the concurrence of the prince of Wales.
Mr. Hell is the fourth American to re
ceive the medal, Captain James B.
Eads, Thomas A. Kdison and David
Edwin Hughes having been selected
for the honor heretofore.
The convention of the Illinois Pro
hibitionists at Peoria last week was a
most exciting atfair. When the call
was made for voluntary contributions,
the 1200 delegates went wild with en
thusiasm and crowding to the stage
the showered their contributions upon
it. Almost $.",000 in cash was heaped
on the platform. Two platforms were
submitted and a bitter debate ensued
resulting in the adoption of the one
holding the prohibitionists to two is
sues the liquor question and woman s
FROM ACROSS THE WATER.
A BBIEf'bESUME OF OLD WORLD NEWS
Trade Treaty With Spain-Labor BioU in
Rusiia-Kiug Edward Out of Danger-Death
of "Father of Astronomers"-rnited States
Wins in Arbitration With Russia-China
Appeals to America for Its Influence With
Allied Powers.
A severe eafthquako shock was felt
at Salonica, European Turkey, Satur
day afternoon. Many houses were
wrecked, and there was much los9 of
life. Particulars of the disaster have
not yet been received.
A treaty of trade, commerce and
amity between the United States and
Spain was signed at Madrid Thursday.
Bellamy Storer, the United States min
ister, left Madrid July 4 to join his
family in Switzeiland.
Mme. Teresa Carreno, the distin
guished pianist, was wedded at Berlin
June '.10, to her fourth husband, Arturo
Tagliapietra' of New York, who is a
brother of her second husband. Mme.
Carreno is a Venezuelan by birth, but
is well known in New York, where she
first appeared in 1870 in the Academy
of Music as a' singer. She soon after
ward gave up singing to give her at
tention to the piano, and to-day is
probably the world's most distinguished
woman pianist. She has been called
'the lioness of the Pianoforte."
Queen Wilhelmina of Holland is re
gaining her health and strength at
Castle Schaumberg, near the Rhine.
suffrage-and excluding the leading w"eI8 ane ls leading a quiet lite witn
national issues the queen mother. Her gay demeanor
., '. ' .. ,, , . has not returned, however, and she
of the negotiations. This arrangement ! h, m pi)t p, i.i..i... ! KS saa .na troub eu. As her physi-
combines the Swift and Armour inter- Dav. He made 11 sveech to the largest
ests, which have recently gained con
trol of the other packing concerns
throughout the country.
Benjamin S. Piatt, enrolling clerk of
the Senate, has prepared a statement
which shows that the past session of
audience ever assembled in Pittsburg,
which cheered him heartily. He went
from Pittsburg where he was the guest
! of Attorney General Knox directly to
his home in Ovster Bay, N. Y., where
he will spend his summer vacation. In
Congress was distinguished by the ! his trips through the country the pres
large amount ot ousiness transacted.
In the House, 1.",5'.I2 bills and joint
resolutions were introduced and in the
Senate C4.")0. There were sent to the
president 9-"i bills originating in the
House and 547 Senate bills, a total of
l.")0:t. The Senate passed 1000 of the
measures originating with it and the
House i:!8(i of its own bills.
The Democratic Senator Vest of Mis
souri is physically unable to return to
his western home at this recess of Con
gress. He has for some time been un
able to walk unattended, and although
he has been one of the regular attend
ants upon the sessions of the Senate,
his eyes have grown so weak that for
some months he has refrained from
using them except when absolutely
necessary. Newspapers and the pro
ceedings of Congress are read to him.
His mind is as keen as ever.
The strike of motormen and conduc
ident will make occasional speeches
setting forth the administration argu
ments. Speaker Henderson, Senators
Frye, Hanna, Lodge and other con
gressional leaders will also make cam
paign speeches.
W. A. Reid, secretary of the Skag
way Y. M. C. A., has returned to Ta
coma, Wash., from the interior of
Alaska, where he talked with the In
dians, whose earnest statements, he be
lieves, fully confirm previous reports
that the Indians of the lower Yukon
have discovered an immense petrified
ship on Porcupine river, near the Arc
tic circle and north of Rampart, Alas
ka. When asked regarding the size
cians decide that she must not spend
next winter in the severe climate of
Holland, she has accepted an invita
tion to visit the King and Queen of
Italy in Rome, beginuing in Septem
ber. Thence she will go to some one
of the royal country residences to lie
placed at her disposal until she com
pletely recovers.
