Valentine Democrat. (Valentine, Neb.) 1900-1930, April 28, 1910, Image 3

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BACKACHE !
& Suffered Over Nine Months , Nothing
Relieved Me Untill Took PE-R U-NA.
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JOSEPH
Y LACELLE.
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Mrs. Joseph Lacelle , 124 Bronson St. ,
I Ottawa , . East , Ontario , Canada , writes :
"I suffered with backache : and head-
9cbo for over nine months and nothing
relieved me until I took Peruna. This
medicine is by : far better than any other
medicine for these troubles. A few bot
tIes relieved me of my miserable , balf-
iSead , half-alive condition. "
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' " _ 1I I SAMPLE \ BOTTLE FREE-To dem-
onstrate the value of Peruna in all ca-
tarrhal troubles we will send you a sam-
ple bottle absolutely free by mail.
, The merit and success of Peruna is
BO well known to the public that our
I readers are advised to send for sample
bottle : Address the Peruna Company ,
Columbus , Ohio. Don't forget to men-
lion you read , this generous offer in
the _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ - - - - - - - - - -
, theIf in need of advice write our Medical
Department , stating your case fully.
Our physician in charge will send you
ad , ice free , together with literature con-
_ taining common sense rules for health ,
- which you cannot afford to be without.
Where He'd Be.
Mrs. McSosh-I wish all the saloons
In creation were in the bottom of the
Ma.
Ma.Mr. . McSosh-Gee , you gotta mean dis-
; p'sition ! Wanner get me drown' , eh ? -
Cleveland Leader.
HAVE YOU A COUGH , OR COLD ?
i If so take at once Allen's Lung Balsam and watch
j results. Simple , safe effootlvo. All dealers. Popu
. nrices - .5c.bOcaad Sl.OO ) ( ) bottles.
\ QUEER VILLAGES.
/Some Peculiar Ones That May Be
+ Seen In England.
The English village is very dear to
the hearts of poets and painters , and
thousands of them are certainly charm-
" however more amus-
ing. A few , , are
? ing than anything else-as , for in-
stance , one which consists entirely of
. old railway carriages , even the chapel
being composed of four horse trucks.
-Another village , with a population of
i T.,100 and taxed at the valuation of
-$8,000 , has neither school , church nor
.other public building , the only thing
-of the sort being a letter box on a
jpillar. !
7 . Villages with but a single. inhabi-
tant ; are not unknown , one of them
, . The
being : Skiddaw , in Cumberland.
single villager complains bitterly be-
cause he cannot vote , there being no
overseer to prepare a voters' list and
no church or other public building in
which to publish one , as the law re-
S\ quires. The lonely rate payer in a
; \ ' Northumberland village has declined
to contribute money to maintain the
roads , remarking that the one he has
is quite good enough , for its use. In
the Isle of Ely Is a little parish with
about a dozen inhabitants that has no
' rates , as there are no roads or public
institutions of any kind and conse-
+ quently no expenses.
Kempton , near Bedford , can prob-
ably lay successful claim to the dis
tinction of being the longest village
in the world , as it straggles along the
road for a distance of seven miles.
Sometimes a village will entirely
disappear , having been built either on
the edge of the crumbling cliffs that
make part of the coast line or over an
ancient mine. One of the latter class
Is in Shropshire , and each year one
' . . or more of the cottages tumbles as
the earth sinks beneath it.-Harper'r
Weekly. v ; " "
POSTUM FOR MOTHERS.
J I'he Drink That Xonrlshes and SUJIJ-
piles Food for Mother and Child.
"My husband has been unable to
-drink coffee for several years , so we
-were very glad to give Postum a trial
and when we understood that long
. sboillng would bring out the delicious
jflavor , we have been highly : pleased
-.with It.
"It Js one of the finest -things for
.
nursing mothers that I have aver seen.
-It .keeps up the mother's streagth ' and
-.increases : the supply of nourishment
for the child if partaken of freely. . I
drank it between meals instead of wa-
ster and found it most beneficial.
"Our five-year-old boy has been very"
, delicate since birth and has developed
. : -slowly. He .
was. white and bloodless.
