a mass. 1 on- lur i m rvke : stnicnt, Jmih ink Hurt ill l51 ft )orfttin M Ont For Cancer! Few people are born entirely free from blood taint. This it often Try slight or remote, and aometimea may not develop it all in on generation, bat breaks oat ii a serious disease later. Cancer, tba moat dreadful of all dis eases, ia often the result of aome blood taint innentea from generation back. It often appear as a mere mole or in significant pimple, which later develops into an alarming condition. No one know bnt that he may be subject to an inherited impurity in the Mood, nor can ke tell whether or not this may some day crop out in the form of destructive csicer. It is, therefore, important that my little aore or scratch, which docs ot readily heal, be given prompt atten tion, or a seriona condition may result. Mr. Robert bmedley, ol Ucala, Ha., ni the victim of a malignant cancer, which first appeared in the manner ibove described. He writes : "At first I paid no attention to the tittle blotches on my face, thinking they iouUI soon pass away. Be lore long, lowever, they became sore, and soon pn to enlarge. I applied ordinary al remedies, but they had no effect, I then consulted a physician. v hen told me I bad cancer, I became ed and hastened to obtain treat- it for I knew how dangerous cancer received the beat medical atten but the cancer continued to worse' until the physicians Illy said that I would have to K an operation performed, as that tne only nope lor me. ints i ra id to submit to, as I knew cancer was pod diseaae, and my common sense me that it was four to expect an ation to cure a blood disease. knowing S. S. S. to be a good blood rty I decided to try it, and the first e produced an Improvement I nued the medicine, and in four :hi the last scab dropped off. Ten i have elapsed, and not a sign oi iiease has returned." e alarming increase in the number iths which occur as the result of a cal operation is attracting general won, and a strong sentiment against metnods of treatment is fast de- g among the most intelligent it seems that in almost everv where the doctors' treatment is tceuful, the learned physicians de- Fi once mat an operation must be ned, and the keen blade o the pn is recklessly resorted to. many caustic plasters which are 1 to remove cancers are more oain- (n death, and the danger of a eur peration is as great as the disease no piaster or surgical oper- can cure cancer, because it is disease : the destructive cancer pre in the blood, and cannot be . or removed by local treatment, disease must be forced from the it is only reasonable to rely upon uioou remedy tor a cure, one goes direct to the cause of the and removes it. S. (Swift's Specific) is the only Core for runner anA nthsr nbcti. iuved n c const"! deep-seated blood diseases such mil, Eczema, Catarrh, Rheuma- p contagious Blood Poisou. It is ely Vegetable, he only blood remedy guaran- vuuua not a particle of mercury, or other mineral, which meant. it tn 10 an who know the disastrous these drutrs. Mini in eBW Cancer and Blond Risenae Hailed free to all who nnMrena pecific Company, Atlanta, Ga. Mice of the Peace CONVEYANCER-M- 2. STEININGER. Middleburgh, Pa fen, E. E. PAWMIU r ER& PAWLING, Attorneys-at-Law. KBUlldln(r. fliifliueD Pa. fTnAHY SURGEON. f,J business entrusted totoye&re -v-v ug careful attention. LCR0CSE, . A" , assct ' ricanCo.y M t orhky at law, ; ( , HlDOLXBTJRa, PA. utrastel tahla 'ompt attention. $204, Establibhed ' Y HOTEL. MtarsUeMtoM. V r 3w 1 t CltHUJ" v Z nt allclossea oi ebng men to driva or after maala. rDay. T IUTE1 LAND OT GOLD. Here is the Opportunity of your Life The Investment oi a Few Dollars May Bring You a Fortune. . . Away out upon the Pacific coast, at the very gateway to the land of gold, there baa recently been organ ized a compauy of thoroughly reli able aud representative men, prin cipally stale officials of the youug Stale of Washington, whose pur pose it is to outfit practical and ex peiienced prospectors on the co operative plan aud inaugurate a thoroughly systematic research of I he rich gold fields of the North. This is your opportunity. You have read of Alaska, talKeii of lh Yukon aud longed to be uu the Klondike, but for variour reasons you cannot make the loug perilous trip iu per sou. The great distance, the eu ur inous expense aud the uuparulled