Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
e — — % EXPERT ON .THE STAND. Testifies in Brouwer Murder Trial at Toms River, N. J. TURNED DOWN BY TAFT| PROPOSAL MADE TO SEPARATE ing a hypothetical question, which de- scribed the symptoms shown in-the ISLE OF PINES FROM CUBAN | 1,1, iiiness of Mrs. Frank Brouwer, SOVEREIGNTY. .Dr, Walter 8. Washington of Newark testified . in the trial . of | Dr. Frank Brouwer that In his opinion arsenlcal poisoning was the cause of Mrs. Brou- wer’s death. Dr, Washington testified NOULD BE A VIOLATION OF TRUST PROVISIONAL GOVERNMENT WILL PRESERVE INTERESTS OF CUBA INTACT. Havana, Oct. 13.—Secretary Taft during the day received President Stark of the lsle of Pines association and informed him positively that the provisional government could not con- slder any movement In the direction of the separation of the isle from Cu- ban sovereignty. Mr. Taft added that the matter of the internal government of the Isle of Pines had been referred to Charles K. Magoon, who succeeded Mr. Taft as provisional governor: of Cuba, accompanied by a formal state- ment in which Mr. Taft declared that “it is absolutely impossible for the provisional government of Cuba to recognize for a moment that the Isle of Pines is not completely under the Jurisdiction of the provisional govern- ment as part of the republic of Cuba and that while the fact that the ma- Jority of the residents of the Isle of Pines are Americans may call for ex- ceptional provisions respecting provis- fonal and municipal government, any of the three bases mentioned in the 1sle of Pines assoclation’s communi- cation involving the separation af the isle from Cuba is wholly inadmissible, as it would be a violation of the sacred trust imposed upon the provisional government to preserve the interests of Cuba intact during the inoumbency of that government.” Mr. Taft has ordered one officer and tweuty-five marines to the Isle of Pines, explaining that he does not an- tlalpate any trouble there, but that the marines are sent te promote & feeling of security. CUBANS OBJECT TO FUNSTON. DR. FRANK BROUWER. as an expert. Nearly fifteen minutes were occupled by the prosecution in putting the question, owing to its length. It embraced the main points of the testimony of several witnesses who have already testified. Dr. Brouwer is accused of having caused the death of his wife by ad- ministering poison and crushed glass. BATTLE WITH HIGHWAYMEN EAST TOLEDO FATALLY 8HOT AND TWO OF THE BANDITS HURT, (0.) POLICEMAN Toledo, O., Oct. 13.—A desperate encounter hetwaen policemen and three holdup men took place early in the day at Main and Front streets, East Toledo. One of the pollcemen, Joseph Schlagheck, was fatally shot and two of the highwaymen were hurt. The third man, known as “Blackle,” escaped and the police are searching for him. Christ -Petersen, Neil Myers and “Blackie” held up F. H. Carnell, an insurance agent, and. after nearly choking him to death robbed of ‘$45. He noiffied the police and Patrol- men Schlagheck and Deaunne ran the holdup men down. As soon as the latter saw they were cornered tHey started. shooting. . The first shot caught Schlagheck in the chin, arcund. Three more shots struck him in the back. Deaunne's first :shot broke Myers; wilst. :Then Deaunne grabbed Petersen and quieted ' him iwith his club. ‘Meanwhtle “Blackie” escaped. Myers and Petersen strug- gled hard, but Deaunne held them at bay with his revolver.till the patrol wagon reaclied- the scene. Alleged Underlying Reason for Recall of General, ‘Washington, Oct. 18.