; : I began to give him Postum freely and ,
. : you would be surprised at the change.
When any person remarks : : about the
< .great Improvement , we never fail to
. stell them that we attribute his gain
rfn strength and general health , to the
: free use of Postum and this has led
.many friends to use it for themselves
- -and children.
"I have always cautioned friends to
whom I have spoken about Postum ,
* to follow directions in making it , for
i unless it , is boiled fifteen or twenty
.minutes , it is quite tasteless. On the
Bother hand , when properly made , it is
very delicious. I want to thank you
'for the benefits we have derived from
\the use of your Postum. "
. Read "The Road to Wellville , " found
.
'in pkgs. "There's a Reason. "
Ever read the ebove letter ? A
. ew one appears .from time to time.
. hey . 'r.e genuine , itrue. and full of
filumaa interest > . . <
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BL ' 3EBALL SEASON BEGINS
Opening League Games Are Played
in Eight Cities.
Big doings the other day on the
ball lots of the National and American
leagues. Smiling skies prevailed ev-
elsewhere , eight umpires each "tossed
out a new white ball , " eight umpires
each in his finest voice criedplay
ball , " and in eight cities the sporting
writers chronicled that "the game was
on. " At least these quotations have
done .service from time immemorial
and there Is no reason why they
should be discarded at this late date.
It was the day when all the teams
were equal and that marked the initial
puncture or the initial impetus to the
hopes of several million fans. What
will the end be ? Call around in Octo-
ber and the answer will probably be
ready.
In the American League the rapid
development last year of Philadelphia
and Boston and the hard tussle that
Detroit had to repeat for the second
time her pennant performance , makes
the picking of a championship team
this year the merest guess work.
About the only thing that does seem
assured is that the first division teams
in each league will not differ material-
ly from those of last year. Pittsburg ,
Chicago , New York and Cincinnati
again look to be certainties in the Na-
tional for the upper tier , while in the
American , Detroit , Philadelphia and
Boston appear reasonably safe , with
either New York or Cleveland having
a good chance to wrest from Chicago
her berth in the upper division.
- And " . . . added . . . . . . . ; _ interest . . . - _ . - . in . . , the . . . . _ jtfetjpnars
I race this year is the adoption a
strong policy regarding the umpiring
and the protection of the umpires.
President Lynch bids fair to follow the
example of Ban Johnson , of the Ameri
can , in this respect , and it is predicted
I that the day of umpire baiting is for . . .
ever past. . . : "
S'J v _ . . . : - = - _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ I-- : : .
PERISH IN CHINESE R OTS .
-t' " ' =
British ' Consulate &ily Foreigii-
Owned Building Le& Standing.
In the rioting in Chang Sha ; China ,
In which not less than 24,00t' { persons ,
including the governor of d& prov- I
ince of Hu Nan , have perished , 'U'the '
foreign-owned buidings in the city
have been destroyed by fire except . the
British consulate. All the buildifrgs ' !
, rented by foreigners have been looted- .
. The Chfnese officials as long ago as
Thursday issued a proclamation that
they were unable to protect the lives
and- property of foreigners < , and there
upon. all foreigners made haste to
leave' the city. So' far as is known no
foreign' resident lest his ! life.
The missionaries : attached to the
American EJ"I ! r- ' . ilinn : Ai'.uu.'e , the
United Evanjrr ! , jca ( ( "mire. * ' & the1 (
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Wesleyan and - _
' missions , number-
ing forty-ohe in all. took refuge in
boats. They lost all of t eir effects.
The destruction of all foreign prop-
erty , including-the Japanese consulate
and the British' warehouSes .
warehousesfollowed .
rhe fate of the Standard' Oil Com-
oany's new tank's is' unknown. :
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Hor . e . Spreads-1 neat > t'hetioa. ,
Having wrecked' a trolley car ,
smashed a wagon- into splinters , in- !
jured five men arid1 hTelfl1 up' a Big
Four train , a runaway horse ended : its
spectacular cnreer inr Springfield , . O. ,
by being killed with' a * pick- and- bur
led in Mad river.
