THE MORNING OEEGONIAN, SATURDAY, APRIL 26, 1902. MOROS COME TO TERMS CE1A.SE RESISTANCE ON THE SHOW OF AMERICAN FORCE. Court-Martial of General Smith Be- giiiH Waller and Day Admitted The Cholera Record. WASHINGTON, April 25. Adjutant General Corbin today made public the following extract from a cablegram just received from General Chaffee respecting the situation In Mindanao, dated Manila, April 24: "Before Baldwin could be communi cated with he had taken the fort at Pualo after slight resistance. No casualties. Very soon after the neighboring town of Ganasi opened its doors, hoisted white flags and delivered the red flag. Dato Lampo and others -with a strong follow ing asked permission to call and make peace. Dato AmanI Pack, of Gana, who sent threatening messages in reply to my letter. Is one of those who have submit ted. The camp is two miles from Gana, whose Sultan has asked Baldwin to come there. Have directed him not to move. He is 10 miles from Dato. , "It is my purpose to have an interview with General Davit. Will go on the Han cock, which leaves here today for Mala bang with a battalion of the Tenth In fantry. It is our purpose to show a con siderable force of troops to the lake Moros, converse with Datos, then retire the troops by different trails to Malabang and Parang; thereafter to send expe ditions occasionally to the lake. "We supposed Gana was 35 miles from Malabang. It Is actually a short 21 miles No fighting necessary to over came the opposition to advance to pres ent location of troops; 775 men with Bald win, two troops cavalry, dismounted, 12 miles in the rear. Every effort will be made to prevent a general war. -Davis says the situation at this time Is very favorable." f COURT-MARTPAL OF GEX. SMITH. Testimony of First Witnesses De-f veloped Nothing; New. MANILA, April 25. The trial by court martial of General Jacob H. Smith on the charge of conduct prejudicial to good order and discipline began today. Gen eral L.loyd Wheaton presided. Colonel Charles A. Woodruff, counsel for the defense, said he desired to simplify the proceedings. He was willing to ad mit that General Smith gave instructions to Major Waller to kill and burn and make Samar a howling wilderness; that he wanted everybody killed capable of bear ing arms, and that he did specify all over 10 years of age, as the Samar boys of that age are equally as dangerous as their ciders. Captain David Porter, Marine Corps, and Lieutenant John H. A. Day, Marine Corps, were the only witnesses exam ined. Their testimony developed nothing new. Major Littleton W. T. Waller. Ma rine Corps, will be the only other witness for the prosecution. He was unable to be present today on account of sickness, but it is expected will be in attendance to morrow. The defense will call several officers of the Ninth Infantry. Waller and Day Acquitted. Major Waller and Lieutenant Day, of the Marine Corps, who were tried by court-martial here on the charge of exe cuting natives of the Island of Samar without trial, have been acquitted. Attorney-General Lout His Temper. At the trial today of the editor of Free dom, who is charged with sedition in pub lishing an article from an American periodical, to which the editor of Freedom agreed and added remarks of his own, censuring the United States Commission ers' rule, Attorney-General L. R. Wllfley created a sensation and astounded the Judge, lawyers and spectators. He lost his temper with Judge Odlin, and said: "The civil government wants to know where It stands under the law passed. It wants to know whether it will be en forced, or whether such unwarranted statements will be allowed. The court knows the wishes of the Government, and it is to be presumed that it knows its own rules." Judge Odlin replied: "The court will determine the case ac cording to law. The court wants you to understand that it believes individuals hive rights as well as governments." The defense had asked for a delay of a week, owing to counsel having been dis qualified on account of not passing the Filipino standard of law. The hearing in the demurrers in the case was postponed until May 3. Philippine Cholera Record. MANILA. April 25. The cholera record up to date is as follows: Manila, 505 cases and 39S deaths; in the provinces, 1317 cases and 5)07 deaths. The Board of Health is finding cases of natives trjing to bury the dead at night, in order to prevent the detention of the lling. VETERANS ADJOURN. , A "Lovins Farcivell" to Commander-'in-Chief Gordon. DALLAS, Tex.. April 25. When the last session of the United Confederate Veterans convention was dalled to order today a resolution by Commander-in-Chief John B. Gordon, a "loving farewell," was adopted with cheers. General Gordon said in response: "Comrades, I have been touched many times, and every year this old Confederate heart grows more tender and loving as the end approaches. When the end comes, I want your hands to bur? me, and on my tomb I would have writ ten: "Here lies a Confederate.' " A -ote of thanks was written to Dal las, to the State of Texas, and to the ladies of Texas for their hospitality. General Gordon embraced the op portunity to make another plea for a monument to Southern women. The con vention then adjourned