—Asslstant Sec- retary of War Oliver, at the request of Secretary Taft, has issued an order relieving Brigadier General Fumston from command in Cuba and directing him to return to the command of the department of Columbia. The semi: officlal explanation given at the war department was that the general hav- ng accomplished the object of his mis- slon—that of assisting Taft in the dis- armament of the insurgents—he was relieved and sent back to his com- mand. Everybody in the war depnrtmept from messenger boys up to the high- est officers, understood, however, that the only reason for relieving him, was ] objection the Ouban {nsurgents have to him on account of his so called desertion from the army of liberation under Gencral Garcia, which, it the stories told by Funston’s friends are true, is generally helleved to have been fully justified. His reason for leaving the island 18 the murder of a Spanish officer who had come out of a blockhouse at the time of the battle of Las Tunas, under & flag of truce, to negotiate for the surrender of his men. VICTORY FOR UNION. Picketing Injunction Dissolved by Con- . | necticut Judge. Bridgeport, Conn., Oct. 13.—Judge Cager,-sitting {n the superior criminal court,-dissolved the temporary injunc- tion issued to_the National Bullders’ assoclation % gainl the Brle‘k yers and Pldsterers’ ‘aiion; the Stonema- sons'“utilon and the lnternlllo 1 Pro- tective assochtlofl, all of this ¢ y, to ty 3 interfering::with i 1 employed: Brldgeport and prol ibiting under pefi alty of $1,000 any efforts at inducing ‘workmen tovléave their ‘jobs: The union claims that this is one of: the ~most ‘important victories;they ever won in this state., It is under- stood ‘plathtiffs will carry the decision to! the; supremie;court on! ‘questions-ot ed. TURKS ALWAYS BEATEN. Revolt in Arabjan Province Shows No Signs of 8ubsiding. Constantineple, Oct. 13.—The rebel: Hon agalnst Turkish rule in the prov: ince of Yemen, Arabia, shows no signs of subsiding and whenever a pitched battle is fought the rebellious Arabs seem to be victorious over the unwill- Ing Turkish conscripts sent to subdue them: Severe fighting has ocourred in the district of Azir between govern- ment troops and the rebels, in which the Turks were routed with the loss of 100 men killed and 60 wounded. The casualties of the Arabs are estl- mated at 200. PARIS SUEWAV. CAVES .IN, | Heavy trost, which formed fce ter of;aul inich thick on: standing did untold damage in thfs section of the: Michiigan fiuit. Belt. Neighbering Houses' Hastlly and 8afe- ly Evacuated, i| the depth .of eight: inch .. Paris, Oct. 13—Thirty yards:of the'| the potatoes and .vegetables, still in Metropolitan subway near the Buttes | the ground. Thousands of bushels, of Chaumont park, a section necessary | Brapes were frozen on the vines and to complete the belt around Parts, sud- |"large- quaritities of “apples made unfit, denly caved in. The wildest excite- | for market. ment followed, as it was feared that “Killing. Froat Jn Virginia. the neighboring’ -~houses would Lynchburg, Va,, Oet, 12—A killing erumble, but by order of the police the bulldings were hastlly and sately | frost formed hers, illing vegetation evacuated. The scene of the cavein 1s close to the place where the Metro- politan disaster of 1904 ocourred. . | The frost was eleven dnyt ahead of vlut yenr Heroic Boy Crushed te Death, Marshall, Mo, Oct. 13.—In the de- destruction by fire here of the homs | of F. W. Miles, a grocer, Bentle Irwin, aged eighteen was crushed to death while attempting to save the inmates dollars' worth - of:fruit; frees around and Oscar Page, another boy, -barely. Rochester.; The: peach:trees: suffered. “soaped doath. It fu belleved that two the most and many peach and’quince || others are buried in the debris. 1 orchards In Monrae county are ruined Many Orchards Ruined. Rochester, N. Y., - 0c storm that swept over Western New Below Freezing in Virginia. Lynohburg, Va. Oot. 13.—The cold wave hére broke all: records of :the ;mundiza tea 0”0#‘3 local weather atation for October, The ~SHOt h 3“3% 'ofd son minimum temperature was 27 degrees,; committed, suicide by /fAifing The coldest In thirty-five years was’through hi 28 degrees on Oct. 31, 1 IN" VIRTUAL SLAVERY HUNDREDS OF WHITES AND NE- GROES HELD PRISONERS IN FLORIDA CAMPS.' CAUII NG ANXI iTV Aotlvl(y 'Among Fanatlcal Bands In !'/ Lower Morocoo. Paris, Oct;:13.—The activity among the fanatical nomad bands in the lower part of Morocco is causing consider: able ‘anxisty 'iu' French 'government circles and the appearance of M. Jon- LT IN . FRANGE, | mart, the governor. general of Algeci- DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE MAY ACT ATTanEV GENERAL WILL HAVE PERSONAL INTERVIEW WITH COMPLAINANT. ‘Washington, Oct. 13.