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A R~ , '-«‘<;h : ng Etth.
A warm tail bath !:• very rcfro---hing
to anyone suffering from exhaustion
of travel or a lens -hopping expedi¬
tion. which is as trying to mind and
body at .anything that cm be under¬
taken by a w man. Away from the
searhore, a very simple substitute for
sea-water is a cup of rock salt dis¬
solved in warm water and adder! to
the bath. When the salt is irritating
to the skin, take a warm bath and
sponge off with a mixture of violet
or lavender water and alcohol, about
half and half, and rub briskly with a
warm friction towel. Such a method
prevents the exhaustion and dangers
cf cold which follow a warm bath.
Time Filed.
A small boy who was waiting with
bis mother in a twelve-story office
building on Chestnut street tlie other
day, watched with fascination an indi¬
cator which showed, by a pointing
hand on a dial, where the mounting
car was. “Mamma,” he said, “now I
know why everybody here hurries so.
Just look lrow fast that clock goes!”—
Philadelphia Record.
H.ITT'. Tlltdf
We otter One Hundred Dollars Reward for
anyoasoof Catarra tuac cannot bo cured oy
Dali’s Catarrh Cure
>. J. t hkney <fc Co., Toledo, O.
We, the undersigned, have known P. J.
< heney lor the lust if,years,andbeiiovchjm
j erfeetly honorable in 11 U business transac¬
tions and llmmelaily able to carry out any
obligations made by their llrm.
Wksi .t Tbuax, Wholesale Druggists, To¬
ledo, u,
Wauiunu, ir.iXAS A Mauvix, Wholesala
Druggists, Toledo, O.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken Internally,act
ingdireotly upon the blood and mucoussur
iaoosof the system. Testimonials sent free.
Trice,75c. per b )ttle, Hold by all Druggists.
Take Hall’s thimily Tills to- constipation.
Schiller's Father’* Wish.
Apropos of the Friedrich Schiller
centenary it is Interesting to recall
that when the news of the birth of the
, poet readied ills father, the latter be¬
sought God to bestow upon the boy
“those gifts of mind and soul to which
lie himself, through lack of education,
had never attained,”
CAPT. GRAHAM’S CURE
Soi«m on Fneo nrol Hark—Tried Many
I>ortor# Without Huccem— (ilven
Tliank« to Cutlrurii.
Captain W. S. Graham, 1321 Eoff St.,
W heeling, W. V a., writing under date of
June 14, '04, says; "I am so grateful 1 want
to thank God that a friend recommended
Cutieura Soap and Ointment to me. I
suffered for a long time with sores on my
isu-o and back. Some doctors said lahad
blood poison, and others that 1 had bar¬
bers itch. None of them did me any good,
but they all took my money. My friends
tell me my skin now looks as clear ns a
baby’s, and 1 tell them all that Cutieura
Soap and Cutieura Ointment did it.”
Once a week ^verj s>tpe arid drain
in*’ m/(hse fi'notld bo fiUBhed with
copperas solution to Temove all odora
and sediment.
EXPLANATION WANTED.
American Imm gralion Inspector Brings
Charges Against Austro-Hunga¬
rian 0‘ficials.
President Roosevelt is manifesting
a particular interest in the case of
Marcus Braun, a special inspector of
the United Stales immigration service,
who is having trouble with officials
of the Austro-Hungarian government,
whom he charges with tampering with
i his official mail. Inspector Brawn com¬
plained of his treatment to Ambassa
j dor Storer, who cabled to the state
J department some details of the case.
Inspector Braun has made several
reports to the bureau of immigration
| r.s a result of his inquiries in Europe,
! especially in Austria-Hungary. One of
l these reports was received by the de
| partment last autumn and another
a few days ago.
The first is sensational in its state¬
ments. It contains allegations, back¬
ed by affidavits, of the Austro-Hunga¬
rian government’s efforts to foist upon
this country immigrants who may not
be desirable from the viewpoint of
American people. Tihe charge is
made specifically that the Austro-Hun¬
garian government is paying the
steamship companies large sums of
money each year to bring immigrants
to this country and also that the im¬
migrants are being urged to become
American citizens.
The reports of Inspector Braun
have not been published, lest the
statements they contain might cause
friction between the United States and
the Austro-Hungarian government.
The officials of the latter government
have been cognizant in a general way
of the contents of Inspector Braun s
reports for some time, and it is inti¬
mated that is one reason for the trou¬
ble in which he now finds himself in¬
volved.