hazards, hurdsuipB and privations that one must eucouuter practically excludes and prohibits the individ ual from attempting to share in the rich spoils of that fabulously rich couutry. But by a concentration of in uu ij s aud iutiuouces hII difficulties cuu bo overcome. It i for this pur pose that the promoters of the Alaska Co-Operaiivti iMiuing Syndi cate have organized, and their plan practically insures success and will ail'ord au opportunity for IUoho ot limited means to participate iu the fabulous discoveries thnt are cou stuutly beint? uiudu iu that far nway uorthland. The Syndicate uow Iihs piospectors iu the field, and will contiuue to outfit others diuiug the coming season. For this purpose 250,000 shares of the preferred or treasury stock, of the par value of $1.00 each, are offered at this time at 25 ceuts per share. Heiice, 10 shares will cost you $2.50 : 100 $25.00; 1,000 shares, $250,00. This slock, fully paid up aud non assess able, will be issued ou payment as above. Every dollar received for stock will be honestly and judicially expended iu out fitting practical aud reliable prospectors aud the result of their discoveries and locations will go iuto the treasury for the pur pose of paying divideuts upon your stock. The subscribers to this pre ferred stock will receive back 25 ceuts per share, or their full cash subscription, before the promoters receive u dollar. One siugle loca tion may mean millions for the stockholders, and the Syndicate honestly expect to secure u hun dred locations, iucludiug both quartz and placer. Following are the duly elected trustees of the Syn dicate, aud their official staudiug should certainly be accepted as a iruarautee of good faith and the promise of an honest administra tiou of the Syndicate's affairs : Will D. Jenkins, Secretary of State i Robert Bridges, State Land Commissioner ; Thomas M. Vauue, Assistant Attorney General; U. G. Hei fuer, State Insurance Commis sioner ; George V. Thompson, State Laud Inspector ; Rev. Horatio Ail ing, Gougregatioual minister ; Jesse F. alurphy ex-Uegister U. S. Laud Office. If you desire to invent in this stock, remit by postal money order, express money order or registered letter, directed plainly to the under signed. Heember that the 25 ceuts for each share pays for the stock iu full. Prospectus, giving lull detuils, with ui tales of mcoiporatiou, sent application. Address, C. G. HtiFNF.it, Secretary, Alaska Co-Operative Mining Syndi cate, Olympia, Wash. A Physician'sTribute To the Benefits Received From Dr. Miles' I Dr. Mile: -8I NEW HEART CURE. H EART DISEASE is carable. It Is not surprising that all cases are not cured, since no physician has made the heart a special study for a quarter ot a century as Pr. titles has done. The follow ing tribute from a physician will be read with Interest. "For six years prior to taking Dr. Mikes' Now Heart Cure my wife was a terrible suHerer from heart disease. She bad a constant flutter ing of the heart and severe palpitation and pain in the left side. She tool: three bottles of Dr. lilies' New Heart Cure and wis complete ly restored to health, and has not taken a drop of medicine during the past two yean. Under these circumstances I cannot do Otherwise than recommend it toother." Friendship, N. T. W. H. Scow, M. D. Dr. Miles' Remedies are sold by all drug gists under a positive guarantee first bottle benefits or money refunded. Book on Heart and Nerves sent free to all applicants. DO. MILES MEDICAL COM Elkhart, lad. WrjooWS' APPRAIHKMBNTB. NoMne Is here by given that the following Widows' Ap praisements nnrtnr the $soo law. haw been tlied with the tier of th0riani' Oourt of Bnvder county tor Confirmation on Monday, the lath day of Dee., I. Appraimmenl of Lueetta Bears, widow ot Win, B. Soar, lata of Sellnigrovo, Hnyder Co., Pa., daa'd, elected to be taken under the $300 esemp- ' Appraaenient of Rllaabeth Metier,' widow ot Ifoali Statlfr, lata ot Monroe Twp,. Harder (V. Pa., daa'd. elected to be takea under the tSIX) exemption law. Appraisement of Carrie Broaloui, widow of Napoleon Broalous, late of Perry Twp., Snyder Co., P., deo'd, fleeted to be taken under the pot exemption law. THE COMING SERMON. Dr. Talmage ex preasea himself most forcibly up on the preaching -T or the ruturt. uk- UDerai view ot the subject Mia text Is Luke tx, CO, "Go, thou, and