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ACTIVE LAKE NAVIGATION OPEN
First Boat Passes the Soo and Ex-
cursion Steamer Make Ready.
Reports to the effect that the first
boat has gone through the Soo , cou-
pled with the manning of Chicago's
excursion steamers and the issuing of
new pilot charts of the great lakes by
Hydrographical Department of the
United States yesterday , signified the
active opening of navigation : on the
great lakes. The first boat to enter
the Chicago harbor was the City of
Traverse , on March 13 On March 6
the. ice had disappeared from Lake
Michigan , according to reports in the
weather bureau. The average closed
season of navigation about the Chi-
cago harbor is from Jan. 7 to Feb. 27 ,
and the closed season in Sault Ste.
Marie usually is from the middle of
December to April 30. A report from
Sault Ste. Marie stated that the
steamer J. E. Upson , In charge of
Captain J. B. Wood , the first up-bound
boat to pass through the Soo this sea-
son , had signaled for-landing.
STANDING OF THE CLUBS.
Progress of the Pennant Race in
Base Ball Leagues.
NATIONAL LEAGUE.
W. L. W. L.
Philadelphia 3 1 Cincinnati . . .2 2
Pittsburg . . . .2 1 Boston . . . . . .2 2
Chicago . . . . .3 2 St. Louis..1 3
New York..2 2 Brooklyn . . . .1 3
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AilEBlCAN LE O'GE.
W. L. W. L
Cleveland . . .4 1 Detroit . . , . . .2 2
Boston . . . . . .3 2 St. Louis . . . . 1 2
Washington. 3 3 New York..1 2
Philadelphia 2 2 Chicago . . . . .1 3
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AMERICAN . . - 10. ASSOCIATION ' .
- W. L. W. L.
Toledo . . . . . .5 1 Kansas City..3 3
Minneapolis. .5 Indianapolis. 4
Columbus . . .4 2 Louisville < . . ! 5
/ St. Paul . , / < vS f. . Milwaukee l - . - - - - . . .1 5
I Qtf.TICS- > ,
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@D'LITItlli5
r A.
The' MarylaTfu .Legislature p 1sstf a !
xcs , < iJ1Jt'o.n' ' favoring * the " adoptionx > f the ;
, . fedefkl income1 tax amendment t& the"
, , < :
.Const ! lbn. -
Federal siipe'rv'jslon" = of speculative
effcchanges v ' as"4 recommended by W. H-
Th&hipsbh , pVe'sIdefit' of the New Or-
leaiis , Cotton Excharg . ' , in an address
beforV : the ReputillbkjA Club of New
York ' 'city ; .
East ra' . ' d. , : West ' ' wlii1 ! llpV \ * horns in an
. .
? > uguai's5rugg'te' for'doll " ' . ti ° 1 of the ap-
po- > .tmenf w , 'the" , ' Supi riffle' \ ourt : : bench
'n ' auccessRJn' to to the late"Avi5al ociate Jus
tice BrewefC ; , . according t\s > \ redictions
heard in concessional clrtjllea ,
The porte ttus' , ) political1 & , , evelop-
tients of the past' ' ' 1d the
past few we'elcff w. . .
general discontentwith theC.F ed'gua 1 ad-
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ministration that7'.appears " : t(1 ( e. " 'n <
many States will 'form the subject tf
a party conference , asoon to bA" ! itef i \ ' > y
the Republican leaders In W'Si'i , -
ton. _
on.With
With a brass band } pa'radinr : f < he ' .
street , and with the 'great ; ' auditorIum I
Jf the Y. M. C. A. packedto"life"dbor !
with enthusiastic citigfens * De's " ' ' 1 J
, DeVvM6n'e
losed one of the most emarlcabiepcam I 1
ialgns ever fought In' 'aiiy'clty ' ' ' j t
a 'city''off the'
Inlted [ States for pure g6vernment an'd I ]
r edom from the yoke- of ! ' ' nt1OH. f. s. It 1
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MILLIONS LOST THROUGH FROST
Heavy Damage in Iowa , Where Tem-
perature Drops to 22 Degrees.
