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Show iu mxc go SHIP BURNED AT SEA QHfrer TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION: One Tear, In advance fctx Montba Tore Montba FOURTEEN LIVES LOST AS RESULT OF FIRE OM STEAMER. 11. tS - J Xntered at the Poet OlSee at Brigham City aa second class matter. Life Boats Were Launched, But ing to Heavy Seas Were the Passengers Being Drowned. Ow- Cap-size- HYBCM STANDING, Editor. INSTRUCTIONS TO CORRESPONDENTS. Items ol news are eolielted from all parts of She country. W nte upon one aide of the paper only. Write proper namea plainly Imfrom to the In order publisher protect positions from Inreaponalble persons, the full name of the author should be signed to all communications. The Identity of correspondents will be withheld whenever desired. EVERY THURSDAY. UTAH STATE NEWS. A blast furnace is likely to be erected In Ogden in conjunction with the proposed smelting plant Niels Clemenson, one of the earliest pioneers of Sanpete county, is dead at Ephraim, at the age of 84. Grading has been resumed on the Bamberger extension of the Salt Lake A Ogden Hue, between Kaysvllle and ... Farmington. Two parties wo were under quarantine at Falrvlew for smallpox have been released and that city Is now free from the disease. ' The' San Pedro grade Is now completed to the Muddy river, and the rails have been laid for a distance ot , forty-thre- e miles beyond Callentes. James Mellor of Fayette while carrying a bucket of water, slipped and fell with great force upon' the sharp edge of the bucket, breaking two of his ribp. Miss Nina Bean and .Miss Margaret Thurman of Lehl left Liverpool on the 18th on their trip home, after spending two years In Great Britain as missionaries. The La Sal Mountain Telephone Electric company has leased the Moab and Thompson line for a term of years and the two lines are now under one management The bull fight at Ogden on the 22nd proved to be a rather tame affair, six bulls, being used in the Engagement hut all being so tame that the sports were rathr disappointed. "Father Gimlin, who has successfully managed a baseball club at Ogden for the past six years, has been selected as manager of the Salt Lakr baseball club for the coming season. Clifford Hill, a Salt Lak hoy, has confessed to the unique crlm of having stolen the flowers from htf father's grave and selling them to get money with which to buy toys and sweetmeats. A. Soyks, of Richfield, while eating breakfast, put a needle in his mouth with his food. The needle lodged In his throat In trying to get It out it was broken, and the end containing the eye was swallowed. N. H, Darton of the hydrographic division of thq United States geological survey') looking into the water resources of Modena and that portion of Iron county with a view, of ascer' taining tin available water supply. The daughter of William Pierson of Salt Lake dropped a lighted match Into a pile of paper in a closet in the family residence, and be- fore the lire department arrived the building had been reduced to ashes. Domenico Castanxa, a track walker for the Denver ft Rio Grande, was killed near Castle Gate on Friday night of last week. The man had evidently been struck In the back by a train, his body being horribly mangled. The. body of a man, nnde and In an advanced state of decomposition, was found on the bank of the. river near Ogden. The body Is believed to he that of a man named Bailey, who formerly worked for the Union Pacific at Ogden. The records of the United States weather bureau at Modena show that this has been the warmest February alnce the station was established, the maximum temperature up to the 27th, 66 degrees, never having - been equaled.' An Important deal Is under way between the Sanpete Valley and the Los Angeles Railway companies, through which It Is probable that within a few weeks the San Pedro system will receive its coal supply from the Morrison mines, located at Sterling. Mr. Brown of Salt Lake was In Monroe last week, examining the conditions for an electric plant and water system for the town. After an Investigation he has located a site and made the town board a proposition, and the matter Is now under consideration. The Kanosh correspondent of the Fillmore Progress-Reviesays: "As an evidence of advancing civilization amongst oar Indians a young redman came into the Cash store and Inquired of the clerk for a pair of babys stockings and a nipple