preach the kingdom of God." The gospel is to be regnant over all haarta, all circles, all governments and all lands. .The kingdom of God spoken of In the text is to be a universal king dom, and Just aa vide as that will be the realm sermonlc "Go, thou, and preach the kingdom of God." We hear a great deal In these days about the coming man, and the coming woman, and the coming time. Some one ought to tell us ot the coming sermon. It Is a simple fact that everybody knows that most of the sermons of to-day do not reach the world. The vast majori ty of the people of our great cities nev er enter church. The sermon of to-day carries along with it the deadwood of all ages. Hun dreds of years ago It was decided what a sermon ought to be, and it Is the at tempt of many theological seminaries and doetors of divinity to hew the mod ern pulpit utterances Into the same old style proportions. Booksellers will tell you they dispose of a hundred his tories, a hundred novels, a hundred poems to one book of sermons. What is the matter? Some say the age Is the worst of all ages. It Is better. Some say religion is wearing out, when It Is wearing in. Some Bay there are so many who despise the Christian relig ion. I answer there never was an age when there were so many Christians or so many friends of Christianity as this age has our age, as to others a hun dred to one. What Is the matter then? It Is simply because our sermon of to day Is not suited to the age. It Is the canalboat In an age ot locomotive and electric telegraph. The sermon will will have to be shaken out of the old grooves or It will not be heard and It will not be read. Before the world Is converted the sermon will have to be converted. You might as well go Into a modern Sedan or Gettysburg with bows and arrows Instead of rifles and bombshells and parks of artillery as to expect to con quer this world for God by the old styles of sermonology. Jonathan Ed wards preached the sermons best adapted to the age In which he lived. But If those sermons were preached now they would divide an audience In to two classes those sound asleep and those wanting to go home. But there Is a coming Bermon who will preach It I have no idea. In what part of the earth It will be born I havo no Idea. In which denomina tion of Christians It will be delivered I cannot guess. That coming sermon may be born In the country meeting house on the banks of the St. Lawrence or the Oregon or the Ohio, or the Tom blgbee, or the Alabama. The person who shall deliver It may this moment lie In a cradle under the shadow of the Sierra Nevadaa, or In a New Eng land farmhouse, or amid the riccflelds of southern savannas; or this mo ment there may be some young man in some of our theological seminaries In the Junior or middle or senior class shaping that weapon of power; or there may be coming some new bap tism of the Holy Ghost on the church es, bo that some of us who now stand in the watch towers of Zlon, waking to the realization of our present Inefficien cy, may preach it ourselves. That coming sermon may not be 20 years off. And let us pray God that Its ar rival may be hastened, while I an nounce to you what I think will be the chief characteristics of that ser mon when It does arrive, and I want to make the remarks appropriate and sug gestive to all clauses of Christian workers. First of all, I remark that that com ing sermon will be full ot a living Christ, In contradistinction to didactic technicalities. A sermon may be full of Christ, though hardly mentioning his name, and a sermon may be empty man's Christ. An Invalid's Christ. A of Christ, while every sentence Is rep etitious of his titles. The world wants a living Christ, not a Christ standing at the head of a formal system of the ology, but a Christ who means pardon and sympathy and condolence and brotherhood and life and heaven. A poor man's Christ. An overworked man's Christ. An Invalid's Christ. A farmer's Christ A merchant's Chrust An artisan's Christ. An every man's Christ A symmetrical and finely worded system of the theology Is well enough for theological classes, but It has no more business In a pulpit than have the technical phrases of an anatomist or a physician in the sickroom of a pa tient. The world wants help, Immedi ate and world uplifting, and It will come through a sermon in which Christ shall walk right down into the Im mortal soul and take everlasting pos session of It, filling It as full of light as Is the noonday firmament That sermon of the future will not deal with men In the threadbare Illustrations of Jesus Christ. In that coming sermon there will be Instances ot vicarious sacrifice taken right out of everyday life, for there is not a day somebody is not dying for others. As the physi cian, saving his diphtheric patient by sacrificing his own life; as the ship captain, going down with his vessel, while he is getting his passengers Into a lifeboat; aa the fireman, consuming In the burning building, while he Is taking a child out of a fourth story window; as last summer the strong swimmer at Long Branch or Cape May or Lake George himself perished try ing to rescue the drowning; aa the newspaper boy, not long ago, support. I In Ilia m A that fat Mma vain fcf In. 1t V e v - - lnjt his mother for aome rears, hla la ralM mother, when offered by a gentle man 60 cents to get aome especial pa per, and he got It and rushed up In hie anxiety to deliver . it. and was crushed under the wheela of the train, and lay on the grass with only strength enough to say. "Oh, what will become of my poor, sick mother now?" Vicarious suffering? The world Is full of It An engineer said to me on a locomotive In Dakota.: "We men seem to be coming to better apprecia tion than we used to. Did you see that acsount the other day of an engi neer, who to save bis passengers, stuck to his place, and when he was found dead in the locomotive, which was up side down, he was found still smiling, his hand on the air brake?" And as the engineer said it to me he put his hand on the air brake to illustrate his meaning, and I looked at him and thought, "You would be Just as much of a hero in the same crisis." Oh, In that coming sermon of the Christian church there will be living Illustrations taken from everyday llfo of vicarious suffering Illustrations that will bring to mind the ghastlier sacrifice of him, who, In the high plac es of the field and on the cross, fought our battle and wept our griefs and en dured our struggles and died our death. A German sculptor made an image of Christ, and he asked his little child, 2 years old, who It was, and she said, "That must be some very great man." The sculptor was displeased with the criticism. So he got another block of marble and chiseled away on It two or three years, and then he brought In his little child, 4 or 6 years of age, and he said to her, "Who do you think that Is?" She said, "That must be the ono who took little children In his arms and blessed them." Then the sculptor was satisfied. Oh, my friends, what the world wants is not a cold Christ, not an Intellectual Christ, not a severe ly magisterial Christ, but a loving Christ, spreading out his arms of sym pathy to press tbe whole world to his loving heart But I remark, again, thnt the coming sermon of the Christian church will be a short sermon. Condensation Is de manded by the age in which we live. No more need of long introductions and long applications and so many di visions to a discourse that it may be said to be hydraheaded. In other days men got all their Information from the pulpit. There were few books, and there were no newspapers, and there was little travel from place to place, and people would sit and listen two and a half hours to a religious dis course, and "seventeenthly" would find them fresh and chipper. In those times there was enough room for a man to take an hour to warm himself up to the subject and an hour to cool off. But what was a necessity then is a superfluity now. Congregations are full of knowledge from books, from newspapers, from rapid and continu ous Intercommunication, and long dis quisitions of what they know already will not be abided. If a relluloiis teach er cannot compress what he wishes to say to the people In the space of 43 minutes, better adjourn it to some oth er day. Paul preached until midnight, and Eutychus got sound asleep and fell out of a window and broke his neck. Some would say. "God for him." I would rather be sympathetic, like Paul, and resuscitate him. This accident Is oft en quoted now In religious circles as a warning against somnolence In church. It is Just as much of a warning to min isters against prolixity. Eutychus was wrong