Wisconsin Weekly Advocate
Thursday, July 26, 1900
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Page text (machine-generated)
State Historical Society
WISCONSIN
WEEKLY
ADVOCATE
DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF THE NEGRO RACE
MOB LYNCHES A NEGRO.
Crowd Invades the Jail at Huntsville and Succeeds in Securing Its Victim by Smoking Out Officer Who was Protecting Him Militia Late.
Huntsville, Ala., July 23.—Elijah Clark, a negro, was taken from jail in this city tonight and lynched after Sheriff Fulgham had made a desperate attempt to defend his prisoner. A dense smoke from a combination of tar, feathers, and oil, fired by the crazed mob, was too much for the sheriff, and he was dragged from the jail and placed under a physician's care. William Vining, who attempted to rush through the crowd and up the jail steps, was shot and dangerously wounded. A crowd of 150 men, principally employees of the cotton mills of Dallas, a suburb, searched the woods all night for Clark without avail. This morning Sheriff Fulgham and posse captured the refugio and landed him in jail here.
A mob was soon formed and Sheriff Fulgham appealed to Gov. Johnston, who responded that he had ordered the militia at Birmingham, Montgomery and Decatur to proceed here with all haste. The sheriff then telephoned Judge S. M. Stewart, asking an immediate trial of the negro. The judge replied that he had arranged for a special session of court at 3 o'clock this afternoon. This news was given to the mob, which greeted it with jeers. The outer door to the jail, a wooden barrier, was battered down, and Sheriff Fulgham retreated with his prisoner to the third floor, locking the heavy door after him. The mob then began to devise means of securing the prisoner without doing harm to the sheriff.
A large amount of tar, feathers and oil was secured and piled up on the cement floor of the jail and a match applied. A suffocating smoke arose and spread quickly throughout the jail. The sheriff again retreated to the corner farthest from the burning pile, taking his prisoner with him. More tar and feathers were brought in and ignited. The sheriff was seen to disappear from the window and the mob waited. He did not reappear, and Chief of Police Overton broke through the crowd and rushed up the stairs through the blinding smoke. Reaching the third floor, he found Sheriff Fulgham in a semi-conscious condition. The chief begged the sheriff to escape. The reply was: "I will stay here. I will die doing my duty."
The chief of police dragged the sheriff down two flights of stairs into the street, from where he was taken to the city hall and doctors summoned. The mob then seized the negro and hustled him to Dallas, where he was executed. Just as the work was finished the Decatur militia arrived at Huntsville
MR. JOHN F. SELBE.
We take great pleasure in introducing to the public a young man who is interested in our work. This is Mr. John F. Selbe of St. Paul, Minn. Mr. Selbe was born in St. Paul December 12, 1872. He has been actively engaged in organization work of the Republican party for the past four years, and is now secretary of the Ramsey County Republican committee. He was sergeant-at-arms of the Republican state convention which nominated Samuel R. Van Sant,
KRO5
MR. JOHN F. SELBE.
the soldier statesman of Winona, who will defeat the present Populist governor, John Lind, by 25,000 plurality next November. On account of ability in detail work he was selected by the state and national organizations of Republican clubs to manage the Roosevelt meetings in St. Paul July 17, 1900.
He is at present chief clerk of the law department of the city of St. Paul, and attended the University of Minnesota law school.
Judge William H. Holt of Kentucky, who has been appointed chief justice of Porto Rico by President McKinley, has many friends among the legal fraternity in New York. Ex-Secretary of the Treasury John G. Carlisle has a high opinion of his attainments. He was born in Kentucky and has practiced law in that state the greater part of his life.
SENATOR I. M. HAMILTON.
We called on the newly-elected president of the Young Men's Republican league, Senator I. M. Hamilton of Oswego, N. Y., who became very much interested in our work and said he would
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SENATOR ISAAC MILLER HAMILTON be only too glad to add his name to our list of subscribers. The young Republicans made no mistake when they selected Mr. I. M. Hamilton as their president. We take great pleasure in presenting the cut of Senator I. M. Hamilton.
WILLIAM L. WINDOM.
We take pleasure in presenting one of the latest cuts of Mr. William L. Windom. Mr. Windom is president of Duluth, Minnesota. Young Men's Republi-
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WILLIAM L. WINDOM. can league. He is bright and industrious and a great worker—in fact one of the greatest workers among the young men in that section of the state. He is much interested in our work and contributed freely. We wish him success.
CHICAGO NEWS.
The home of Mrs. A. E. Willson, the amiable consort of our esteemed and time-honored friend, Prof. A. E. Willson, 6246 Peoria street, was the scene of pleasure and enjoyment such as is rarely seen, on Tuesday evening last, the occasion being a formal reception tendered in honor of Mrs. John Thornton, nee Price, of Columbus, Ga. The guests were: Mmes. John Thornton, Enos Bond, Martin, Mitchell, Alberta Bryant, A. J. Motley, A. E. Willson; Messrs. E. Bond, Theo. P. Bryant, A. J. Motley, Martin, W. S. C. Willson, R. P. Willson, Ice cream, cake and fruits were served at 11 o'clock. The evening was spent in discussion of the attitude of Europe and America toward the world, and in vocal and instrumental selections.
The editor made a flying trip to Chicago the other day in interest of the campaign for the paper. While there he called on Hon. Charles Gordon, P. M., who liberally contributed to the support of the Wisconsin Weekly Advocate. Look for his cut in our next issue. A. E. Willson, Mrs. Julia C. Willson, children, W. S. C. Willson, Miss C. C. Morse Willson, Richard P., James G., A. E., Jr., and Mary Anne M. Juliette, Mrs. John T. Thornton, Prof. A. E. Willson and Master "Boots" (A. E. Willson, Jr.) paid the Cream City a visit on Sunday and were the guests of the editor of the Advocate.
Mrs. J. T. Thornton of Columbus, Ga., is spending a part of the summer with friends and acquaintances in Chicago. We had the pleasure of meeting her at the home of Mrs. A. E. Willson on Saturday last and are pleased to have had such a distinguished honor, for we find her to be one of Georgia's gifted daughters.
—The Supreme court of Alabama, in a recent decision, says the Street Railway Review, upholds the rulings of a lower court that whites and negroes should occupy separate portions of street cars.
TO MAKE BLACK BOYS DOCTORS.
African Youths Invited to Study Medicine and Surgery in Liverpool, England.
Mr. Albert L. Jones, the founder of the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine, thinks it would be a good idea to educate young men from the British and other colonies in Africa in medicine and surgery so that their people may have the advantage of more scientific treatment. He bases his scheme on the idea that some of the young fellows who have been educated in the schools of Sierra Leone, Menrovia, and many other places, are bright enough to turn a five-years' course in medical training to excellent account. So Mr. Jones has made arrangements with one of the steamship companies to take young Africans to Liverpool at low rates; and the Liverpool University college, the Royal Southern hospital and the School of Tropical Medicine are all to have a part in the work of turning the young men into doctors and surgeons.
A circular has just been distributed along the west coast of Africa giving information about this fine opportunity for native Africans to enter one of the most useful professions. The native press in the towns along the west coast is welcoming the idea with enthusiasm. "Doubtless many youths of the colonies on the west coast," says a Monrovia newspaper, "will avail themselves of the opportunity offered them."
This remains to be seen. The sum of $3000 is required from every student for a five-years' course. This is probably very cheap, for it is to include every expense for five years in England and transportation both ways. But the number of African boys who can raise $3000 for this or any other purpose is not very large. If any considerable number of them are able to accept the offer it is likely to be because their friends and churches and even the colonial governments chip in to help them raise the required sum.—New York Sur.
