Bellefonte, Pa., Aug. 25, 1905. EE ESR, MRS. PUFFER'S CONVERT. When the bridegroom cometh will your robes be white? Are you washed in the blood of the Lamb? Will your soul be ready for the mansions bright? Are you Washed in the blood of the Lamb? The voice of Mrs. Puffer rose high and joyously as she sang the words of thc re- vival hymn to a martial air. When I entered the laundry she was bending over the washboard, keeping time with her arms as she washed, and sang in a voice not un- pleasant to the ear: Are you washed in the blood— In the soul-cleansing blood of the Lamb? Are your garments spotless? Are they white as snow? ] Are you washed in the blood of the Lamb? “La, good-morning, ma’am! Ain’ I the noisy one? Puffer says I'd make a good Salvation Army captain, becanze I’d make so much racket. I tell him I might be something a good deal worse. I know a good deal about the work of the Army, and I tell you they do some real good. Still, I ain’t no mind to put on one o’ them unbecomin’ scoop-shovel bunuits and go round thumping on a banjo for the benefit of the heathen here to home. That ain’t my forty, and yet I do want to be of some good to others in the world. What do you think o’ this big revival movement that seems to have broke out in spots all over the land?”’ “I pelieve in it, Mrs. Puffer, and I think it is needed.”’ - “Well, I just guess! I don’t take no stock in this talk that the world is goin’ plumb to rack and ruin, and that it never wae 80 bad asitis to-day. But the Lord knows it’s bad enough and there's full need of all that good folks are doin’ to make it better! The devilment that there is runnin’ rampant in this big city calls for a revival sure enough! An’ drink is at the bottom of a lot of it. La, I could freeze the young blood in your veins and barrer up your feelin’s till you’d most faint | I if I was to tell you all I know of the drink curse right in the neighborhood I live in! But I won’t. I’ve been goin’ to some revival meetin’s in a mission near my house ev’ry night for more’n a week. “Puffer says he expects me to sprout winge soon, and I sass back by tellin’ him that it wouldn’t e’prise me none if he eprouted horns. But of course neither of us mean it. It’s just the fool way men and women have of complimentin’ each other when they’ve been married as long as Puffer and me have. Ain’t it right queer. that a man who would just about lay down his life for his wife loves to say tor- mentin’, eneerin’ little things to her, while a woman who would murder anyone that said things ag’in’ her husband never says a decent thing to him herself? Funny, ain’t it? ‘It is strange.” “What in time makes us do it? Is it this thing called ‘hereditary’ or ‘environ. ment’ or something like that? It ain’ just clear to me what them things mean; bus I reckon that a man I heard talk the other night hit it off all right when he said that hereditary was what a man blamed his father and mother for, and environment was what he laid onto his wife and ohil- dren. I reckon he meant by that that we always try to shift the responsibility for our own devilment off onto some one else. But about these here revival meetin’s. You been to any of ’em?’’ ‘‘Yes, to several.”’ ‘Well, the ones I’ve been to have been real upliftin’, and I ain’t a mite o’ doubt but that they have done a lot o’ good. And, as I say, there’s bowlin’ need of it. This revivalist where I went is of the kind I like. He builds up all the time, instead o’ tearin’ down. I mean by that that he he ain’6 allus pitchin’ into other folks’s religion an’ tellin’ ’em it ain’t good for nothin’ and they can’t get into Heaven even over the back fence with it. And he ain’t no sissy preacher whose very looks shows that he’s primped before the glass balf an hour before he come to church. And he talks as a man should talk. There’s nothin’ meachin’ about him, and he’s got somethin’ to say—a real message—and that’s what men are ready to hear from a real man. He’s doin’ good, that man is! He’s makin’ a man out o’ Jim Haley.” *‘Who is Jim Haley.” . She wiped the suds from her muscular red arms and dried them on her apron as shesaid: “Jim Haley? Lord bless you, ma'am, he’s my convert! Anyhow that’s what the revivalist calls him, and it’s a real comfort to me to feel tbat I bave had a part in belpin’ to bring Jim into ‘the marvelous light,’ as they call it. And I have faith to believe that Jim will stick. He will, if I and this here revivalist can help him to. And if be does, it will be a modern mara- cle, and one as great as them old maracles about the loaves and the fishes and the turning of water into wine. Ob, you don’t have to hark away back to the time when the Lord walked the earth to discover maracles! There's lots of em happenin’ all the time right here on our earth, and if Jim Haley holds out thas will be one. It'll be literally takin’ a man up out o’ the gutter and makin’ a man out o’ him, for I’ve seen Jim Haley actually in the gutter and the street Arabs peltin’ him with mud balls, and him too beastly full to help hisself, and I’ve helped him to his feet and to his tenement myself to keep him from bein’ run in. Disgustin’, ain’f it?’, *‘Is certainly is, Mrs.Puffer.’’ “Ain’t¢ it though? Tarrible! Well, at the first 0’ the jrevival meetin’s I went to the preacher asked all that would promise to bring some unconverted person that needed convertin’ mighsy blamed bad to the meetin’ the next night to hold up their hands, and I held up my band. Of course that was a promise, and one I felt bound to keep; so next day I begun to look round to see who needed to be converted; and I didn’t have to look far. Of course I had to sweep up my own dooryard firs, and I ain’t a mite ashamed to say that I gos right down on my prayer bones and asked the Log to make me better to start out with. ‘Then I thought o’ Jim Haley, pore thing! He’s a real smars young married man with a wife and two real nice little boys, one four and the other two years old, and—well, the stork is likely to light down in Jim’s tenement most any time now. And under such circumstances a man is in duty bound to hark back to what be prom- ised on bis weddin’-day, and not go and git full. Jim isa plamber by trade, and such a good one he kin make his thirty dollars a week ev'ry week in the year that he'll keep sober; but he’s got to workin’ two days and spreein’ the other four, and that means that he’ll soon be out o’ work the aisle with me. altogether, for it will come to be known thas he ain’t to be depended upon. ‘‘He’s a real nice, lovable chap when he ain’t in licker, and when he is—well, back, everybody! Talk about holy serrorsl If Sim Haley ain’t one when he’s full, e dunno who is. More than once his wifr and babies have come runnin’ for their lives into my tenement, and him a man that wouldn’t lay a band on ’em when he’s gober. Don’t you think he needs either convertin’ or a hosswhip?’’ ‘*He does indeed.” ‘But yon look at the other side. His wife is one o’these slack, frettin’, dawdlin’, whimperin’ women, oue o’ the kind that meets a man when he comes from his hard day’s work in an old calico Mother Hub- bard, her hair in crimpin’-pins or curl- papers, no collar on, the children dirty, the house topsyturvy, the supper half-cooked and flung on the table just anyway, and while he eats it she sete and complains about the children or what she has bad to put up with all day, and what a good time she had before she was married; baker’s bread and pie on the table and sometimes no cloth. Say, don’t you think there was need o’ two conversions in that bouse?’’ “1 do.” “I tell you, ma’am, there’s often need o’ two conversions or two hoss-whippin’s in drunkards’ homes, and, glory be! I think it likely that there’ll be two in Jim Haley’s house. There's gob to be if Jim is to stick to his conversion. “But I'm gittin’ ahead o’ my story. You see I1aid for Jim the next evenin’. IfI was thirty years younger and Puffer was capable o’ bein’ jealous o’ me, which he ain’t nor never was, he might o’ been jealous over the way I haunted the door- way of our tenement-house the next even- in’, layin’ low for Jim Haley. He never stays at home an evenin’, drunk or sober. How could he be expected to? I know he'd be comin’ out about seven o'clock, and when he did I nabbed him. ‘Jim,’ says I, ‘I want you to domea favor. Will you? ‘““Well, he was sober as a jedge that night, and a more obligin’ man never lived than Jim Haley when he’s sober, and he says real hearty-like: ‘I'd be glad o’ the chance to do you a favor, Susan Paffer. Yon’ve done me many a good turn, and I’l1 do you any favor I can.’ ““That’s a promise, isn’t it, Jim?’ says “641% is,’ he says; ‘and I'll stick to it.’ “Phen,” says !I, ‘youn’ll go to church with me to-night. Come right along, young man.’ “Well, he was tuck back, now I tell ou! ' i“Why, why,’ says he, ‘I—I—I ain’t been $0 church for years and years.’ «All the more reason why you should gonow,’ says I. ‘You promised you’d do me a favor, Jim, and I know you'll stick to your word.’ ‘‘He said he would—to tell the plain truth, heswore that be would—and he did, and I marched into that meetin’ with my promise of the night before kept and a man in terrible need o’ conversion walkin’ down You b’leeve in prayer don’t you, ma’am?’” “Most assuredly I do, Mrs. Puffer.” “So doI. Well, I just set in that meet- in’ prayin’ with might and main for Jim Haley and his wife,” for she needed it bad ashe did. And I set there and prayed that that preacher might say just the word that poor, sinful, licker-cursed soul by my side needed, and he said it—yes, he did! And i6 took right hold o’ Jim, and what do you think? When the invitation come for them that would like to be prayed for to rise Jim shot right up, and when he set down I give his hand a good squeeze, if he was another woman’s husband. He stayed to the alter-meetin’, and I saw to it that the preacher had a word with him, and I had a good talk with him on the way home, and the next day I had one with his wife, and, what was more to the purpose, I took bold and give the tenement the best clean- in’ it had ever had. Of course I had the good excuse that she wa’n’t fit to do if at that time,and she wa’n’t and that it ought to be done before the stork arrived. Then when the four rooms was all sweet and clean I says to her, says I: ‘Letty, the house looksso nice you ought to slick yourself up to match it— vou and the children. Come, I'll scrub the children and dress ’em up while you slip on that blue-cloth dress o’ yours and that pretty white apron some one give you Christmas.” She kind o’ fell in with the idee, and then I made the excuse that she didn’t look strong enough to fly around gittin’ supper, so I got it myself, and pat it pipin’ hot on the table when I heard Jim on the stairs, S’prised? I never see a man more 8’prised. He just stood there in the doorway with his tin dinner pail in his hauds and looked around dazed-like. Then what do you think he did? He marched right over to where Letty was settin’ in a big rockin’-chair lookin’ real purty—she is very purty—and he stooped over and kissed her, and then grabbed up the babies and kissed them, and I could see somethin’ shinin’ on his eyelashes and I—well, I lit out. ‘‘Well, Jim went to church with me ag’in that night, and he went right for- ward with the others when the usual invi- tation was given, and I could see that the Spirit was strivin’ mightily with him. The next day I bad a real good talk with Letty. ‘Letty,’ says I, ‘that man’s future lays purty largely within yon. He’s a man to ’preciate a nice tidy home and a tidy wife and children and real home comforts,’ says I. ‘Now’, says I, ‘you just keep your own little troubles to yourself for awhile, and be real cheerfnl and smilin’ and keep the home nice and invitin’, and see if Jim don’t prefer it to the street or the grog- shop,’ says I. I told her I'd run in and help her some ev'ry day until she was stronger, and that we must do ali we could to reclaim Jim now, or I was afeerd he’d never’d be reclaimed. I talked religion to her. Faot is, I had a listle prayer-meetin’ with her—just us two. Of course prayer and faith and works should all go together, so ‘I helped Letty get another good supper for Jim, and we ad the house all in applepie order when he got home. ‘“You have to be a little foxy,even ‘when you are in the convertin’ bizoess; but, as the old sayin’ is, the end justifies the means. Well, the upshot of it all is that Jim goes to meetin’ with me ev’ry night, and Letty is goin’ when she’s able, so I'm likely to have two converts to my credis, and I tell yon, ma’am, that there’s a day comin’ when it will be wu’th somethin’ to have the savin’ of a human soul to one’s credit—or as much of it to one’s credit as it is posssble for her to have. I b’leeve that Jim Haley is a converted man this day, and I b’leeve he’ll hold out. If he does, it will be the best job I ever had a band in. Makin’ fun o’ real religion is mighty small bizness, and no one ever does it when they know from experience what it can do for a pore sinburdened and storm-tossed soul. Ain't I right?” ‘I am sure yon are.’’ I went up to my room, and from the laundry there came up to me faintly, like the soand of a far-away melody, the sonnd of Susan Puffer’s voice singing: Down at the cross where I first saw the light— + Glory to His Name! Down at the cross with the Crucified— Glory to His name? —By J. L. Harbour.—Sunday Magazine for August 6, 1905. Champion Girl Swimmer Wants to Beat Yankees. “Do you think the Americans will like my swimming?’’ This question was asked under somewhat remarkable circumstances. It came from Miss Annette Kellermanon, of Australia, who bad just got well started on her recent long distance swim in the River Thames, England. During this journey she completely overshadowed all previons performances under similar conditions—in- cluding that of Capt. Webb—making 13 1-4 miles in three hours and 54 minutes and 16 seconds. While thus creating a new world’s record the Australian girl found no difficulty in carrying on a most animated and interest- ing conversation with the New York Press correspondent, who, with her father and of- ficial time keeper,occupied a launch which kept about an oar’s length away from the fair swimmer. Miss Kellermann began her phenomenal swim with a dive off historic Putney bridge, and in spite of the distance and the fact that she had talked nearly all the way, was the freshest member of the party when she got out of the water at Blackwell Pier and ingenuously demanded something to eas. COMING IN SEPTEMBER. This Australian girl is carious to know how her swimming will be regarded by Americans as she expects to visit the Unit- ed States in September. : Miss Kellermann, who is now only 19, has never been defeated in any contest of long distance swimming or artistic diving, either by man or woman. So far her rec- ord is one continuous report of victories. At 15 she won the amateur mile championship of Australia in still water in 29 minutes, which was three minutes and 49 seconds faster than any woman in the world has done. She then made2 1-4 milesin 46 minutes and 30 seconds. When she had acquired all the amateur Australian cham- pionships Miss Kellerman became a pro- fessional. In the last three years she has won every Australian long-distance swim, making five miles in one hour 48 minutes and 34 seconds, and 10 1-4 miles in four hours and 23 minutes. So far her other speed records are 100 yardsin 1 minute and 18 seconds, the best ever made by a woman; and a quarter mile in seven minutes and two seconds, although she prefers the long- distance tasks. She is also the holder of many championship prizes won in diving contests. DAINTY AND WELL EDUCAETD. With it all she has found time to educate herself greatly beyond ber years. She has an intense admiration for things American and she is looking forward with aoncom- mon interest to her coming visit to the United States. The Australian girl’s beautifully model- ed limbs and remarkably well developed shoulders have nothing masculine about them, but leave no doubt of their strength. The movement of her hands and feet when in the water is good to contemplate. Her feet are small, instep high, and as they move throogh the air during a dive resem- ble those of a Parisian premiere danseuse. The activity of this 148-pound, 5-feet 7- inch young woman betokens an immense nervous energy, under perfect control. This same characteristic is notable in Miss May Sutton, the American tennis champion. Both girls are cool and decisive in action, quick witted, educated and refined. LOVES DANCING AND TENNIS. Out of the water Miss Kellermann would be taken for an American product,so close- ly does she resemble the outdoor sport-lov- ing college girl. In dress her taste is de- cidedly American. After being assured that there could be no doubt of the favor with which she would be received in the United States, Miss Kellermann told me much of herself and her ambitions. Daring this nearly four hours conversation she chatted with the greatest comfort and ease, not once changing her stroke of pace—a truly remarkable performance. ‘Training?’ she asked. ‘‘Well I doso little it is hardly worth mentioning. Iam a great believer in proper development. For instance, I practiced ballet dancing for two years. Privately, though, for I would not for worlds dance a ballet in public. But you have no idea how useful dancing has been to me, particularly in diving. I know of no other method to train the muscles so the feet may take on the suppleness of the hands. Then I’m very fond of tennis and have won several championships, but do not play; as I dance, to help my swimming. When there is a semblance of training re- quired I usually run a few miles for sever- al days before a contest. Otherwise, I do not believe in doing too much. It wears one down. I eat the same things other peo- ple do,but only take one drink of any kind of liquid each day. This helps the wind.” WILL CHALLENGE ANY MAN. “What do you think of the relative speed merits of men and women ia the wate1?’’ I asked. ‘It’s no use for a woman to try and bea a man at short distances. That is a ques- sion of brute strength. But for long dis- tances I certainly favor my sex, because we have more patience. I am willing to swim any man in the world at any distance more than 10 miles. I dohopel will be able to get some of your American champions to try a long-distance with me.”’ California’ Fruit Wealth. Whether classed as small fruits, or ses in a class by themselves, the ambrosial grapes of the country call for thirteen thousand fruit cars, each oarrying 15 tons, to take the lascicus bunches from the vineyards to she market place. Raisins, first produce in 1867, became of commercial note in 1873. This branch is carried'on in California only. It takes from three to four pounds of grapes for one pound of raisins, and production in recent . Jan has ranged close to one hundred mil- on pound of raisins annually. The price of grapes at the vineyards has changed greatly. In New York thirty years ago the price was five to six cents per pound. From 1896 to 1901 about six-tenths of a Sent, Sales have Jeep hy much low- er prioes. n ornia good grape land costs about $200 per acre; cultivation, $40 to $75 per acre; returns range from $125 to $500 per acre. Many California vineyards contain five hundred acres each. The larg- er ones cover from one thousand to two thousand five hundred acres each. That of the late Leland Stanford was over seven miies long,and contained nearly five thous- and acres. — F. W. Hewes, in Harper's Weekly. ——Sabecribe for the WATCHMAN. A Sirange Community. A community which closely approxi- mates Bellamy’s ‘Looking Backward’ is Cosme, a little settlement near Assuncion, Paraguay, described by Wilhelm Laemann in the Leipsir Gronzboten. Equality, de- mocracy and community of wealth are the principles on which it was founded in 1894 by a split in a colony of Australian immi- grants to Paraguay. ‘‘The houses of the settlers lie together and form a small vil- lage, and are small, pretty and clean, they have only one story and are built of boards and shingled or rooffed with mazega grass. The roof hangs clear over theside walls and is supported by posts, a detail which al- lows for 2 wide verunda—a most welcome adjunct in the hot weather. On one sile of the house is asmall outbuilding which contains the kitchen, and every house bas its garden. “Up to the present the dwelling houses cover only a quarter of the space which has been reserved for the village, and when Herr Lacmann visited the place there were some 20 houses occupied and 108 incounrse of erection. In time the buildings will form a large square, which will lie ahout a larger square. In addition a number of smaller public places have heen provided for, which will lie, as those already in ex- istence, hetween the houses. There is an absolute community of goods in Cosme, the only exception being that objects of house- bold or personal use—furniture, cooking utensils, clothing and food—remain the property of their users. When one enters the colony he must bring his entire proper- ty in with these exceptions. When, how- ever, one wishes to withdraw he does not receive back the amount of his contribu- tion, but only the amount which ocorres- ponds to bis share for the last working per- i i Every one must go through a probation of one year, and before this period is completed no membership is obtained nor any contribution of goods made. Every applicant upon entering must pay the treas- ary $25 for each adult member of the fam- ily and half of this amount for each child. If then the probationers decide not to re- main in the colony their expenses to Buen- 0s Ayres are paid, but this is not done un- less the applicant remains in the colony three months. The only requirements are that the applicant be strong and healthy. *‘Under no circumstances are colored per- sons admitted.” A Warning Shot. One of the strange incidents of war, es- pecially during a state of siege, is the friendly relations which exist hetween ene- mies when off duty. At one moment the soldiers of the opposing armies will be chatting sociably and exchanging favors, the next—shooting each other down as deadly foes. A little incident told by Mr. Ripley in his *‘Story of Company F,’’gives a glimpse of a genial interlude in the grim civil war. Daring the siege of Petersburg it was the custom for the opposing pickets to grant temporary truces for the purpose of prepar- ing food. Half an boar, perhaps, would be agreed upon, and its limit would be scru- pulonsly observed when ‘‘time’’ was call- ed. Thenevery man would hurry un- der cover. On one occasion a Confederate was slow to respond to the warning. He, toall ap- pearances, did not realize that he was in sight. While the others hurried to their posts, he sat quietly blowing bis coffee and munching his hardtack. Fortunately for “him, he was in plain sight of a sentinel less bloodthirsty than some. This man thought it only fair to give him further warning. “I say Johnny,” he shouted, ‘‘time’s up! Get into your hole!’ “All right,’”’ replied blowing his coffee. ‘Just hold that cup still a minute and I'll show you whether its all right or not!’ shouted the sharpshooter. The confederate began to suspect that he was in fact visible,and he held his cup still for an instant as he looked np and around. This afforded the desired opportunity for the sharpshooter. With a well-sent bullet he knocked the cup clean out of the own- er’s hand. With sudden agility the sur- prised Confederate made haste to disappear amid the jeers and langhter of both lines of pickets. “Johnny,” still \ Great Grangers’ Picnic. The 320d annual greats Grangers’ picnic exhibition will be held at Williams’ Grove, August 28th to September 20d, 1905. This is undoubtedly the largest and finest dis- play of farm machinery held in the east. The beauty of the exhibit is that so much of it is running. Saw mills, shingle mills, threshing machinery, traction engines and encilage cutters galore are all shown in operation. A splendid stock exhibit is promised. The auditorinmn will be attrac- tive as usual. Daring the day addresses by leading Grangers and agriculturists. Tuesday and Wednesday evenings illustras- ed lectures by Frank R. Roberson. Thurs- day and Friday evenings musical and literary entertainments by the hest of Chautauqua talent. Major R. H. Hender- shot and son the most wonderful drummers and fifers in the world. Everything first class, Tickets good from August 23rd to September 6th,atlow rates on all railroads. Consult your nearest ticket agent. Farmers Will Enforce Trespass Laws. The beginning of the fruit season and the near approach of the time for hunting has caused the usual annoyance to farmers from persons strolling over their farms. Some of the farmers have already provided themselves with trespass notices and will make things interesting for those who come on the farms. Under the recent tres- pass law, it is much easier to convict per- sons for trespassing than under the old law, and the new law will be enforced, if the annoyance becomes as great as it has generally been in the past years. The mere facs of one invividual going on land owned by another constitutes a olear case of tres. and throws the tres r liable to conviction and a fine. In faot, there is no escape from conviction, if it is shown that he has been on the land. Those who de- light in going to the country, would do well to look up the law and not forget its provisions. ——There are many ouariosities of the mosquito. A correspondent of the Chicago Record-Herald, writing from Colorado Springs, reports that mosquitoes are found in mines 1,200 and even 1,500 feet below the surface of the earth. ‘‘Experienced miners tell me,”’ he writes, ‘‘that the mos- quitoes sometimes become so bad that the men are unable to work. This phenom- enon occurs only in shafts and tunnels where there is stagnant water, but the sur- rounding country is entirely arid—as dry as a bone—withont any swamps or ponds or other places where mosquitoes might breed. Mosquitoes are scarce in high alti- tudes simply for that reason, and hence it is a mystery where those came from that are found in the mines.”’ EE ——_—_—__—_———,,—,ee ee CHANCES OF PEACE ARE IMPROVED President Rooeevelt Makes Last Effort to Effect Com- promise. Portsmouth, N. H., Aug 21.—The chances of peace have undoubtedly been improved by President Roose- velt’s action in stepping into the breach in a last heroic endeavor to induce the warring countries to com- promise their “irreconcilable differ- ences,” but the result is still in sus- pense. The Associated Press is able to an- nounce that the feature of the propo- sition of President Roosevelt, com- municated through Baron de Rosen to Mr. Witte, and transmitted by the latter to Emperor Nicholas, was based upon the principle of arbitration. Whether the proposal contemplates ar- bitration of all the articles upon which the plenipotentiaries have failed to pgree or only upon the question of in- demnity, cannot be stated with posi- tiveness, but it is more than probable that it relates only to indemnity or to indemnity and the cession of the island of Sakhalin. Neither is it pos- sible to say whether the president has yet made a similar proposition to Ja- pan. Acceptance by both sides would involve a great extension of the prin- ciple of arbitration, as nations have heretofore declined to arbitrate ques- tions involving their “honor and dig- nity.” Both Mr. Takahira and Mr. Witte in the earlier stages of the