Secretary Wesley Greene of the
Iowa State Horticultural Department
estimated that the damage to the Iowa
fruit and vegetable crop ' from the
freezing weather will be between $5-
000,000 and $10,000,000. He asserts
that early fruit , cherries and plums in
particular , have been destroyed , but
vegetables may be replanted , thus re-
gaining a part of the loss. Snow has
been falling in many parts of Iowa. A
temperature of 22 above zero was re
ported from the southern part of the
State. Temperatures ranging from 27
to 38 above zero , accompanied by flur-
ries of snow , represented the weather
in Western Missouri , Eastern Kansas
and Southern Nebraska. In Illinois
frost has greatly damaged fruit at
Galesburg. Springfield and Central
Illinois were visited by a heavy snow-
fall and budding fruits were killed by
frost. A cold , drizzling rain fell
throughout Southern Illinois and hard
rains fell in Southern Indiana and
Western Kentucky , washing away
many bridges.
ROB FAST MAIL TRAIN
Two Bandits Hold Up , China-Japan
Fast Mail in California.
The China-Japan mail , which left San
Francisco over the Southern Pacific
Railway for the East at 9 o'clock Sat
-
urday night , was held up by two
masked men at Sprig , two miles east
of Benicia , Cal. , at 12:30 o'clock the
othej mQjjiinjr and robbed . _ of nine
pouches of registered mail. I
The train carried no express mat-
ter. . Four . - . , . ' of " ' the pouches have been
recovered , but - the robbers rifled the
others and now are hiding" the hills
and canyons between Martlh'etf and
Oakland. Sheriffs' posses from two
counties , detectives and postoffice in
spectors on horses and in automobiles
are engaged in the man hunt. The
robbers were well armed and a battle
is anticipated.
The passengers on the train were
not disturbed and several of them did
not learn of the robbery until the
. next morning. After getting the mail
Nsacks the robbers cut the engine loose
from . the train and sent it wild , throt
tle open , down the main track to the
le st.
I
VOTE TO END STRIKE.
PhilaSelphia ' Committee Reported to
Have 'Acce ; ted Company's Terms.
The committee of nineteen , , com-
posed of representatives of striking
motormen and conductors from each of
the barns of the Philadelphia Rapd
Transit Company , met the other night
\
and voted in favor of accepting a set
tlement offered by the company
through representatives of the Amer-
ican Federation of Labor. The terms
of the settlement have not yet 'been ,
made public , but it is said they in- :
clude many of the features of the
proposal made through Mayor Rey-
burn on March 20 , when the comp .ny
agreed to take back all the strikers
it nd to guarantee them $2 a day until
' Tular runs could be secured for
n . The cases of the 174 men whose
tri
iTBd.arge precipitated the strike on
.
' 9 will be submitted ! to arbitr
g efl ' . . , l
mr. .
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CUBA fEARS UPRISING ; 1
RUSH $ MACHINE GUNS
Troops Dispatched to Santa Clara
Province , Where Negroes Are
Reported in Excited State.
GOVERNMENT MAKES A DENIAL
Promises Impossible of Fulfillment
.
Said to Be Cause of Agitation-
Rumors of More Trouble.
The other night a special .train car-
rying a battalion of infantry and a
battery of machine guns under com-
mand of General Rivas left Camp
Columbia , near Havana , Cuba , bound
for Santa Clara. A rumor is current
that an uprising is in progress in
Santa Clara province , but this the gov-
ernment denies.
Secretary of the. Interior Lopez
Leiva issued a statement saying that
there is not the least disorder in any
other part of the island. The secre-
tary said reports had reached the gov-
ernment that there was a condition of
suppressed excitement among the ne
groes of Santa Clara and the eastern
provinces in consequence of the incen-
diary utterances , of the negro agitator ,
General Svaristo Estenoz. Because of
these reports , the secretary said , the
government had decided to send
troops for the sake of the moral effect
which their presence would have in
overawing possible disturbers of the
I peace and in giving confidence to loy-
§ 1 , lawdibiding citizens.
There has been great unrest in the
country recently because of the . . agitf . . . . _
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tion of the negroef't ?
