- TheValentine Democrat Valentine , Neb. 1. M. Rice. Publisher A CLASH IN MOSCOW LAST WORD BEFORE THE WIRE BROKE WAS OF BATTLE. Ueaguo of Leagues Makes an Ap peal to the Masses for Support Railroad Trains at "Warsaw Are Manned by Government Troops. St. Petersburg advices say that the sin gle telephone wire working to Moscow Thursday afternoon brought grave re ports of serious disorders and collisions between the troops and the people. Since noon Thursday the streets hav < Ibeen filled with troops , especially thoso in the industrial section. The railroad stations arc in the possession of the mili tary. tary.Wholesale arrests of the leaders of the workmen were made Wednesday night. It is reported that the police include in their captures the members of the second workmen's council , who were placed in the fortress of St. Peter and St. Paul with the members of the iirst council , who were arrested Saturday night. A third council , ] however , promptly took the i place of the second. ' The League of Leagues has issued an appeal to the public asking for liberal jsupport of the proletariat , "which , is Ibearing the brunt of the struggle for the emancipation of tho nation. " The aP- , pcal says there is bound to be much pri- vation. starvation and even death from 'cold , and not only asks for material aid , 'but proposes the inauguration of free din ing rooms for workmen in all pails of the city. Moscow is already cut off from St. Pe tersburg and with the provinces gener ally and no communication can be main tained. According to the latest information , the Lithuanian insurrection has extended jiuto the province of Vitebsk , across the borders of Vivonin. At Kogtinhuseu the chief of police and Ibis assistants wcrp tried by a revolution ary tribunal and were executed. The main interest in the strike of the railroad men centered in the Warsaw ( station , where the government was to make a test of its ability by moving a train for Berlin. The depot was packed with troops. Promptly at noon there ivas a wild hurrah , accompanied by a jroar of escaping steam , and a few min- jutes later the railroad men walked out of the yards in a body. In the manufacturing fflstricts beyond jthe Warsaw and Nerva gates , in the Schusselburg district and in the sections on both sides of the Neva , the workmen generally obeyed the summons to strike , and promptly at 12 o'clock thousands o/ them emerged to the streets. HIGH MAN AS STREET CLEANER Cincinnati Millionaire Makes Ap plication lor a City Job. Cincinnati will have a millionaire for Superintendent of her street cleaning de partment. The now official will be .To- Beph S. Neave , a retired capitalist , who was prompted to apply for the position tccause of ' 'is desire to devote his time siud ability to some useful department of municipal affaiis. After the recent election , in which the reform forces were successful , Mr. Neave's friends among the independent Republicans urged him to give the public the beneGt of his time and experience , Being an enthusiast on well kept and well paved streets , he applied for the place of superintendent of the street cleaning de- jpartmeut. He is a mechanical engineei and an executive of recognized ability. The salary attached to the office is $2- 400 a year. TRIED TO FIGHT BANDITS. Details of tbo Killing of Two Amer icans in Mexico. An El Paso dispatch says : Details of the murder near Diaz , in the state of Chihuahua , Mex. , of Robert Rutherford and M. C. Murray , of Philadelphia , and the wounding of H. L. Finstad , of Los 'Angeles , and another man whose uamo lias not yet been learned , shows that the four Americans were returning home from Diaz to Rutherford's rancli when they were beset by bandits and com manded to give up their valuables. The men attempted to escape , but seeing flight was useless gave battle. The ban- bits , outnumbering them several times , fclosed in and mercilessly shot them down , taking their valuables and escaping. Mexican officers are on the trail , but fthe bandits have evidently escaped in tho jrough surrounding country. Dual Buffalo Tragedy. Driven to desperation by the refusal of hiswife to live with him ever since the lay they were married , William McCoy , a. seaman on the lakes , shot atid killed his Trife and then shot himself , at Buffalo , N. , Y. The couple was married two years 'ago last March. Sioux City Stock : Market. Thursday's quotations on the Sioux ( City lire