to the next meet ing In New Orleans. At the camp today a feast unique in the history of reunions was prepared, six buffalo having been slaughtered for a barbecue. DAUGHTERS OF REVOLUTION. General Society Completes Election of Officers and Adjonrns. DENVER, Colou, April 25. The Gen eral Society, Daughters of the Revolu tion, adjourned sine die today after elect ing the following members of the board of management: Mrs. C. S. Thomas, of Colorado; Mrs. Carrie Woodruff, of North Carolina; Mrs. James A. Mount, of In dianapolis; Mrs. Davis C. Carr, of New York; Mrs. C. A. Place, of Minnesota; Mrs. Francos E. Stanley, of Massachu setts, and Mrs. W. S. Cogswell, of Long Island. A committee consisting of Mrs. N. S. Kcay, of Pennsylvania, as chairman; Mrs. Hill, of Maryland: Miss Voss, of Indiana; Mrs. Caspar, of Colorado; Mrs. Peath, of Massachusetts; Mrs. Ingraham, of New York; Mrs. Terry, of Long Isl and, and Mrs. T. K. Bruner, of North Carolina, was appointed to confer with Senators and Representatives in Congress with "regard to a bill making the vicin ity of Valley Forge Into a National park. Nosrro Boy Hanged, PLATTE CITY, Mo.. April 25. "Gen eral" Armstrong (colored), aged IS, was hanged here today. He was convicted of criminally assaulting Iva Turner, the daughter of a farmer, two years ago. Montana Grand Army. HELENA, Mont, April 25. A. N. Bull, of Bozeman, was today elected depart ment commander of the Grand Army of the Republic for Montana. The 18th an nual state encampment closed here today. The next encampment will be held at Anaconda. Mrs. Annie Brennaman, of Bozeman, was elected department presi dent of the Woman's Relief Corps. . FESSENDEN'S SYSTEM. Satisfactory Experiments With Nevr Government Telegraph. NORFOLK, Va April 23. Tests of the new Government system of wireless teleg raphy were made today at Roanoke Island, Pamlico Sound, before a number of naval experts. The "tests were in charge of Professor Reginald Feesenden, of Alle gheny, Pa., who Is now attached to the Weather Bureau service, and who is the Inventor of that system. It is acknowl edged that the feasibility and practica bility of sending wireless telegraphic mes sages at sea quickly and accurately by the new system has been demonstrated beyond doubt. The xperlments were con ducted from Cape Hatteras to Roanoke Island, a distance of 00 miles by an en- tirely salt water route. It is stated that General Greely's hasty departure to Washington was for tho purpose of being present when his associates- at Roanoke Island will make an attempt to send a wireless message to the bureau at Wash ington, possibly tomorrow. Proceeding Against Beef Trust. SALT LAKE. April 25. Preliminary steps in proceedings., which it is stated may be Instituted .against the meat trust, were taken by Attorney-Geperal" M. A. Breeden today, by the latter requesting of tho State Food" and Dairy Commis sioner statistics In regard to the recent advance In the prices of meats. Informa tion as to whether or not meats on which any preservatives have "been used havp been or are being imported Into the state was also requested. Should the informatiop warrant,, it Is stated tha,t the "Atlomeyv General will at once prdceed Tinder the anti-trust and pure-food laws ofjthje state. THE SICK ARCHBISHOP. Attending Physicians Say Corrlgan's Condition Is Encouraging. NEW YORK, April 25. Archbishop Cor rigan, who is seriously ill of pneumonia at his residence in this city, according to the last bulletin. Issued at 10:15 o'clock to night, passed a satisfactory day, and, in the opinion of the attending physicians, his condition is encouraging. The arch bishop is conscious, but is kept very quiet, and two trained nurses are constantly with him. The attending physicians are Drs. Keys, Janeway and Delafield. They do not expect the crisis will be reached v tIvpa n elv 4ara More than 300 telegrams of inquiry as to I tho archbishop's condition were received J at tne resiaence, ana -several, nunarea peo ple left cards. Representative Cnmmings Very III. BALTIMORE, April 25. It was learned from a reliable source late tonight that Congressman Amos J. Cummings, of New York, is critically ill from pneumonia at the Church Home, in this city. The au thorities at the Home decline to give out any particulars of his condition, but it Is understood that his recovery is extremely doubtful. SAYS HE KEPT HER JEWELS Mrs. Barrios' Charges Against United States Minister Hnnter. MOBILE, Ala., April 25. The widow of Reyna Barrios, President of Guatemala, who was assaeslnated February 8, 1898, sought safety In the home of the Ameri can Minister to Guatemala, W. Godfrey Hunter, and moved all her furniture, dia monds and jewelry thither for safekeep ing. It appears from an affidavit, sworn before Richard Weskatt, Vlce-Coneul-General at London, that Hunter is charged by Mrs. Barrios with Illegally retaining her property under the plea of payment of 13 weeks' board and lodging of Mrs. Barrios and her attendants and services rendered. Mrs. Barrios denies any obli gation or contract for board and lodging or services. She states that she gave to Minister Hunter and his family valuable pieces of diamond jewelry of a hundred times the value of the board and lodg ing