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LOPYRIGHT 1505 'DAVID ADLER & 501t CLOTMINGCQ MIWAUREE and Workmanship in his Overcoat or Rainecoat. to look over our Garments. u O’Leary & Bowser y BENGAL NATIVES TAKE OATH IN THE TEMPLE NOT TO DEAL WITH FOREIGNERS. Calcuita, 30, Fifty thousand Bengalis, assembled at the temple of Kolighat, have sworn by Kali to boycott British goods as a pro- test against fhe partition of the prov- ince of Bengal. The administrarive work of the province, according 1o the views of the home and Indian govern- ments, had grown 1o such nnwieldy proportions ag 1o necessitate a divi- slon of the labor, hence the partition of the province into two lieutenant governorships. Bengalis are intensely resentful at what they characrerize an attempt Lo split rhe population and impair the Bengalis' nationality. At scores of meetings throughout Bengal the people have pledged themselves to support the boycott, which has now veceived the sanction of the prie The scene at the temple of Kalighat, the greatest in Bengal, was siriking when the immense assemblage fook the. oath, “in the holy presence of the Goddess Kali not to nse foreign goo. Sept the Goddess buy articles in toreign shops when available in native shops or employ foreigners on any work thai can be done by our countrymen.” The foreign firms are already feel- ing seriously the effect of the hoycoti. BOMB OUTRAGE REPEATED. Migsile Thrown at Crowded New York Tenement. New York. t. 30.—A bomb filled with both dynamite and a quantity of inflammable oil was thrown at the rear of a crowded tenement house. at Eighth avenue and COne Hundred and Forty-third street. More than a score of persons who were sleeping at the time were hurled from their beds by the explosion and iwo of them were carried from the house unconscious. Within a minute after the explosion flames had nearly enveloped the rear walls oi the tenement honse. The po- lice believe that “Black Hand" italian assassins threw (he bomb. The ob-! ject of the atiack was the rear door of an ltalian barber shop on the ground Hoor. infernal Machine at Budapest. Budapest, Hungary, Sept. 30.—A tin box filled with powder of some kind was. found under the staircase of a hotel in which the coalition leaders were meeting. The box, which is al- leged to be an infefnal machine, was taken 10 police headquarters for ex- amination l LOW PRICES THIS WINTER. ecretary Wilson Sees Relief in Enor- moeus Yield of Grain. Washington, Sept. 30.—Secretary ‘Wilson of the department of agricul- ture predicts lower retail prices dur- ing the coming winter season for meat, dairy products, poultry and other necessities of life. He says the relief for the house- kolder will come from the enormous vields of small grain and corn in the great grain territory of Illinois, Min- nesota, the Dakotas, lowa, Nebraska and Kansas. Albert Scheffer Dead. : | St. Paul, Sept. 30.—Albert Scheffer, some years ago prominent in Repub- lican political circles and at one time one of the foremosi financiers in St. Paul, is dead. He was interested iu several -banks and had large realty holdings. A few years ago he re- moved to New York, but recently re- turned to St. Paul. MARKET QUOTATIONS. ! Minneapolis Wheat. J Sept. - 29. — Wheat— | { ‘ac; Dec., 813 @817%¢; May. 8533c. On track—No. 1 hard, 83%c; No. 1 Northern, 83c: No. 2 Northern, 80¢, Duluth Wheat and Flax. Duluth, Sept. 29.—Wheat—To ax‘rivei —No. 1 Northern, 813;¢; No. 2 North- | ern, 78% On track—No. | North- ern, s2¢; No. 2 Northern, 191%¢c; Sept. (old), Sitse; Sept. (new), 79c, Dec., 78%4c; May. S135c. Flax—Sept., 98%c: 1 Oct,, 98¢: Dec., 98c; May. $1.01%,. i St. Paul Union Stock Yards. St. Paul, Sept. 2 : veals, $2.00@ \ .40. Sheep—Year- good to $5.00@5.50. | and heifers, | 5.00. Hog ling weth choice native Chicago Union Stock Yards. Chicago. Sept. 29.—Cattle—Beeves $3.60@6.15; cows and heifers, $1.40@ 4.50; stockers and feeders, $2.30@@ | .25; Western, $3.10@4.70. Hogs— | Mixed and butchers, $5.15@5.85; good heavy, $5.40@5.85; rough heavy, $5.10 | 5: light, $5.15@5.75. Sheep, $3 : Jambs, $4.40@7.75. | Chicago Grain and Provisions. Chicago, Sept. 29.—Wheai—Sepi. v, 863¢¢. Corn ., 307¢: Dec., 44c: | i 3 Qats—Sept.. ? | Dec.. 281:.@28%c: May, 30%c. | —Sept.. $14.85; Oct. $14.60: Jan, | $12.4215. Flax—Cash. Northwestern. | $1.00: Southwestern. 