stock market follow : Butcher ( Steers , $3.25@4.65. Top hogs , $4.00. Unable to Find Fields. A New York dispatch says : Acting President Cromwell , of the Mutual Life insurance Company , announced that the inessenger whom frouier President Mc- Curdy sent to California to look for An- ilrew C. Fields hns been unable to find Fields and has returned without informa tion. Canal Bill Signed. -i .bill appropriating $11,000,000 for the Panama canal. This is the first bill pass- Dd by congress at the nrc'sciit _ session. DISASTER IN CHICAGO. One Man Killed and Several Per sons Missing- . One fireman was killed and several em ployes may have lost their lives in a fire which destroyed the enamel sign factory of the Charles M. Schonk Company , 7 to 15 Park Street , Chicago. Tuesday night. Until the ruins of the building have been searched it will not be positively known whether any of the employes were kille-1 either in the explosion , which started the fire , or by the falling of the walls and floors which followed soon after. While the fire was at its height one of the walls suddenly collapsed and a num ber of firemen were precipitated in the debris. With the exception of Lieut. Henry Bassett , of truck company No. 74. who was crushed to death , all of the em ployes were injured in the panic that fol lowed after the fire broke out , and for a time there were all sorts of rumors as to the number of persons killed. There were forty girls and thirteen men and boys employed in the factory , and according to the officials of the company all but two persons have been accounted for. The police and firemen , however , declared that several of the employes were unable to make their escape and were in the building at the time the floors and walls collapsed , and until the debris is cleared away the number of casualties will not be positively known. The employes who are said to be miss ing by the officials of the company are Margaret Becker and Henry Saute. The employes were distributed in all parts of the building. The majority of the girls and boys were employed on the upper floors , and considerable difficulty was experienced in rescuing them , as the fire spread very rapidly on account of the combustible material used in the factory. When the firemen arrived the younger of the employes were panic-stricken and were vainly endeavoring to reach the street down the fire escapes. A number became jammed together and were unable to make any progress. With the help oC the firemen and the police , however , or der was soon restored and the majority of the employes were soon assisted to tho street. The employes who were injured were ihurt in the jam on the fire escapes , but 'the condition of none of them is serious. Fireman Bassett was killed while run ning away from the building in an effort to escape from a falling wall. The outer edge , however , caught Bassett , and IIP. was crushed to death. The body was re covered a few minutes later. The loss of the building which was de stroyed and the contents was estimated nt $250,000. TAKEN OUT ALIVE. XVorkmen Caught in a Tunnel in New York. Two men who had been in the East River tunnel of the Pennsylvania Rail road in Long Island City , L. I. , nearly forty hours were taken out Tuesday af ternoon. The rescuers.penetrated the tunnel in n boat , while other workmen were attempt ing to force a hole through the cement roof of the tunnel. When the rescued workmen had recov ered sufficiently to speak they said they were the only men caught in the tunnel , and the 200 rescuers , who had been work ing desperately to dig the men out , ceased work. The men were imprisoned by a cavein. The tunnel is being built tinder the East River to Manhattan island. DANGER NOT OVER. American 3Iarines "Will be Landed at Shanghai. Armed guards and patrols are main tained at Shanghai , China , to cope with a possible renewal of disturbances. The streets are open , but looting is greatly feared. The United States cruiser Baltimore iwill land a force at once. The Britisli cruiser Diadem is sending 500 men ashore. Other warships are expected , and it is reported German troops are com ing from Kiaochau. The Chinese newspapers say the row dies proposed to take advantage of the mixed court dispute to attack and loo } the foreign settlement. Explosion in New York. Three were killed and seven injured by an explosion of dynamite in an excava tion for a new building opposite the Wal dorf-Astoria