for a nursing bottle. Headquarters, band and staff and companies A. B, C and D, composing the First battalion of the Twelfth infantry, located at Fort Douglas, and companies G and H, from Fort Duchesne, left bait Lake City on Wed-- ' nesday of last week for the Philip, I pines. '1 Reports received from SL George and vicinity show that the farming season will be one of the most forward for several years past. The farmers have already planted garden seeds, such as peas, lettuce, onions and radishes. , Peach trees are already budding. , Upon the completion of the tele- phone line Connecting Modena with a number of places In the Dixie country the Modena efflee of the United 8tates weather oureau will distribute the dally forecasts of cold Waves and frost warnings to all places reached by his line. 4k'.. PASSES SENATE. Recorded Vote Fourteen Againct Treaty With Panama. The United States senate on Tuesday ratified without amendment the treaty with Panama for a canal across the Isthmus of that name by a vote of 68 to 14. The result was a foregone conclusion, the interest in the matter being only In the division of the vote on the Democratic side, which was not known definitely until the roll was called, all the Republicans being for ratification. Fourteen Democrats voted for ratification and Two Democrats, fourteen against. Clark of Montana and Stone of Missouri, were paired in favor of the Overtreaty, and three Democrats, were man, McLaurln and Martin, paired against It, so In the total vote sixteen Democrats were for the treaty and seventeen against The Democrats who were present and voted for the treaty were: Bacon. Berry, Clark, (Ark.), Clay, Cockrell. Foster (La.), Gibson, Latimer, McCreary, McEnery, Mallory, Simmons and Taliaferro. Only STANDING A WIXOM, Proprietor. PUBLISHED CAunt- - IKLA1Y I A special from Seattle says: Fourteen people lost their lives as the result jof the fire on the steamer Queen from San Francisco to Seattle, early Sunday morning.' The origin of the fire Is as yet unknown. It started in the social ball of the vessel at about 4:30 In the morning and raged for three hours before It was gotten under control. When the conflagration was first discovered the lifeboats containing the women and children and many men, were launched, but three of these, owing to the heavy seas, capsized, spilling the passengers in the water and causing the loss of nine lives. Three men, waiters on the vessel, were suffocated before they could reach the outer air in safety from their bunks In the glory hole In the aft part of the ship, and one woman died later from exposure. According to the stories told by passengers and crew of the Queen, .which arrived In port at S oclock Sunday afternoon, the vessel was off Tillamook and about thirty miles from land when the fire was discovered. There was a heavy sea on and the ship was first-clas- Klnk-wasa- the-road a feathered. Boris Sarafoff, the Macedonian leader, came to Italy with the principal object of deciding on a course of action with Ricciotti Garibaldi, who heretofore haB not approved of an Isolated movement on the part of the'Macedonlans. Railroad Accidents During Term of Three Months. Accident bulletin No. 9. which has just been issued by the Interstate Commerce commission, gives an account of railroad accidents that occurred In the United States during the months of July; August and September, 1903, and shows that during this quarter there were 60 passengers and 220 employees killed and l,u68 passengers and 1.914 employees injured, making in all 28o persons killed and 3,682 Injured In train accidents. - Routed. The United States cruiser Columbia, Which left San Domingo February 22, arrived at SL Thomas, D. W. I., on Tuesday, and will remain In these waters eight or ten days. She confirms the Washington reports that severe fighting occurred February 16 and 17 outside of San Domingo City. The Insurgents were completely routed, losing two field nieces, quantities of ammunition and provisions, and four generals and many other officers killed, wounded or made prisoners. Will of Senator Hanna. By the will of the late Senator Marcus Alonzo Hanna, an estate valued at about 83,000,000 Is left to the family. The principal beneficiaries are the widow, Mrs. Charlotte. Augusta Hanna, Daniel Rhodes Hanna, the two daughters, Mabel Augusta Hanna Parsons and Mrs. Ruth McCormick, wife of Medlll McCormick of Chicago. A sister, Lillian C. Hanna