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About Morning Oregonian. (Portland, Or.) 1861-1937 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 1, 1906)
THE MORNING OREGONIAN, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1906. 3 REVOLT SWEEPS THROUGHOUT ISLE Prospect Dark for Restoration of Peace in Troubled Cuba. SANTIAGO IN REBELLION nsurgents Control Whole Province of Santa Clara and Uprising Covers Vebt Frantic Appeal to Avoid Intervention. HAVANA, Aug. 31. The situation Is far darker tonight than at any previous time since the insurrection broke out. News of an uprising" in Santago prov ince, while not yet published here, is spreading about the city and causing the gravest concern. When Mr. Sleeper, the American Charge d'Aftaires here, was told the contents of the Associated Press Santiago dispatch, he endeavored to veri fy it through the State Department, but was told it was absolutely untrue. Sub sequently it was verified from private newspaper sources. The extent of the rising In Santiago is not known, but it is the opinion here that the worst ca lamity of all to the Palma government would be an insurrection in Eastern Cuba. The Associated Press was Informed to night by two reliable eyewitnesses that Cardenas, which hitherto has been con sidered a perfectly peaceful city, was the scene yesterday of desultory righting between police and rural guards on the one side and roving Insurgents on the other. The only province remaining perfectly peaceful is Puerto Principe. Kebels Ilule Santa Clara. The Associated Press correspondent at Cienfuegos telegraphed tonight that there are 3000 armed insurgents in that vicinity and that all the small towns In Santa Clara province are controlled by Insurgents, who attack and loot trains and seize the property of foreigners as well as of Cubans. Trinidad is surround ed by insurgents, and the government appears powerless to protect the prop erty of Americans and other foreigners. Railway trains are held up at will and passengers searched. The Cuban Central Railroad has declined to assume re sponsibility for the safoty of passengers or freight. Recruiting for government forces is making good progress here. The gov ernment continues to niHke fine headway wherever there is open fighting. Hide and Seek With Guerrera. The troops In the western portion of Pinar del Rio Province have not yet come up with Pino Guerrera, and, according to the Associated Press correspondent with the troops, there is no present likelihood of their doing so, as the troops might march for ten years and all the while tluerrera would still be just ahead of them , In the hills. There are thousands of moun tain trails with which the insurgents are familiar and which lead in all directions. If Guerrera cared to harass the govern- ment, its troops could be killed off by Eharpshooters. The government has no cavalry in Pinar del Rio, and the only real soldiers are the artillerymen, but, as they are afoot, they cannot cope with the well-mounted veterans on the insurgent side. Guerrera does not want to fight. His scouts can always be seen at a distance from the government line of march. The correspondents report more looting by Guerrera's men. Whole West In Revolt. There are many rumors in circulation as to what may happen September 15 un less a new election is granted. To add to the general apprehension, the American Protestant missionaries of Ha vana, who are In general charge of the Held, say that reports from missionaries outside of Havana are practically unan imous in stating that the insurrection is sweeping all the country districts in the western half of the island and that they are unable to continue their work and ride over the routes in their several dis tricts. , Terror of Intervention. The Increasing gravity of the situation has revived discussion of the possibility of intervention by the United States. La Discussion, the semi-official organ of the administration. In an editorial this evening, calls upon Cubans to lay down their arms and save the republic from the danger of intervention. The article appeals to the patriotism of the people, depicting the 'results of intervention as follows: "Permanent intervention wnnM Via wnrqa than death, it would be preferaole if the' Caribbean should engulf the Pearl