COLORED MEN ENLIST.
Ready to Fight Chinamen If Necessary—Recruiting is Rather Lively
Jim Moore, a colored boy, enlisted in the United States army at the Milwaukee recruiting office today. His age is 21 years and 6 months and he hails from Louisville, Ky. Moore has been in Milwaukee about a month at work laying asphalt pavements, and in that kind of work he has traveled around the country considerably. This colored youth is to be a cavalryman. First he will be sent to Fort Sheridan, Ill., and from there he will be assigned to either the Ninth or Tenth cavalry, which are colored regiments. The companies of these regiments are scattered all over the country, Capt. Chase says, but are soon to be gathered together and sent to the Philippines.
The local recruiting office has another colored man under consideration and wired to Washington today for instructions. This second colored man who wants to fight nobly is at present employed in a Milwaukee Turkish bathhouse. Capt. Chase enlisted three recruits this forenoon and two others under consideration. Sheboygan has been billed for recruits and Capt. Chase expects to go there tomorrow to enlist men. Six years ago, when Sergt. Brinkman came here upon recruiting service, the first man who passed through his hands as a recruit was a colored man. He had been an elevator operator at the Plankinton house. A few colored men join the service in Milwaukee from time to time.
Oil Not So Good as Gas.
An Eaglesham ploughman who was much troubled with the toothache was advised by a neighbor to get the offending moler extracted, adding: "Ye'll never feel the pain ava, Geordie, if ye tak' gas." A day or two afterwards Geordie was accosted by his friend. "Weel, Geordie, an' hae ye got yer tooth oot now?" "Oh, ay," replied the ploughman, tenderly touching his cheek. "Did the wife draw it oot?" Geordie nodded. "Then ye wadna tak' gas, did ye?" inquired the other. "Na," replied, Geordie, sadly, "we dinna burn gas, so the wife poured some paraffin oil in my mouth, but I'll no say it made the operation ony easier to bear."
Southern Moonshiners.
The great majority of moonshiners are to be found in the mountain fastnesses of Georgia, Alabama and Tennessee, and here they live in conditions of civilization as crude as their ancestors, most of whom were English fugitives from justice who reached this country more than a century ago. Indeed, in many respects these descendants have retrograded rather than advanced. Had they been surrounded for a century by a Chinese wall they could not have been more destitute or ignorant of the modern conveniences. International Magazine.
Was Henry Clay's Slave.
Cincinnati, O., July 23.—Lucinda Taylor, colored, ex-slave, was sent to the city infirmary. She is 110, and blind. Her daughter, 66, and grand-daughter, 42, also blind, went with her. The woman was a slave of Henry Clay, and when Gen. Bolivar Buckner married Col. Clay's daughter, the Taylor woman was given to Mrs. Buckner as a wedding gift. She remained with them until the slaves were liberated, and since that time she has had a pretty rough time.
CREAM CITY NOTES.
Mr. V. W. Mott of Oswego, N. Y., was elected vice-president of the Young Men's Republican league. He is a business man and easily approached. The party made no mistake in selecting him, and he is a true friend to the race. He also added his name to our list.
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Rev. Joseph Jackson, accompanied by the editor, heard the farewell sermon delivered by Rev. A. A. Kiechle, who will take a vacation for six weeks. The reverend selected for his discourse "Christ's Opinion of John the Baptist and Social Equality in Christianity," with which he held the audience spellbound from start to finish. He is a true friend to the race, and is always willing and ready to help those who try to help themselves. We hope on his return he will still be filled with the Holy Ghost.
恋恋
We attended the services at the Grand Avenue M. E. church, and heard Rev. Dr. Masden. He is considered to be one of the ablest ministers of the Northwest. His preaching is mild and pleasant, he is Christ-like in his doctrine and he is doing all that he possibly can to better the condition of men and women. His services are considered to be the best in the city during hot weather. They have regular Sunday school, prayer-meeting and class-meeting, each service being largely attended.
Great benefit has been derived from visiting the several services and listening to the different discourses.
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It gives us great pleasure to say that Mrs. Dr. Knight is herself once more and will soon, we hope, be able to resume her household duties again.
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Milwaukee will soon lose one of her worthy young men, whom we are sorry to say is Mr. Clarence Noble, who resides at 209 Fifth street. Owing to ill-health, Mr. Noble has decided to visit in the West, where we feel sure the mild atmosphere will greatly benefit and reinvigorate him.
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We are sorry to inform our readers that Mrs. James Miller has been very sick, but is now improving nicely, we are glad to say.
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We greatly sympathize with Mr. and Mrs. George Winbush in their hour of grief in the loss of their first and only baby.
Mr. A. Bizzetti's family has gone to spend the summer East. We wish them a successful visit.
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Mrs. Relford has gone to Trinity hospital. We hope she will soon be restored to health, as she was always a good church worker and she has our sympathies in this trying hour.
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Mrs. Burnett of 194 Fourth street is making preparations to go to St. Paul. We learn that St. Paul will be her future home. The above is a handsome young widow and will be missed by the gentlemen of the Cream City.
Ox-Exed Daisies.
We have often noticed people gathering the ox-eyed daisies that grow on the river bottoms and carrying them home or to the cemetery to decorate graves with. If they could only realize the mischief they were doing they would not do it. As there is sap enough in those stalks to ripen the seed, where that weed gets a start to growing, it is almost impossible to kill it out, and it kills out nearly everything else where it grows. If I wanted to injure an enemy almost irreparably I would get a lot of that seed and sow it on his farm. It is one of the greatest nuisances under the sun, and one of the hardest to get rid of, so please beware of it.—Vancouver Independent.
The Western Way.
There is a certain expansiveness in the range of treatment of social topics in the Western papers that must fill society editors in the East with envy. It must be such a relief to the tedium of noting the arrival and departure of the guests of Mrs. Jones and the same old delightful luncheons given by the Smiths to be able to throw off sparkling personalities like this gem from the Salina (Kas.) Union: "Born, to the wife of Jim Jones, a boy. The boy favors his old dad in several ways, viz.: He is bald, has a red nose, takes to a bottle like a bumblebee to a lump of sugar, and makes a lot of noise about nothing. Selah."
A Nation to Emigrate
For nearly two centuries Finland has formed a portion of Russia's domain. And four times over has the reigning Czar assured them of the continuance of their privileges in the way of their own House of Parliament and army laws. But last year, without rhyme or reason, a stroke of the pen deprived them of all their cherished liberties and reduced them to the same level with the rest of the overtaxed, ground-down Russian nation. Fifty thousand Finns are leaving for America, and ten times that number will go within the next few years.—New York Telegram.
Fat Carrots and Look Young
Carrots have been regarded as moderately useful, but not especially interesting product of nature, but suddenly they have acquired a prominence all their own. Eaten early in the morning they are said to produce a most astonishing effect upon the skin, hair and eyes of the devotee. It is asserted that in six months the most faded and "elderly complexion will have become fresh and youthful."
THE MEMORY OF MARTHA.
Out in de night a sad bird moans,
An', oh, but hit's moughty lonely;
Times I kin sing, but mos' I groans,
Fu' oh, but hit's moughty lonely.
Is you sleepin' well dis evenin', Marfy,
dear?
W'en I calls you f'om de cabin, kin you
yehain?
Tain't de same ol' place to me,
Nuffin's lak hit used to be.
W'en I knewed dat you wus allus some'ers
aear.
Does you know, I'm cryln fu' you, oh my wife?
Does you know dey ain't no joy no mo' in life?
An' my only t'ought is dis.