The president, Saturday, called for
the reports of Inspector Braun and
will go over them himself in connec¬
tion with the consideration of the in¬
spector's present difficulty. Tamper¬
ing with the mail of an official in a
foreign country is a serious matter,
and there is no disposition on the
part of the officials of the department
of commerce and labor to treat the
complaint of Inspector Braun lightly.
RUSSIAN MAY-DAY WAS QUIET.
Cossacks With Whips Quickly Dispersed
____ OfiW ds Bcijjt .on.fi iotiag. -
The widely heralded May day dem¬
onstration in St. Petersburg Sunday
did not result in the bloodshed pre¬
dicted.
Malsby & Co.
41 South Forsyth St., Atlanta, 6a,
Portable amt Stationary
Engines, Boilers,
Saw Mills
AND ALL KINDS OF MACHINERY
. Complete line Carried in stock' for
IMMEDIATE DELI VERY.
Best Machinery, I.ovvest 1 'rioes ami Best Terms
Write us for catalogue, prices,
etc., before buying.
At the Preobrajensky cemetery,
where the principal meeting in honor
of the ‘‘January martyrs,” as the vic¬
tims of “red Sunday” are popularly
called, had been advertised, a crowd,
largely composed of curiosity seekers,
assembled.
Cosacks dispersed the crowd by
using their whips freely, inflicting
many injuries.
There was a similar incident on
Vassili island, where a dozen students,
mainly girls, raised the “Marseillaise,”
and gathered a crowd. Cossacks can
tered up and dispersed the crowd with
whips, seeming to take special pleas¬
ure in slashing the girl students with
their knouts; but the latter apparently
were anxious to pose as martyrs and
deliberately provoked attack by sing¬
ing revolutionary songs.
In St. Petersburag the day was pass¬
ed happily without a drop of blood
being shed. The revolutionists found
it impossible to execute ethe prog&am
of demonstrations and
which they so widely advertised, the
workingmen declining to
themselves to advocate the
da of their self-constituted
and the advertised meetings were
tended chiefly by spectators.
BAD BREATH
•*Fot roonth* \ hnvi grt'at trouble with my Motnach
anti iimnl all kiu«l* of medloit iofneii. My tongue ha«
Actually m i;r*en as graft s. , m my brt'alh recommended having
a bad odor Two w«'fk» ago a f rtend
Cmc arct* and ‘ after ‘ uains them I can willingly and
ehce tfuUy t«ay that ihay narn eutirelv cwted me. I
there .. efore let you know that 1 shall recommend
them to any one* mitTorin* from such troubles."
Cha». H ll’alpuu, IW Ktvingtou St , New York, N T
Best for
The i ne Bowels ooweis ^
candy catnanttc
Palatable. PoV*nt. Taat-* 10c, Good. Do Nevef Good,
N*v«*r JSiekt*n. Weaken or Grti** v*ble» •tamped ?0c.60e. CCC.
•old in bulk. The ^ennino back.
Guaranteed *o cure or your xuouey
Sterling Remedy Co., Chicago or N.Y. 596
ANNUAL SALE, TEH MILLION BOXES
CENTS BUYS A
PACKAGE
ECONOMY BLUE
Makes Full Quart Best Wash Bluing
lf> year* on th» tnarUrt, Ast iWl*r, or we
will send by mall |>»ok»i;e upon receipt of 10c.
ln stamp® and your dciler's name
Bkiducs MfDou *i i Qy. Louisville, Ky
,___— ir- ituti «««. Shorthand and i t-..
up hr folio-,'. l.ouifV-tUo.Ky .open the wh.->
ar. Mvicleius can any time, t
If M fjet*, il nfMrtfA It <'ftk u*»e Thompson's EyeWalsr
Heavy Assessment on Stockholders.
Comptroller of the Currency Ridge
ley has levied an assessment of 66 2-32
per cent on stockholders of the First
National bank of Milwaukee to make
good the defalcation of former Presi¬
dent Bigelow. The amount of the as¬
sessment will reach $l, 000 ,i> 00 .
HART ON A HIGH-FLYING SPREE.
Transport Paymaster Mysteriously Makes
Wav With SlO.OOOof Uncle Sam’sCash.