Baldwin, is given $10,000. An aunt, Mrs. Helen Converse, is given $1,000, and each of the grandchildren $5,000 each. t S 23. Proof of Its Age In the Sourt Russians Exhibit a Feeling of Hostil- There Is of Minnesota. Records ATTEMPTED TO BOTTLE UP RUSity Towards the United States. pedigree of a "The IrriSIAN FLEET AT PORT ARTHUR. that A St. Petersburg cable says 23 years of age Is all that wild gander tation against the United States on saved a grocer of Minneapolis from s atShips Leaded With Explosives and account of the supposed unfriendly heavy fine for violating the game laws titude of that country toward Russia, of Minnesota," said a citizen of the Sent Amorg Russian Vessels Failed which was slightly noticeable throughto Co Any Damage Except to Gopher state. "Our game wardens are veritable out the negotiations, seems to have Themselves. secured become dally more pronounced, and, sleuths, and they recently considered evidence of a what they Chemat Incident A dispatch from St. Petersburg since the Vicksburg bad violation of the game laws by a commander of this says that on February 23 the Japanese ulpo (when the grocer, in the shape of a wild goose Is said to have re- which was exposed for sale. attempted to rend four steamers filled American gunboat "Wben the case was brought for with explosives among the Russian fused to unite with the commanders to fleet in Port Arthur harbor. These fire- of ether foreign warships at Chemulpo trial the grocer offered evidence to protest against the fighting which show that the alleged contraband themwere no did and ships damage was only a purchased selves destroyed, the two being sunk resulted In the loss of the Russian goose named Johnson. raiser a from poultry and the and Korletz, warships Varlag and two going ashore. "Mr. Johnson testified that 23 years not take Two Japanese boats escorting the fact that the Vicksburg did he found a stray wild goose before on board survivors of the Russian fireships were destroyed by Russian egg, which he placed under a hen with here men business ships), American the result that a gander was hatched. guns. of are really concerned about the pos- This gander, now celebrated In MinneThe Port Arthur correspondent sota court records for nearly a quarter the Novostl telegraphs that at Port sible effect on American trade. for orders of a century was crossed with tame last Within few the days Arthur the Japanese lost steamers produce marcountergeese and the been American have goods (number not stated) and one torpedo year. every keted regularly manded, the only explanation given boat At the moment of writing, Mr. Johnson volunteered to prodid the correspondent continued, "twenty-thre- e being that prospective purchasers un- duce the gander in court If necessary, not desire to buy American goods and the game wardens retired, bafJapanese vessels are visible on der the present circumstances. New York Sun. fled and defeated. the horizon, and cross firing has beCONCONSPIRATORS gun In which the Russian cruisers POSTAL Humanitarian Bird Cage. VICTED. Bayan, Novik and Askold are participating. Jury Returns a Verdict of Guilty as TOOK TO THE WOODS. Indicted, "Guilty as indicted," was the ver8hot and 8hell Came to Fast for 8an e dict announced by the jury in the Domingans. conspiracy trial at Washibgton Richard Thq. report o Captain shortly after 8 oclock Friday night, Walnwrlght, commanding the Newark, stating at the same time that this was regarding his recent reconnolssance the verdict as to all four defendants, about Santo Domingo has been made Aug. W. Machen, late general superinpublic by the navy department Speaktendent of the rural free delivery diing of the shelling of Santo Domingo vision; George E. Lorenz of Toledo, City, Captain Walnwrlght says: Samuel A. Groff and Diller B. Groff After consultation with Captain of The jury had .been Washington. Miller, and by his direction, I moved out nine hours. The verdict appeared to a position directly opposite the river to come as a great surprise to the deand shelled the east bank of the river fendants, who had expected to be acIn order to drive back Into the interior quitted. all insurgents In that neighborhood, KOREA WILL ASSIST JAPAN. preparing the way for landing a battalion composed of the landing force Little Army of Hermit Kingdom Will By means of this mechanical conof the Columbia and Newark. trivance, those who consider it cruel The Wage War With Russians. A