of the Antilles." The artlc further appeals thus to racial sentiment: The colored race may tremble before the possibility of intervention. Americans hate and despise negroes. Even their own ne jcroes, whom they have been in contact with for I'OO years, are treated like dogs, lynched and hardly considered human. II it la so with negroes of tnelr own land and ian ruage. what would happen to the Cuban negro? As to what whites might expect under American intervention, the article says: Black Picture of Americans. Our courteous comrades, in the public de partments will be superseded by men of the type of Bliss (General Tasker H. Bliss), who, when administrator of customs, asked nobody to be seated in his office and who forced the use of the English language. Also Instead of our deliberate and refined Judges we should 'nave Judge Pitchers (alluding to Captain W. L". Pitcher, of the Eighth United States Infantry, who in 1899 was Police Magistrate and Supervisor of Police of Ha vana) with their "Ten dollars or ten days." Furthermore, we shall have with us beer Urlnklng American officers with clanking purs, masters of all. captivating our ador able virgins. That this may occur, Cubans fight against Cubans, making room that Fin landers, Germans, Americans, Spaniards may come and enjoy the fecundity, of our soil and air, the murmuring of our rivers, the beauty of our moonlit nights, the kiss of our aea and even the love of our women, all be cause It Is aatd the elections were not fair. Is there no other remedy except placing our necks under the yoke of Uncle yam ? This war can have no other end but intervention. Surrenders In small numbers are re ported from various places, the largest being at Venero on the boundary line of Matanzas and Santa Clara, where 25 men forsook the Insurgent cause. There is no apprehension of an uprising In the City of Havana, although the city contains a great many insurgents. Many foreigners are registering themselves at their Consulates. Palma Xot Ready to Talk. President Palma was asked tonight by the Associated Press to give his view of the present situation and whether he Relieved there was a possibility of ar ranging a peace with the Insurgents In a manner acceptable to the government. He replied: "I regard the present time as inoppor tune for making a statement for publica tion, but perhaps In a day or two. or within a short time, I may give you my views." A detachment of rural guards engaged 125 insurgents near Esperanza, 10 miles from the City of Santa Clara, yesterday, with the result that the latter were dis persed, leaving 10 dead on the field. In crossing the Sagua la Grande River later 18 insurgents were drowned. The victory of the government forces at Campo Florida. 20 miles east of Ha vana, yesterday, resulting in the loss of 20 men killed for the insurgents, has not caused the- rejoicing here which might have been expected, as the men slain have relatives and friends here. The au thorities of several of the Cuban cities have caused the erection of earthworks as a -protection against insurgent attacks. According to a dispatch from Santiago, General Jesus Rabi, the veteran com mander, is ready to start out against the insurgents at the head of 1000 loyal volunteers. OFFICE OPENED IX XEW YORK Revolutionary Junta Will Keep America Informed of Revolt. NEW YORK. Aug. 31. In an office building at Pine and Water streets the Cuban junta established offices today. Colonel Aguirre, Major Joseph A. Castel lancy and Senor Nordose, who will be the official representatives of the revolution ary movement in this country, were pres ent. There were no ceremonies. Colonel Aguirre said that the junta in New York is not to be used for the pur pose of revolution. Its efforts, he said, will be directed solely to keeping the American people informed as to the true course of the movement. Arms and am munition. Colonel Aguirre said, could more easily be sent into Cuba from Jamaica than from here. CAST ASIDE THEIR DIGNITY Lawyers Have Musical Evening to Close Their Convention. MINNEAPOLIS, Aug. 31. With a big symphony orchestra on the stage boom ing Wagnerian crashes and a double quartet of young lawyers supplemented by a piano in the other end of the Min neapolis Auditorium, singing college songs and other popular airs, staid