Captain Franklin W. Hart of Wash¬
ington, D. C.. paymaster of the trans¬
port Lawson, has been arrested at San
Francisco for drunkenness, and will be
courtmartialed. Hart, it is alleged,
came down from Mare Island, with or¬
ders for $' 10,000 on the navy pay of¬
fice. He returned s o much under the
influence of liquor that he was unable
to transact business. It could not be
learned by officials what he had done
with the $10,000.
1
TWO VIEWS..
"Yes, he used to be in the news
pa.er business, but he’s studying for
tbt ministry now.. He says he decided
tint he couldn't be a reporter and
sate his soul.”
'Indeed? I believe his old city edi¬
tor put it differently. He says he
coiidn’t be a reporter to save his
Bom.”—Philadelphia Press.
WHY SHE GOT MAD.
Ifr. Brcnks--Did you fall down to
day Ethel?
Ars. Bronks (who prides herself oi
he* skating).—Hardly.
thought you would.”—Life.
Matching Shades to Dodge Them.
Btfore trying to match the sample
of ’ sf’k d*. % the clerk asked:
“f this a piece of something you
wan, n or something you don’t want?”
Something I want, of cours-e,” re
plied the customer, with asperity,
‘You don't suppose, do you, that I
woul l go to all this trouble for a
thinf I can’t use?”
“S ‘tne folk *o,” said the clerk,
‘Tv i met a number of them. The
first'woman i I ever saw with that kmd
inch lnch^nf n$ch. r m blue silk tnat she wanted me
to The scrap of silk was so
small that it was hard to make com
the paris'^ bjue 13 , bolts but after hauling shelves down half
on the and run
uing the door several times to test
the C)]cr in broad daylight, I found
the etaet shade.
“ ‘Epw yards do ant,
many you w
madai^e?’ “ ‘Oi,’ I asked.
said the woman, ‘I don’t
want any. Almost any other piece
will d 5 . That particular shade is very
n J b eC :i min S '. \ j ust wanted to make
_. sure . t‘»at feustomer I . don’t get it, that’s all.' !
The laughed. “What did
you sty?” she asked.
“I’d rather not tell,” said the clerk.
"Anyhjw, since then I have been cau¬
tious. Before matching a sample now
I inquire as politely as possible into
a cutomer’s intentions. If it’s a case
of ‘Dc n ’t want’ I don’t hurt myself
match ng the shade.”—New York
Press.
*’3arber Shop and Rules.
ft wi s at - barber shop yesterday
afterno™ on First avenue, that it
h append.
“Nest-!” shouted the barber, who
had jusjt dealt with a customer. Two
person^ at once sprang from the
chairs where they had been waiting
patienty and approached the knight
of the razor each looking ferociously
and inquiringly at the other. One of
them ’►is an elderly personage, evi¬
dently -om the country, the- other a
, -i-’o •’inNgt 3u f yfii Uac
down slow h| d j ust t, e g Un t0 indicate the
a nd uncertain approach of
beard.
barber. Whit^h 0 f y OU jg next?” asked the
an i,” said the young man.
“No, _you are not,” protested tfha
other, < an ^ as j am the oldest, I
claim fi j
rgt c { iance _ Besides, I am in
a 5 y? at hurry.”
“Ah! I see you are from the coun¬
try and, ^ course, do not understand
the tut rub run >s ot « soclety - . governing such
cases a s this,” said the youth.
^. ba t is the rule?”
Singly this. Beauty goes before
age. j will take the cba i r See?”
“Oh, well; t jjat’s right. Mr. Bar
her sha re him first He has got the
best of me by rU | e and
come to C £ b £>, g right accord
lng ^he rule where I come from .’ 1
Inde ed? mat is the rule where
from - old chap?” asked the
young fellow, as he fixed himseli |
comfort ^ ably . jn tbe barbe r’s chair.
\\ ell^ young man, the rule down
my way j g tnat; we a i ways keep the
pigs un &a( j 0 f us—Seattle Post
telligen^, er
^‘tv? n 5 J * F0RTABLE feel foolish COMPARISON peddling
these .. you
n ongen3ical toys? „ asked th „
man °f severe ideals.’
“T , twi ’ answered the street fakir,
rather foolish. But what do
~ 0a of the people who buy ’em?”
Ington Star.
QUICK RESULTS.
W. J. Hill, of ConcoTd,
N. C., Justice of the
says:
1r" g, . ‘ , - . ’5
5 Y& :. - .,,,5‘_‘.
fix a“;
’ ~ If: nun:
L? > | ,‘f‘
Ii" <-
‘ ' s»? “ {j xvii:
.