—Fresh allega- tions of the existence I slavery in Southern Georgia, below. Tampa, have beeén made to the department of jus- tice and it is alleged that hundreds of men in the state, both white and ne- groes, are held in virtual slavery. It 18 declared that those responsible for this condition of affairs are mostly Northern men and companies engaged in the turpentine and lumber business and in mining phosphate rock. It is further alleged that the sheriffs in va- rious counties of the southern part of the state are said to be parties to the enslaving of negroes in the phosphate mines, turpentine farms and lumber mills.. The department’s informant, ‘who is a woman, is to have an inter- view with Attorney General Moody, after which the department will de- cide upon the course it will pursue. PLACED UNDER ARREST. Man Charged With Murder Found With Throat Cut, ‘Winchendon, Mass., Oct. 13.—Harry ‘Wood, who is suspected of having shot and killed his sister-in-law, Mrs. Ira E. Wood, at her home here during the night, was found in bed at his home early in the day with his throat cut by a razor. The wound is not danger- ous. Later Wood was ‘placed under arrest on-the charge’ of murder and removed to the police station. Near the bed in which Wood was found stood a loaded shotgun &nd in 'the road between the house and Ira Wood's residence was found a shell which fitted this gun. - Mrs, Wood was killed by a charge from a shotgun. The motive for the crime is mnot known. Harry Wood would.say noth- ing ‘about the affair after his arrest. He is sald to be regarded by his neighbors as somewhat mentally de- fective. WILL REDUCE PRICE OF SALT. New Process ‘of Manufacture to Be Used in_United States. New York,. Oct. 13—Official an- knocking him completely { new process from foreign interests for | Yorl destroyed many thousands of || {Mount Pelee. volcano, island of: Mar- nouncement is made by President Ful- ler of the International Salt company that the corporation has acquired a the manufacture of 'salt and .that the company 'has decided upon the .erec- tion of eight plants, which will be equipped’ with the new apparatus. Of these eight plants three are now be- ing constructed; two in the western; part of New York state and one in Kansas. 'As the result of this, pro- cess the International Salt company, according to Mr. Fuller, will be in a position to turn out salt at a much lower cost of production. TRAGEDY ON WEDDING ' TOUR. Wife Shoots Husband and Suicides Be- cause of Former’s lliness. Liberty, Mo., Oct. 13.—Jease Webb, aged twenty-five years, son of a promi- shot and dangerously wounded by his wife at Smithville, near hera. ; Mrs. ‘Webb then shot herself through the heart, dying instantly. The couple had been married but one week and were on, their honey- moon trip. ‘Webb, who had been suf: fering . from tuberculosis, became ‘worse during the last few days.: Webb says that his wife and he had talked the matter over and decided “it was better to end it all.” NEARLY CUT Value of Exports'From United States % to China and Japan. ‘Washington, , Oct. *13. \marked characteristic of the export'trade of the United States in’recent months 18'a Teduction In'the value of exports to China and, Japan.: The total value, of merchandise exported to China in IN TWO. the eight months-ending with August, |+ 11908, 15" but' $22,000,000, against $42, 000,000 in the corresponding . months of 1905, ‘and ‘to' Japan' $21,000,000, i gainst $39, 000 000 in the same months of 1905, while to Asia ds'a whole the | lexports are but $58,000,000, as against /896,000,000 ' in;, the ' ’corresponding, months of 1905 3 ) izl ' MOUNT 'PELEE ACTIVE. i (i Ruln 3f Ashes Fall- Over N--rby | 0 be “Islands.: { anse Terre, Island of. Gundclonpc, \Oct '13:=+4 ‘violent eruptior’ of " the nent farmer of Plattsburg, Mo., was |- tas, at the day’s cabinet meeting was for the purpose of explaining’the sit- uation and making precautionary dis. positions of troops In the event of an outbreak. - " The Echo de 'Paris claims to have Information to the effect that a. reg: ular attack ujjon the French has been planned ‘at Tafilelt, in Southern Mo- rocco, under:the leadership of a rela- tive of the sultan. Bands, it is added, are now heing mobilized throughout the entire south of Morocco and al- ready ave in armed rebellion. THEFT OF INDIAN ROLLS. Prominent Oklahomans Indicted and Arrested. Muskogee, 1. T. Qct. 13.