at the legation of the United States. Hnnter Denies It. LOUISVILLE, Ky., April 25. Beyond making a denial. Dr. W. Godfrey Hunter, United States Minister to Guatemala, who arrived in Louisville several days ago, refuses to discuss Mrs. Barrios' charges. TO SETTLE MINERS' DISPUTE Civic Federation Committee Will Take Up the Wage Question. NEW YORK, April 25. Members of the conciliation committee of the National Civic Federation are all expected to at tend the final conference with the repre sentatives of the coal-carrying companies and the United Mineworkers of America, tomorrow at the headquarters .of the fed eration in this city. The committee hopes at this conference to bring about a set tlement of the troubles in the anthracite district THE DEATH ROLL. George Speyer. FRANKFORT-ON-THE-MAIN, April 25. George Speyer, head- of the banking firm of Lazard, Speyer" & Ellison, died hero yesterday. , --., Mr. Speyer was also connected with New York and London banking .houses. The cause of his death was heart 'failure. He was a great philanthropist and in 1901 gave 1,000,000 marks to the municipality of Frankfort for the -pUrposei 6T" sclexljlflcl icsearun. xie was a partner m meAw York Arm of which James Speyer Is the head. James AtwcII. PITTSBURG, April 25.-James Atwell, president of the National Association of Ex-Prisoners of War,, and well known In Grand Army circles throughout tKe country, died at his home In this city to day. Mr. Atwell was stricken with apo plexy at Atlantic City three days ago, and never regained consciousness. He was 64 years of age. Thomas F. McCahe. EL PASO, Tex., April 25. Thomas F. McCabe, a tragedian formerly well known on the stage, is dead at the age of 49, from consumption. McCabe was an Elk and a member of the Actors' Association of New York City. He was at one time associated with Joe Murphy and John O'NcilL David Hanchett. NEW YORK, April 25. David Hanch ett who was for more than 50 years on the" stage, is dead in Brooklyn. He played with Edwin Forrest, Charlotte Cushman and many other well-known actors. For several years ho taught acting In Colum bus and Indianapolis. A Knock-Out 'at Helena. HELENA, Mont, April 25. At the Pal ace Theater here tonight, "Red" Oglesby, ex-heavy-weight champion of Mon tana, defeated "Silent" Rowan, of Salt Lake, Rowan being knocked out by a stiff punch on the chin In the second round. Mother Gray's Sweet Powders For Children. Mother Gray, a nurse in the Children's Home In New York, treated children successfully with a remedy called Mother Gray's Sweet Powders for Children. They are harmless as milk, pleasant and never fall. A certain cure for feverishness. constipation, headache, teething and stomach disorders and remove worms. At all druggists. 5c. Sunni FREE. Address, Allen S. Olmsted. Le Roy, N. X. J IHER CONDITION SERIOUS! QUEEN WILHELMINA OF HOLLAND DOES NOT IMPROVE. Dispatches From the Royal Family Differ From the Medical Bulletins Other Foreign News. AMSTERDAM, April 25. In official cir cles no amelioration of Queen Wilhelml na's condition is admitted, and her doc tors admission that she is not sleeping well is taken as a bad sign. It is al leged that the dispatches from the royal family concerning the Queen's condition differ substantially from the medical bul letins on the subject. It is reported that the Queen is restive under the liquid diet treatment, and has insisted that her nurses give her solid food. In this respect, however, her doc- tors are Inexorable. The Queen mother has jreat difficulty in pacifying the pa tient. It is ascertained that the doctors have advised the Queen mother, for the sake of her own health, to relax her vigil ance, and take a daily walk or drive. These outings, therefore, are no indica tion that Her Majesty is progressing fa vorably. The morning' bulletin announced that Queen WUhelmlna slept at Intervals dur ing, the night The afternoon bulletin was noncommittal. It merely said that Her Majesty's condition called for no spe cial remarks. - FIFTY ARE INJURED. Bad Accident on the Great Eastern Railway, Ncnr London. "LONDON, April 25. Fifty persons were injured this morning In an accident on the. Great Eastern Railway, near the Hackney Downs station. As a train from Walthamstown, called the three-penny train., was crossing a bridge, an axle of the car nearest the locomotive broke, and the coach Jumped the rails, dashed into the side of the bridge and lodged across both tracks. The train was filled with workmen on their way to work. Tho two coaches following the stranded car crashed into it, completing the wreck and dealing awful havoc among the passen gers caught therein. The s:cor.d car was wrecked and a number of its Inmates were badly hurt. The Injured were taken to the Dalston Hospital. IN SIGHT OF PEACE. Rut England Continues to Send Oat Men and Munitions of War. LONDON. April 25. Speaking in Lon- do"t0nit Mr. Brodrick, the Secretary of War, said: "We are perhaps in sight of peace, but in the interval we are sending out men and material to carry on the war for an other year or two, if necessary, that being the only spirit wherein the government can interpret the will of the nation and approach the arrangements for the con clusion of peace." Kruger Did