law yers and dignified Judges laid aside their dignity and had a good time tonight at the banquet marking the close of the ISHh annual meeting of the American Bar Association. When the association convened today the report of the committee on insurance was called up as unfinished business. The majority report of the committee holds that insurance Is a matter of interstate commerce. After much discussion It was decided that the proposed Federal statute pro viding for the supervision of interstate transactions in Insurance be made a spe cial order immediately after, the annual address at the next convention. The nominating committee selected the following ticket: President Alton B. Parker, New York; secretary, John Hinckley, Baltimore, Md.; treasurer. Frederick E. Wadhams, Al bany, N. Y.; executive committee, Charles Monroe, Los Angeles; Ralph Breckenridge, Omaha; Rome G. Brown, Minneapolis: Walter G. Smith, Philadel phia; Charles F. Libbey, Portland, Me. The secretary, was instructed to cast the vote of the association for each of today's nominees. Judge Alton B. Par ker was then escorted to the desk, and briefly thanked the members of the asso ciation for the trust reposed in him. The executive committee recommended in its report that a two-thirds vote be necessary for the approval of any legis lation. A resolution was introduced that the association accept the invitation of Los Angeles for the meeting in 1908, sub ject to the judgment of the executive committee. A resolution appointing a committee of five to investigate the advisability of in augurating a plan to raise a fund for the erection of a National memorial -to John Marshall at Richmond was adopted.' DEMOCRACY SPLIT ANEW (Continued From Page 1.) He disclaimed any right to the compli ment. On the contrary, he protested that so far from having become conservative he was more radical than ever.. What he meant by that was explained in full last night. "He Is flourishing a whip to the crack of which the party will not respond. He has served an ultimatum, the answer to which will be sufficiently emphatic. The bombshell will shatter. There is not a state in the Union in which it win not take immediate effect. "An hour ago, so to speak, it was Bryan first, the rest nowiere. Look for a grand transformation scene, with Bryan almost Invisible as a probability, scarcely visible as a possibility. He has disqualified him self. He has at one fell swoop converted himself from a sure wijaner into an eligi bility. Determined to go faster than the President, he has left the track altogeth er. Having eliminated himself, the Dem ocratic party must look for a Democratic candidate." Republicans Gloat With Glee. The Republican papers naturally view the situation with equanimity and take pleasure in pointing out the alleged mis takes that will disrupt his parly on the eve of its rehabilitation. As to the poli ticians of all parties, they are awaiting the echoes of the Garden speech with the keenest interest. Within the next day they will probably talk more openly than at present. And right now it looks as if one element among them was getting ready to be more scared over Bryan, the apostle of Government ownership, than it ever was in the past over Bryan, the apos tle of 16 to 1. WATTERSOX TURNS UPON HIM Government Ownership Impractica ble and Means Democratic Defeat. LOUISVILLE. Ky., Aug. 31. (Special.) Henry Watterson, the dean of Democ racy, in a sharp editorial in tomorrow's Courier-Journal, takes issue squarely with Bryan on his Government ownership of railroads and warns the twice-defeated candidate for the Presidency that the South will not tolerate the idea. The editorial continues in part: "The suggestion as a plank in a Demo cratic platform at this time is not only Impracticable in the highest degree, but, if it were adopted as a fighting' line, would cost us the election. It could not be carried out as a policy, even if by some cataclysm we should come to power in spite of It, and it ought not to be adopted or contemplated as a policy by any party having the real good of the people at heart." SECRET COMPACT FOR PEACE Bryan Said to Have Agreed With British Premier on Policy. LONDON. Sept. 1. (Special.) The Ex press, referring to William J. Bryan's declaration in his speech at Madison Square Garden that he carried from the Old World to the new a message of peace, states that, while in London, Mr. Bryan made a secret pact with Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman, by which they agreed to negotiate a perpetual peace treaty between Britain and the United States If Mr. Bryan, became President. DIES AS HE WISHED End Comes Suddenly to Ed ward Rosewater. HEART STOPS ABRUPTLY Great Omaha Editor Found In Last Repose in Courtroom Exhaust ed by Last Losing Cam paign for Senator.' OMAHA. Neb., Aug. 31. Edward Rose water, proprietor and editor of the Oma ha Bee, and prominently Identified with the political, financial and business af fairs of Omaha and the State of Nebras ka for 40 years, was found dead in Dis trict Courtroom No. 6, on the third floor of the Bee building, early today. He had evidently died of heart failure. Mr. Rosewater went to Waterloo, Neb., Thursday afternoon, where he made an address to the old soldiers of Nebraska. He reached Omaha on his return trip at 7 P. M. He is known to have been in his office during the evening, but was not seen by members of his family after re- r v i 1 Edward Rosewater. Editor of the Omaha Bee, Who Died Suddenly.. turning from Waterloo. It was a habit of Mr. Rosewater to go to different parts of the building whenever his pleasure so Induced, and it is presumed he stepped into the large courtroom and sat down for a minute's repose and fell asleep. Found Dead by Judge. When Judge Troup, who presides over court No. 6, arrived at the courtroom this morning he was surprised to find the lifeless body of Mr. Rosewater on a bench. He was sitting at the end of the bench, reclining easily against a radiator. He had reclined his head on his extend ed arm, across a rail- at the end of the bench. In his right hand he held a handkerchief. Mrs. Rosewater left a light burning- at the family home, which is directly in the rear of the Bee build ing, anticipating that her husband would be home during the evening. When he did not appear, Mrs. Rosewater notified Chief of Police Donohue that her husband had not returned home, although It was known that he had been at bis office dur ing the evening. Nothing was done in the way of search, however, as It was not uncommon for the veteran editor to be detained late at the newspaper office. Worn Out by Losing Campaign. Dr. Charles Rosewater, brother of the dead editor, said to the Associated Press that his brother had ' often expressed a wish that when he should die it be with out lingering illness, and that he would prefer to pass away in the manner in which he did. Dr. Rosewater attributed the sudden death of his brother to the results which followed the excitement at tending on a long campaign, in which Mr. Rosewater was a prominent candi date for nomination by the Republican State Convention for United States Sen ator. The convention was held August 22, and Mr. Rosewater, unanimously sup ported by the-delegation from Douglas (Omaha) County, was a prominent figure at that gathering. There were several ballots taken, during the course of which Mr. Rosewater gained steadily against his chief opponent, Norris Brown. Fol lowing the ballot which nominated Brown, Mr. Rosewater delivered an ear nest speech to the convention, thanking his friends for their support, and pledging himself to the support of Mr. Brown and the state ticket, and urged the conven tion to nominate a clean ticket for which no apologies would be necessary- Indorsed Successful Rival. ' Mr. Rosewater, following the conven tion, announced through the columns of his paper, the Omaha Bee, that he was out of the Senatorial race. During the campaign, Mr. Rosewater, naturally, was under considerable strain, and following the announcement of the result . of the ballot, which gave Mr. Brown a majority, gave evidence of weakness, but revived at once and addressed the convention. He told a close political friend that he felt little worse for the excitement of the campaign, and was strong enough to go into the battle for the election of the state ticket. Edward Rosewater was noted as one of the most aggressive newspaper editors In the West, and long held a foremost place among Nebraska Republicans. Born in 1841 at Bttkovan, a small village in Bohe mia, he was educated at the village