—W. T. Martin, Jr., a former employe of the Dawes commission, and M. F.. Dun- leavy, a prominent real estate man, have been indicted by the federal grand - jury ' charged with the’ theft more than a year ago of the Cree In- dian rolls.” They were arrested and released oh bonds of $1,000 each. The maximum penalty is a fine of $2,000 or imprisonment for three years at hard labor. The rolls were stolen from the gov- ernment office.” The present law, which was. introduced by Representa- tive Murphy of Missourl at the last session of ‘congress, makes it a felony to haye in one's possession a copy of any Iudl-m lolls WUHK AMONG GUHSGRIPTS 8OCIAL DEMOCRATS WOULD IN- DUCE THEM TO REFUSE TO JOIN THE COLORS, 8t. Petershurg, Oct. 13.—The Social Democrats. have assumed the direction of the organized movement for the refusal to perform military service which the Constitutional = Democrats at thelr convention at Helsingfors de- cided to avoid. At a secret and large- ly attended meeting of the central committee of the Social Democrats here it was decided to begin the wonk ‘immediately among the' conscripts of 1906, who have: just. been motified: to appear : for, enrollment, and endeavor to induse them to Tefuse to join the colors; The’presses of the revolution- ists are printing thousands of the So- cial Democratic proclamations and an organized effort will be made to reach every man on this year's list of con- scripts. | The organizers of the move- ment have little expectation of actual- 1y ‘preventing the enlistment of re- cruits' and are aware that'the con- scripts have .no adequate means to back up their refusal to join the col- ors, but:they hope:to: augment 'the disorders in the interior and send al- ready dlsufrccted contingenu to the army. Conflicts of Daily, Occurrence. Yaroslav, Russia, Oct. 13.—Dally en- counters are taking place between re- actionary ‘and revolutionary workmen. Each side is well organized and many of the men are well armed. The rev- olutionists have notified the manufac- turers that they must discharge all reactionists or take the consequences. ESCAPE : DOWN : FIRELADDERS. Several Hnndred Woman Caught in ' Burning 'Buiiding. New ' York, Oct. 13.—Women 'and .girls’ to ‘the ' number of 2560, ‘employes in various taiioring. shops in a five- story brick building in the Willlams- birg section of Brooklyn, escaped from their workrooms; by;means of the fire. ladders wh 2 the hulldmg caught fire. None’of them was' injiired, but they wereall badly | frightened: ‘when tha blaze, beginning on the thixd floor, cut off their exit by the stairs from tlie fourth and fifth fioors: ' The upper part;of.;.the buildingwas-burned out and the stage ¢ ndmlning was Imd‘ SUPPOSED DEAD BOY ‘RETURNS; Body Found in Water Had Been In- terred in< Family! Tomb.! ‘Wheeling, 'W:.Va;, | Oct.:13~—Harry Bishop, a Wheeling boy, posed to haye Leen murdred. a week g0} 'has retiirned Home and his father fainted' away. -when' he dppeared: .\ A/ Ly 5, by gnmbllng deb /e been Bishop's wns (ound n th water and burled in fter thie ‘Coroner hal returned tva‘-dicc ‘ot murder and after| mpany . had paid ; the Bishop wns at ‘Kittaning, Pa, when the supposed -murder oceurred:: ‘The |l identity of the dead boy hna not been cstnbl!shed ln{myupce ‘nnlqne caused ‘a rain''of dshes ' ovur'l i [the southeast part of, Guadeloupe, The' ntmnuphera here; ‘Wlth fine' vmcanlc akhef ‘Washi ngtou, the’ inteistate” commier Mamhers ot cummlsslnn '\ |do not-expect to‘be’ able finally to de- 5 of taniffs to/be pub- | termine; the fo lished by the iirgads and filed, with for several weoks, ‘perhaps two ‘mmonths: / The‘work s re- reat importancea by both ssion and T el he ‘raifroads thd"ffix N‘flppfl\ ‘q v.mnfimrunm 47 wi 1501 he Lyceam theater, 0 Was sup; nd Comgn@rmaf DIFEtSH of ‘Elactiie’ 'Roaé szldc anfiv i ABSCONDER, il BAID 'TO ‘BE''A" FRIEND-'OF CASTRO: LATTER MAY USE''HIS' INFLU- ENCE ‘TO PREVENT ARREST OF SILVEIRA, New York, Oct. 18.