5he ; newsp j r' La : ' Lucha , which
was f-U § most influential instigator
and suppoftfirjof the August revolu
'
tion , but which J i § now a Zayista or-
.gan , commenting on a ' recent meeting
of the negro members of congress ' ,
says the government is responsible ,
having before the election promised
the negroes things impossible of ful-
fillment. The paper adds that it is
now incumbent on the government to
check the race agitation energetically.
General Estenoz , leader of the negro
movement , is making inflammatory
speeches in Santiago Province. When
he reaches Havana after inflaming
Santa Clara , Camaguey and Pinar del
Rio he will present an ultimatum to
President Gomez to resign with the
alternative of having the Americans
brought back to Cuba. Everyone is
wondering who is financing Estenoz ,
who is a Jamaica negro. Haytian ne
groes are accompanying him. They
travel in special trains for which they
have no means of their own to pay. .
It Is rumored that an Insurgent party ,
has been formed in Santa Clara Prov '
I'
ince. The government denies this , but
the negro agitation has caused the dis
I patch of troops to garrison the pro
vincial capitals.
DEMOCRAT 'WINS IN LANDSLIDE.
Tames ; S. Havens Elected to Con-
t
gress in New York State.
In the Congressional election at
Rochester , N. Y. , the other day Re-
publican standpatism was dealt a
blow as terrific in its effect as that
which it sustained a few weeks age In-
the Fourteenth Massachusetts Dis-
trict , where Eugene N. Foss , running
as a Democrat , reversed the tradition-
al majority in a district supposed to
be rock-ribbed Republican.
James S. Havens , a Democrat , has
been elected to fill the vacancy in Con-
gress caused by the death of James
Breck Perkins over George W. Al-
dridge , the Republican boss of Monroe
County , by the unprecedented plurali
ty of 6,500. The district , the Thirty-
second , had not gone Democratic since
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1900. . . - *
The defeat was overwhelming. Mr.
Perkins , a Republican , carried the dis-
trict in 1908 by 10,167. Fighting sin-
gle-handed , Mr. Havens succeeded In
almost reversing this plurality in a
campaign that lasted but seventeen
days. While the so-called "moral is-
sue" was undoubtedly paramount in
the campaign , there seems also to be.
no doubt that the Payne-Aldrich tar-
iff bill had a great deal to do with
the result. Aldridge had come out
flat-footed as indorsing the tariff law
as it stands. Havens was avowedly a
tariff reformer.
FIRE SWEEPS WRECKED TRAIN.
Shriner' Forms Relief Corps Which
Saves Passengers in Dixie Crash.
Four mail clerks are dead and three
trainmen and a mail clerk injured as
a result of the wreck and burning of
the through flyer No.2 , north-bound
on the Illinois Central Railroad , five
miles ' north of Jackson , Miss.
Col. William Craine of New Orleans ,
who was officer of the day during the
recent Shriners' drills at New Orleans
and who was on the train , organized a
relief crew , taking passengers out
through the windows. Procuring fire
extinguishers from the mall car , Craine
and his fellow passengers played
streams upon the flames in an effort
to rescue the mall clerks , but without
effect on the fire. None of the pas-
sengers was injured. The bodies of
the dead mail clerks were cremated In
the wreck. The wreck was caused by
the engine leaving the track and plung-
ing down a fifteen-foot embankment ,
carrying with it the baggage car , maiJ
mmd library car and two Pullmans.
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OPPORTUNITIES FOR TRADE. .
,
Bryan Trip Ended , Points t .
Chances in South America.
William J. Bryan , who has just
made a tour of South America , rd -
turned to New York the other day ozx
board the Red D. Line steamship Car
acas. Mr. Bryan talked of his trip
to the newspaper men. "He was en-
thusiastic over the possibilities of
South America to be developed by tha
.
opening of the Panama Canal.