Not Sny It. AMSTERDAM, April 25. The report published by a news agency in the United States that Mr. Kruger had declared In an interview in the Hendelsblatt that the peace negotiations between the BrltisTi and the Boers had been completely broken off Is untrue. The Hendelsblatt has not printed an interview with Mr. Kruger on the subject. Kruger's Visit to Ameriqa. THE HAGUE, April 25. The Boer agents In America are renewing their en treaties that Mr. Kruger visit the United States next June. He will probably com ply with these requests, if sufficient pres sure Is exercised, although he has often expressed his dislike of this plan. BOXER TACTICS. Russian Workmen Turn Their Spite Against "Foreign Devils." ST. PETERSBURG, Thursday, April 24. The Minister of the Interior. M. von Plehwe, has gone south, in order to In vestigate the disorders in Southern Russia. Reliable information received here from Moscow shows that tho labor movement there has -assumed most dangerous forms. There have been many factory fires in Moscow and in the southern provinces, supposedly of incendiary origin, and fac tories have been placarded with Boxer liko posters, calling on the workmen to rise up against the "foreign devils," as the foreign managers and foremen are termed. These posters further declare that "cod etel and hot lead are cheap." The managers referred to have been sub jected to various indignities on the part of their own employes. The English words, "foreign devils," are frequently heard in the street PRINCE HENRY'S SQUADRON. Puts to Sea for a Training Cruise of Five Weeks. KIEL, Germany, April 25. Admiral Prince Henry of Prussia put to sea this morning- with the most powerful squadron ever commanded by a German Admiral for a training cruise of five weeks' dura tion around the British Islands. When the squadron had been gone from here for two hours, the battle-ship Kaiser Wilhelm der Gross's machinery became deranged, causing some damage on board the vessel. She returned to the Imperial dock here for repairs. SgyenTcolliers have been sent in ad vance ofc the squadron to coal the Ger man ships on the high seas off the north of Scotland. ,An American Invention will .be used' for this purpose. The German squadron will touch at Galway, Bear Ha ven and Kingstown in Ireland, and Port land, In England. uYl "BATTLE WITH REBELS. Large Party1 Dispersed by Chinese Imperial Troops. HONG KONG. April 25. Advices re ceived here today from Wu Chou, under date of April 23, 'announce that a bloody battle was then proceeding between a force-o'f Imperial troops, on their way to Nan King and a large party of rebels. Tho Imperial army attacked the rebels encamped In the Wu Chang hills, brought up two Maxims and two 12-pounders, and finally scattered the rebels and captured their leader. Hung Yung Seng, who was wounded. Subsequently the rebels cap tured two villages and established their headquarters there. Election of Bercsford. LONDON, April 25. Rear-Admiral Lord Charjes Beresford, Conservative, has been elected without opposition to the seat In the House of Commons representing Woolwich, made vacant by the retire ment of Colonel Edwin Hughes, Conser vative. Great interest was taken in Great Brit ain in the candidacy of Lord Beresford for Woolwich, in consequence of his re cent severe comments on the condition of the British Navy, and the efforts of cer tain members of Parliament to induce the Admiralty to discipline him in the way General Buller was disciplined for hia utterances regarding the British Army. Experiments Bankrupt Zeppelin. BERLIN. April 25. Count Zeppelin, the aeronaut, has been ruined financially by his experiments with airships. He is un able to obtain any further support In Germany for his projects, and he is break ing up the old framework of his airship, from which he has sold five tons of alum inum. Italian Debate on the Strike. ROME, April 25. A debate on the policy of the government In the recent strike movement and the summoning by the gov ernment or railroad employes to the col- j ors, has been going on In the Senate for two days. Today It gave rile to a num ber of lively episodes in which the spec tators In the galleries took part by Join ing in the demonstrations of approval and disapproval. Finally, by a secret ballot the vote censuring the government's pol icy was rejected by S3 to 76. The debate was an outgrowth of several interpella tions by members of the opposition. Marriage Postponed. VIENNA, April 28. The Neue Frele Press and the Neue Welner Tageblatt an nounce that the marriage at Prague, Bo hemia, of Countess Henrietta Chotek. sister-in-law of the heir presumptive, and Prince Stanislaus Radziwlll, was post poned on account of the illness of the bride, and that all other reports of this occurrence are incorrect Failure of an Old Swiss Bank. LONDON, April 26. The Geneva corre spondent of the Dally Mall says a sensa tion has been caused there by the failure of one of the oldest banks In the country, the Baslcr Credit Gassellschaft. M. Grob and M. Hoeflinder, respectively the man ager and the. cashier of Jhe bank, have been arrested. It is reported, that 1.600, 000 of the bank's funds have been lost by wild speculation at Paris, and that thou sands