Hotel at New YorkTues day. The explosion was caused by work men attempting to redrill a partially drill ed hole in which several sticks of dyna mite had been left. Lincoln Man Shot. Oliver H. Tibbetts , an old soldier living at 133G O Street , Lincoln , Neb. , was shot and dangerously wounded Tuesday morn ing. His wife was arrested and charged with the shooting. Domestic strife is supposed to have been the cause of the trouble. Reform Scbool Burned. A boy's reform school located some distance outside of Washington , D. C. , caught fire early Tuesday morning and the main building , in which were housed 300 boys , was totally destroyed. The loss is $50,000. No lives were lost. La Fo He tie's Resignation. At Madison , Wis. , Gov. La Follette at noon Tuesday sent his resignation as gov ernor to the legislature to take effect the first Monday in January. Became Bride of Another. Gracefully eluding William Newman , of Blair , Neb. , who had come to Omaha to marry her , Miss Nora Whitlock has tened to Lincoln Tuesday afternoon and married Willard S. Teter , a barber. Miss .Whitlock fell in love with Teter while nursing him at an Omaha sanitarium. Kills Wife and Shoots Self. August Ruchnewicz , a bricklayer , shot and killed his wife at Chicago Tuesday morning , and then fatally shot himself. Domestic uoiibi ° s > were the c j-p RUSSIAN SITUATION WORSE. Workmen in the Big St. Petersburg Iron Works Join the Strikers. A St. Petersburg special says : The strike promises to be on a far more exten sive scale than any previous movement of the kind. It was ascertained Wed nesday night that many of the largest works , including the Putiloff and Nobel concerns , will cease operations imme diately. Almost all the papers suspended by the censorship are appearing under new names and are meeting with huge sales. It is said that the insurgents have seized the state treasury at the Tucum province of Courland. The railway union at Moscow has re solved to run troop trains from Man churia and to convey grain to the famine stricken districts. On account of some confusion a general strike was proclaimed at Moscow at noon Wednesday , instead of Thursday , with a complete suspension of street railroad service. The government enters on the new struggle greatly crippled. The helplessness of the government in this crisis is demonstrated by tho inability of Interior Minister Durnovo Wednes- day night to get through instructions to arrest the members of the workmen's council of Moscow. He attempted to use the railroad wires , but the operators obey ed the dictum of the council and refused to send the message. The government is even unable to forward instructions to Gen. Linevitch , commander of the Manchurian army. The situation in the Baltic province- ? is growing steadily worse , and in the Caucasus a renewal of the outbreak of Tartars and Armenians has produced an other reign of terror. The inhabitants of Tillis and other cities are begging the authorities to furnish them with arms for the purpose of organizing militia for self-protection. At Sebastopol new mu tinies have occurred and 1,000 soldier have been disarmed and are under guard. The tioops at Kharkoff have revolted. The weather has become very cold. It i believed a few days of hunger and privation will drive the people to desp-- ation and provoke uprisings and attack1 ? on the strikers and perhaps pillage. BIG WRECK LOSS. Thousaiiels in Money and Jewelry " \Yas Destroyeel. Besides the loss of life in the Santa Fe wreck at Lang , Kan. , Tuesday , there was about $5,000 in gold and $9,000 in currency and many thousand dollars' worth of jewelry destroyed by the ex press car attached to the train taking fire. fire.An An Emporia , Kan. , special says : There is no doubt here that the ditching of the Santa Fe passenger train at Lang Tues day , in which Engineer Harry Davis and Express Messenger Elmer Derrick wen > frilled , was the work of train wreckers. It has been discovered that the tool house near Emporia Junction .vas broken into and a claw bar and wrench stolen. The wrench and claw bar were found in a meadow near the scene of the wreck. A claw bar and wrench were stolen from the same tool house when a Santa Fe passenger train was ditched near hero last May. MONTANA BOY MURDERER. A Youth of Nineteen Confesses to Many Crimes. James Sherman , a 19-year-old boy of Lewiston , Mont. , accused of the murder of Sam Studinski. a uawnbroker , on the night