cable from Seoul, under date of to keep birds in captivity may enjoy battalion landed at about 4:30. At a small town in the Interior the Insur- February 26, says: The Korean gov- the pleasure of their song without inflicting pain. The tiny songsters gents were found In some force, un- ernment has decided to order the Koa switch are not real, but by der the command of General Jose rean troops to join the Japanese in the they whistle pretty turning bird calls and field. Tlburzier. The general was warned splash about in the bath, while the to remove his forces at once back into The port of Wlju was opened to mother bird feeds the youngsters. the interior away from the east bank foreign trade last night The limitaTrees Inside a Church. of the river, and that he should not tions to be placed on trade and other fire on the town again from that side. incidental matters will be discussed Ross, Hertfordshire, can boast of a He signed another written agreement later. This action necessitates a har- church frhere two fine elms are growto that effect and at once collected his one on either side of a pew occuso bor, Yongampho has been decided ing forces and marched his men into the pied by a member named John Kyrle. Interior. upon. Mr. Kyrle was a great lover of trees, and especially of elms, of which he Valley Under Water. Right of Free Speech In Philippines. planted an avenue near the church. The most disastrous introWilliams has levee break One of the trees of this avenue was Representative duced a resolution requesting the sec- that has been known for several years cut down, and it Is supposed that its retary of war to Inform the house In this part of the Sacramento valley offshoots have grown up Inside of the "whether and to what extent since the occurred Friday at a point three miles church at each end of the pew. The close of the war the right of free from Sacramento, Cal. The break was parish church at Kempsey contains a speech and of free political action pre- caused by the seepage of water chestnut tree which grows from the vail In the Philippine Islands, and par- through a gopher hole, the water soon tomb of Sir Edward Wilde. The school children of the village used to ticularly whether any laws are In getting beyond control. The crevasse sit in the and it is said on Is about 160 force which deny or In any respect feet long and the column one occasionchancel, their teacher found one abridge the right of the inhabitants of of water Is thirty feet high, pouring of them eating a chestnut, and that those Islands to advocate through the through the break like a Niagara. The he snatched it away and threw it bepress by petition or In orderly public roar of the water can he heard for hind the tomb, where it took root and of their nearly a mile as It rushes through the has flourished. meeting the Independence country by peaceable separation from break. It is estimated that at least the United States, and if such laws 10,000 acres of valuable land will be are still In force, why they are neces- submerged. sary in time of peace. House Passes the Naval Bill. To Fill Hannas 8hoes. The house passed the naval approThere has been considerable discus- priation hill Friday, after having had sion Indulged in around the senate and ft under consideration for a week. the house about the probable succes- There was a party contest on a numsor to Senator Hanna as chairman of ber of proposals during the day, and the Republican National committee, especially on an effort by different miand the names of Senator Scott of nority members to secure an amendWest Virginia, Senator Penrose of ment to fix the "Ana David longed, and said: Oh, that price of armor plate and Pennsylvania, Representative at the figure bid by the Midvale Steel one would give me drink of the water of the well of Bethlehem, which Is beside Dick, who is slated to be Senator Han- company. Several amendments II. Samuel, xxiii., 15. gate. were the seems nas successor In the senate from It Just like tus yesterday, An me a younker o' thirteen Ohio, are most frequently mentioned. ruled out on points of order, and the used, freckled, full o play, A suggestion also Is made that SenRepublican leaders by parliamentary Th boy-eboy you ever seen! ator Aldrich no doubt will be connect- tactics left the question of armor plate over all th' town An gettin' het up fit to kill, ed with the committee In some In the discretion of the secretary of Then