have been ruined. Scottish Coal Combine. EDINBURGH. April 25. The Evening News, of this city, says negotiations, in which J. Pierpont Morgan Is interested, are on foot to combine the Scbttlsh coal companies, with a capital of ?,000,OCO ($15,000,000). LONDON, April 26. A denial comesfrom Edinburgh this morning that J. Pierpont Morgan has anything to do with the re ported combination of the Scottish coal companies. Martinis of Qncensherry a Bankrupt. LONDON, April 25. The examination In bankruptcy of the Marquis of Queens berry, which was, concluded today, showed that he ran through personal property to the value of 266.000 and the Glenstart estate of 500 acres. When he succeeded to the Marquisate in 1900, he had anticipated his interest in the estate to the extent of 106,235. The Marquis lost between 60,--000 and 100,000 In speculation on the stock exchange. Sitle of a. Famous Rug. NEW YORK. April 25. A rug 203 years old and known as Empress Eugenie's "prayer rug" has been purchased In this city for $5000 for F. N. Finney, of Mil waukee. The rug Is of Persian manu facture, six by four feet, and has a pre cept from the Koran woven In its breadth. It was sold to its former owner in Paris three years ago at an auction of the Em press' belongings. Russian Minister of Education. ST. PETERSBURG, April 25. M. Senger, Assistant Minister of Education, has been gazetted acting Minister" of Education, succeeding General Van Novskl. (General Van Novskl was appointed Min ister of Education after the murder of M. Bogliopoff, in 1901. The General resigned the office April 23, owing, it is said, to op position to his suggested educational re forms in Russia.) ISLANDERS FAVOR SALE. Result of Unofllcinl Plebiscite in Danish Went Indies. ST. THOMAS, D. W. I., April 23. Press comments on the action of the Danish Landsthlng, in connection with the Dan ish West Indies treaty, are. In sub stance, that it circumscribes Justice too much. The Inhabitants demand that the question of the sale of the Islands be not left for settlement to a few electors, hold ing that every male native of full age is entitled to vote. The result of the limited unofficial ple biscite of the Island of St Thomas is 'un certain; but it is probably pro-sale, though the voting was close. St Croix, by a vast majority, is pro-sale. BIG MINING SUIT. Stratton Accnxei the Strong Com pany of Extracting Gold Ore. DENVER, Colo., April 25. Stratton's Independence Mining Company, of Crip ple Creek, today filed a suit in the Arapa hoe County District Court against the Strong Mining Company, charging the latter company with extracting gold and other valuable ores from the Maggie lode mining claim, which adjoins the Strong property, and asking damages to the amount of $1,750,000. Stratton's Independ-r ence Is owned principally In London. The Strong .rr.ine was owned by Sam Strong, who was killed by Grant Crumley a few months ago. BURNING FORESTS. Fires in New Mexico Mountains. LAS VEGAS, N. M., April 23. Forest fires have been raging in the mountains in Galllnas Canyon, above the Las Vegas Hot Springs, for the past two days. The smoke can now be seen very plainly from this city. Great damage Is being done and it is feared that houses of ranchers In the canyon will be swept away by the flames. Reports have also reached here of fires in the Tecalote mining region 'around Mineral Hill, and a great stretch, or country win De swept. Pennsylvania Forest Fires. OIL CITY, Pa., April "25. Forest fires in this vicinity have entailed a loss of 530,000 upon Venango County oil produc ers In the past 24 hours. Reports from Forest County show that the fire is do ing much damage in th& virgin forest near Tlonesta. Bank Wrecker Pardoned. TRENTON, N. J., April 25. William N. Boggs, who was sentenced to five years' imprisonment for his connection with the wrecking of the Dover, Del., National Bank, of which he was cashier, was re leased today, having been pardoned by President Roosevelt Boggs had about an other year to serve. Health Officers in Conference. INDIANAPOLIS, April 25. The health officers of Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio and Illinois met in conference here today. Smallpox was discussed from many stand points. Resolutions condemning the San Francisco and California health officers for their action regarding the bubonic plaguo were adopted. No Injunction Against Miss Stone. BOSTON, April 25. The petition of a lecture bureau for an injunction to re strain Miss Ellen M. Stone, the mission ary, from lecturing under rival manage ment, was deified by Judge Richardson this afternoon. The hearing on the mer its of the case lasted two days. Nominations Confirmed. WASHINGTON, April 25. Confirmations by the Senate: Alfred L. GottschaJk, of New York, Con sul at San Juan del Norte, Nicaragua. Postmasters California, E. S. Newcomb, Coronado; L. Webster, Ventura. Wash ington, F. W. France, Buckley. Arizona, A. L. Smith Prescott. The increased use of telephones in Lon don has greatly diminished the demand ror hansoms. That is easily understood, for business men, to whom time is precious, no longer have to drive hurriedly to this or that office. Of the 38 Sultans who have ruled the Ottoman Empire since the conquest of