of August 2. ! , has confessed , stat- of Sam Studinski , pawnbroker , on the himself alone , as well as the dozens or more of mysterious burglaries in Lewis- ton during the past year , and also the at tempted poisoning of the county attorney and his family Dec. L Russel Hartop , David Atkinson and Walter Goosch havs been released from custody and Dr. E. A. Long is expected to me released soon. LAWYER HUMMEL CONVICTED Sentenced to a Year's Imprisonment and Fined. Abraham H. Hummel , a New York ' wyer , was convicted Wednesday on the charge of having conspired to have the divorce of Mrs. C. W. Morse , from 1 Charles W. Morse , declared void in order to nullify her marriage with Morse. Hummel was sentenced to a year's im prisonment and fined $500 , the maximum penalty. Immediately after the sentence Hum mel was taken to the Tombs , preparatory to being taken to the penitentiary. "Press Agent" Cared For. President Itoosevelt Wednesday ap pointed Joseph Bucklin Bishop as a member of the isthmian canal commission .to . fill the vavancy caused by the resigna- aion of Chief Engineer Wallace. Bishop 'has ' been secretary and historian of the commission. $10OfOOO Fire in Washington. At Washington two fires in the commis sion house district early Wednesday morning destroyed several buildings and threatened the destruction of the Majes tic theater. The loss is $100,000. Shanghai is Quiet. All was quiet in Shanghai Wednesday. Business has been resumed , but the vol unteers and sailors landed by the Avar- ships remain on duty as a precaution gainst a renewal of rioting. Beaten to Death by Negro. Ora Bee , a young negro , beat two white men to death near St. Joseph , La. , with a piece of iron pipe and fatally wounded another and seriously injured a fourth , using the same weapon. Kobbery of $45 and the clothing the men wore prompted the crime. Nebraska Man Hornoed. A Washington special says : President Roosevelt Tuesday noinnated William P. Warner , of Dakota City. United'States marshal for the district of Nebraska. STATE OP NEBRASKA NEWS OF THE WEEK IN A CON- DENSED FORM. Apportion School Money State Fund Yields Trifle Over $2G8OOC Some Districts Don't Get a Share Douglas County Heads the Liisi Monday State Superintendent McBrier at Lincoln announced the December ap portioument of the temporary school fund , which amounted to $2(53.411.85 when the state treasurer made out his cer tificate Dec. . The total school poptda tion entitled to participate in the appor tioument is 375'M4 , making the per capi ta for the apportionment $0.701787. The superintendent says that several hundred districts were excluded because of non- compliance with the law , although those which were unable to keep school the minimum period prescribed by statute be- cause of the failure of the railways tc pay taxes are exempted when the affida vits are made to that offect. The total amount of t'hc apportionment is less than it would have been had the railways paid their taxes. Last year thf December apportionment was $272,000 , The state officials have not made any compilations to show to what extent the railway suits have diminished the fund. The returns made to the state superin tendent in response to his request for fur ther information as to the authentication of the enumerators"census reports did not indicate that any of tho large dis tricts , which have been charged with pad ding , failed to make sworn statements. The smaller districts have been thrown out for various technical defects in then statements. Douglas County leads in its share of the apportionment , which is $2S , . M4. . ' ' 2. based on a school census of 40.74 , " } . Lan caster County receives $14 , ( > . K > .8. . on 'i school census of 20,88. ) . The next largest shareroes to CJage County.S7.2.K5.4S. . based on a school population of lO.'MO. The fund was derived as follows : State tax. $ (50,074.47 ( : interest on school and saline lands sold. $22.028.0. ) : interest on school and saline lands leased. 