takin' time to simmer down. the navy. capacity. At that ol well Mitchells half-bloo- d CLA8H WILL SOON COME. Completely THIS WILD GOCSE half-bree- d it Insurgents i d Russian and Japanese Armies Getting Close to Each Other In Korea. Cabling from Chefoo on February 23, a correspondent of the London Post says 40,000 more Japanese troops have landed at Chemulpo and that he has received confirmation of the report that some Japanese have landed at Pigeon Bay, others at and that an engagement ocpitching badly. When smoke was discurred the night of February 12. covered coming out of the social hall The correspondent at Seoul of the on the after main deck of the vessel, the crew was Immediately rousted out Dally Mall reports a panic at Ping-yanand the hose manned, while the stewKorea, which Is regarded as ards went from cabin to cabin waking heralding the approach of the opposup the passengers. There was no disorder, either among the crew or pas- ing armies. According to the Standards corresengers. When Captain Cousins, commander spondent at Seoul, the Japanese bomof the vessel, discovered the extent of barded Port Arthur at intervals bethe fire, which embraced practically tween the 8th and the 14th of Februall the rear portion of the vessel, he ary, causing, however, only slight Immediately ordered the life boats damage. launched. Four, filled with women and children and sufficient men to HAVE NOT CROSSED YALU. man them, were dropped over from the windward of the vessel, each con- Main Force of Russians Remain on taining about sixteen people. The first North 8lde of River. boat capsized almost as soon as It touched the water, by getting under Reliable reports from northern the stern of the ship. All the passen- Korea indicate that the Russians gers In this were rescued by the other have not yet crossed the Yalu river. small boats, with the exception of a s Miss Steiner, a passenger, Their scouts have, it Is rumored, penewho was drawn under the ship when trated Into the country south of Wlju, the boat capsized. The second boat but the main force still remains north capsized while being lowered. There were no passengers in this at the of the river. The Japanese seem to time, but the crew of four men who be convinced that the Russians are were aboard was spilled out and lost. unable to assemble a sufficient force A third boat Ailed about half a mile to attempt a movement into Korea. from the Queen, and all but four of its The Russian strength north of the passengers and crew were rescued by Talu is variously estimated from the other small craft In the vicinity. 20,000 to 40.000. COS8ACNS IN KOREA. ORDERED TO PANAMA. Said to Have Routed Detachment of Third Infantry Ordered to Leave for Japanese, Capturing Their Horses. Isthmus at Once. A dispatch received In SL PetersThe war department has issued orburg from Liao Yang and dated Feb- ders for the entire Third regiment of ruary 28, says that Chinese on the to proceed to the Isthmus of Yalu river report that an advance infantry Panama. The regiment will "leave at guard of Russian cavalry, which has earliest possible time on the the penetrated Korea for a distance of Sumner and McClelland transports two hundred about vrests across the from New York. The regiment Is goriver, had an encounter with a detaching to Panama to relieve the marines ment of Japanese and that the Japan- stationed there. The headquarters of ese were compelled to retreat and fled, the regiment are at Fort Thomas, Ky. leaving their horses, which were seized by Cossacks. General Line-vitcPopulists Fall to Agree. dispatched cavalry and a body After many attempts to agree upon ot Infantry in pursuit, and with an order to occupy northern Korea. a mutually satisfactory date, the and the fusion PopuBlockaded , by Japanese. lists have failed to select a date upon Vladivostok has been blockaded by which to hold a joint national convena Japenese fleet since Thursday, ac- tion. R. G. Brown, chairman of the cording to a London Daily Mail dis- Populist committee, states that July 7 patch from Hakodate, which adds that had been agreed upon by his comIncoming steamers report Russian panions as the date upon which the cruisers on the east coast of would meet in Indianapolis. in the bay of Sendai. Japan. Populists S. W. Williams, chairman of the Japanese warships have been reported committee, stated that in the vicinity of Vladivostok, but this his committee will Issue a call for a report