Constantinople by the Turks, 34, have died violent deaths. v Spuing The. woman who suffers in fcnd the spring season especially trying. All the year round she endures backache, headaohe, nervousness, female weakness and other ills, yet manages to keep up. But spring with its languor is apt to add the last straw to the burden, and the general physical debility added to the womanly weakness produces a break-down of the health. Spring is a trying season to all weak women, and not seldom a fatal season to those whose chronic ailments make them an easy prey to disease. If womanly suffering were a necessity; if no healing were offered for diseases which afflict tho majority of women the world over, such a fact would discredit all the boasted medical advancement of the twentieth century. In spite of the fact that a large number of weak and sick women accept their condition as being beyond the reaoh of medicine; and although local physicians often pronounce womanly dis eases incurable which will not yield to their own treatment, it is a positive truth that the majority of women who suffer from diseases peculiar to their sex can bo com pletely cured and restored to robust health. Nothing is more certain than that Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription cures wom anly diseases. It cures ninety-eight out of every hundred women who give it a fair and faithful trial. That means that of every hundred women who suffer from womanly diseases there are oaly two who cannot be perfectly cured by the use of Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription. Even the two per cent, of women who cannot be completely curedcan be greatly benefited by the use of "Favorite Prescription," by a lessening vu iuv 5'" lue-tuiwe iu pnysicru screngtn. xms great medicine works won ders for weak and sick women, restoring them to health and happiness in many cases, when they have been pronounced incurable by local physicians. I received both of your letters," writes Mrs. Eva Vcdder, of Oneida, Lenawee Co., Mich. "Iwas so weak I did not have strength enough to stand on my feet long at a time, neither could I sit up very long. There was a sore spot on the left side of my abdomen which uained me very much when I walked. I lost my appetite, had a severe pain in the pit of my stomach which was worse when lying down. I commenced with your medicines, taking Favorite Pre scription and 'Golden Medical Discovery' alternately, and when I had the two bottles half taken I was much improved. I took four bottles, and to-dav am just as well and strong as any body could ask to be. My husband says Dr. Pierce's medicines have been worth one hundred dollars to us. We feel that we cannot say enough for the good I have received from your med icines. I thank you for your kind and quick replies to my letters. There is only one way in which the truth of the claims made for Dr. Pierce's Pa voriteJPrescription can be proven for the individual woman and that is by giving this medicine a fair and faithful trial. It has cured so manv women of womanlv disso whom no other medicine could cure. It has -cured so many chronic and complicated cases, and cured so often when many physicians had pronounced the disease incur- " able, that until 3 woman 'has tried "Favorite Prescription " and found it to fail, there s is hope for her, no matter of how long standing the disease may be or how many other medicines she may have used in a vain attempt to find a cure for womanly diseases. The strengthening properties possessed by Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription make it the best tonic and nervine for weak, run-down, nervous women, and an ideal medicine for the languor and debility of the spring season. "Favorite Prescription" wiuuiuura icmanijr, uura euieuumig ur.ims, neais mnammation ana ulceration and p cures female weakness. It cures headache, backache, nervousness, sleeplessness, loss of appetite and i other ills from which women suffer. It makes weak women strong and sick women well. k -X was an nm-aown ; naa no strength ; fiea sharp darting pains all through me ; head and back ached even- & day," writes Mrs. Frank Caswell, of Salamanca, N. Y. I was also troubled with a distressed feeling in the stom P ach and pain in front of the hip bones. I had a severe cough and it nearly killed me to draw a lone br-ath I wa? H so sore through my langs. & w - -a I wrote to Dr. Pi-rce telling my symptoms as near as 1 could. He sent me a very kind letter advisintr ire io 6 try his medicines which I did, and before I had taken them a week I was decidedly better. I took two bottles of H the Favorite Prescription ' and two of the Golden Medical Discovery,' and am sure I never felt better in mv life H than when I quit taking them." J M Sick women, especially those suffering from diseases of long standing, are invited to consult Dr. Pierce by letter, free. All correspondence is held as strictly private and sacredlv confidential Ad- a dress Dr. R. Y. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y. J ' The offer of free con3ult&tion by letter made by Dr. R. Y. Pierce is not to be confused with offers P of "free medical adyice" made by irresponsible people who having neither medical education, medical g knowledge or medical experience are disqualified professionally and legally from the practise of 8 medicine ' If In a little more than thirty years, Dr. R. Y. Pierce, chief consulting physician to the invalids' S Hotel and Surgical Institute, Buffalo, N. Y., assisted by his staff of nearly a score of phvsicians has B treated and cured hundreds of t! ousands of weak and sick women. Thousands of these women have S expressed their gratitude fo the advice of Dr. Pierce which saves, them from the indelicate question- incrs. offensive examinations and obnoxious loo.al troatmonts doomwl nnMnaonr v.-- .. ,. ri-i Pi The deak-r who offers a substitute for "Favorite Prescription" prouu paiu ou luu ante ui mas Bsm PioPG&'s Common Senso Medical Adviser Ss sent FREE on rccslvt of stamps to BSSky expense of msdlSng ONLY Send 3S one-cent stamps fos th9 cloth bound vmtumt), mx only 21 stamjss for the book In paper covers Address Dr R, V PIERGE, BufisiSos, 19, Ym hximmm7mmmMmsm, LITERARY HOAXERS. Cronsley'H Superb Imitntlon of Browne Steevens Impositions. London Dally News. Our attention has just been called to one of the cleverest literary hoaxes on record. It Is known only to very few students, and we think our readers will be glad to hear about It. A writer in a provincial paper lately quoted Sir Thom as Browne's "Fragments on Mummies," from Emerson's fine essay on "Poetry and Imagination." It is such a perfect bit of "stately, somber and gorgeous prose" that the modern reader, who Is less fa miliar with his Emerson than was usual ly the case in the last generation, will not be sorry to see It quoted. Browne is supposed to be speaking of the ancient Egyptians: -" Of their living habitations they made little account, conceiving of them but as hopltla. or Inns, while they adorned the sepulchres of the dead, and, planting thereon lasting bases, defled the crumbling touches of time and tho misty vaporousness of oblivion. Yet all wcro but Babel vanities. Time sadly overcometh nil things, and Is now dominant, and sltteth upon n sphinx, and looketh unto Memphis, and Thebes, while his sisters Oblivion re cllneth semlsomnous on a pyramid, glorious ly triumphing, making puzzles of Titanlan erections, and turning old glories Into dreams. History slnketh beneath her cloud. T he trav eler as lie paceth through those deserts asketh of her. "Who bullded them?" and she mum bleth something, but what It is he heareth not. There Is likely to be no reader who will not allow, with Emerson, that it is hard to refuse the "claim of poetry" to this splendid passage, which was first printed In Simon Wilkin's edition of Browne's works in 1S33, pronounced by Southey to be "the best reprint in the English lan guage." The passage In question, however, Is not to be found In the cheaper edition of Wil kin's Browne which was Included in Bonn's Standard library- There is good reason, it seems, for that omission, though It must 'have puzzled and annoyed many readers. A correspondent of the paper in question, Charles "W. Sutton, asserts with good war rant that the passage In question Is not Browne's at all, but merely a clever imi tation of his style. He tells us that the version of tho "Fragment on Mummies" in Wilkin is given from a transcript in the handwriting .of one James Crossley, of Manchester. Crossley, who was well known as a close student of Browne, and who had taken the trouble to reprint some of his scarce tracts along with the "Urn Burial,'' supplied Wilkin with this fragment. The editor added: "I have given this fragment on the authority of Mr. Crossley, of Manchester, but have not been able to find the volume in the British Museum which contained it; nor could he Inform me, haying transcribed It himself In the museum, l)ut omitted to note the volume in which he met with it." Mr. Sutton pbserves: "It is no wonder that it could not be found, for Crossley was hoaxing the learned editor of Sir Thomas Browne, the fragment being a jeu d'esprlt from our townsman's own pen." To hoax an editor, as George Trevelyan observes, "has time out of mind been tho special ambition of undergraduate wit,' but it is not often that the temptation persists Into mature life. The two English writers who stand at the head of the class of literary hoaxers we shall not attempt to say whether their fame Is Worth having or not are probably ereneral with rKspasPR inmmnn Vmr km- mentonons meuicmes. nis pront is George Steevens, otherwise known as "The Asp," and Robert Surtees, of Mainsforth. The recreations of Steevens were not cal culated to endear him to his contempo- raries, especially to such of them as edit- ed Shakespeare or indulged in antiquarian discussion. Steevens edition of Shakes- peare one of the chief foundations of the i famous "variorum edition" of 1821. which still commands a high price at the book sellers, and Is dear to the student under j one of his most cruel jokes of the kind. "With a malignity that was not without humor," says Sidney Lee In the Dictionary of National Biography, "he supplied many obscene notes to coarse expressions in the text, and he pretended that ho owed his Indecencies to one or other of two highly respectable clergymen, Richard Amner and John Collins, whose