In his somnolence, but Paul made a mistake when ho kept on until midnight. He ought to have stopped at 11 o'clock and there woum have been no accident If Paul might have gone on to too great length, let nil those of us who are now preaching the gospel remember that there is a limit to religious discourse, or ought to be, and that In our time we have no apos tolic power or miracles. Napoleon, In nn address of seven minutes, thrilled his army and thrilled Europe. Christ's sermon on the mount the model ser monwas less than 18 minutes long at ordinary mode of delivery. It Is not electricity scattered all over the sky that strikes, but electricity gathered Into a thunderbolt and hurled, and It Is not religious truth scattered all over, spread out over a vast reach of time, but religious truth projected In compact form that' flashes light upon the soul and fives its Indifference. Oh, when the coming sermon of the Christian church arrives, all the churches of Christ in our great cities will be thronged. The world wants spiritual help. All who have burled their dead want comfort All know themselves to be mortal and to be im mortal, and they want to hear about the great future. I tell you, my friends, If the people of these great cities who have had trouble only thought that they could get practical and sympathetic help In the Christian church, there would not be a street In Washington or New York or Boston which would be passable on the Sab bath day. If there were a church on It; for all the people would press to that asylum of mercy, that great house of comfort and consolation. A mother with a dead babe In her arms, came to the god Veda and asked 1 to have her child restored to life. The KOd Veda said to her. "You eo and net a bandful of mustard seed from a house In which there has been no sorrow and In which there baa been no death and I will restore your child to life." So the mother went from house to house and from home to home looking for a place where there had been no sorrow and where , there bad been no death, but she found none. She went back to the god Veda and said: "Mr mission is a failure. Tou see. I haven't brought the mustard seed. I can't find a place where there has been no sorrow and no death." "Ob." says the god Veda. "understand, your sorrows are no. woreejhai tv '-wt vs'. all have our grlefa, and all have our heartbreaks.' Laugh, and tbe world laugba with you; Weep, and you weep alone, For the sad old earth must borrow Its v. mirth, . - But has trouble enough of Its own. , We hear a great deal or dlscusslcn now all over the land about why peo ple do not go to church. Some say It Is because Christianity is dying out and because people do not believe In the truth of God's word, and all that They are false reasons. The reason Is because our sermons are not Interesting and practical and sympathetic and helpful. Some one might as well tell the whole truth on this subject, and so I will tell it The sermon of the future the gospel ser mon to come forth and shake the na tions and lift the people out of dark ness will bo a popular sermon Just for the simple reason that It will meet the woes and the wants and the anxieties of the people. That sermon of the future will be an everyday sermon, going right down Into every man's life, and it will teach him how to vote, how to bargain, how to plow, how to do any work he Is called to, how to wield trowel and pen and pencil and yardstick and plane. And it will teach women how to pre side over their households and how to educate their children, and how to im itate Miriam and Esther and Vaslitl anil Eunice, the mother of Timothy, and Mary, the mother of Christ, and those women who on northern and southern battlefields were mistaken by tho wounded for angels of mercy fresh from tho throne ot God. Yes I have to tell you the sermon of the future will be a reported sermon. If you have any Idea that printing was invented simply to print secular books and stenography and phonography were contrived merely to set forth sec ular Ideas, you are mistaken. The printing press is to be tho great agency of gospel proclamation. It is high time that good men, Instead of denouncing the press, employ It to scatter forth the gospel of Jesus Christ. The vast ma jority of people In our cities do not come to church, and nothing but tho printed sermon