Dat I's honin' fu' de bliss
Fu' to quit dis groun' o' worriment an' strife.
Is you watchin' fu' me, Marfy, at de do'?
Ef you is, in spite o' sin.
Dev' be sho' to let me in.
Dey it be sno' to tell me in.
W'en dey sees yo' face a-shlinn', den dey'll
know.
—Paul Laurence Dunbar in the Bookman.
THE LOYALTY OF DR. PENROSE
Philip Penrose and John Carleton had been chums since boyhood. Ever since that memorable day at an early stage of their school life, when John Carleton had fought and vanquished the bully of the class for his cowardly assault on the "new boy," Phil Penrose, the two had been the stanchest friends, albeit they were quite unlike in temperament and disposition. Philip was quiet, studious, reserved and somewhat delicate, while John was big, athletic, impulsive, and, although naturally bright, impatient of study. Each found in the other some quality to admire and emulate. Both youths fitted for Harvard and were loyal chums throughout their university course. That finished, however, their paths in life separated. Philip studied medicine and became a successful practitioner in his native New England town. John adopted a business career, connecting himself with a Chicago firm of which his uncle was a member. But their friendship did not end with their separation. They corresponded regularly, keeping each other in touch with their affairs. John fell in love with the "dearest girl in the world" and married her, but Philip, who for some reason had always disliked and avoided women, remained a bachelor—the despair alike of maneuvering mammas and scheming spinsters.
About two years after John's marriage Philip was stunned at receiving a letter from his friend, appraising him of the fact that his wife had left him for no other reason than that they had quarreled, and that John, in a moment of temper, had said something for which he was afterward sorry. The shock to Philip was all the greater for the reason that, up to that moment, he had believed John's marriage to be as ideally happy as any marriage could possibly be, and the news had the effect of deepening his constitutional dislike and distrust for women.
It was about six months after learning of John's marital misfortune that Dr. Penrose called one day to attend a patient on a neighboring street. It proved to be a young widow named Mrs. Felton, residing with her mother, and evidently a newcomer to the neighborhood. He saw that she was seriously ill and showed marked symptoms of pneumonia, and also that she was laboring under strong nervous excitement. It is needless to say that Dr. Penrose treated her to the best of his professional skill, and with such success that by the next day there was a marked improvement in her condition. He found his new patient and her mother to be extremely reticent about their affairs, yet during his attendance on the former he learned that she formerly lived in a Western city; that her husband had died recently, leaving her in straitened circumstances, and that she had come East in the hope of obtaining employment as a teacher or governess. He decided, however, that her illness was aggravated by some serious mental trouble, of the nature of which he was ignorant.
It is possible that Mrs. Felton's recovery was less rapid and less complete than it should have been, all things considered; at all events Philip continued to call on her long after one would have supposed there was any need of his professional services. Perhaps it was because the doctor was but a man after all, and therefore could not be blind to the fact that his mysterious patient was a handsome young woman with a peculiar charm of manner; yet greater beauties than Mrs. Felton had smiled upon him without ever quickening his pulse. Perhaps it was the appealing sadness in her large, dark eyes that attracted him; perhaps it was the unwavering reserve and dignity of her manners and the fact that there was not a trace of coquery about her, for the doctor had a horror of coquery, and until recently had believed it to be a dominant feminine trait.
The upshot of the matter was that Dr. Philip Penrose, without having any certain knowledge of Mrs. Felton's past life, asked her to be his wife, and was firmly refused. Pressed for a reason, she answered that she did not love him. To which he calmly replied that, as she was the only woman he ever would or could love, he intended to win her affection, and was willing to wait years, if need be, to attain that result. Philip's determined attitude forced a more explicit reply from Mrs. Felton, and she naily admitted that there was an insurmountable obstacle to their union in that her husband was not dead but living!
Quivering like a stricken deer under the blow, Philip began involuntarily piecing together in his mind certain ideas, the chief of which was that Felton had been the maiden name of John's wife, and on a sudden the awful truth flashed upon him. "John Carleton—he is your husband?" he said huskily. For answer she burst into uncontrollable weeping. When a little calmer she told her story; of how John had begun to entertain an unreasonable jealousy of her; of how they had quarreled, and that he had said words to her that her pride could not brook, and of how, in a moment of madness, she had gone away, determined never to live with him again; of her subsequent repentance of her rash act, and of how pride and shame had kept her from returning to him.
Whatever may have been the state of Philip Penrose's mind that night as he sat in his study, his pen never faltered in the message it was writing to John Carleton. The answer that came by return post was to the effect that John Carleton utterly repudiated his wife; he never would forgive her desertion of him, and was about to seek a divorce.
And so there came to Philip Penrose the greatest temptation of his life. All through the long, weary night he wrestled with it, and when morning came it found him aged and worn, but with a grim, determined look on his face. Into the letter that was to plead for the honor and happiness of the two beings he loved best on earth he threw all the eloquence and passion of which he was capable. With what magical power he wrote may he indiged by the reply:
"Dear Old Boy: You have conquered. You have shown me plainly wherein I was wrong and the way to happiness again. I long to clasp my wife in my arms. God bless you, Philip."
And Philip? Well, he is one of the ablest physicians of the day, and has amassed a fortune. His hair and shaggy beard are quite gray now, and he is still a bachelor. But standing on his desk in a heart-shaped frame there is a picture of a young girl, whose dark eyes bear a singular resemblance to those of John's wife. It may be that it is while gazing abstractedly at the counterfeit presentment of Miss Carleton's girlish beauty and sometimes pressing it fondly to his lips, that he finds inspiration for the brilliant and learned treatises with which he challenges the admiration of the medical and scientific world.--Boston Post.
ACTS OF COURTESY MISJUDGED
A Southerner Tries to Render a Woman Service and is Rebuffed.
"Customs here in the North with regard to some of the little things of life are sadly different from those which obtain in our land," remarked a dignified Virginian on Thursday to a reporter who had witnessed his unmerited discomfiture.
A plain-looking little woman was struggling along with a clumsy telescope bag to her own exhaustion and the discomfort of other passengers who were leaving a Cortlandt street ferryboat. The Virginian, every inch a gentleman, politely offered to carry the bag, but was withered in an instant by the look of indignation and resentment which disfigured the woman's homely little face.
"I am not used to being insulted, sir," she exclaimed, as she jerked her heavy burden into her other hand, swept up her skirts with the released hand, and went along jabbing people in the legs with her bag.
Catching the sympathetic glance of the reporter the Virginian explained that in his land women expected men to render such services and did not feel in any way compromised in accepting such assistance from a stranger, while in the North they seemed to associate any such act of courtesy with the advances of impertinence.
"I ought to have taken warning by an experience I had the other day," continued the Virgianan. "A pretty girl, not any older than my own daughters who are at school in your city, was carrying a heavy dress-suit case and an umbrella, for it was raining hard, and had a lot of trouble with her skirts. 'Let me help you with your bag,' I said to her, 'and come under my umbrella.' She looked at me in terror, flushed scarlet, and then paled, and almost ran from me.
"It is too bad," he added, "that the rascals who annoy other men's wives and daughters and sweethearts make it impossible for a gentleman to render a trifling service to a woman without damaging her self-respect and being misunderstood himself."—New York Times
Irishman Won Out.
A one-legged Yankee orator, concluding to have some fun at the expense of an Irishman in his audience, made him the object of a number of sallies. The Irishman endured these as long as could. During a lull in the fun, he asked the speaker how he came to lose his leg. "Well," said the Yankee, winking at the rest of his hearers, "I will tell you. I was told I had some Irish blood in me, and, concluding it had all settled in my leg, I immediately had it cut off." The Irishman looked at him for a few seconds, and then answered: "It's a murtherin' pity it hadn't settled in your head."