A press despatch from Honolulu
says: "The British coronation day,
June 20, was generally observed here,
all the government offices closing at
noon by order of the governor. Judge
A. h. Humphreys of tne J irst Circuit
court, however, refused to adjourn his
court for the occasion, and gave an in
terview stating his reasons, in which
he vigorously repudiated the whole
idea of an observance of the kind. The
judge used fervent language in criti
cism of Americans who observed such
: ceremonies in honor of royalty, and his
words aroused much discussion. Some
M. Herve A. E. A. Faye, the astron
omer, died at Paris Friday. He was
the oldest member of too Academy of
Sciences, and was born in 114. He has
been for several years the father of all
living astronomers. The savant con
tinued his researches with almost ju
venile activity up to his last year, his
scientific works being very numerous,
and distinguished by the clearness of
his exposition. M. Faye discovered,
simultaneously with M. de ico, at
Rome, on August 22, 144, a cornet in
Aquarius, which was rediscovered in
California in ls!4. The Vico-Iaye
comet is so faint that, though its pe
riod of return is only 1,993 days, it has
escaped detection on nine successive
appearances in the last ."0 years.
Labor riots occurred fpr several days
last week at Rostov-on-DonK in the
province of Ekaterinoslav, southern
Russia. In collisions between the
troops and the rioters many of the lat
ter were killed or wounded. The out
break somewhat resembled the peasant
riots in Central Russia in the early ;
spring. The leaders were strangers in ;
the district : were dressed in fantastic!
uniforms, adorned with decorations,
and proclaimed themselves to be agents j
of the czar. They preached the de-
struction of all machinery which le
duced the number of laborers and!
brought the masses to starvation. A
fanatical mob attacked the factories in
the name of the czar, and wrecked
manv manufacturing ei
before the troops were called out.
English residents were much offended.
the Indians traced its dimensions on lttIKmK 01 mauing complaint
, the ground, indicating a length of 1,- I 81 " Bningion.
j 200 feet. Such Indians as are familiar i Fetes were held at the Vatican in
with the Bible are convinced that the Rome Sunday evening in celebration
ship is none other than Noah's ark. ! of the Pope's' Jubilee in honor of the
Reid intends to return to the interior ' 24th anniversary of his coronation.
tois on the Union Traction company, ' or Alaska this summer, when tie will 1 The entire Papal court, and thousands
Providence, K. I., which has been in i talte 'onie Indians and request army of members of all the Catholic socie
force since June :i, was declared off ' offers to detail soldiers to accompany J ties represented in Rome, were pres
Saturdav, the com pa-v having granted i llim- Tne snil lips on 8 niKn hill, jent. The court was beautifully
the main demands of the men. The uu"k m m-i mwc me sea inn. ; aoorneo wiin lapesmes ami a protu
company notified the strikers that it ! An unusual exhibition of reckless j sion of plants and flowers. The Pope
i would grant the 10-hour day as re- j daring has been made the past week occupied an especially constructed and
'quired bylaw, nav 20 cents an hour. I bv Harry Tracy, who with another con- ! richly decorated gallery. He was
and take the men back. Hostilities I vict both sentenced for assault and rob- greeted with enthusiastic acslania-
will now be at an end in Providence ! bery, escaped from the Oregon state tions. At the close of the fete a great
The earl of Arundel and Surrey. ,,
son of the Duke of Norfolk. Miwj;
day morning at Arundel Castle, 1
sex. This heir of the I'r, inierfj,,".'
and Earl had been an idiot an'
cripple since his birth, HertmWrj,;'j
O. A. Titus of the Union U,t ,. I
of New York beat Louis ScboiwV
Don rowing club of Toronto in the't r"
liminary beat for the diamond -cai
at Henley, Eng., Monday. Tim-'C
U2s. It was the hottest day of the v.",'
Maud Pauncefote, eldest linasfct,.'
the late British ambassador t., t
United States will be lor fa;!Je,,
biographer, arranging and puMi,ajE!
his private papers and letters asne'
moirs. She will also collect nnd j,aj
lish a volume of Lord Piiuna-futu'.
poems, written in early life uuku
psendonvm.
Joseph Chamberlain, colonial ,,..
tarv for Great Britain, wasba .lvn.
on the head by a cab accident at Lot
don .Monday. ioe norse supped, don
and he was thrown violently fonvar"
shattering the glass front of tbe cal
He had a severe scalp wound and a
gash on his forehead requiring a nun.
ber of stitches. He was tak.-n toj
Charing Cross hospital.