con- ference absolutely rejected the idea of arbitration, and only yesterday both reiterated their disbelief in such a so- lution. It was noticed, however, that Mr, Witte’s opinion was not expressed as strongly as it was last week. In the oral discussion of the terms Mr. Witte yielded upon two articles, but substantially the result of the 13 sittings of the plenipotentiaries has only been to emphasize the position taken by Mr. Witte in the written reply he presented last Saturday to the Japanese terms. And now both sides turn to home for the last word before the cards are thrown face up- ward upon the table next Tuesday, for the impasse reached by the plenipo- tentiaries is recognized to be only a diplomatic fiction. If in the interim fresh instructions are received by either side compromise is yet possi- ble. But the chances are recognized to be slim. So far as the Russian pleni- potentiaries are concerned there never was a chance of their yielding both in- demnity and Sakhalin. The cession of Sakhalin without in- demnity was, according to the best inside information, the extreme limit to which Mr. Witte would ever con- sent to go, and the emperor has not yet given the word even to concede that. And suddenly a new factor has beeen introduced which in the opinion of those most competent to judge les- sens materially the chances that he might do so, namely, the issuance of his manifesto granting a popular rep- resentative body to his subjects. The bearings of this “historic document,” as Mr. Witte described it a few days ago, upon the issue are easily compre- hensible. It is bound to ameliorate the internal situation in Russia. It is the entering wedge for the realization of the century-old dream of the Russian people. The president declines either to con- firm or to deny any of the statements about the proposition which he sub- mitted to the Russian envoys through Baron Rosen. There is strong reason for the statement, however, that the proposition involved far more than a mere suggestion that the matters in difference between the envoys be sub- mitted to the arbitrament of an impar- tial tribunal. The statement heretofore made in these dispatches that powerful pressure not alone from President Roosevelt, but from neutral powers of Europe, is being brought to bear upon the governments of Russia and Japan to insure a successful issue of the con- ference can be reiterated. Whether that influence takes the form of a sug- gestion of a modification of Japan's terms, of an insistence that Russia make the best bargain she can, or of an entirely new plan to bring about an agreement, cannot be ascertained. RUSSIA'S ANSWER READY Czar Said to Have Made Sincere Ef- fort For Peace. St. Petersburg, Aug. 22.—The Rus- sian government's final communica- tions to Mr. Witte, outlining the course that he shall pursue at the reopening of the peace conference at Portsmouth, are still in process of being put into cipher prior to being forwarded to America. With the receipt of St. Pe- tersburg’s last message the brief breathing spell will have ended. St. Petersburg leaves the final word with her representative at Portsmouth. The Associated Press is in a position to state that when the nature of these communications becomes generally known, it will be seen that in a sin- cere desire to effect a satisfactory set- tlement the government has gone so far as its extremely vital state interests will permit. It can further be said that for this reason the goverment is firmlw convinced that in case of failure of the negotiations the responsibility will not rest with Russia, which has conceded much already. While it is impossible to learn the actual contents of the government's communications to Mr. Witte, it can be declared that the requirements of the state make concessions on the questions of indemnity and Sakhalin, as these questions were originally pre- sented by the Japanese, impossible. It is certain that in the matter of concession the four points now in dis- pute have been considered and studied here in the light of concessions Russia already has granted on the other eight articles. : The foregoing is a brief but accurate outline of the platform upon which Mr, Witte will met the Japanese plenipo- tentiaries today. It is believed that the questions of the surrender of the interned ships and the limitation of Russia’s naval power in the Far Hast will be satisfactorily settled. There remains, then, the ques- tions of the payment of indemnity and the cession of Sakhalin by Russia. The first may be overcome by Russia following Japan’s lead in avoiding the use of the word “indemnity,” but con- senting to make certain payments to Japan on other scores, the chief of these being Japan’s bill for keeping 100,000 prisoners, which is expected to be very heavy. The sums mentioned as the possible payment on account of these prisoners range from $50,000,000 to $150,000,000. Little or nothing is obtainable here regarding the possible disposition of the question relating to Sakhalin. ASSEMBLY FOR RUSSIA Announced By Emperor Nicholas In Manifesto to People. : St. Petersburg, Aug. 19. — Russia’s national representative assembly, the fruit of decades of stress and strug- gling for reform, which endows the Russian people with the right of being consulted through their chosen rep- resentatives in the suggestion, prep- aration and repeal of legislation, takes its place among the fundamental in- stitutions of the empire. The national assembly will be a consultative organization in connec- tion with the council of the empire and not a legislative body. The pow- ers of the emperor remain theoreti- caly absolute. As the emperor is the supreme law-giver and autocrat, the decisions of the douma have only a recommendation and not a binding force, though the rejection of any legislative measures by a two-thirds majority of both houses is sufficient to prevent the measure from becoming law. The representatives of the people will have:not only the right to be heard on any legislation proposed by the government, but also can voice their desires on new laws, and will have the right to exert a certain su- pervision over budgetary expendi- tures. : The suffrage, though wide, is not universal. It is based on property qualification, the peasantry having a vote through membership in com- munal organizations. LORD CURZON RESIGNS Viceroy of India Retires Owing to Dis- satisfaction. London, Aug. 21.—The resignation of Lord Curzon of Kedleston as vice roy of India and the appointment of the Earl of Minto as his successor, was announced at the India Office. According to the correspondence, which ig issued in the form of a White Book, it appears that Lord Curzon’s resignation was cabled to that office on August. The correspondence shows a decidedly bitter feeling between Lord Curzon, the India Office and Lord itchener, commander-in-chief of the forces in India, over the new plan of army administration in India. Lord Curzon’s dissatisfaction came to a head with the refusal of the cabinet to appoint Major General Sir Edmund Barrow, on Lord Curzon’s recommen- dation, military supply member of the council. MORE FEVER CASES Scourge Bounds Forward and Situa- tion Is Unsatisfactory. New Orleans, Aug. 22.—Yellow fever tock a bound forward in New Orleans and the situation in the state is far from satisfactory. Report up to last night: New cases, 61; total to date, 1446; deaths, 9; to- tal, 205; new foci, 16; total foci, 322; cases under treatment, 328. Nine persons died of yellow fever, more than in any one day since Au- gust 14, when a record of 12 deaths was made. Health officers explain that the report is always high on Monday because of unavoidable laxity in re- porting on Sunday. MAY BE TRIPLE DROWNING Upturned Boat and Man’s Body Found On Lake Ganoga. Wilkesbarre, Pa., Aug. 22.—An up- turned rowboat was found floating on Ganoga lake on the North mountain. Investigation was made and the dead body of Arthur Potter, of Ellentown, Bradford county, was fished from the bottom of the lake. He was foreman for Colonel R. Bruce Ricketts in the construction of monster dams there. Potter was last seen alive on Friday evening, when he was rowing two strangers across the lake. It is now thought that the two men have also been drowned. Frost Hit South Jersey. Belleplain, 'N. J., Aug. 21.—Consid- erable damage was done by a heavy frost, which covered a large part of the farming district, Saturday night. Hundreds of acres of sweet potatoes have beeen injured, and in a number of fields the vines are black. Lima beans and melons felt the effect of the frost, but the other vegetabies were not injured. Will Fight the Beef Trust. Chicago, Aug. 22. — Chicago hotel men, wholesale butchers and restaur- ant keepers have formed a combina- tion to fight the “beef trust” Two plants—one costing $150,000 and the other $800,000—are in course of erec- tion and a third to cost $500,000 is contemplated. Oldest Western Marylander Dead. Cumberland, Md., Aug. 21.—Daniei Kean, the oldest citizen of Western Maryland, died, aged 101 years. He helped build the Chesapeake & Ohio | canal before the days of railroads. Among his descendants are an ex- postmaster and an ex-mayor of this city.