877.020.05 : interest on bonds. $ ( ii.81)2.'JS ( : interest on state warrants. $ o . :577 : : fish and game li censes. $2.810 ; from assets Bank of Or leans , $1.200. FEE LAW BEING TESTED. / Action Started in Supremo Court Against County Clerk Drexel. "Wednesday the supreme court at Lin coln granted an alternative writ of man damus against County Clerk Drexel of Douglas County , on the relation of that county , to compel him to account for all fees of his office in excess of $1,500 ; i year. The writ is returnable .Tan. 2. The suit , which was filed by County Attorney Slabaugh , is intended to test the validity of a new enactment of the last legislature , which requires that fees in excess of $1,500 be paid into the coun ty treasuries. The legislature , through an oversiht. failed to include a provi sion excepting the counties having a pop ulation of more than ( JO.OOO from its ef fect , and the result is to scale the sala ries of the county clerks , sheriffs and treasurers in Lancaster and Douglas Counties. It is agreed that the suit shall be a test case for all of the officers affected. Revival at Reynolds. Reynolds is experiencing a great relig ious awakening in the shape of a revival in the local Methodist church. The crowds are phenomenal , people coming nightly for miles. The church is packed nightly. The ' 'men only" meetings Sun day afternoons are record breakeis in at tendance and interest. Evangelist Ens- low , of Chicago , is in charge. The wave of religious enthusiasm that is sweeping over that section is without an equal in the history of the town. Clemency for Prisoner. Wednesday Gov. Mickey issued a com mutation to Frederick Sargent , a Madi son County man sentenced in 1803 to twenty years in the state penitentiary for wife murder. Sargent , who has served twelve years and is the oldest inmate of the prison in point of service , will be re leased on New Year's day. lie has been : i trusty for several years. He killed his wife in a rage over her alleged unfaith fulness. Found Dcael in Beel. Leonard Huffman , an old and highly re spected German farmer , who lived some nine miles west of Table Hock , was found dead in his bed. Death is sup posed to be from natural causes. DIo was 75 years of age and had lived in that vicinity for about forty years. He leaves several children , all grown. AVins Seed Corn Prize. Two hundred prises have been awarded in the seed corn and cooking contest ar Lincoln. For the best seed corn exhibit Robert Engel. of Saunders County , has won first prize. His postofliee addre'ss is Fremont , but he lives in Saunders. lie will get a cream separator worth $100. Crowds Greet Corn Special. A large crowd was at the depot to meet the corn special , which arrived at Frank lin on schedule time. The"crowd was made up mostly of farmers , and they no doubt will be much benefited by the inter esting lectures which were given. A large amount of literature pertaining to corn growing was distributed. Morjjan Goes to Emerson. Ex-State Senator W. II. Morgan , of South Sioux City , for many years a mer chant at Allen.Neb. . . , has accepted a po sition as manager of the Emerson Mer chandise Company. Safe Blown at Clnrks. Burglars blew the safe Tuesday night in the general merchandise store of St-ui- ley & Knight at Chirks , obtaining about $200 in cash and a number of negotiable notes and other business papers. The work was cleverly performed. Lincoln Man Wnnn'lod. Oliver II. Tibbetts. an old soldier living .at 1330 O Street , Lincoln , was s'lor : iid dangerously wounded Tuesday moniing. Hi wife was arrested and chirked with tile shooting. T'onrcstie ' < tri" ' : : sui : ui to have been Le . : > . : : so . . .Le j-luy.Ir ; BEATEN BY A Man TVho Abused His Wife Beater Almost to Death. A Hartington special says : Ilenr : Haack , the Coleridge wife beater , was given n dose of his own medicine. Abou two weeks ago Haack was lined J0 an < costs on the charge of beating his wif < while intoxicated. He was also admou ished to leave town for good. He cam < to Hartington , and. wishing to effect ; reconciliation with his wife , he returnee to Coleridge. As soon as it got noises around that he had returned a vigilunci committee was formed of twenty mei and boys and he was marched out o ; town and unmercifully beaten. For a dis tance of four miles he was driven like i wild animal. He was kicked and ham mered with clubs until he was unable t ( move , and a sympathetic farmer broughi him to Hartington more dead than alive His nose was broken , his jaw fracturec and his head pounded so both eyes wer < swelled shut. His left ear Avas broker and there were black and blue spots al over his body. While there is no one who justifies his treatment of his wife the best citizens ol Coleridge condemn the action of the men who participated in his punishment. CONGRATULATIONS POUR IN United States Marshal for Nebraska