"South America is bound to become
the great market for the products of
this country , " said Mr. Bryan. "Here-
tofore our merchants and manufactur-
ers have been kept busy with the home
markets , but now they are reaching'
out for the trade of the countries to
the south of us , and they will gain
it in time. The Increased sale of our
goods within a very recent period dem-
onstrated that we are already begin-
ning to see the necessity for reaching
out and grasping the opportunities
that lie all ready to our hand In the
South American countries. The open-
ing ofthe Panama Canal , which will .
not be delayed later than 1915 , in my ,
opinion will lead to a marvelous de
velopment of trade relations with the
countries on the west coast of South
America. "
. "During the next fifty years , " con-
tinued Mr. Bryan , "between 25,000,000
and 50,000,000 emigrants will find a
home in South America , and the so-
cial and economical changes that will
be brought about by this shift in pop-
ulation will bring up for consideration
wholly new and probably difficult prob-
lems. "
Mr. : Bryan would not discuss the
letter sent by him to be read at the
Jefferson day dinner In Washington.
RESCUE 95 FROM SINKING SHIP.
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Life Savers. Take Passengers from
Santa Clara Off Eureka. ; : CaJ ] ! , J '
N9.ucty-five persons rescued from the "
Nbrui " Pacific . Steamship Company's
I steamer Santa rl ra , . . which founde . . . .
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the other day , arrive : = u eta . on he
tug Ranger. Every one on tne otIID. ( .
ship was rescued. The . anta ! act
sank about four miles down the coast.
According to a wireless message , the
Santa Clara struck heavily in crossing
the bar when leaving Eureka , and it '
is believed her seams opened after she
got to sea. A few moments before
darkness fell and hid the vessel from
the view of those watching through
glasses at Table bluff it was seen that . f
an attempt was being made to transfer
the passengers. One man was seen
to fall overboard , cling for a time to
the anchor chain and then disappear.
A tremendous sea was running , and
when last seen the small boats which
had left the Santa Clara had not been
able to get alongside of the Ranger.
The Eureka life-saving crew put to sea ,
but were unable to cross the bar. An
other attempt was made , which was
successful. The Santa Clara was in
command of Capt. O. Noran and car
ried o crew of twenty-five.
ENTOMBED IN A MINE.
Alen Imprisoned by Explosion at
Mulga , Ala. , All Dead.
Forty men were entombed in the
Mulga mine of the Birmingham ' 'Rail
way Coal and Iron Company at Mulga ,
Ala. , by an explosion at 9 o'clock the
other night and it is believed that all
are dead. Fifteen white men and
twenty-five negro laborers are in the
mine. The foreman , who is entombed
with the others , has the only list of
those working at the time. When th *
first crew of rescuers reached the bot
tom of the shaft the following morn
ing the bodies of two miners , were
found. On returning to the surface tto
rescuers- expressed the opinion that
all the .men were dead.
After the explosion flames shot up
the shaft for about 400 feet and th .
ground is covered with charred tim-
bers , which are blown up from the bot-
tom of a 350-foot shaft by the force of
the blast. Every window in the vil-
lage was broken. .
LOWER FOOD PRICES IN SIGHT.
Sew York Provision Men Look for
Decline in Beef : and Pork Values.
Close observers of the food products
markets in New York expressed expec
tation of an era of low prices for food-
stiffs. "The wish in some degree may
be father to the thought , " said one
provision man , "as lower prices would
help us as well as the consumer , but
the tendency of prices now is unmis-
takably downward. It seems to me
reasonable for people to look for a ;
decrease in the retail prices of beef
and pork in a short time. The plenti-
tude of grain has compelled the farm-
er to feed it to his cattle , which are
waxing fat , and which must be put on
the market. " Other provision men
expressed similar views , based largely
upon the decline in the grain markets
and predictions of bountiful crops ,
both here and abroad.
OCEAN LINER IS WRECKED.
Minnehaha Goes on Rocks , but Pas-
sengers and Crew Are Safe.
The Atlantic transport steamer Mla-
nehaha , which sailed from New York
on April 9 for London , is ashore oa
the seal rocks at the Scilly islands ,
near Bishop's rock , according to a
wireless message received at Lloyd's
signal station at the Lizard. The
wreck was caused by a dense fogv
The passengers and crew of the liner
landed on Bryher Island , one of tha
Scilly group.
The Minnehaha sailed from Ne .
York with sixty-one cabin passengers.
The boat is a cargo carrier of 1S.44J
tons I
. I. . .
9