Farmer "Wanted to Know."
"You see," explained the farmer, "it was this way: He wore checked stockin's, an' bicycle pants, an' when he come an' asked me fer permission to do a little huntin' on my premises I reely felt sorry fer him. When he asked me what a squirrel looked like I felt sorrier, but kind o' jokin'-like I told him they looked like mules. Well, he went out an' killed one o' my mules. Now, what I'd like to know is whether he thought it was a squirrel, done it accidentally, or done it on purpose to git even fer the joke."—Indianapolis, Sun.
CONGER SENOS MESSAGE.
Had Been Besieged Two Weeks with
Grave Danger of Massacre.
DATED JULY FOURTH.
Formation of 4a Provisional Govern-
Washington, D. C., July 25.—The fol-
Jowing cablegram has been received at
the navy department, dated Chefoo, July
24:
“Written message Signed Conger, dated
July 4, received Tien ‘T'sin 21st, says:
~*Reen besieged two weeks British le-
gation. Grave danger of general mas-
sacre by Chinese soldiers, who are shell-
ing legations daily. Relief soon, if at all.
City is without goveynment except by
Chinese army. Determined massacre all
foreigners Pekin. Entry relief forces into
city probably be hotly contested.’ ”
‘The mesage comes from Capt. Charles
M. Thomas, commander of the Brooklyn.
The message from Minister Conger
which came over the wires from Capt.
‘Thomas, this morning, was the first com-
munication of unquestionable authentici-
ty which has been received from the
American minister at Pekin since his
urgent appeal for help of July 12. It es-
tablished clearly the fact that the Amer-
ican minister and probably the other le-
gationers were alive on July 4, though in
sore straits. Therefore it completely and
finally disposes of the first stories
that were published from Shaughai of the
massacre of June 27. It was true that
it does not in itself negative the subse-
quent reports of the massacre on July 6,
two days later than the day of the dis-
patch, but the officials here feel that
ihere is quite as much reason to believe
that the second report was false as in the
case of the first report, now shown to
have been erroneous.
Washington, D. C., July 25.—The state
department has_ received a cablegram
frem Consnl MeWade at Canton, saying
that Viceroy Tak gives assurances that
all the foreign envoys at Pekin were
alive and well on July 22.
Salisbury Declines.
London, July 25.—The British premier
and minister of foreign affairs, Lord Sal-
isbury, today notified the United States
ambassador here, Joseph H. Choate, that
jit was impossible to accept the evidence
so far submitted by the Chinese or that
transmitted by the United States regard-
ing the safety of the foreign ministers at
Pekin, and that until their safety was
thoroughly established the British gov-
ernment would be unable to discuss any
question of mediation or kindred matters.
TO RESTORE ORDER.
Formation of Provisional Govern-
ment for Tien Tsin.
Tien Tsin, July 18, via Shanghai, July
24.—Col. Bower of the Chinese regiment,
Col. Wogack of the Russians and Col.
Aoki of the Japanese will form the joint
provisional government for the city of
‘Tien T'sin, which it was recently decided
to establish. They will be entrusted
with the task of bringing something like
order out of the existing chaos. |
Since the issue of the proclamation in-
viting well-disposed Chinese to return to
their homes a number have come back to
the city, and many native servants are
coming to the settlements, a majority of
them returning to the service of their
previous employers.
Ruin and Desolation.
The native city this afternoon presents
an appalling spectacle of ruin and des-
olation. The suburbs were completely
destroyed by fire, mostly caused by the
shells of the allies on the side facing the
settlements. It is believed that not a
dozen houses are intact, and all were a
little damaged by the tremendous fire
of the allies’ artillery, which, however,
was apparently not heavy enough to
produce much effect. A curious speeta-
cle is presented by a number of mud
hovels immediately underneath the wall
where the latter was most damaxed,
hardly one of them showing signs of
having been hit.
Inside the city the damage was terrific.
The. buildings nearest the wall were
mostly gutted by fire, and many were to-
tally blown to pieces by the shells of the
allies. Among the smoldering ruins are
many charred corpses, which the pigs
and dogs are eating.
Many Dead Are Not Buried.
The allies are busy removing the
bodies; but, in consequence of the grext
number of dead, many have not yet been
buried. The streets throughout the cicy
are strewn with all kinds of articles, and
dozens of Chinese are digging in the
ruins for money and other valuables.
Most of the houses which are intact or
little damaged, display the flags of one
or the other of the allied forces, the Jap-
amese and French flags predominating.
‘There have been many attempts to imi-
tate the fiags, which, under other cirewm-
stances would be laughable. The houses
which do not display flags show bits of
cotton or paper bearing the names of the
allied nations and complimentary sen-
tences, The French, apparently, are the
favorites, many of the pieces of cotton
and paper displayed bearing the inserip
tion “France” or “Vive la France.” Al!
are unmistakably in the handwriting at
native clerks formerly employed by for-
eign Chinese firms.
It is stated that the Chinese iosses
since the troubles broke out are 11.000,
most of whom have been killed by Box-
ers and soldiers. This is probably muci:
exaggerated.
Chinese Take Revenge.
Tien Tsin, Friday, July 20.—Chinese
coming in from the country report that
the Chinese soldiers are killing the Box-
ers wherever the latter are seen, giving
as a reason that the Boxers deceived
them into embarking on a hopeless strug-
gle. An intelligent Chinaman said he re-
earded this as a sign of widespread dis-
sension. It was only a matter of a short
time before the same state would exist
in Pekin, when, in ali probability, Jung
Liu, commander-in-chiet of the Chinese
forces, and Prince Ching would be able
to regain sufficient influence to make
peace, especially if the foreigners in the
capital were safe. This appears to rep-
resent the general native opinion here,
as far as it is possible to ascertain it.
In the meantime reliable news as_ to
events in Pekin aid whether the for-
eigners are alive is entirely lacking, or
is only obtainable from Chinese sources,
and even this is most meager and con:
tradietory.
The Movement on Pekin.
Tt is now thought that the forward
movement of the allies will probably take
place earlier than was at first intended.
possibly by the end of this month; but
nothing definite will be decided before
the arrival of Gen. Sir Alfred Gazelee,
commanding the Indian contingent.
A runner who arrived from Pekin yes-
terday reports that the foreigners were
safe on July 10. and that there had been
considerable fighting between the Boxers
and soldiers inside the city. 5
American Wounded to be Sent Home.
Tien Tsin, ae 19, via Shanghai, July
25.—Most of the American sick and
wounded have been taken in boats to
Takn, where they will embark on the
American hospitai ship Solace for the
United States. “
Refused to Surrender.
Taku, Saturday, July *21.—Chang-¥:
hag unsuccessfully tried to arrange with
the general commanding the Peh-Tanz
forts for their surrender. ‘The general
refused to surrender the forts, but said
that if the foreigners did not attack hin
he would agree to maintain a neutral
attitude.
Russians Whipped by Chines:.
| Yokchama, Tuesday, July 24.—Tele-
grams from Seoul and Chemulpo, under
date of yesterday, report from Russian
sources that eighty Russians have been
| killed by Chinese at An-‘Long, twenty ex-
| eaping ‘across the Yalu river to Jiju
| Wiju?).
| According to another account fifty Rus-
jsiams who had been defeated by Chinese
arrived at Jiju Sunday en route from
Port Arthur to Pyong Yang. Russian
officials have left Seoul for Pyong-Yaug.
j Japanese correspondents accuse — the
| Russians of brutal inhumanity in the
| fighting at Tien Tsin. The newspapers
|here are advocating an understanding
with Russia permitting the dispatch of
Japanese troops to Corea in case the
i disturbances spread from Manehuria
| there.
| St. Petersburg, July | 25.--Russian
| troops from Nikolsk and Sungary river
| tre hastening to the relief of Charbin and
other places in a similar plight. :
| Gen, Grodekoff reports that the Chinese
feebly cannonaded Blagovestchensk, Sun-
'day, Inly 22. Little damage was done.