94c. Butter— Creameries, 17@19c; dai S, 1634 @ | 18%c. Eggs—15%@17%ec. Poultry— | Turkeys, 1€¢; chickens, 10c¢; springs, DECISION FOR GOVERNMENT ON PLEA OF ABATEMENT TO IN- DICTMENT OF PACKERS. WILL BE ARRAIGNED THURSDAY NEXT DEFENDANTS PLEAD AT THAT TIME AND DATE OF TRIAL BY JURY WILL BE SET. ' Chicugo, Sept. 30.—Federal Justice Humphrey has sustained the demurrer filed by United States District Attor- ney Morrison to the plea in abate- ment made by packers seeking to have indictments for alleged restraint of trade declared void. Judge Hum- phrey said he made his decision on broad grounds without taking into consideration technicalities which the government advanced against the plea in abatement. The plea in abatement attacked the alleged secrecy maintained about the drawing of the grand jury. It was alleged that the names of the jury- men, after they had been drawn, were withheld from the defendants. This plea was supplemented by the declara- tion that it is the constitutional right of every man to know beforehand who is to try a case in which he is inter- ested. Another plea was that an unauthor- ized person, Assistant District Attor- ney Goodman, had been in the grand jury room and took stenographic notes; later these notes were tran- scribed and returned to the jury for its consic wion, It likely the jury for the trial Il be drawn about the middle of October. After ihe decision had been given the defending attorneys tried to amend the fourth plea by the insertion of the word ““for.” This met with resistance from ihe district attorney, but the court promised that if the law was clear on the point he would allow it. The government is said to fear a “J'trick in the Insertion of the one word. The district attorney then moved that the defendants plead to the indict- ment and the court fixed Thursday next as the day when the men will be arraigned. WOMAN KILLS HERSELF. Fiance Under Arrest Accused of Mak- ing Suicide Pact. St. Louis, Sept. 30.—The dead body of Mrs. Nellie West Long was found in a room at the Burlington hotel. She had committed suicide with mor- phine. Bert Grimm, her fiance, who was with her, is under arrest charged with having entered into a suicide compact with the woman. He de- clared that they were about to be married when he became suspicious that she had not obtained a divorce from Oliver Long. He confronted her at her home and, he said, she sud- denly cried out that she would com- mit snicide and ran from the house. To ialk with her, he said, he took her to a hotel and while absent from the room she took morphine. When he returned he found her dead and gave the alarm. The police express the helief that a suicide compact had been entered into and Grimm failed to take his own life. FOURTEEN MEN INDICTED. { Grand Jury After Owners and Pro- moters of Gambling Boat. Chicago, Sept. 30.—True bills have. been returned by the grand jury against the promoters and owners of the City of Traverse gambling boat charging the keeping of a common gamblinghouse and a conspiracy to do; an illegal a¢t. Some of the defendants must face two indictments for keeping 2 common gamblinghouse and two in- dictments for conspiracy. Fourteen defendants were named in the bills. The evidence on which the indict- ments were voted related to a single occasion when the boat was said to have been in Illinois waters when 1 bools on horses were sold. SHERRICK INDICTED. Grand Larceny, Embezzlement , and Conspiracy Charged. Indianapolis, Sept. 30.—David E. Sherrick, former auditor of state and recently removed by Governor Hanly, i was arrested at his home during the ;day on an indictment returned by the iarion county grand jury charging him with grand larceny, embezzlement ¢y to defraud. He gave m of $20,000. Peach Stone Kills Child. Menominee, Mich., Sepf. 30.—The { eighteen-months-old son of James Mec- I Carthy choked -to death on a peach stone. Two physicians worked des perately to save the child's life, but 2 : ithe stone lodged in the windpipe and could not be removed. A 1 \ECENT TYPHOON IN THE PHIL. . IPPINES RESULTED IN NU- MEROUS CASUALTIES. WIPPING SUFFERS GREAT DAMAGE LEVEN AMERICANS AMONG THE VICTIMS ON BOARD COAST 1< GUARD STEAMER. | Manila, Sept. 30.—Reports now com- ig in from places along the path of zon and the southern islands indi- ote great loss of life and property. 1 the water surrounding Samar and her islands many coasting veswels md island transports have been arecked. The coast guard cutter Jeyte is a complete wreck and eleven Jmericans and twenty-four batives vere drowned. 