school and at the High School at Prague, until he reached the age of IS years, when he came to the United States. He became a telegrapher at the age of 17, and from 1861 to 1863 he was a member of the Uni ted States Military Telegraph Corps, be ing one of General Grant's most trusted telegraphers. In 1868 he went to Omaha as manager of the Pacific Telegraph Com pany, since absorbed by the Western Union. - In 1S71 he started the- enterprise which made his fame and fortune the Omaha Bee. It was at first a small evening pa per, but by his vigorous, progressive, in dependent policy, Mr. Rosewater built it up into one of the greatest and most In fluential newspapers of the West, having in a few years converted it into a morn ing paper. Of late years he has left the management of It to his sons, Victor and Charles, simply retaining the title of edi tor. - From the beginning of his career as an editor Mr. Rosewater was active in Ne braska politics. He was a member of the Legislature In 18T1; of the Republican Na tional Committee in 1892, and of the ad visory board of that body in 1896, 1900 and 1904. He received many votes on numer ous ballots for United States Senator in 1901, and made a close race for the same office in the convention recently held. He was a member of the United States Mint Commission in 1897. He represented the United States and was vice-president of the Universal Postal Congress In 1897 at Washington and In 1906 at Rome. He was the original promoter of the Trans-Missis- STORE CLOSED ALL DAY MONDAY LABOR DAY. WATCH REPAIRING AND JEWELRY WORK BY EXPERTS Good Merchandise Only Quality Considered Our Prices Are Always the Lowest COMPLETE ASSORT MENT OF JEWISH NEW YEAR CARDS $1.25 Long Lisle Gloves, 87c Pr. 2000 pairs of 16-button length Black and White Lisle Gloves; sizes 6, 6i and 7; regular $1.25 value. The best long-glove bargain of the year at 87 cents 2800 pairs of 12 and 16-button length Silk Gloves, black and white; have sold regularly at $1.75; very special value at $1.25 Sale 25c Handkerchiefs for 14c A very special sale of women's dainty Swiss Handkerchiefs, scalloped and hemstitched, embroidered; regular 25c value for X4 Men's $1, $1.50 Shirts 68c For our Special Saturday Sale we place on sale 1000 men's high-grade Negligee Shirts, made of smart im ported Madras and Oxfords; attached or detached cuffs, plaited or plain bosoms; all sizes from 14 to 17h. These shirts have sold from $1.00 to $1.50 all Summer, but while the lot lasts they go at 68c See Washington-Street Window. August Curtain Sale: Buy Now and Save Money Hundreds of tbeae Curtain nave al ready been sold to women shrewd enough to realise that they will have to pay regular prices two weeks from now. There Is ' large variety of new patterns la Clnny, Irish Point Lace, Renaissance, Corded Arabian, Cable Net and Not tingham effects, in both white and Arabian colors- Regular $1.00 special 79J Regular $1.23 special ...... OS Regular $1.50 special $1.19 Regular $1.75 special ......$1.38 Regular $2.00 special $1.53 Regular $2.50 special $1.98 Regular $3.00 special $2.33 "Regular $4.00 special $3.19 Regular $5.00 special ..... .....$3.98 Regular $6.50 special $4.98 Regular $7.50 special $5.98 Regular $8.50 special ....,$6.68 Sale of Shell Fins and Novelty Back Combs Fine Shell Pins, in amber and shell effects; straight and crimped; regular 12Vc box. Special 8fJ Fine heavy Hairpins, shell and amber, straight and crimped, fine smooth finish. Special price, box 15 Fine finish Back Combs, assortment of about a dozen, shell and amber styles, some straight, some curved; worth 75c and 85c. Special sale 39 Fine finish Back Combs, shell and amber; latest shapes; regular 50c and 65c, for.35 Women's 25c Vests 15c In this radical clearance sale of light-weight Underwear go all of our regular Women's 25c Vests; low neck, sleeveless. Special at 15' Women's 35c Swiss ribbed lisle Vests; low neck, no sleeves; 35c quality for....25i Women's medium-weight cotton Vests; high neck, long sleeves; 75c quality for only 63 Medium-weight Umbrella Drawers; lace trimmed and beautifully finished; 75o quality for 63 A Money -Saving Sale of Soaps: Prices Cut Compare these prices with those of oth Lifebuoy, Sunlight and Monkey Soaps, per cake 3t Good grade perfumed Toilet Soaps; 8 cakes in box; all odors; box 23 Violette de Lorme Soap, 3 cakes in box; reg ular 25c value, for . ..14 White Honey, Oatmeal, Violette and Castile Soap; 50c dozen or large size cake.... 5$ Extra large size cake Elderflower or Oatmeal Soap; regular 15c value for 7 ler stores. Buy here and save money. 