[Cossacks are crossing the Amur river,
| dispersing the Chinese.
| The steamer Vojevoda, which has ar-
Lrived at Tolbnzin, from Charbin, reports
i that she was fired upon at Sausin by
Chinese from the river banks and junks.
The Japanese government is ready to
| mobilize three ‘additional divisions, fez
, service in China, if required. i
American Troops Reach Taku.
* Shanghai, Tuesday, July 24.—Three
| thousand American troops have arrived
lat Taku, as well as eight trausports filled
with British troops. Both detachments
| are deticient in artillery.
| A cable steamer has started to lay a
cable from Wei-[lai-Wei to Chefoo and
Taku.
| Chaffee at Nagasaki.
| Washington, D. C.. July 25.—Adjt.-
Gen. Corbin ‘received a cable dispatch
| today from Gen. Chaffee, announcing his
arrival on the transport Grant at Nage-
| Saki. He cables all well. As soon as
ithe Grant is coaled she will proceed at
jonce to Taku. =
| Gen. Chaffee on his arrival received
'the cable dispatch announcing his ap-
| pointment as a major-general of yolun-
teers.
:
VON BUELOW’S SHARP REPLY.
| Chinese Government Must Expiate
, Death of the German Minister.
Berlin, July 25.—The Norddeutsche All-
gemeine Zeitung publishes a message
similar to that presented by Wu ‘Tin
Fang to President McKinley, in) which
the Chinese Emperor requests Germany’.
mediation with the other European pow-
ers. The reply of Count von Buelow,
the foreign minister, which also is print-
ed. is conched in unprecedentellly strovs
terms. Count von Buelow says _un-
equivocally that he is not prepared to
present the appeal to his imperiai mas-
ter until the fate of the foreign ministers
in Pekin should be known and until, tur-
ther, the Chinese government shouid have
expiated the death of Baron von Ket-
teler. The note is curt, with none of the
‘finely-worded phrases which in ordinary
}times distinguish the utterances of the
| foreign office.
American Course a Surprise.
he! Beelin” newspa pave aay eee-canetd:
erable space to the position taken by the
United States toward China, All. thes:
writers seem to be surprised, indignant
and concerned that American diplomacy
should “presume” to take a positien con-
trary to that assumed by the other pow-
ers. The Berliner Tageblatt has a long
editorial filled with sneering expressions
after this fashion:
- “The government of the United States
jappestrs to feel itself honored by. the int
perial Chinese edict presented by Wu
Ting Fang. The government of — the
“United States is so thoroughly convinced
| of the value of its friendly policy toward
China that it reposes faith in the govern-
ment in advance. No child would be so
credulous,”
“Phe future will shdw." says the
Manich Aligemeine Zeitung, “that the
telegram alleged to have been sent hy
Minister Conger was one of the most au-
_dacious forgeries of all time.”
RUSSIA IS FOR WAR.
Czar's Remedy for Dealing with the
Chinese and Boxers,
Moscow, July 25.—Diplomatie circles
in St. Petersburg attach no importance
to the news that the Chinese government
desires to secure the mediation of the
United States with the other powers and
that President MeKinley has signified
his willingness, under prudent restric-
tions, to offer such mediation. The Rus-
sium government takes the ground that
no legal government exists in China and
‘that a war for the suppression of re-
bellion is the only choice of the powers
concerned.
Ruse to Gain Time.
London, . July 25.—The Daily Tele-
graph has this dispatch from its special
Sepa at Shanghai, dated July
(28: “Taotai Sheng has sent today to the
consular body an alleged telegram froin
Yuan Shi_Kai saying:
. “"Gen. Yung Lu at Pekin found a mes-
senger coming from the British legation
en the 18th. Yung Lu sent him back to
the legation to assure the ministers of his
friendship and his intention to provide
them with supplies. A messenger Was
then sent to the legation from the tsunz
li yamen to concert measures for an cs-
cort for the ministers to Tien Tsin.”
_ “There ix a strong suspicion that all
‘these telegrams are only intended to gain
‘time while the Chinese are preparing for
another coup.”
Dispatches Held Back.
_ London, July 25.—Sir Claude MacDon-
ald’s message, dated July 4, appealing
for relief, is regarded ia London as only
a prelude to the absolute confirmation of
the massacre. This is the opinion also
of the Japanese minister here. The
“newspapers suggest that the British mm-
| ister’s dispatch was held back and_re-
leased about the same time as Mr. Con
ger's undated message.
_ Lesson Learned in South Africa.
The Daily Mail's Tien, Tsin correspond-
cnt writes that the admirals have de-
cided that it would be useless to move
toward Pekid without at least 65,000
en.
| In an editorial referring to this state-
ment the Daily Mail comments upon_the
American preposal to advance with 7000
men. It says:
“We have learned in Africa how dan-
serous it is to despise our enemies and
in the interest of civilization we do not
wish to see such a lesson read to the
United States by the ‘heathen Chinee.’ ”
French Minister Lives.
_ Paris, July 25, 12:30 a. m.—M. De!-
casse, minister of foreign affairs, has
received a Sn from the French
consul at Shanghai dated July 23, which
“says:
“Li Hung Chang has just assured me
that M. Pinchon, French minister te
China, is living’ and he has agreed to
transmit to him a message from me re-
| questing a reply within five days.”
AROUND THE: WORLD.
ON THEIR WHEELS.
Tivo Couples Exped to Maker the
Trip Without Money in
Thirty Months.
New York, July 24.—Surrounded by a
sweltering crowd in city hall park today,
Mr. and Mrs. Alexander E. Spiro of
New York and Claude A. Bigelow and
his bride of Flushing, L. L, started at 10
o'clock on their wheels ror a trip around
the world, ‘The Bigelows rode a tandem.
‘they estimate it will take thirty months
to accomplish the journey. ‘Fhe expedi-
tion is the outeome of a supposed $5000
wager. All four riders, Bigelow sated,
are members of the Country Road club.
No offic al of that club appeared to start
the tourists. Bigelow is a printer by
trade, Spiro is a medica! student. The
br.de said they had no money and would
earn their hving en roure by newspaper
work and photography. The quarte‘te
expect. to arrive in Philadelphia at 8
o'cock tonight and will make Chicago in
about two weeks.
The physique of the adventurers did
not indicate that they would win ihe
swagtr.. | ee Ee ee
YELLOW FEVER
I oR Ni ;
IN FIRST INFANTRY.
Dread Disease Attacks the Ameri-
, ean Troops at Pinar
del Rio.
Washington, D. C., July 24.—A dis-
patch has been received at the war de-
partment from Havana which says that
Gen. Lee has obtained information that
jeaves no doubt about the existence of
yellow fever in the Virst © infantry at
Pinar del Rio and that nine deaths there
last month reported as pernicious malaria
ave now believed to have been yellow
fever. Dr. Reed and a specialist sent to
Pinar del Rio by Gen. Lee have reported
that yellow fever exists among — the
troops. The dispatch aixo says that there
ave five suspected cases of yellow fever
ameng the soldiers of the First infantry
stationed at Guanajay.
a r
CAPTURE .OF PANAMA.