4 | At the town of Sorsogon fifteen na- ves were drowned. i ! The loss on hemp plantations is etimated at $1,000,000. The army transport Juan Rodriguez I ashore at Legaspi. In the interior of the island of Sa. par thousands of natives are home- bLss and the same report comes from nany-of the other small islands. The army posts in the southern-isl- #ds lave been destroyed. The civil and military authorities @re rushing aid to the suffering people i the form of supplies of food and cGher poinis are very meager. REPORTED BY CORBIN. Does Much Damage to Gov- ernment Property. Washington, Sept. 30.—General Cor- bin, commanding the division of the Puilippines, has cabled the war de- pirtment further details of the dam- ak€. dene. to- government property: there by recent typhoon. He says that “temporary shelter posts at Hart: shorne, Catubiz;-Fagaberiah, Taviran Gindara and Bulao were destroyed. Camp Connell was injured. Launches | Typhoch / Hercules and Lorcha were blown aghore near Taraguan. Baslan reports the Carmen ashore on the east coast of Samar and the insular govermment coast guard vesgel Leyte wrecked on the west coast near Allen. All officers and six passengers on the Leyte were lost. pany E, Twenty-first infantry, killed and several officers and men in- jured at Hartshorne.” PORTION OF CITY SHAKEN. Tremendous Explosion in New York Underground Tunnel. New York, Sept. 30.—One man was blown to pieces and another had his arm torn off in a tremendous explo- sion in the excavation for the Penn- sylvania railroad terminal. The city was shaken for a radius of half a mile around the excavation and the people all over the neighborhood ran from their houses in fright. . So great was the force of the ex- plosion that a rock weighing 200 pounds came down like a meteorite in ‘West Thirtieth street, 760 feet away. { It crashed in its descent through the transom over the door of a little shop and buried itself in the beams under the floor. The stone ripped the coat from the back of Lewis J. Magas, who was standing in front of the counter. He had a miraculous escape from death. Several persons also sustained minor injuries. Gained Riches by Looting Shops in Vicinity. New York, Sept. 30.—Central office detectives have found large quantities of ‘silver plate and jewelry in dingy rooms in a Roosevelt street tenement occupied by Antonio Desisto and his wife, an aged couple who make their living by picking rags. Bank books also found by the detectives show {total deposits of nearly $6,000 in local savings banks. The loot is believed by the police to be worth about $3,000 and to cover a period of fifteen years. The discovery of these valuables, many mysterious robberies in the dis- trict around Maiden Lane. TRAMP STEALS A TRAIN. Burlington Freight of Twenty-five § Cars Seized. Seward, Neb., Sept. 30.—A tramp stole a Burlington freight train’ of twenty-five cars from a siding at this place and with this prize started for Colombus, fifty-five miles away. After running eight miles down the trazck steam went down and the embryo en- gineer deserted the train, leaving it lblocking the main track. te recent typhoon in the island of | sielter, C. Cly and others, including many Owing to the destruction of the tele- | farmers near Millershurg, asking him | gaph sysiem reports received from|to bring action in quo warranto or| Artificer Joseph L. Rulon, Com- was _WEALTHY RAG PICKERS. ' the detectives say, throws light on | says the doctor 5\ ¢ lady patients, because he doesn’t know of any med ovarian troubles, vioijl That such a medicin wonderful cures performed cases, by A WINE c OF has rescued thousands of others chronic invalidism. Sold at every drug store in $1. WRITE US A LETTER freely and frankly, in strictest confi~ dence, telling us all your troubles. We will send Free Advice (in plain, sealed envelope). Address: Ladies’ Advisery Dept., The Chattancoga Medicine Co., Chattanooga, Tenn. AFTER THE HARVESTER TRUST. ©Ohio’s Attorney General Investigation. Columbus, O., Sept. 30.—Attorney General Wade H. Ellis is going to in- vestigate the harvester trust in Ohio knd if he finds that the trust is vio- lating the Ohio anti-trust law he will oust the trust from the state. Mr. Ellis received a petition signed by W. Begins an | criminal procedure, or both, “that wiil bring relief to oppression and monopo- listic ‘prices forced upon farmers by the International Harvester com- pany.”