—No définite ¢lue to the whereabouts of Manuel Silviera, | the Cuban who absconded in his, own steamer with sl 000,000 belonging. to. J. M. Ceballos & Co. of this city, which precipitated ‘the assignment of’ the firm, has-been gained. . .Specula- tion has been rife; however, as to_ his destination and the guess which gaing the most belief is that he has gone to Venezuela. /It is stated ‘that Silveira s a close friend of President: Castro of Venezuela and from this it is ar- gued that he will put into a Venezue- lan port and use the friendship of Castro as a protection against arrest. Inquiry among: the most important failed to discover any disposition to regard the failure as indicative of any houses connected with Cuban affairs | i | 1o addition to the boara of airectors » fumber 'of “leading Southern, .Minnesota ;and Fowi] were present and listened to the, report o! ' Mr. Woodbury, the chiet’ engln | the ‘company, ‘who' preséntéd 'hi; phn [0f, the. prelimingry.| suryey, and:lex- i which were; accepted and; declared, to be ‘the final route of the new road, the sprineipal towns‘touched will be North- field, Faribault,:- general commercial or financlal ‘'weak- mess in the island.. The most general Itself become over-extended. as a re- sult of a participation’in' new ' enter- capital, quite large in Cuba and the reoent the intervention by the United States government had upset some very am- bitious plans in that direction. What these plans were is not known, but| kept.inquisitive meighbors off by rid- they. were (supposed 'to ‘be connected with the success of the revolutionists. CABELLOS BREAKS: SILENCE! H!ld of Firm Discusses Failure of His Concern, New ' York, ' Oct. ‘13.—For' the first time since the announcement of. the failure of Juan M. Ceballos, senior member of the firm of J. M. Ceballos & Co., broke his silence regarding Sil- veira and the failure. Of Silveira he said: ! my confidence.” culated that ‘his firm had bought ‘war- He sald that all he had purchased | 95 cents on the dollar for; that Silveira was’in Venezuela or’ on his way to that country. which. Silveira wrote to his. friends, in matlon givén out here. It is sald that | Silveira left the:letter iwith-friends:of his in Havana, saying frankly that|- he did not intend to' come ‘to New York: lic until, Oct. 7, five days after [Sil- veira and his family had sailed from Havana 'on’'the steamer Carmelina. It'was two dayslater, it is'sald, when &, cablegram, containing thei:news came from Havana to the office of Ce- ballos” attorney’s hiere ‘and'anotlier day elapsed ' before''the cablegram ‘was translated. . In, NewYork the news was closely guarded until after the Stock Exchanges had closed and then the announcement was, made. in a for- mal statement. NOVEL METHOD, OF SUICIDE. ; Brazillan''Nobleman ‘ Hires cage M Lions for the'‘Occasion: '2/‘! New York, Qct. 13.—A'Rio Janeiro dispatch says that Viscount Almeida, a well known member of soclet mitted'sufcide in a'novel maner.” He inyited ‘a ‘number-/of/ his!friends’ to' dinner and, afterwards led,them ma» traveling menagerfe. ' mals and chatting the viscount,openged; the door of the cage Jand entered The, Hons pounced upon’ him' and fatally mutilated before he'lcouldbe'| jer- dragged out. It is said he was VERDICT Mlnnoapnllu Youth Found Gulltywu\ & et Homigide, | PG Mlnnenpqlla Oct. 13.—Stephen; s);w | ba, ‘the sixteen: -year-old "boy besh o tHal fof' the kst thiLE: da. on a;charge of murdering JohnHamé ornick in, & saloon on .