Revolutionary Forces in Colombia
Triumph Over the Gov-
ernment.
New York, July 24.—A cable dispatch
received by Dr. F, Lopez, cousul-general
of Ecuador, from President Eloy Alfaro,
seems to confirm the capture of Panama
City by the Colombian rebels. The dis-
patch is from Guayaquil and reads:
“Liberal triumph in Panama.”
For President Alfaro to have receives
this dispateh, Dr. Lopez said, it must
have been sent by the minister of
Benador at Panama. This leads him to
believe the reported capture.
The Panama Railroaa company in this
city received a cable dispatch from_ its
agent in Panama to the effect that a bat-
tle had been fought at Corozai, which is
three and a half miles from Panama.
A dispatch to the Herald, from Pan-
ama, dated Monday, says: The revolu-
tionary forces, about 1500 strong, ar-
rived on Friday evening at Corozal, the
first station on the railroad line from
Panama and only a short distance from
that city.
The government forces advanced at
daybreak on Saturday. Sharp firing tock
place fer several hours. The government
forces then retired to new positions.
‘All of the wounded were picked up in
the meantime and were brought to
Panama.
The ambulance corps of the British
warship Leander came ashore and went
to Corozal and rendered valnable assist-
ance. The corps returned to the ship the
same evening. All business in Danama
has been suspended since Friday eveninz.
Hostilities were renewed at 3. o'clock
Sunday afternoon, There was sharp. ar-
tillery firing by both sides. Gen. Bolisario
Lozada, who has been commanding the
government troops, and his chief of staff.
Col. Miguel Guerrero, have taken refuge
on the warship Leander.
Gen. Carlos Albane, acting governor of
Panama, is now personally directing for
the government all military operations in
the field. Gen, Emilio Herrera is leading
the revolutionary* troops.
HAD A TERRIBLE TRIP.
Five in the Klondike Country.
Tacoma, Wash., July 24.—Late advices
from Dawson give the details of another
tragedy, four out of a party of five losing
their lives as a result of the terrible trip
taken to the head waters of the Stewart
vriver. ‘fhe dead are:
Antoine Perry, Charles Sandstrem of
| Boston; Oscar Van Buren, who started
for the Klondike with Sandstrom from
| Boston, and Louis Bouchard, who joined
the party in Atlin. In addition to these
was George Saxholm of Oakland, Cal.,
who is the sole surviver. He was picked
up below the mouth of the Stewart river
floating down the Yukon toward Dawson.
When discovered he was nearly dead.
having, be explained, after gaining his
senses, been. as near as he knew, four
days withont anything to eat. The’ party
left Atlin in the fall of 1898 and in No-
vember separated, Sandstrom and Van
Buren never thereafter being heard from.
Perry and Bouchard were drowned in
| the rapids by the capsizing of their craft.
WINDOWS IN A BOAT.
| Capt. Corrigan'’s Plan for Searching
for Hie Dauchters’ Rodics.
Cleveland, O., July 24.—Capt, James
Corrigan, millionaire owner of the yacht
Idler, which was wrecked twenty miles
from here July 7, has equipped a remark-
able boat with which to search the bot-
tom of the lake for the bomes of his
two daughters, Ida and Jane, who were
drowned when the yacht went down,
Capt, Corrigan Has had a seow built
with circular plates of glass in the bot-
tom. These windows have been made
watertight, so that as the boat is towed
through the water it is possible to see
the bottom of the lake for a considerable
distance in all directions.
That the search might reach to greater
depth the craft has been equipped with
electric lighting apparatus so that lights
can be used to illuminate the bottom of
the lake.
Can Obliterate Itself.
The sea cucumber, one of the curious
jelly bodies that inhabit the ocean, can
practically efface itself when in danger
by squeezing itself into a crack so nar-
row as not to be visible te the naked
eye —New York Post.
—A steamer from Sitka reports that
Muir glacier has been transformed from
a grand and awe-inspiring mountain of
ice to a mass of ruins. Glacier bay was
packed with floating icebergs. So much
ice has never been seen in that section
since steamers have been running north.
The belief is that Muir glacier has been
reduced to a mass of broken ice by an
earthquake or upheaval.
—Brig.-Gen. Alejandro Rodriguez, who
has been elected mayor of Havana, was
one of the first to join the insurgent
forces after the landing of Gen. Gomez
in Cuba. He is the husband of Senora
Lola Rodriguez, who became famous
through the erg and indignities
heaped upon by Gen. Weyler.
KEMPEF REFUSED 10 JOIN
Admiral Saye: 6 Had No Right
to Make War.
ATTACK ON FORTS.
Comsmater Wie shane diGheatn
Report of the Action—Shell
Strikes the Monocacy.
—— +
Washington, D. Ci, July 23.--The navy
department today made public the mail
veports of Rear-Admiral Kempff explain-
ing his reasons for refusing to join with
the ships of the other powers in the at-
tack, which includes many details not
heretofore published. Admiral Kempft
also encloses the report of Commander
Wise of the Monocacy. giving a graphic
account of the action. Rear-Admiral
Kempff’s explanation for refusing to par-
ticipate in the attack on the fortifications
of x power with which we were at peace
= warmly commended by Secretary
“ong.
"The reports are as follows:
United States Flagship Newark, Taka,
China, June 17, 1900.—Sir: I would state
what follows in regard to the happenings
previous to the resolve yesterday by other
)scnior foreign naval officers here to get
possession of the Taku forts.
On ‘Thursday, June 14, Read-Admiral
Bruce called and asked what I thought of
the matter, and I informed him that 1 was
not authorized to initiate any act of wie
with a country with whom my country was
at peace; that my limit was te protect
American interests.
On the 15th at a consultation of the other
foreign naval officers it, wax agreed that
the railroad station at ‘Tong Ku should be
taken (the railway Is under Chinese govern-
ment control), and in case any Chinese gov-
/trnnent force acted against the force of
any foreign nation all should be involved
and act unitedly. Under my Instructions 1
could not jein in taking possession ef Chin-
pese government property, and did not care
to become a party to such an agreemen
withont special authority.
Kempff Declined to Join.
Yesterday, June 16, the same foreign
naval officers signed a compact that it was
“necessary to tike temporary possession of
the ‘Takn forts; and notice was served on
the viceroy at Tien Tsin and on the com-
mandant of the forts, Consuls at Tien ‘Tsin
were informed of what was contemplated,
1 did not join in the attack on the forts.
Capt. Wise of the Monocacy had orders té
protect American interests, based upon de-
| partment’s orders, but in case of attack by
a Chinese government force, he was to cou-
sider it as a declaration of war and act
accordingly. Very respectfully.
LOUIS KEMPFP.
Rear-Admiral U. 8. N.
To the Secretary of the Navy, Washing
ton, D.C.
ae
United States Flagship Newark, ‘Teku,
China, June 18, 1900.—Sir: I have the
‘honor to report as follows:
The commanding officer of the gunboats
in the river met on the afternoon of June
16 and agreed for the senior officer of the
gunboats to direct the movement. ‘This of-
ficer happened to he a Russlan. The po
sitions for the various gunboats were the
assigned, taking position in the xeeond
"reach" of the river above the north for!.
The gunboats participating were the Ko-
-reetz, Guilak, Bobr, Russian: litis, Ger-
man: Lion, French; Algerine, Engiish. The
English torpedo-boat destroyers Fame snd
Whiting Joined in the latter part, after
securing the captured torpedo boats near
Tong Ku. The Japanese gnnboat claimed
that her engines were disabled, so she re-
mained moored near Tong Ku, and was 2s-
“Signed charge of the railroad station at
that place. The United States ship Monoe-
acy, being under orders, remained meored
at Tong Kn and took no part in the action
Many foreigners were afforded shelter and
protection during the night. A copy of the
“report of the commanding officer of the
Monoeacy is herewith enclosed.