surnames were in each instance appended. He had known and quarreled with both. Such proofs of his confirmed perversity justified the title which Gifford applied to him of 'the Puck of commentators." " Much sympathy wan felt for Amner and Collins, who were a good deal annoyed by his jest. More akin ! to Crossley's hoax was the production of j c j' wiiivu iciw iiuiu v'l-'-'ifei; jtri:i:iiz in scribing a convivial meeting at the Globe in which Shakespeare and other drama tists took part. This was copied from the newspaper in which Steevens published It into BIrkenhout's "Blographla Liter aria," and still turns up here and there as a genuine document of the period. Most neonle have heard of the nraetlpal inko Which Steevens played on Gough, the di- rector of the Society of Antiquaries, who had refused a bargain which Steevens of fered him. Steevens proceeded to engrave a marble fragment with some Anglo Saxon letters which purported to state: "Here Hardecanute drank a wine horn dry, stared about him and died." This he managed to pass on the credulous Gough as the tombstone of the Danish King, and a terrific controversy followed, in which Steevens tried to impress on poor Gough the "impossibility of wriggling off the hook on which he is so archaeologlcally suspended." Steei'ens' most successful hoax was the description of the death dealing upas tree of Java, which was a sheer Invention of his own, and which not only imposed on Erasmus Darwin, but has passed Into a byword of our language. Surtees of Mainsforth, though he never hit on any invention quite so successful as that of the upas tree, loft his mark on our literature. It is, indeed, by no means certain that we know the whole extent of his pleasant fabrications. The prove nance of old ballads is so doubtful and dif ficult to trace, at the best, that a man who condescends to pass off his own lyrics as folk songs is very hard to detect; he muddies the water at the fountain-head. It is well known that Surtees wrote "Barthram's Dirge" and "The Slaying of Anthony Featherstonhaugh," which ho passed off on Sir Walter Scott and foisted Into the "Border Minstrelsy" as genuine old ballads. It seems that Scott, to the day of his death, never knew that Surtees had deceived him. The received story is that Surtees sent his fictitious ballads to Scott, whom he did not then know, in the hopo of making his acquaintance, in tending to confess later on that they were his own composition, but that Scott was so thoroughly cnvlnced of his good faith and so very likely to take such a joke In bad part that Surtees never had the courage to confess, though copies of the rough drafts of both ballads which were found among his papers' set the question r i n-nt. in r V- f( 63 does so to gain the little m more your loss. beyond dispute. It Is true that we might also assume that Surtees, while incapable of forging these ballads, wished to be thought their author, and deliberately left the drafts behind him to produce that be lief. Fortunately there is other corrob orative evidence, but it is easy to see what trouble a forger of ballads may bo preparing for the future student. To this day there ish grave doubt whether "Auld Maltland" was not really the composition of Surtees. Snveil Ills Life by Repartee. Detroit Journal. A Pontine roofer saved his life recently by his aptness at repartee. He was out on the roof of the Insane asylum at Pontiac. making some repairs, wltftin a foot of the eaves. Suddenly the noiso of his hammer was Interrupted by the voice behind him, calmly saying: "Well, come on! Let's jump down to gether' The roofei turned and saw a maniac standing behind him. The glitter in tho madman's eye made the roofer look with a feeling of dread at the ground below, realizing that there was no escape. The roofer concealed his fright a mom ent. He even smiled contemptuously a3 he looked Into the maniac's face. "Huh!" he remarked. "Any blamed fool could jump down. But let's go down and try to Jump up!" "Say, that's an Idea!" exclaimed tho in sane man. "Come on. Let's go down and try it!" And he led the way to the trap door In the roof. The military authorities in Germany are be coming seriously alarmed by the ever-increasing difficulty of keeping the establishment of the non-commissioned officers of the army up to Its required numerical strength. the chief adjunct of beautv. ia now placed within the reach of ovcrvono by means of Newbro's Herplcido, a j new ccicatiflo discovery that effec-1 tuauy ac3troys inomicropcs respon sible for all scam dificaC3. It not onlr makes dandruff and fall- Ins hair things of tho past, but invio? oratC3 the-hair roots, causing a soft, thick growth to supplant tho old thin and brittlo one Hero is what one happy woman says : PunjpsBtrso. Hox?.. Kqt. S3. M. My fcalr was coming out very npiaij-.md in places Tr.-i3 enuray oiia i ana csjiuwt on ocr pr.jsicin ne nirongiy rccommenaea lierplcido to me, nna alter taroo or lour ap plications ar hair Stopped falling, and is i coxmnz in ftgaia quite uuct. I asoa to do tronhled wilfi dandruff, of which t am enirrt. so ynu soo 1 hare caoro to pra'iw Newbro's uerpiauo. juu. .-hikx ueeuovicu. For Sole at oil Flrst-Cfass Drag St IjiSJJJOLLfifift Swm ID lnvnriantfll