can reach them and call them to pardon and life and peace and heaven. Do you exhort In prayer meeting? Be short and be spirited. Do you teach in Bible class? Though you have to study every night, be interesting. Do you accoHt people on the subject of religion In their homes or in public places? Study adroitness and use common seuse. The most graceful, the most beautiful thing on earth Is the religion of Jesus Christ, and if you awkwardly present It It Is defamation. We must do our work rapidly, and we must do it effectively. Soon our time for work will be gone. A dying Christian took out his watch and gave it to a friend and said: "Take that watch. I have no more use for It. Time has ended for (me, and eternity begins." Oh, my friends, when our watch has picked away for us for the last mo ment and our clock has struck for us the last hour, may It be found we did our work well, that we did it in the ' very best way, and whether we preach ed the gospel in pulpits, or taught Sab bath ('lasses, or administered to tbe Nick as physicians, or bargained as merchants, or pleaded the law as at torneys, or were busy as artisans or as husbandmen or as mechanics, or were like Martha called to give a meal to a hungry Christ, or like Hannah to make a coat fur a prophet, or like Deborah to rouse the courage of some timid Itarak In the Lord's conflict, we did our work In such a way that It will stand the test of the judgment. And In the long procession of the redeemed 'hat marches round the throne may it be found there are many there brought to uoj through our Instrumentality and in whose rescue we are exultant. Hut, oh, you unsaved, wait not for that corning sermon. It may come after your obsequies. It may come after the stonecutter has chiseled your name on the slab GO years before. Do not wait for a great steamer of the Cunard or White Star line to take you off the wreck, but bait the first craft, with however low a mast, and however small a hulk, and however poor a rud der, and however weak a captain. Bet ter a disabled schooner that comes up in time than a full rigged brig that comes up after you have sunken. In stead of wnitlng for that coming ser mon It may be 20, 50 years off take this plain Invitation of a man who, to have given you spiritual eyesight, would be glad to be called the spittle by the hand of Christ put on the eyes of a blind man, and who would con sider the highest compliment of this service if at the close 500 men should start from these doors, saying: "Whether he be a sinner or no, I know not. This one thing I know whereas I was blind, now I see." Swifter than shadows over the plain, quicker than birds In their autumnal flight, hastier than eagles to their prey, hie you to a sympathetic Christ. Tke orchestras of heaven have already strung their in struments to celebrate your rescue. And many were the voices around the throne Rejoice, for the Lord brings back his own. I'nuatantatloua Leopold, The King of the Belgians Is an unas suming individual Returning from a walk one morning during his recent visit to Paris, and noticing a crowd standing outside his hotel in the Rue de RIvolI, he asked a street boy what the people were waiting for. "They want to see the King of tire Belgians, sir," answered the boy. "He is not very Interesting, my lad," said the King; and he walked unnoticed Into tbe hotel. New York World. Blxzley You must dislike Newcomb very much. , Orixily I bate him as fiercely as a barber hatea a bald-beaded man with a fall bard. TrK . THE AMEER IWDICWAWT. Xnowa How to With Bekls L'aod HS Jfaana. London. Nov. 21 A well Informed correspondent at CabuL capital of Af. ghanlatan, gives an account ot an Inter view which he had with the ameer of Afghanistan. In which the ameer, refer, ring; to the rlnlna; of the tribes on the frontier of British India, suld: "I cannot Imagine how any one can think me responalble for the actions of the Haddah Mulluh. who Inntlirated the trouble tor It was he who raised AMElilt OP AFGHANISTAN, the revolt of the Shinwurrlrs uml other triboH UKaliiHt me shortly after my uc resKlnn. I liuiuircil into his iinti-c.-ili iits uml fulleil to discover lihi triln-. cast or birthplace. "When my Rovernor at .!e.ill:i'.pa.l stopped the Iladilah Mullah's follow ers from leuvtiiK AfKhanlstun they s:ibl they hud the rli;ht to llht the Kni'.lish. for their leaders had toM them 1 ha.. Klven them permission In !o so. ,, Kovernor thereupon arrested several i.f the leuders, who were cnrylnt; ureeii Jehinl (holy war) Uuks. He rent tli.