Forts Opened Fire.
The vessels, except the Iitis, took their
assigned positions early in the evening of
the Wth inst. and at about 12:55 a. m..
one hour before the expiration of the time
limit, all the fort guns which could be
traimed on the ships. fired simultaneously.
many shots striking the Koreetz. ‘The vee
sels returned the fire with a rapid fire from
their guns, which, with the exception of
the guns of 6-inch caliber, weve of small
rapid-fire type.
The guns on the north fort were ebiefly
4.7-inch, while the south fort has a num-
ber of guns from 6 to 8 inches in caliber.
The Algerine, having aboard a Janding
party of some | 360 men, immediately put
them ashore. Ayportion of them advanced
through Taku to the navy-yard, and took
“by surprise four new modern torpedo-boats,
carrying two tubs and six 2-pounders each,
/and, convoyed by the Fame and Whiting,
/took them to Tong Ku. ‘The ether landing
parties and the remainder of the English,
aggregating some 650 men, awaited an op:
portone time for the assault. The firing
continued with more or less spirit untli
daylight, when it became very rapid ana
active, and, it ix reported, very disastrous
to the Chinese. About 4:30 a shell entered
the magazine of the Guilak, blowing it up,
causing her to take water and burning for:
ty-seven men more or less severely. She
got over an awning (as a collision mat) and
after a few hours’ work was floating at
her normal height,
Charge by a Landing Force.
At about 5 a, m. the gunboats haying
silenced the northwest fort, a landing force
charged and occupied it. A few easualties
occurred, notably, the captain of the Jan-
anese landing party and one English sailor
killed and several wounded, The Chinese
then abandoned the north fort, which is
joined to the northwest fort by i protected
passage. After about Uwo hours more the
south forts were taken. After the explosion
of the magazine, most of the occupants fled,
but were not pursued. Some thirty or forty
were found hiding in various parts of the
fort. The various nations participating
hoixted their flags on the various flagstaffs.
The forts being of thick mud and’ grass
adobe, were but little damaged by the gun-
fire, although they received a host of pro-
jectiles. The ‘unk and gunshields as a rule
were not damaged. Two or three of the
modern guns were disabled.
The dead Chinese were not counted, but
it is estimated by eye-witnesses that some
200 dead were left in the fort.
| “The loss on the side of the allied forces
was, as nearly 8 possible, as follows:
Algerine—One officer very badly injured;
eight men wounded.
Iltis—Captain very badly injured; three
or four men killed: six or elght wounded.
Koreez—Two_ officers “badly wounded;
eight men dead: twelve wounded.
Gvilak—One officer badly wounded; eight
men killed; ten wounded: — forty-seven
burned by explosion of “powder room.”
Lion—One man killed; one badly wounded.
‘The above ix an account gleaned from
conversations with officers engaged, but
may contain minor inaccuracies.
During the engagement guns were turned
on the Monoeacy, which was out of the line
of fire. She was struck (no casualties) and
was forced to withdraw up the river. Very
respectfully, LOUIS KEMPFP,
Rear-Admiral U. 8. 'N.
‘The Secretary of the Navy, Washington,
p. €.
Fire at the Monucacy.
Following is the- report of the action
medao he Cammander Wiee of tha Uannn,
Following is the- report of the action
made by Commander Wise of the Monoc-
acy to Rear-Admiral Kempft:
U. S. Steamship Monocacy, Tong Ku,
China, June 17, 1900.—Sir: I have the hon-
or to report upon the occurrences stuce_yes-
terday noon. I attended a seocting of of-
ficers at 6 p. m. on board the Borbora. [|
was shown the protocol and ultimatum as
to the Taku forts. The signatures to the
documents were autographic, and as yours
was not appended, I informed the senior
officer that he would have to leave the
Monocacy out of the plans and places for
vessels of the attacking forces.
The first gun was fired at 12:45 and with
the simultaneous discharge that followea,
two of the shots passed aver the Monocacy.
although she was out of the line of fire
between the forts and vessels attacking.
The Iitis did not leave her berth, which
was a short distance from mine until 10:30,
and the Japanese did uot leave hers during
the bombardment.
The fire was well snsteined en both sides
and although shells continved at intervals
to pass near me or burst short or beyond,
I attributed it to a wild firing by the forts.
| About 2:30 I was ares on top of the
pllothouse yy the Sat. had mounted
there when I heard a shell approaching and
immediately a crash. The second cutter
paigins at her davits, a few feet below and
behind me, had been struck by a shell. It
entered her stern, tore out the bottom and
Seoeing diagonally across the sbip, cut the
after fall of the steam launch, smashing
the port forecastie, the ladder and passea
through the ship's side, in which it left a
clear cut, 2 feet by 10 inches. ‘There were
many men on the forward main deck and
it must have goue as close to some of them
as it did to me. It fortunately missed the
launch’s davit, as that would have caused
it to explode.
A Tremendous Explosion.
It was difficult to make out how the allies
were faring, but they were evidently closing
in, as after 3 a. m. discharges from guts
like Gatlings or Maxims were heard. At 4
o'clock there was a tremendous explosion
and a mass of flame, which f attributed to
a magazine In-one of the forts.
Towards 4 o'clock the bursting of shells
in my near vicinity increased to such an
extent that it occurred to me that the
forts might be directing some of their fire
on the railroad station, as in this flat cour-
try it was a prominent mark and a number
of Japanese and Russian troops were en-
camped around it. In such case the
Monocacy would be in considerable danger
from x fire whieh I had hitherto considered
bad shooting. Acting upon the thought I
at once cast. off everything. I steamed
away from the bank and went two miles
tp the river, anchoring in the first bend.
This move was made at 4:50 a. m., and at
5:30 the fire slackened and a Japanese flag
floating over one of the forts, I returned
to my berth.
Women and Children Taken Aboard.
I was able to render the following assist-
ance:
First, a party of thirty-seven ladies and
children, refugees from the mission at Ta-
ku, who had fled hurriedly on notification
of the bombardment. They came aboard
last night at 9 p. m. and are still with me;
also came two officers of H. M. 8. Barfleur,
who had fi down from Tien Tsin too
late to get to any English ship. As T was
coming down the river at 6 a, m, an English
torpedo boat towing a Chinese boat prize-~
I had no small boat to make a landing—so 1
seut the launch to run her line ashore, for
which thanks have been returntd.
1 have taken on board and had surgical
attendance for the following: A Japanese
soldier with a gunshot wound, a Chinese
coolie found close to the ship with an arm
torn off by fragment of shell, a Russian
soldier with wound in the hand.
This place is deserted by everyone: no
trains, no telegraphic communication on
shore, but I had a ‘phone from Mr. Petten-
gill, who reports afi quiet ‘since first. dis-
turbance.
I know nothing of the fight except that
the forts were taken, I feel a natural re
zret, shared no doubt by the officers, that
duty and orders prevented the old Monocacy
fromm giving her ancient smooth-bores a last
chance. Very respectfully, F. M. WISE.
Commander U. 8S. N.
TAQ yy
AIR WAS FILLED
1p ITV 4 J
WITH FLYING GRAIN.
dg tiene cepa
Tornado Does Great Damage to
Grain and Buildings Near
Joliet, Il.
Joliet, I, July 25.—Word reached
here today ef a tornado which last night
struck the village of Beecher, in this
county, doing great damage to buildings
and crops. The storm developed sudden-
ly and in a moment the air was filled
with flying bundles of oats. Acres of
corn, were laid low and a cornerib be-
longing to William Mathias was picked
up and carried half a mile,
1h \ ay
FIERCE FOREST FIRES.