_
were v my irregular, dark col^ed and
fldl of sediment. The Pills cleared it
a :nd I have not had an ache in
i' 3 si nce taking the last dose.
great ‘ 5 d^ , -dth generally is improved a
Foste a j..
r -Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y.
ot box sal^ b aii dealers, price 50 cents
per
TRAIN DITCHED BY WRECKERS.
| -
Cars Throwa (rora Track a(ld Six p !e
Hurt, Two Probably Fetaliy.
An Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe
passenger train was ditched by train
wreckers Sunday just east of Empo¬
ria, Kansas. Six passengers were in¬
jured, and two will probably die.
This is the fourth attempt in the
last four months to wreck passenger
trains in the same place. Previous at¬
tempts were made by piling ties on
the track and without serious re¬
sults.
Sunday’s wreck was caused by driv¬
ing the spikes and fish plates of two
rails on the inside of a curce. The lo¬
comotive passed over the loose rails
i sa f eJ y. hut a mail car left the track
an d was dragged 100 yards along the
embankment before the train w r as
stopped. The next five cars, two ex
press and baggage cars, a smoking
car and two day coaches, were
ditched. The passengers were asleep
when the wreck occurred.
There is no clew to the wreckers.
| Three men were seen Saturday night
near the Howard branch sectiOT1
house ' Sunday morning a track
Wr f Cb and . a * law , , bar were missm . . S
j and they ™ ere found ln a P ° o1 of wa ’
J ter near the wreck -
——
WOMAN IMPERSONATES CHARLOTTA
And Swindles Lot of Foolish Boston Dagoes
Out of S40.000.
} A woman, who claimed to be Carlot
ta, the wife of Maximilian, former em
peror of Mexico, and brother of the
j present emperor of Austria, has left
; Boston, Mass., after securing some
$40,000 from members of the Italian
colony in that city on the pretense
that she was the rightful claimant
of the Austrian throne.
She is being sought by over 100 res
! ’ dents of the North End district, who
for almost eight >' ears have been P^
ing her money to enable her, as they
supposed, to gain possession of the
Austrian throne, upon which event
taking place she promised that those
who helped her would be made min¬
isters anj nobles and be given vast
estates.
ALLEGED LYNCHERS EXONERATED.
Five Men Given Freedom By Jury at Orange¬
burg, South Carolina.
After being out fifteen minutes,
the jury in the case against five white
men on trial in Orangeburg, S. C.,
charged with lynching a negro, Keitt
Bookhardt, at Eutawville, brought in
-3- Ttd ’ feA ^ --yoT- g oWiy: —TYrer-st
evidence was chiefly that of a
who claimed to have been in the
ty Vvhen the negro was killed. The
defense put up wives and relatives of
prisoner who swore that the defend
ants were at home in bed when the
crime was alleged to have been com¬
mitted.
TRIPLE T RAGEDY SHOCKS MEMPHIS.
Man .. Ki ...„ Is Sweetheart, „ His Rival and JD Blows ,
„ Out His Own Brains.
A triple tragedy occurred in Mem
pbis> Tenn., about dusk Sunday night,
when Thomas McCall, an employee of
the Illinois Central railroad, shot and
jailed Edith Ferguson, a woman well 1
known about town, and Hal William
son. ’f’he murderer an hour later
turned the weapon upon himself, fir-S
ing a bu uet into his head. The cause
was jealousy.
_
PATTERSONS NOW IN WASHINGTON.
Erring Nan, Her Father, Brother-in-Law and
Sister Arrive at Old Home.
Nan Patterson accompanied by her
father and Mr. and Mrs. J. Morgan
Smith arrived in Washington from
7:20 Saturday .
New York at morning
and proceeded to the Patterson home
on Columbia Heights, a modest two
story cottage, where they arrived in
time for breakfast.
A crowd of curious persons awaited
the arrival of the train at the Penn¬
sylvania depot.
Will Bury Bones of Jones at Annapolis.
President Roosevelt has approved
thfl rec0 mmendation of Secretary Mor
^ at the body of John Paul Jones
be buried at Annapolis, Md.
BiRAM CRONK PASSES FROM EARTH.
^ ast Survivor of War of ISI2 Dies at Age of
105 Years.
Hiram Cronk, the last sur\:\or of
the war of 1812, died at his home
in Ava, N. YSaturday, aged lOo.