of a blockade, although consid- convention SL in Louis June 14. ered probable, has not yet been confirmed from other sources. Russians Hang Japanese 8ples. Ooom Paul Growing Very Feeble. The Japanese who were hanged by A letter received In St. Louis by Russians In Manchuria for attemptGeneral Benjamin Viljoen, formerly of ing to blow np the railroad bridge over the Sangari river were disguised the Boer army, anonunces that Kruger of the Boer republic as coolies. They were arrested just as they were about to make the atIs slowly dying as an exile at Mentone, France, and that Dr. Reitz, state tempt Inquiry revealed that they secretary under President Kruger, Is were Japanese officers of the general staff, namely, Colonel Assassl of the also an exile in Holland and a constant sufferer irom nervous prostra- engineers and Lieutenants Zonelolas-chKaeurta of the sappers. They tion, General Viljoen says his infor- wereand at once from the girders mation comes from a member of Pres- of the bridge. hanged ident Krugers household. Burned to Death In Jail. Evangelist Given Coat of Tar. Carl Black and Cecil Hoggett, two A mob of 200 took an evangelist young men, were burned to death In named Bldwell to a point abont a mile the city jail at Mountain View, Oklaout of Dillon, Mont, and treated him homa, about 2 oclock Tuesday mornto a coat of tar and feathers. He was ing. They had been arrested for accused of causing trouble In many drunkenness about midnight, and It Is families. The crowd went to the that the bedding caught fire thought house where he was holding services from a lighted The fire had and wrecked the place. There was a gained a good cigarette. before the free fight, in which many were in- cries of the two headway men attracted young jured. Bldwell Jumped through a win- attention. By the time men reached dow and sought refuge in - another the jail the .two young men had ceased house, where he was found later and to heat against the Iron bars and the taken out of town and tarred and entire building was In flames. War Clouds In Balkans, The situation In the Balkans, with which Russia, Italy and Austria are so closely connected, although it has apparently improved somewhat during the last few days, still occasions much anxiety. It is no longer a secret that JAPS SUFFER DEFEAT mi ARE ON THEIR DIGNITY. HI post-offic- One-ga- ll by mill. J Thers Is a Tonic in Merri Flowi Spontaneous1 What la there In a hearty that clears the moral and 3 ) Biosphere and gives a mao or a new physical vigor? There i 088 tag like It for banishing miam. 101 doubts. There is somethin!.8' tlous in Its merriment, too .r8, only had more time for spent 8i gayety and Joy we would be physically, mentally and morally w man who laughs seldom j ous one. Caesar recognized thu turies ago. Even If one think, the man who does not laugh v,,8 one but himself, he Is, neverthl8 Injuring society at large by IU sum total of mirth and JolUt,8 be Is sure to hurt himself, denies himself the simpie,becauJ Joys which make men one with!!' kind. There la something ton). w I hearty laugh. It frees the spirit quickens the blood. Omaha wJj Herald. A"1 , 78 in8 PUTNAM FADELESS DYpr duce the brightest and fastest cofa, 11 Missionarys Tribulation. ' Bishop Tucker of Uganda, withfel resident doctor and lady aiditul had a very narrow escape at Klki cently. A number of native the doctors attention outside a building In which a confirmation Uttkl w 1 They croud against the walls to obtain what tie shelter from the rain the hanging roof afforded. The combi, pressure was too much for the edifice to resist and a collapse ot I Ice was being held. I 01 I I (j I whole structure was the result Wiq I the assistance of a large band ot m. I who hastened to the spot, the defat I was removed and the three whit p pis rescued, fortunately not much tfa worse for the accident. Mr. Wlnlow' Soothing gym. For children teething, often th gum, Suunukm, alley pln, cure wind con. ' S5cSJ Use of Earth as Food. Consumption of earth as food b said to be common not only in Chlui New Caledonia and New Guinea, b in the Malay archipelago as well The testimony of many travelers la a, Orient Is that the yellow races t especially addicted to the practice. I Java and Sumatra the clay used dergoes a preliminary preparation far consumption, being mixed with vtta reduced to a paste, and the sand mj other hard substances removed. Th clay Is then formed into small cake or