In the British House u! C'ummoL.
Tuesday the preliminary secretary ;
the admiralty confirmed the rep,,
that J. Pierpont Morgan had oifered:
stisbnieiVts i Pl-ce -11 the British ships in the
tv for the next 50 Years, on ivrai-
The United States has won a victory , terms. He added that the offer hi
in the arbitration of the Russo-Amer-1 not Net j)een accepted, because it coal
ican sealing damages dispute at The j 0Di v' e dealt with in relation tu Bri
Hague. "Russia must now pay up. The j jsh"shipping generallv and the Atlat
United States asked indemnity from j tic trade situation, which was bet
Russia on behalf of the owners, mas- j very carefully considered bv the ot
ters and crews of the American schoon-jernment xhe matter is being di
ers C. II. White, Kate, and Anna and 1 CUS3e(j jn parliament.
Cape Horn Pigeon, seized in the west
ern part of Kehring sea in 1392, and of The Chinese government has a Ui:
the James Hamilton Lewis and the j td the government of the Unitei Stav
Aleute in 1301. The dispute was the i to use its good offices to cause the i
subject of protracted negotiations, re-1 lied powers who still retain their j:
sultina in an agreement in 1900 be- di ers in Tien tsin to evacuate tha-
tween Count Lamsdorrl', acting minis- place in conformity with the spirit if.
ter of foreign affairs of Russia, and ; the agreement of Fekin, which settle:
Herbert H. D. Pierce, United States the boxer troubles. Secretary Hay sil
charge d'affairs at St. Petersburg, des-1 address himself to the various govert
ignating Mr. Asser, a member of the i ments, probably through Mr. Cocz--council
of state of the Netherlands, as ! at Pekin, and the foreign minister-
arbitrator. Mr. Asser, at The Hague, j there located. The state departme:
decides that the average annual catch has satisfied itself that the foreu:
should form the basis on which dam
ages should be awarded, which was
Bellows Kails.
IStf
DR. F. G. PETTEE, IVntist, Crosby
over Holden's drup store.
block,
f S. PRATT. M. D..
V lirattleboro. otliee hours:
18 North Main street,
?e hours: until 9 a. 111..
1 to 2:30 p. 111., 0:30 to 8 p. 111. 41 tf
JOHN E. GALE, Attorney at Law,
Vt.
Guilford,
mvi
, 1 1 11 1 1
although the employes of the Pawntic
ket street car company will continue
The strike.
Figures have been obtained from of
ficers who had charge of payments for
military purposes, showing' that Gen.
Maximo Gomez received 3.-,000 from
the Cuban treasury while American
government for the" island existed, to
socket, iv. 1. in descending sne lost Keep him and his associates quiet. The
her hold on the parachute and fell 00 i money was paid on account of services
rendered 111 disbanding and pacifying;
the Cuban army but the pavmeiit"was j
kept quiet, lest it should cause discon- I
I H. E. BOND & CO. j
I Funeral Directors I'
I and Furnishers. j
I 17 .Main Street, lirattleboro, Vt. i
i I I I I I " :l I'lfllllllli!
feet, being injured so badly that it
was necessary to amputate her leg
above the knee. Her jaw was broken
and she received other injuries.
Twelve thousand dollars which the
late Louise C. Frisbie, formerly a Wall
street broker, willed to Luman H.
Holmes, of Springfield, Mass., provid
ed he changed his name to Frisbie,
will go instead to Vassar college. Lou
ise Frisbie was Holmes' aunt. In her
will, filed in New York a year ago,
Holmes was given until July 2 to de
cide whether he would change his
name to that of the donor, lie an-
tent among others who got no pay, and
lest the Cubans should lose faith in
their leader and think him mercenary.
Word has been received at Newark,
N. J., that William Clark, thread man
ufacturer, died Monday in England.
Mr. Clark was one of the largest thread
manufacturers in the world. He was
born at Paisley, Scot., in 1341. He
came to this country in 1304 with his
brother George, and in a small wav be
TK.4l)i:S.
GH. HALL
in slate.
Canienter and Slater. Dealer
late. 25 Clark Street. 25tf
SIKRCASJTII.K.
BARROWS & CO.. Wholesale
Dialers ill Coals of all kinds.