He had been honored by both the
national government and his native
state. Born at Frankfort, Herkimer
county. New York. April 19, 1S00, Hi
ram Cronk became a member of Cap
tain Edward Fhiller’s company of the
infantry when only a little more than
14 years of age, and did valiant
service against the British.
“Doan's Kidney
Pills proved a
very Efficient
remedy in my
case. I used
them for disor¬
dered kidneys
and backache,
from which I
bad experienced
a great deal of
trouble and
pain. The kid¬
secretions
REBEL MOROS
SLAUGHTERED
General Wood's Forces Gave Fierce
Encounters on Joio Island.
THREE HUNDRED SLAIN
While Americans Lose Only Seven in
Killed and Fifteen Wounded--Cam¬
paign Still Under Way.
Advices from Manila, under Mon¬
day’s date, state that fierce fighting
has been going on the last two weeks
on the island of Joio, between the
outlaw’ Moro chief, Pala, with 600
well armed followers, and troops un¬
der the personal command of Major
General Leonard Wood. Pala’s losses
thus far are 300 killed ( while those
of General Wood are seven killed and
fifteen w’ounded. Pala and his re¬
maining followers, in accordance with
Moro tradition, prefer death to cap¬
ture.
General Wood, with detachments
from the fourteenth cavalry, the _
seventeenth, the trventy-second and
the twenty-third infantry and con¬
stabulary scouts, have driven Pala and
his follotvers into a swamp which has
been surrounded.
Pala w r as a noted slave trader and
warrior when the Americans occupied
the islands. Later he escaped with
his followers to the island of Pula
Sekar, near Borneo.
One of Paia’s leaders deserted and
took refuge in the British settlement
at La Had. Pala, discovering his
whereabouts, landed with a follow¬
ing and demanded of the British mag¬
istrate that he turn the deserter over
to him. The demand was not com¬
plied with, and Pala ordered a mas¬
sacre. Twenty-five persons, including
several Britons, w r ere killed. Pala es¬
caped to the island of Jolo and or¬
ganized the present uprising.
It is reported that the Borneo au¬
thorities requested General Wood to
apprehend Pala, dead or alive, and
turn him over to them.
LIBERAL DONATIONS BY BAPTISTS.
Fourteen States Contribute Sum of $354,
000 for Foreign Missions.
Fourteen states and territories, rep
+ iiv&- «sriV»-cr*A. wa.Vri*7r’»-r,g 4
the Southern Baptist convention im
session at Kansas total of City, $354,000 Saturday, for con for¬ ;^
tributed a
eign missions. In addition a contri
bution of $5,000 to the same fund
was announced from a New York ^ wo¬
man, whose name was withheld. The
states contributed sums as follows:
Alabama........$35,000
Arkansas.......... 7,000
Georgia.......... 60,000
Missouri........ 22,000
Florida.......... 5,000
Louisiana.......... 8,000
Kentucky........ 55,000
Oklahoma and In. Ter. 2,00o
North Carolina .. .. 25,000
South Carolina ., .. 30,000
Texas........ 6,000
Tennessee........ 20,000
Virginia.......... 45,000
The four most important enterprises
now under the auspices of the South¬
ern Baptist convention are the for¬
eign and home boards of missions,
the theological seminary at Louisville,
Ky., and the Sunday school board at
Nashville, Tenn. The purpose of this
last board is to publish Sunday school
and other literature and to promote
Sunday school work throughout the
bounds of . the ,. convention. ...
The rT,l theological seminary is not ab¬ —r
'~
solutely under the control of the con¬
vention, but its relations are perfect¬
ly harmonious.
Five Charred Bodies Consigned to Farth.
Brief and simple services were held
over the charred bodies of the five un¬
identified victims of the South Har
’risburg disaster in the Market Square
Presbyterian church at Harrisburg,
Pa., after which they were buried in
the Paxtang cemetery.
PANAMA GETS EIGHT-HOUR DAY.
Attorney General Holds that Canal Laborers
are Under Provisions of the Law.
In an opinion rendered by Attorney
Q enera j yioody, regarding the applica
eight-hour law to the em
;
i plovees on the Isthmus of Panama, e
j attorney general those employees, holds that the law
applies to
An.inspection of the opinion showed
1 that it did cover all the grounds
not
desired by the canal commission, and
consequently it will be returned to the
attorney general for further consider
ation.