. The, attorney gencral replied in brief as follows: “Answering your respectful com- munication I shall- immediately com- mence an investigation ‘of the 80~ called harvester trust and its methods of business and, if it is violating the terms of the Ohlo anti-trust act or any Other: } “ghali.file ihe, necessary suit to dissolve such trust and to pro- tect the purchasers' & the commodities referred to from any -gumbination op-| erating to control prices thereof.” Verdict of Justifiable Homicide. Detroit, Sept. 30.—A coroner’s. jury has found a verdict Lhat Willam R. Harrington committed justifiable homi- cide when he killad Charles M. Mar- tin with a baseball bat. Martin was assaultlng Harrington’s sixteen-year- old daughter when Harrington at- tacked him with the bat. Coroner Parker ordered Harrington released| from custody. | Last Day at Qyster Bay. Oyster Bay, L. I, Sept. 30.—Presi- dent Roosevelt spent the last day of his summer sojourn at Sagemore Hil | in preparation for his departure for | Washington. Atter devoting a couple of hours to his official correspondence he passed thc remainder of ike day about the house and grounds giving directions as to their care. i Arcanum Rates Binding. Toronto, Ont., Sept. 20.—In the e~ that will positively cure womb or tists, however, has been proved by the on diseased women, in thousands of 9 . Woman’s Relief It has saved the lives of thousands of weak, sick women, and It will cure you, if you will only. give it a chance. on’s knife. from a meldncholy lifetime of 00 bottles. Try it. = GAVE UP SUPFORTER ‘1 wore a sapporter for years, for my wemb, which had crowded every~ thing dewn before it, writes Mrs. S. J. Chrismai, of Mannsville, N. Y. ‘‘Asuf- fered untold misery and could hardly walk. After taking Cardui I gave up my supporter and can now be on my feet half a day at a time.”’ _ Feed and Sale § Stable. LIVERY ATTACHED Goods of AllDescription Stored J. P. Pogue. SUGAR MARKET DEPRESSED. Failure of Two Leading French. Op. i erators Announced. ! Paris, Sept. 30.—-The failure is an- nounced of MM. La Caussade and Viallet, leading operators in the sugar market.’ l.a Caussade is president of the sugar syndicate. The sudden death of Meurice Bouglise, head of the Wgyptian refineries, is also an- nounced. These, following the failure of Jalusot and the death of Cronier. seriously deopressed the sugar market. INDIGESTION'S RECORD tlon of W. Laricw againsi the su- preme council of 1he Royval Arcanum to restrain the order from increasing its rates Justice Street has declared the defendanis - were within their rights in making the changes and therefore hinding on the plaintiff. STUDENTS MUST OBEY LAWS. Issued by Mayor of -Madison, Madison, Wis., Sept. 30.—As a re- sult of an attempt by a crowd of stu- dents to break up a carnival company 'showing here at night Mayor Curtis gave orders to the police to shoot any student resisting arrest or assaulting | officers. President Van Hise of the | state university urged officers and tourts to show mno discrimination ggainst students and said he would sxpel every student convicted in court and would suspend all arrested. At convocation during the day President { Van Hise severely scored students for irowdy conduct. i Strict: Orders ; “The best remedy I can prescribe for your ise d‘l{:finn madam, is Green's August Flower. b3 of several othier physicians who pre- scribe it regularly.” QIndigestion is making an awful record as a cause of sudden deaths. It is beat- ing heart-failure in its ghastly harvest. ‘on read in the papers daily of aj par- en(tlllefiealthy and even robust men being suddenly attacked with acute indigestiom after enjoying a hearty meal, and of their d “in many cases before a physiciam Could be called in. i @This should be a warning to you who suffer with regular or periodical attacks of indigestion.” If these unfortunate vic- tims of acute indigestion had taken a small dose of Green’s August Flower be- fore or after their meals they would not have fallen a prey to such sudden seizures. qAugust Flower prevents indigestion by creating good digestion. Italso reguiates the liver, purifies the blood and tones up the entire system in 2 patural way. 7 QTwo sizes, 25¢ and 75c. All druggista. b ) AN Y YYYY : Painting ¥ Paper Hanging e 3 Kalsomining : Shop in rear of Swedback Block. =R K