Main Street, Hrattlehor.
and Retail
Offlce No. 3a
15vl
..... . . 1 - ' . hi-, iiiuiiuiiiiuir jl Luituu luirmi wit
nounced that ne would retain me in a little ,)uildlnff on the ,,auks of t()e ; ,er
uiimo u. " 1 ttissaie river in the upper part of New-
Dr. Clara Bruce of Cincinnati, is lark. From that beginning there grew
trying to introduce a reform in dress ' the great works, having a branch in
for women. The costume as worn by j Paisley, Scot., and covering with im
Dr. Bruce, consisted of a plain, gored ; mense' buildings many acres on both
skirt and white shirt waist with full j sides of the Passaic in Newark,
sleeves, fastened with small cutis. She I ,, ,
said, before the Twentieth Century ' Senr Buencamino, formerly secre
club, "The costume 1 wear, making tary of war under Aguinaldo and who
- ' ' .1 (ut - flail l,iia-u.'t,n..l- l.,.f... -I. L.-
ate Philippine committee recently.
called last week upon President Roose
velt at Washington and requested the
C P. n.. O" 33 3ST NE,
Successor to Sherman & .lenne,
IKTSURANOE.
ESTAllLmiKI) IN 1G7.
Fire. Mutual Life, Accident, Plate Glass, Kni-
ilovers Liability. Elevator, Hartford Steam
toiler, Tornado Indemnitv and Surety Bonds
North Cierman Llovd s. s. to. 17tf
HEAVY TRUCKING
OF ALL KINDS
Done at Reasonable Prices !
I have purchased a Deck AVagon for moving
household goods. Can carry more goods and in
better shape than any other wagon in town, sav
ing vou time and money. I also have the latest
machinery for moving pianos.
LUCIUS W. ADAMS.
TELEPHONE : 14923.
Successor to J. A. Taylor.
and all, cost 61.2'y. My reform dress is
so simply made that any woman can
make one. My idea is that we women
have one style of dress that will always
be recognized as being in style, no
matter bow many prevailing new styles
there may come in."
A terrific race riot between Slav and
Polish miners and coke workers oc
curred Saturday night at the Paul
mines three miles from Connellsville,
Pa. A Slav was
three revolver wounds "and another Slav
was shot through the body and prob
ably will not live. Thirty Slavs, men
and women, were all more or less in
jured in the terrific hand-to-hand fight
that took place. The participants were
covered with blood after the fracas.
but their injuries, while serious, will
not prove fatal. Thirty arrests were
made. The trouble started at a chris
tening. Captain McLean of the Cincinnati
at Venezuela cables as follows of the
situation in Venezuela: - "General
Matos, with 3,000 revolutionists, is at
Urica, well armed but inactive. There
are ;t,000 more revolutionists in the
state of Bermudez, and the entire rev
olutionary force is estimated at 10,000.
Small bands of revolutionists in the
pen with which he signed the Philip
pine government Iii11,hs be desired to
preserve it and eventually place it in
some public library in the Philippines.
The pen already had been given to
Senator Lodge, chairman of the Phil
ippine committee, but as he happened
penitentiary June 1), after killing three
guards. Ihe fugitives kept to the
woods and the militia was called out
who surrounded Tracv north of Seattle,
Washington, where a desperate battle
was fought. Three of the posse were
probably fatally shot, and Tracy, who
said he had killed his companion, es
caped, and at the ritle's point, com
pelled the crew of a steam launch to
embark and pilot him northward up
the sound. Ten hours later he
landed and escaped to the woods.
After pressing various persons in
to his service in the same wav,
i Tracy appeared Saturday at a rancher's
i near Seattle where he forced the fam
1 ily to give him breakfast, a bundle of
clothing and hats and six dnys supply
,' of food, and after reading the papers,
! he bound and gagged "the family and
made the hired man carry the bundles j
1 to the rowbuat and row him down the !
j sound. The family notified the author
ities as soon as they could get free but
Tracy had 15 hours' start. The boat
found Monday at the head of Mil
13av and Tracv was seen in the
afternoon by an Indian woman at the
reservation ' north of there. Sheriff
Cook, with a posse, left Port Madison
Monday morninir and followed the trail j
from the boat into the forest. Another j
posse is guarding all avenues of escape
into the Olympic mountains. Tracy
and Anderson appeared at Charles
Herald's house at Renton Tuesday.