tablets about as thick as a lejj pencil and baked in an Iron saucepan. When the tablet emerges from this process it resembles a piece of dried pork. The Japanese frequently est small figures roughly modeled from clay, which resemble the animal turned out In pastrv shons. . Plsoa Cure cannot be too highly spoken of a cough cure. J. W. O'Bbikn, 322 Third An, N., Minneapolis, Minn., Jan. EVERYDAY FARE 8, iSOQ, IN INDIA Chickens and Rice the Staple Form of Diet The woman who goes as a missionary to India must expect to put up with strange fare. Miss Mattie a missionary Just returned from that country, says: "During the list year of our stay In India we had bed only once, mutton twice and fish about eight times. Chickens are so cornmoo we got tired of them. In fact, chicke Is about the only kind of meat to be had. The natives are vegetarians and seldom eat meat of any kind. A butcher came to our city once a wed and brought goat meat, the only kind to be had. The natives eat either rice or bread made from wheat or s graix peculiar to the country. It is a country. The rich people live well and have dainties, but th poor live on rice and vegetables Neither knives nor forks are used. Uphill Walk for Health. The best way to get oxygen Into the blood Is to walk a mile uphill two or three times a day, keeping th mouth closed and expanding the nostrils. This beats all other methods During such a walk every drop of blood in the body will make the dr cult of the lungs and stream, red and pure, back to Its appointed work of tiscleansing and repairing worn-ou- t sues. The uphill walk, as a prophylactic and curativs measure la many chronic ailments dependent upon f weak condition of the heart, lungs and blood vessels, would prove Invar uable. Medical Brief. Remember It? Th' shaky pump Mighty Army to Invade Korea. '1th water drlppin from th spout, to information received Or gushin, when kalump! kalump! According Will Be Represented at Worlds Fair In We'd pull th handle out' by well Informed military men, the We'd getalmost a cup full an we'd drink Spite of the War. An, say, but it was cold an sweet! Russian army which is intended to It makes me young again to think A cablegram has been received by How it 'ud splatter on my feet. operate In Korea will consist of an adthe architect of the Russian building vance vanguard of two regiments of Wy. KI1 Dunlap, one time he said at the Worlds fair from Commissioner Siberian That water wus th best on earth. sharpshooters, a vanguard of An' any man whose thirst ux fed General Alexandrovsky telling him to sixteen 'Ith it ud get his moneys worth. regiments of infantry, with sir th best' Yes, with even yet builderection of the the proceed quick-firinguns, three batteries of I hear him sayln Wy, It, as plain An he had traveled don't has mounted guns and a ing. No further communication forget! corresponding From California plum to Maine. been received by the Worlds fair force of cavalry. The main body will Wellwater nowadays management, but this Is taken to IndiBut, pshaw' consist of forty regiments, Including They aint none now that fills th bill. Beware ol Ointments for Catarrh cate that the Russian government will Cossack I never drunk an never saw 300 guns. with cavalry, that Contain Mercury, As good aa that at Mitchells participate In the exposition. as mercury will sorely destroy the tense of saB An when I think o how I uaet mill. and completely derange the mbole system en 'et It run an go to waste. WT Warships at Isthmus Recalled. entering It through the mucous surfaces. 8wa 8enator Hannas Successor. My thirstiness Is all unloosed article should never be used except on presenp An I fair shrivel for a taste! Ratification ot the Panama canal tlon from reputable physicians, as the damage Uwf Charles Dick was nominated by acYr. D. N. in Chicago Tribuna. will do Is ten fold to tbe good you can possibly a resulted In th Immediate recall treaty rtre from them. Haifa Catarrh Cure, maoofaetafsd clamation for both the unexpired and by V. J. Cheney 4 Co., Toledo, O., contains no msffc of the United States warships and Navahoe Wrestler. cury, and Is taken Internally, acting directly upon regular terms for United States sen- about f tbe blood and mucous surface of tbe system, i of the marines from the as a form of athletic ex- buying Wrestling Hair Catarrh Cure be sure ator, to succeed the late Senator Han- isthmus. The ercise seems to be common to all geuuioe. It It