4-lb. bar imported Castile Soap; special. 44 Woodbury's Facial Soap; special, cake.l5i Witch Hazel, Tar and Turkish Bath Soaps; cake 4 Rainier Mineral Soap, box 24J j "Williams' Barber Bar, cake 4J Violette Soap, cake 5 Pure Glycerine Soap, 3 cakes in box . . . .23 Dr. Fenner's Clear Skin Soap, purest of com plexion soaps; regularly 20c cake; box of 3 cakes 40 I Changing oi Seasons (TH m v : 'iCtMVt At this time of vear ore is ant 'fm lo el lDa' urea leeung. you probably need iust a, little' tonic to liven up your sluggish blood. Our Cut-Rate Drugstore suggests: Malt Nutrine 15c MAN GOFER OOc Pabst Malt le LlsterlncSSe, 41c, Sle 81c Aseptine JS8c, 2Se "25 M"" ...aee Meat and Malt, MaBic Hair Re- fl.ia ,.eo atorer 50c Beef, 1 Iron and Danderlne 83c, 41c, 21c Wine 60e Coke's Dandruff Iron Tonic Bitters. 90c Cure 83c, 41e 100 Printed Cards 78c Usual Price $1.25 and $1.50 100 Visiting or Business Cards; best quality; printed in the latest Old English script, black letter or French script, work is so fine that they can hardly be distinguished from copper-plate engraving; 100 cards, with name, address and day, or three-line busi ness cards ; usual prices, $1.25 and $1.50 per 100. Today only. Tfln Special Sterling Belt Pins A new importation of very pretty pins to be used instead of buckles. Come in new head and .flower designs, etc Good, long, strong pins Small size 75 Medium size .$1.00 Large size $1.25 Collar and Ribbon Pins The newest designs about a dozen quaint con ceits; one-piece joint and catch; extra finish; worth having because they are the latest designs. A Wonderful Muslin Underwear Sale A reduction sale of Muslin Underwear at Lipman-Wolfe's always excites the widest interest, for besides the attraction of low prices you are always sure of Lipman-Wolfe quality. Every reduction advertised is exactly true something that does not happen always at other stores. Every garment is new, dainty, carefully made, tastefully trimmed and is sold at a price matched nowhere on goods of equal quality, workmanship and beauty. If you want to save money on the muslin garments that you always need, now is the time, and the place is the Lipman-Wolfe store. O Cp For women's $1.25 Gown Chemise, high-neck styles, cambric or nainsook, finished with hemstitched ruffles, lace edge, ribbon beading, short; or long sleeves. tfil 1 Q For fine Nainsook and Cambric Gowns, values to $f.75, slipover and open-front styles, finished with fine embroidery, lace edges and insertion, ribbon beading, short sleeves. A. C For Gowns of fine nain sook, with fine embroid ery insertion, lace beading and ribbon trimmings; values to $2.2o for $1.4o. For Walking Skirts made of cambric; values to $2; very deep flounce, three cluny lace insertions and lace ruffle. $1 $1.19 Q fir For Cambric Walking JVr Skirts; values to $1.25; made with deep ruffles, with tucks and lace insertion, others with tucked ruffle and embroidery trimming. OCpFor these $1.25 Corset Cov ers, made of fine nainsook, daintily trimmed with Valenciennes and clpy laces, insertions and em broidery. A,Qfi For children's 75c Short Ki "f" monos, made of fine lawn, feather-stitched, with pale blue mer cerized thread. OCn For Drawers, made of cam W4sW brie and nainsook; values to $1.25; with yoke of French band fin ish, dainty lace and embroidery inser tion trimmings. C1 L TZ For Cambric Skirts; val-P-ues to $2.25; with deep lawn flounce, three fine lace insert ings, lace-trimmed ruffle and dust ruffle; another style with deep lawn flounce, cluster tucks, trimmed with 5-inch embroidery. filQFor Long Negligee Kimo pX.J7nos; values to $2.50; made of fancy figured lawn, trimmed with ruffle and lace. For these 75c Short Ki monos, made of fancy stripe dimity, yoke back and front; others made of white lawn, with fancy Per sian band trimming. QQi For Short Kimonos, made of daintily figured and Persian designs, with plain color bands; val ues to $1.75 for 98c. 55c slppi Exposition at Omaha In 1897, the most successful exposition financially In