Gerald was sent out to dispose of two
watches, but iustead telephoned the
sheriff's office. Half a hundred depu
ties surrounded Gerald's house but
Tracy was gone 10 minutes before the
deputies knew it. They then closed in
and found Anderson, tied to a tree
back of the house. Uloodhounds are
now ou his trail.
Observance of the national holiday j
Hock of pigeons sent to Rome from all
the chief towns of Italy was then re
leased and Hew off to their homes,
each one bearing an announcement
that the ceremonies had taken place.
A dinner in celebration of the jubilee
was given in the Vatican at noon Mon
day to l.'x) of the poor of Rome.
exactly the contention advanced by
Mr. Pierce, who is the advocate for
this government.
The physicians in attendance upon
King Edward announced Saturday that
they considered him out of danger.
Most of the churches in the United
Kingdom celebrated this announce
ment Sunday with informal thanksgiv
ing services, special music and the
uA -..-; -ni nnu tu
T,?:T 7. ....wiMautle Adams
guiciujiiruk un7 i?ut7ii uiu:t3 iLiai, luc
Indian colonial troops now in London
shall postpone their departure indefi
nitely and they will participate in the
reception to be given Lord Kitchener
when he arrives in England about
July Vi. Half a million of Lon
don's poor were given their prom
ised coronation feast Saturday, at a
cost of eioO.OOO. The king sent, through
the lord mayor, a message saying how
sincerely he regretted his
I ministers at Pekin whose govemmer-
are represented by these military lea:
ers are thoroughly anxious to have tt
treaty of Pekin executed in a in
spirit, and to that end to have Ti
tsin evacuated at the earliest momer
by the foreign forces, so it will carr
the Chinese appeal to the government
concerned.
Sarah Bernhardt definitely announce
at Manchester, Eng., Tuesday that ar
rangements had been completed f::
to plav Juliet to Ma-
Bernhardt's Romeo during the visit ;:
the French actress to America in lWi
be prese t and how touched he was by
the loyal and kindly feelings so uni
versally displayed. The king's recov
ery has been so rapid and satisfactory
that it was decided Monday that the
coronation will take place between Au
gust 11 and August l.". The pageant
through the streets and the ceremony
at Westminster Abbey will be much
curtailed from the original plan.
The volcanoes of Mirad Valle as:
Rincond Vieja, in Costa Rica, situated
respectively 80 and 00 miles southeast
of Lake Nicaragua, are in active ope
ation. Volcanic phenemena are re
ported from Indian Territory, nhrrr
surveyors north of Ttllsa found erae's-
in the sides of mountains, as thou;:
inability to : from great pressure underneath, bar
is escaping from the fissures, and a co;
tinual hissing and roaring can be heard.
On the extreme top of the highest hi!,
there has been a small volcano at work
raising up large bowlders and tossic
them aside. Experts state it is a L'rea
oil and gas field, and that presur
from a great depth has caused the com
motion, ine inhabitants of Tulsa ar
greatly excited over the matter.
Tie largest selliini!
brands of Cigars in the world!
Our MABKKT LETTER this
week mention interesting facts
regarding the Financial Situa
tion, Colorado Fuel V Iron. Sugar
Southern Railway. Common and
Amalgamated. We should lie
pleased Ui mail you a copy.
ill JILvAViillJiJ
killed i,riv hi De I,resen.t Ht the ,me' he presented I was general in the Philippines. The
irls'inrl nnntlVer tilnu i ' to lJueDL'a11'10-, W. Leon Pep- president's proclamation, declaring
peruian, secr.-iary 01 me "uiuppine amnesty in the islands, directing the
commission, who also wanted the pen, subordination of the military to the
was promised, instead, the pen with 1 civil government and approving the
which the president signed the amnes- work of the armv in Cuba and the
ty proclamation to the Filipinos. Philippines, was read at Manila at
R H. Rumrill, long a Yankee king "?,n' .ln botn English and bpamsh.