{ul.v 4, first degree, V111 | » i;The state; expectedi & verdict? of murder in the second; dpqrae {1/ Thef i+ & b 53 elded lefl-de ense. -ntu Oct, T irailvay ‘xha‘chmimi nd ‘helpers’ here, \who héve beett ofi' beéveral aaye; have recelyedondersite resume) ‘When | all: wérer watching theiani| idea expressed was that the firm had Cooch, known tn the rev prises beyond the capacity of its.own | court to indictments charging, . him These investments had been | with conspiracy to defraad the gov- revolutionary ‘ developmnts there’ ‘had $1,000 and confiscated the: distillery. been too greaf’a strain., So far.as the | Cooch fs said, to have accumujated 3. defalcation of Manuel Sllviera was fortune of $200,000'by the manufacture concerned it seems to be agreed that | ang sale: ot llfeft whisky. “All he was in the world I made | Bome of George B. Baker at Brookline, him. I trusted him and he betrayed | M255.has recovered: iy Mr. Ceballos deiled the Stories ‘clr- | 10 the jaii'at Chicago Fviday for the rants for claims in-the last: Cuban war | ¢i8, and her businesspartner;- Mre for from 6 to 10 cents on the dollar. | Mary Scroggs, from Silveira he had pald 80, 85 'and ['convoke ‘parliament for ‘Oct. 25. Thel’ Mr. Ceballos gave as his opinion | devoted to the vexed; church and;state The first intimation of the: trouble |indicats ‘that trad. which led to an investigation and the | response, to -the lo consequent ‘assignment 'of ‘J. ‘M. Ce- and f¢ ballos- & Co. came through’a.letter | otherwis the Cuban capital, according to infor- th This/letter was not made pub-{ the stockholders| and 'board of direct- Im-u of the Minneapolis, Rochent.er and ‘Diibiique Tras tohave anielectric:line from Minneap- for taking overits-ling;will have been completed. When this, road has; been “absorbed 'the Toute in-length:and about’ $3500,000° will \have, been. involved:, ;Work will-begin Tov rnunun'u:. ! MINNEAPOLIS hmiflp Good shlnpmg iPoint. o, as | Donald ‘traveli' g [freight agent for the Chicago, Milwankee ' & 8t. Paul railway, spent! 'yesterday and last night in: the city and left this morni g ifor points on' the south lineof the Great :No:thern, He' states to the:Pioncer: that his company Secures,, & geuerous /amount of the’ lorelgq shipping from:and to sand that’;this - place rst among the ‘towns in the north half of the state asa shipping point. “1 Routs”of Line, 0t 18.—A meeting of/; uinuénpoll company, which s s, to. Dubuque, has, been. lipld here. kers ' trom plained why this route had thosen, i/According /:to; the! présent' plans, The Power of the Press. A instance” which shows. the [confidence ‘of the public in the daily newspapers and also the wide spread circulation of this paper; cawe't) the notice of one of‘out representatives, yesterday while in conversation with a well known druggist. . A short time ago the paper published the following home receipe fer the quick “cure of colds and chronic lung and throat troubles. *Mix final survey, and‘it'1s planned’ by ‘the end of the yeer of 1907, to haye the[ W0 Ounces of glycerire, half road in actual dperat] ion as far southjounce concentrated Oil of Pine and eight ounces of good whiskey; shake well and take tablespoonful 1every four hours.” oHe: states: that: since ' the publication of this receipe a few days.ago he has had so many calls for the ingredients mention- ed . that he quickly exhausted ihe supply. of concentrated Oil"of Pine which he usually carries in stock and has had to replenish it. Thls we consider speaks well not only for the value of the receipe but shows that . this paper is thoroughly read in the homes. sRochester, Preston, Decorah, Walton, Elkader, Luanburg and then Dubuque. g The mext “meeting ‘of . the ‘board of directors, will ibe; held | on., Wednesday, by which time the Minnesota and Iowa Electric Rallway company will have held :its 'meeting ‘and’ arrdngements be 246 miles’ at once as Monday the surveyors are to''start “over ‘the route, making [the | ESCAPES, WITH | $1,000 FINE. “King of ‘Moonshinérs” Pleads Guilty to: llicit, Distilling. Richmond, Va., Oct. 13.