Flooded with Telegrams. William P. Warner , of Dakota City who has been appointed United States marshal for Nebraska by President Roosevelt to succeed T. L. Matthews , will 0 to Omaha immediately to execute his bond and assume the duties of the of fice. fice.Mr. Mr. Warner war. flooded with telegrams of congratulation Wednesday , and also with applications for places. He an nounced that all the present ollice force and th deputy United States marshals would be reappointed , if such appoint ment is agreeable to the persons now holding the oilices. The present depu ties are : Karl Matiiews. ollice deputy ; .L O. Moore , of Palmyra : James Allan and Henry A. Iloman. of Omaha , and .John A. Sides , of Dakota City. STORE ROBBED AT WISNEFL Merchant ! ise Valued at $1OOO Stolen from August Dorrnan. August Doiman's general merchandise store at Wisner was entered by burglar ? Saturday night , the intruders gaining nc- cess by means of unlocking the front door. About # 1.000 worth of goods WOK taken from the store consisting of line dress goods , silks , embroideries , laces , cloaks , furs , shirts , overcoats , skirts and notions. There is no clue to the parties com mitting the burglary , but it certainly was the work of experts , probably the noto rious gang that has operated in that pait of the state for a number of years. The Wisner ollicers and the county sheriff arc making a strenuous effort to obtain i trace of the perpetrators of Saturday night's bur-dary , which is the largest hauJ of the kind in the history of Wisner. WEALTHY FARMER SUICIDEb Thomus Webster , Living Near Os mond , Shoots Himself. Thomas Webster , of Osmond , aged 40. committed suicide at . " o'clock Monday evening at his home five miles west o ! town , by shooting. He was in a room alone at the time , his wife and children being in another part of the house. He shot himself in the head with a revolvei and was dead when found by his wife , who hurried to the room as soon as she heard the shot. Webster was one of the most prosper ous farmers in the community , owning an entire section of land , and was not known to be involved in any way. Tha cause of his suicide is a mystery. Sheriffs Must Pay Nebraska sheriff * in the future will not be allowed railroad fare for bringing per sons to state institutions when they ride on passes or other than actual ' 'paid transportation. * ' Acting on an opinion of the attorney general. Auditor Searle at Lincoln issued an order doing away with the payment by the state of railroad faiv for sheriffs. The riding is one of the most drastic ever made by the depart ment and in a majority of the countie. of the state will reduce the income O' the officials more than 50 per cent. Hurt by Gasoline Engine. Claude Seivers. who is employed on one of Hon. G. W. Holdrege's ranches near Madrid , came very near being killed while operating a fifteen horse-power en gine. The engine had been stopped tc enable him to reach through the flywheel and make a needed repair to the machin ery , when a spark from the electric bat tery caused the wheel to suddenly re volve. Mr. Seivers received a double fracture of the jaw bone and his right arm was broken just above the elbow. Minden Man in Trouble. A prospective Christmas wedding at Kahnnaznn. Mich. , has been indefinitely postponed by the arrest of the intended groom , James MeCormick , of Minden , Neb. , where he was running a hotel. Tin ; charge is robbing a hotel at Kalamazoo. The biide. a Laporte. Ind. , school teach er , will continue her work and wait for the outcome of the charge. Blooil Poisoninjr is Fatal. Michael Konz. aged 22. son of Matt Konz , a prominent farmer near Ran dolph , dir-d at an Omaha hospital from blood poisoning. About a week ago the young man got hi * right hand in the year of a corn sheller while oiling the machine , and his right thumb was amputated , I Hood poison resulted. To ft rind Oay ant ! The York rol'er ' mills , owing to a iarue increase in bn < 5nc < . have installed ii ir own electric Iteht system and the grind both day and night. \ Vebiter"H J infant" In the absence of the t-oioner. Sheriff .Tones uulriated at the inquest 'at Plain- view held over the body of T. it.Veb - ster. a well to do fanner. The verdict \vis tht ( he dei , isvd mine to his d-arh J y a revolverhot tired by his own hand wlih temporarily insane. Dien : it the- Aiof 1 OH fohvaid I.oney. grandfather of K. EL I.oney. who was one of ibv oldest settler * of ( 'umiiir County , living on a homestead ! ; ! ? ! ! ! for many ye-ir < . is dead at . .I : : . . ! . C : < . : . < thege ; of 102 years. Herbert John Gladstone , the nevr Secretary of State for Home Affairs it * Liberal cab- the Cnmpboll-Kaunermau the Fifty-ninth Con gress , ha.s served the First Minneso ta District iu tho House since 18 ! ) : , and had previously served two terms- . 