America, and was a member of Its execu tive committee In charge of publicity and promotion. He was a delegate and mem ber of the committee on resolutions of the American Conference on International Arbitration at Washington in 1904, and was a member of the executive committee of the National Civic Federation. TELEGRAMS OF CONDOLENCE Hundreds of Messages Received from Friends of Dead Editor. OMAHA, Aug. 31 Hundreds of tele grams of condolence have been received by the family from all parts of the United States from friends and relatives of Mr. Rosewater, among them being William J. Bryan and M. B. Stone, gen eral manager of the Associated Press. Mr. Rosewater's eldest son, Charles, who is business manager of the Bee, will arrive in the city early Sunday morning from the East, where he had but recently gone on a vacation. The announcement was made tonight that the funeral will be held at 3 o'clock next Sunday afternoon from the rotunda of the Bee building. The services will be under the auspices of the Masons. During Sunday the body will lie In state for a few hours in the Bee build ing, which will be open to the public. Interment will be in Pleasant Hill Cemetery. of Edward Rosewater, his personal friend, while on the train on his way to New Haven. Mr. Bryan immediately sent the following message to Mrs. Rosewater: "Just learned with great sorrow of your husband's death. Mrs. Bryan joins me In expressions of sympathy. "W. J. BRYAN." Noted Woman Archeologist. BOSTON. Aug. 31. Mrs. Cassandria Artell, widow of Dr. John H. Haynes, died yesterday. Her husband was Consul of the United States and field director of the Babylonian expeditions of the Uni versity of Pennsylvania, and she was the first woman from the Occident to visit Nippur, Assyria, where she went in com pany with her husband upon an explor ing expedition. For some years she was a lecturer. Bryan Sends Sympathy. NEW HAVEN, Conn., Aug. 31. Wil liam Jennings Bryan learned of the death . No Swearing Before Horses. Boston Transcript. The modern horse is altogether too highly organized and too refined an animal to be dealt with successfully by men who are much inferior to liim in these respects. On the walls of a livery stable in New York, where many speedway -trotters and pacers are boarded, there is a printed rule that no loud or, -)ugh language shall be used to the 4"es. This Is cmly one illus tration '. the melancholy fact that br -Juc r. instinct, or self-interest, as u. .iotive outruns humanity. Perhaps in time, knowledge that gentle treatment of the horse pays in dollars and cents will filter down from the expert to the . . - . yowner. Last year one of the :. portant races In the East, a purse of -$10,000, was won by a driver from Colorado with a filly bred, owned and educated by himself; and that night the telegraph carried to his far off family the welcome news that his youngest daughter could now be given the four-years' course in a Massachu setts college which she had long de sired. One can Imagine the caresses which were lavished upon that home bred filly when she returned to her stall after her arduous campaign. Mining Company Goes Bankrupt. BOSTON, Aug. 31.-The Taylor Park Mininp Company, a Colorado corporation, capitalized at J5.000.000. was placed in the hands of a receiver today. Clarence H. Knight, creditor for toOOO. alleged that the company is hopelessly insolvent and owes 213.000. The company Is engaged in mining gold Economy Is a strong point, with Hood's Sarsaparilla. A bottle lasts longer and does more good than any other. It is the only medicine of which can truly be said 1 00 DOSES ONE DOLLAR at Dorchester, Colo. It has offices at Colorado Springs and Boston. Thomas W. Goodale, of this city, was named re ceiver. The receiver was asked for in order that the property might be held to gether and administered as a whole. The company did not oppose this. 4- CARTERS HJlTTLE IVER PILLS 3 SICK HEADACHE PoiitiTely cared by theM Little Pills. They alto reliere Distress from Dytpepitt, Indigestion and Too Heart Eating. A per. feet remedy for Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsi. ness. Bad Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tonga Pain in the Side, TORPID LIVER. They Regulate the Bowel. Purely Vegetable. Small PIH. Small Dom Small Price.