taken Internally ud made to Marblehead, Petrel, na, at the caucus of the Republican Oblo, by P. J. Cheney 4 Co. Testimonial itt9 Wyoming and two torpedo boats will nations and throughout all history. Sold by Druggists. Price, 75c. per bottle. members of the Ohio legislature. The Take Hall's Family pui for constipation. remain on the Pacific side. The New Curiously the tribes in the Interior of name of Mr. Dick was the only one Africa have been found to be skillful York, Boston and Bennington will Heaviest in Winter. presented. As the Republicans have a proceed to Callao. On the Atlantic wrestlers, as are the natives of India Some curious experiments hv and the Indians of America. A photolarge majority In both branches, Mr. side all the been made at one of the royal warships except two will graph of a Dicks election Is assured, and the Navajo wrestler Is repre- north for the maneuvers. Four proceed Institutions at Copenheges-Fo- r 1 on be will a March balloting only some years back the seventy boy hundred and fifty marines will leave formality. In the caucus 109 Repuband girls In the place have been care lican members answered the roll ealL Thursday or Guantanamo. ftally weighed every day In group of fifteen and under. Pretender Supports the Czar., Town 81nks Into Earth. Thereby It Proved that the children gain weight Don Jaime de Bourbon, son ot Don One of the most extensive cave-in- s mostly In autumn and In the early Carlos, the pretender to the Spanish that the northern anthracite coal secof December. From that tlm till part throne, declares he is enthusiastic to tion has ever experienced has octhe rad of April there la scarcely an? give his sword and life for Russia and curred In West Scranton, Pa. The Increase In weight More remsrksbl affected an area of about forty the czar. Among other things he cave-Istill, there Is a diminution till tbe en Russia must win In the far acres. When the first break occurred said: of summer. easL as the white race must absolute- the residents became panic stricken. Tbe Oat Wonder. ly m&tut&ta Us moral and material pre- There are about 200 houses in the disThe Editor must tell Its readers ox race. The over affected. trict the Some are completely yellow ponderance this marvel. It originated with the czar did all he could to prevent the wrecked, others are out of plumb largest farm seed growers In the world, John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Cross, war, and Is deeply grieved at the con- while nearly every house is twisted to Wls. It has stiff straw, stands up JJa flict, which nobody in Russia ex- such an extent that the doors and a stone wall, is white, heavy, and ns pected." windows cannot be opened. long ears, filled to the tip with w plump kernels. It Is a great stooler, stocks from one kernel. Deadly Duel Between Man and Bear, Steel Magnate Must Fight tr YOU WILL SEND THIS NOTICE A Word has just been received at Los Charles M. Schwab, who has Just 10O IN STAMPS e to above address, you will get a Angeles from Ranger C. Bowlne of arrived in Paris, may be called upon of this Oat Wonder, which yielded Solduck Hot Springs that the body of to fight a duel with Baron de In 1903, in 40 States from 250 to 310 bu. Rogniat, Baron Martin Von Scholosser was who was interested in the French un- those recognized an per acre, together with other farm pie for centuries. seed samples and their big catalog. found on the range south of the Hot derwriting syndicate which was to (W. N. U.) Springs on Monday evening near the handle the Paris end of the shipbuildwas baron The a of bear. dead body Can Bs Acclimated. ing combine. If he declines to meet undoubtedly killed by the bear. He the French financier The red shanked grouse preserve with or pistol on a On hunt. in the started morning in Scotland Is a noble bird, and I hts body were found receipts from sword on the field of honor, the Amer? to that country, thoug peculiar banka In Portland, Ore., Chicago and ican steel master will. If de Rogniat auced into theaujratm worthy of a wide dissemination bi New York for over $100,000. Von makes good his threat, have a run in would escape Into cause of Its large size and edlbl Schlosser was an officer In the Ger- with the French law courts, being tlon there being suffi man army and a baron of that empire. charged with llbeL qualities. It Bhould Co well in Wasl tagton state or even in Michigan- - RUSSIA WILL EXHIBIT. g one-hal- n sntn-pl- V. |