1800-1)1 , in the Min nesota State Son- ate. Tho son of a Gettysburg ( Pa. ) blacks m i t h , he inet , is much more- tlmn the son of ili& "Grand Old Man" of England , for iix. his own right he is- accounted one of * the sturdiest statea men of the United' Kingdom , and sincd- 1S99 has been rec ognized as the best of. eitbec- ji. GLADSTONE. party in many , years. He was born at " 12 Downing street , " the famou5 * ministerial resi dence , and was educated at Eton an < 3f Oxford for the career which he lias pursued with such consistent energy and honor. For a'"Sine after his school * days he was a lecturer at Keble Col lege , and then entered political life as his father's secretary. He held suc cessively tho posts of financial secre tary to the war office , under Secretary to the Home OHicc and President or tho National Recreation Society. As Liberal whip lie was noted for cour tesy , and stories ntv told imlicntin ? his honorable demeanor toward Salisbury , , leader of the Conservative * . * S. S. Wertof Altoona. Pa. , is tho proud possessor of a watch onee owned by Lafayette. " ' Congressman .lames A. Tawnoy. who hns been promotc-d to tho chairmanship of the Committee on Appropriation-- " " " " worked at his falliT" , . v J JV > I i * -V * - * * * * er's anvil for sev eral years. lie Avent to Winoua ir 1ST7 , where lie worked as a machiif str while studying law. and was admitted to the bar in ISS2. ile lirst attracted attention during the passage of tin Dingley tariff bill , by having inserted a provision placing a tax of 10 per rent , on all bonded goods shipped throutrk Canada to the United States , thus fir- ting oft"a most productive line of rail way traflic from the Canada railro.uK and giving it to the American I5ii * s. He is 50 years old. The real name of the famous tenor. Max Alvary. was Achenbach. King Carlos of Portugal , who for a. week was tbo trttost of the Count an'l Countess C'astolbuio in Paris , is a royal personage in more ono--he- ways than - - is a royal hunter. , i royal s p o r t. an'l , above all. has JL royal appetito. It is said that ho oats four regular meals a day , has a lunch every h o u r. an'l oats c n o r m o u s i quantities of t h e- c YKI.OS. richest food. It costs something to entertain such a guest , and it has been heralded tint the Castellanes spent Anna Gould's n- i tire annual income last Aveek , amount ing to § 200,000. King Carlos has many- gifts. He is said to be the most ac complished linguist , the finest shot , the most eloquent speaker , and the most royal "liver" in Europe. As the- Duke of Bragan/a , before his acces sion to the throne , it is said that he- used to go "incog * ' to the bull lights in. ' Lisbon , and that on more than ono oc casion he actually donned tiie tor i- { dor's attire and went into the ring. I He is a huge man. weighing nearl ; . ' 'GO i pounds. Daniel C. Oilman , of Baltimore. M'L , \vlio has been re-elected provide : t of the National Civil Service i : H-MI i League , is proini- ' uont in educational { and scientific lields Ho has boon presi dent of Johns Hop kins University for many years. Ho Avas born at Nor wich , C o n n . . it. 1831. From IST.f ; t Ib72be was profov sor of physical and political geography i . \ M. . . . i , , , \t . „ at Yale and from 1872 to 1S7. presi dent of the rniversity of California. . He has been an oflirer of the AiKorli-.ni. Oriental Society. Archaeological Ii sfi- tute of America. Educational Fund So cieties and of many important com missions , lie is an author of repute- and is well known in foreiirn si * - circles. Tolbert vonVit nu. who recently e listed in the n-irular iii-iuy at St. Lo. is a. cousin of Austria's military attat his father is ot'J- at Washington , and an - cer in the Austrian army. Private von Watson speakami writes nine lan guages. _ * - - Dr. Sven Iledin is on liis way to Per sia , where lie proposes to explore thor-r oughly , from a scientific point of view , of Dasht-i-Kavir and the salt deposits - - Dasht-i-Lut. iu the eastern part < < f that country.