of cannibals in the far-off Marquesas ' T-he P1"" freed by the proclama
in the southern Pacific, died last vear1"?" numbering COO, were released
at the age of 70. He sent, bv a mjs. j without ceremony. The Philippine war
sionarv, a message to bis sister, Mrs. nmv ended, began in June, 1S3S. Up
J. E. Xason of Roxbury, Mass., who i Ma? 1- the ,otal i?fs ?f men a?d of"
Hv received a lutfer r-,,r, ! fleers was 4,044. Total cost of war,
ling it and stating that he died'a j -'AOtKl.OOO. The guard of American
; Christian. Rumrill had lived for over ! foldlera has beeD removed from the
150 vears among the Marquesans and his 1 house where Aguinaldo lived in Manila
!storv as told to a naval officer over 10 and he has bet,n toI,i he could f" an-v
jvears ago. when a ship chanced to stop ! where. He had no complaint of dis
for water off the town of Taiohal, on i courtesy or harshness to make. He is
i -,irh;,-a ,i-a fii. . u : 1 1 ! to v isi t b is home in Ca vi t e. and asked
lutionists in the :;"", '".' "",,. . ..!li.int.tiii,. i,uri,.0r, ,h.,r.
vieinirv of T,a Guavra have been rinino- i was mTa ,n uosraD Bna snipped in ItSil " . ' V - . . j
; 11 .Y",La i , : wrecked on one of the Marquesas. All ' t0 v?nture out- en. Chaffee said he
- " ,uuaL.7... -. .......i n- . 1 . a i i :n would per The cnniA urorenTlnn nq nnv
and foui or five comrades. The sur- ! other tizen. He then asked that the
vivors were seized bv the natives, who IF?urts 1,6 Pr'entd from requiring
ii suits. jrtll.
bad no author-
fiiBAN
v. 5$
0L
Cincinnati and the Topeka are sutti
cient for the safeguarding of Ameri
il.rkl cans and their "iTrot.er "tv rhrhts "for the vivor9 were seizvd b' tbe natives, who l?urts ie prevented u
llmilE lp?esent a least P?es dent Castro determined to serve them up at a grand : hra to testify ,n civ.
rMU flnnn tha? he w "i ll take h - "flif S Before being dished up each I !' d that he 1
announces that he will take the held
without delay, and meet the revolu
tionists. Judire Charles M. Lamprey, a Hamp
ton, X. H., lawyer, has prepared for
publication an article in which tbe as
sertion is made that Thorwald Eric,
the brother of Leif Eric, the Norse
man, whom tradition calls the first dis
coverer and colonizer of America, land
ed at Hampton in the year 1004, there
received bis death wound in a fiirbt
with the Indians and at his own re
quest was buried near the shore at a
spot that he had himself selected be
cause of its beauty. This spot Judge
Lamprey believes, is marked by the
great stone on which are cut "three
crosses that have puzzled antiquarians
and historians. The New Hampshire
State Historical society not many years
ago bad a field day at Hampton to ex
amine the stone and the locality.
one of the captives wvs bound securely
and subjected to the slow, torturing
process of being tattoed from head to
foot on one side of the body, the divid
ing line being drawn straight down
the center of the forehead. The rule
was that he who should survive should
not be killed. Rumrill's comrades suc
cumbed and were eaten, but he sur
vived and became a favorite of the kine
and the natives. In course of time he
learned the native language and cus
toms, and taught the natives many use
ful tbmgs. Above all, he sought to
abolish their cannibalistic practices,
and in this be was largely successful.
The old king died, leaving Rumrill as
bis successor. On account of bis tat
tooed state, and partly becau :e be had
settled down to the life of the island
ers, be never desired to return to civ
ilization. He died surrounded by his
native wife and children.
ity to do this and advised him to call
on Acting Civil Governor Wright.
Aguinaldo replied that he would call
at n i u Ii t as he was timid about appear
ing in the streets in daylight. Ven
geance may. it is thought, be taken
upon him by friends of Gen. Luna,
and other enemies. Luna was a Fili
pino leader, whom Aguinaldo caused
to be killed in 1S1K). The first steps in
the new government, according to the
law just enacted, will be the complete
transfer of authority from military to
civil officials, except in the Moro coun
try where disorder lingers, and which
will permit a considerable reduction of
the military force in the islands, and
tbe taking of tbe census, which will
begin as soon as Gov. Taft reaches
Manila, and which will take about a
year.
Geo-
Jac
,uUhr,
Subscribe for the Reformer.
One Band from "FLORODORA" Cigars or Two Bands from
-CUBAN0LA: "CREW "GEO. W. CH I LDS"or"JACKSON SQUARE" Cigars
are of same value as one Tag from "PLANET'OLD HONESTY',
htAu, . olANuAnu NAVY or SICKLE Tobacco,
7? ""X
tf

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