—Wayne:R. enue, officers a8 “king' of ‘the’ moonshiners,” pleaded guilty in. the United States ‘circuft ernment.: Judge Waddill fined 'him He 'owns thousands of:acres of lands in' Meck- lenburg county and maintained, an armed ‘guard ‘around his'place. Cooch ing around the outskirts of .the estate | every night heavily armed and firing Z tri; Dellefs his'rifle in'the afr. ity rAristin The Zoroastrian faith acknowledges Ormazl, . Ahura Mazda, “Lord Wis- dom,” as the supreme god, with six archangels, Amesha Spenta, and a company of angels, Yazata, about him to rule and guide the world.. The in- fernal host of fiends and archfiends ‘who war against heaven and strive te destroy the:future life of man is led by Anra Mainyu, the evil spirit. - In dis- cussing with these Zoroastrians the subject: of the origin of evil 1 'found _that. they look upon the supreme being, Ahura Mazda, as comprising within Fhimself the two powers of good and I evil—namely, Spenta’ Mainyu. the holy | £pirit, and Anra Mainyu, the evil ispir- It. This is similar to the monotheistic view held by the Parsis of India in Jpposition to the statement frequently made that Zoroastrianism is pure dual- ism.” They believe also in the resurrec- || tion 'of ‘the dead, which their faith has taught them since ea#ly-times, and this doctrine is connected with the beliet that there will come a saviour or mes- siah, called ‘the Saoshyant.—A. V. Wil dams Jackson. in’ Century. "BRIEF BITS, OF ;NEWS,, “All'grades of refined sugar have been reduced 10 cents-per 100 gounds, ; Fire, of. unknown origin’ wiped out the busmess section . of; Monroe. City, United States Senator Albert 7 Beveridge, who has beén’ 1l"at! ths Danlel Francis ! negro. was hanged murder:of his wife, Mrs! ‘Martha' Fran: " The French cabinet has decided to greater portion of- the 'session’ will' be parallon questio ""Dispatcheés To' Dun’s Trade Revle s broddening 1n Wer. O 'teniperature. Blind From Birth, It woull'He'of great interest to know -how; much Helen Kelier, losing her sight at nineteen months; really, retain. ed of the se of sight.” With Laura Bridgman, a'‘woman 'of ‘much less in- tellect, there w evidently : little ‘ or npothing left, even as a memory. With her taste and smell were very feeble, 80 that comniunication ‘with ‘the world was, . indeed, through: a narrow ‘pas- sage. Her sensitiveness to_vibration Wils ‘8o fine that without any trace of the!sense of hearing she was aware of U;e tolling -of a bell. But her biogra- pbher, giying, us in detail the record of the 8low ‘steps of her education, tells b us little’of ‘what idéa she was able to hdrd, 77e4ak 1 - Tm;-of ;; things. It is Schopenhauer erh,, T4 NV.!). P Nn’r(;f{‘- Noggh- Who glws onc hint of what we all N} lxnflh i, 12@ 196 want to know of the born blind. He says that o man; 'blind from birth to whom sight was given by an operation put hls hand to his eye to grasp. there and ot 'fa their-place the thlngs he ‘Liondon Chronicle. According 'to an order jus ©-war department the fish 'and game ll::“ it:( & state.are-not: operative ‘on a ary reservation over ‘which. t| “United” States cquired el}:lglfisl]:: Jurisdiction. HD. ~!{Tompy”? Burns and ‘Philadelphla k O’Brien have signed;articles ito “Aght twenty rounds before the, Pacific Athletic' club 3t Los' Angeles on''Noy. :29;ior the heavywelgl\t chaniplonshiip of the worl % ‘—Mim’\e;pq'n ( Minneapolie T3%@74e; /M track-CN, The Crumpet Stors. Wendell Holmes professed to haved’ profound tespect for the' Dutch, possibly on account of what he used to call ““me , Eurgpean ; aborigines of .75, Hogsp—ifi;&fi@&.wi-xfihmmw | “Oliver W rs, $4.560@5.00; good to prime_spripg [-mbs,ts 25@9,oo,>m wolat mxm? i { [ America” Deing Dutch. He gave an aspect of-'Slyhiess' to bis Tespect which | Inspired; the jidea- that it was' not™un- tempeml by humor, but he maintained | that the Duten, n spite of their stolldi- had a humor the: 'or fnstance,” lie would say, "Wlmt 1s the, crumpet story Lo ror e T B Le was famill May, 78%@179c. Corn—Dec. ‘was nbout a man who was going to be' b # I e pps g hangeaimna wwas wisked Whether he nad $13.67%. Flax—Nothin = Bu any I.\stkrequest to make and said h?\ f-p—Cunmerle ?qy{ m&; “ oL crau 18@22¢. Eggsai “my_ l;:&g:‘}f use he had ne red t Tarkeys hiokens, 1ic;, aprings, | © (7 mv?mtmomthunonebemra. e st ol ooy Fae Bacughs & /1 5 ’eme.ae G ek Viida, 11 19 L ! lou_s’-o, Oct. 1z—cmle—§mea, mm?d&dfi% &?Hil: ermprf;\?i‘;n' and el 1.660, (¢ ) 1] ool iy St L "MIMHT::?:;M b i w«dm-.mmsoos‘m Olchlvas, 3 HY staFted i “Three'times: 2607.75. Hogs—Mixed "‘";3‘3 rkofie o i around h $6.20@6.67%; good huw, —and” — .dmng lamely- tiations %-M'm;" % SN