-iu to Cabul, where they are now In prlsnii. and I know how to deal with them." HER MARITAL WOES. Mm. Hmllcy' Iteiiooim Kor Ak Inir For a Limited Divorce. WushliiKton, Nov. 2!!. Kllzabeth I.. Smiley commenced proceedings here yesterday for a limited divorce from Charles V Smiley. They were mar ried In this city in 1M0. Mrs. Smiley alleges that they are first cousins, de clares that some time previous to their marriage her husband "inoculated her with ideas not In accordance with mod ern civilization, and such was the In fluence the defendant Rained over her, that she saw thinKs only In the light In which he presented them to her. rarely exercising her own judgment, so much so that she would put In writ ing requests to him to do many things utterly at variance with common sense, and admissions as to her conduct," and that he even made her believe It was a favor to take sums of her money and invent It In his name. Continuing the petition recites "that he has made her married life one of continuous self effacemcnt, abnegation and bending to his will, and she has been made to believe it to be her duty to yield to the slightest wish of an ar bitrary and exacting self appointed judira and master." She alleges that she thought she deserved auch treat ment In order to become worthy to move on the same high plane on which he hus led her to believe he moved. The petitioner asserts that he "mad" out a list of petty offenses against her, which she still has, for which she should pay tines varying from five cents to $1, requiring her to agreo to pay the same cheerfully and without appeal or argument as to the right or wrong thereof." The defendant Is a New Englander. but has lived In Washington for the lost eight or ten years. He compiled the fisheries statistics of the last cen sus, and was subsequently sent by the fish commission to collect statistics on the l'acltic coast. Tint Army of Pensioners. Washington, Nov. 13. Secretary of the Interior Tlllss. In his annual report submits estimates aggregating $156. 5.12.419 for the appropriations by con grcss for the fiscal year ending Jun 30, 1X!9. Discussing the pensions he Buys 200.000 pension claims are await lug adjudication, ami it is estimated thnt 40 or 50 per cent of these will be finally admitted. If they are rapidly adjudicated they will swell the pension roll jr..000,000 to $7,000,001). When, how ever, these claims nre adjudicated and first payments made thereon the amount of the pension roll will de crease very rapidly, possibly to $125. 000,000 or $130,000,0110 the ilrst year. Fntiil lire In Halt I more. Baltimore, Nov. '23. The entire con tents of the five story building, Nos. 317 and 31'J North Howard street, oc cupied by William II. Scott, popularly known us "tliest Scott," us a furniture store, were yesterday destroyed by lire. In which one woman, Mrs. Susan E. Maxon, of 1536 Williams street, lost her life. The total damage to that and ad joining property Is estimated ut about $135,000. Mrs. Maxon, who was a cus tomer In the Ptore, Is thought to have fallen or to huve fainted from fright, her body being found soon after the flames hud been subdued. Kx-MlntNtcr Tnylor'n Prediction. Ithaca. N. Y., Nov. 20. In his ad dress at Cornell university lust night Hannis Taylor, ex-United Stutes min ister to Spain, said: "Let congress but speak the final and emphatic word recognition and in 90 days the long and bloody tragedy will be over, the whole Christian world will rejoice, Spain will be rescued from an Impos sible situation, there will be no war with the United StateB, and Cuba will be free." To Do Ite-turued to Austria. Baltimore, Nov. 22. Forty-eight men from the Interior of Austria, who were arrested last week In the swamps of Mississippi by United States inspec tors, on the charge of violating the alien labor contract law, were brought here yesterday. They will be sent back. Closing; School Ynr Fortoiny. Richmond, Va., Nov. 23. The city school board last night ordered the schools closed from Dec. 13 to Jan. 3, for lack ot funds, the school fund hav ing been reduced In accordance with a genera) plaa ot retrenchment recently adopted. . ... ir