Deliberately Started by Indians
Who Are Slaughtering
the Game.
St. Panl. Minn., July 25.—A Dispatch
special from Kalispa, Mont., says one of
the worst forest fires ever known in
northwestern Montana is now raging in
the Swan Lake country, on the western
part of the Lewis and Clark forest re-
serve. Gus Mosler, superintendent of
the reserve, reports that the Indians de-
liberately set fire to the timber
and are — slaughtering the — game.
He will proceed against’ the — per-
petrators, — Within “the — space — of
thirty miles up and down the river he
says there are over thirty fires now burn-
ing fiercely. He says that many millions
of acres are burning and that it is the
finest white pine and cedar on the re-
serve, and that it is almost impossible to
estimate the damage. As fast as one
fire is extinguished another is set and his
rangers are almost worn out. The
weather is very hot and dry and the fires
spread rapidly.
To MOD aha
ON THE BOWERY.
Two Marines Enjoying a Carousal
Are Assaulted by an
Italian.
New York, July 25.—Private Pierce of
Co. C, Fifth battalion, United States ma-
rines, was shot through the heart in the
lower Italian quarter of Brooklyn, at
2:30 o'clock this morning. His com-
panion, John Costigan of the same com-
pany, is at the Long Island College hos-
pital, suffering irom alcoholism and a
Mallet wound in the elhow.
The murder was done by Luigi Lougu-
buco, an Italian, who is under arrest.
The two marines had been carousing
along the Bowery, where they picked up
the Italian and all three crossed cn a
ferry to Brooklyn. The? men had a
quarrel which ‘ended gin Longubuce’s
drawing a revolver and shooting the ma-
rines.
VINDICATED AFTER DEATH.
Finding of Crowbar Shows that a
/ Man Was Unjustly Convicted.
Lancaster, Pa., July 25.—The_ finding
of a crowbar at Highville vindicates 2
man, who, fifty years ago, was convicted
of a_crime he never committed. Chris-
tian Zimmers, who sept a hotel at High-
ville, employed Jacob Ritter to dig a well
on his premises. Zimmers missed his
crowbar several days later, Ritter was
arrested, and his conviction speedily fol-
lowed. He was senteneed to a year's
imprisonment. The crowbar in question
has just been found in the well. Ritter
protested to the day of his death his
innocence of the theft.
WIDOW DIES OF LOCKJAW.
Splinter Enters Her Leg and Death
Quickly Results.
Fall Riyer, Mass., July 25.—Mrs. Mary
Borden, 50 years oid, a widow, of West-
port, died last night of lockjaw. Eight
days ago splinters from a garden rake
penetrated her leg. The injury caused no
concern at the time, but when the pain
increased a surgeon opened the wound
and ick out a sliver of wood an inen
long. Lockjaw rapidly developed, with
fatal results.
ENDORSED BY GOMPERS.
St. Louis Strike Supported by Amer-
ican Federation.
St. Louis, Mo. July 25.—President
Gompers of the American Federation of
Labor, who has been here investigating
the strike of the employes of the St.
Louis Transit Soneeny lines, has left for
Chicago. W. D. Mahon, president of the
Amalgamated Association of Street Rail-
way Employes of America, declared that
Gompers endorsed the strike and said the
movement would have the support of the
American Federation of Labor.
STUMPS BY WIND POWER.
Railroad Speed at Which a Six-acre
3 Lot was Cleared.,
Utilizing the wind as a stump-puller is
an Oregon invention. It was the idea of
the farmer at the state penitentiary,
whose task was to clear six acres, and
with the aid of the aind he cieared the
whole tract in six weeks, although the
timber was a dense growth, the first
ment from one to four feet in diam-
eter. - The winds in the quarter blew
strong from the south at this season.
The farmer put his men to work on the
north side of the fir grove. They cut
a log and dragged it close to the north
side of the bases of the fir trees that were
to be felled. The preparations were
made during the first-day, and then the
men went home and anes while the wind
did the rest. During the night a strong
south wind blew the trees down, and
they, in falling across the logs, pulled
up the taproots. The next day the men
sawed up the fallen trees, burned the
brush, and laid their log for another lor
of trees. They proceeded in this way
until the whole grove had disappeared.—
Farmers’ Advocate.
MARKET REPORTS.
Milwaukee, July 25, 1900,
GG AND DALRY PRODUCTS
ee eee SS S BOUL SS.
MILWAUKEE—Eggs—Market firmer at
lie for new, cases included: 101%e for new,
cases returned; 10%¢ for old, cases includ:
ed; dirties and'seconds, 7@8e. ‘The receipts
were 420 cases.
Butter—Market firm. The receipts were
20,060 Ibs today against 10,965' yesterday.
‘There is a) good demand for choice
creamery. Dairy scarce and wanted
here. there being practically none in- the
market. Faney prints, 1914@20¢; fancy orex
tra creamery, per ID, 19c; firsts, 7c; sec.
onds, 1oe; extra dairy, ez lines, 12G L4e;
packing stock, 11@12c: whey butter, Ye: imi.
lation creamery, 15@lGe: grease. artic.
Cheese—Firm. ' The receipts today were
10,750 ths against 13,875 yesterday: full
cream fats, new, colored, Wale: | New
York, full ‘cream: flats, new colored, ow
40'e: Yourlg Americas, new, 10@lic: brick,
#4al0c; Mmburger, per Ih, $'4a@10e: import
ed Swiss, 24¢; Block Swiss, domestic, 1269
J2Me: No. I imitation leaf, 14%@15¢; Sapss-
go. 19@20c: farmers’, 10@11¢.
NEW YORK — Butter — Receipts, ss29
pkgs; market weak: creamery, 17@20ce; cur
rent packed factory, M@taje. Cheese
Receipts, 2774 pkus:’ steady: large white,
wade; small do, 9c; large colored. 1@
Myer small do. HK@dKe. Exggs—Receipts,
TsoW pkgs; firm: Western at mark, 11@1:!\4c
for average lots; Western, loss off, 151ge.
Sugar—Raw strong: fair refining. 4c; cen
trifugal, 96 test, 4%e; molasses sugar, 4c.
Coffee—Unsettled; No. 7 Rio. Me, nominal.
CHICAGO—Butter —_ Firm; creameries,
Is@IM%~e: dairies, 14@1ie.' Eges—Firm:
fresh, Iie. Dressed Poultry—Quiet; tur!
keys.’ G@te: chickens, SK@9e to Matic.
SHEBOYGAN—On ‘the board seventeen
factories offered 1692 boxes cheese. Sales
were: 205 daisies at 10%c; 176 at 10%; G19
Young Americas at ee: 431 at 9%e; 136
longhorns at 10%e; 15 twins at 1c.
PLYMOUTH—Twenty-four factories _of-
fered 1600 boxes cheese. Sales. 1352 daisies
at 1ge; 162 twins at 9%e; 200 at Dez 142
at 10c: 175 Young Americas at 9%e; 178 at
10G- 85 at ae: 1S longhorns at 1WxXe.
SEYMOUR—Sales of cheese were: 391
flats at 9Ke: 108 twin daisies at 9%e; $0 at
We: 111 daisies at 4c,
MILWAUKEE LIVESTOCK MARKET.
HOGS—Reeeints, 5 cars; market Se low-
er: light, 5.10@5.35; mixed and medium
weights. 5.10@5.25: common to choice heavy,
3.40K05,30; Conrse heavy stags, 4.25@¢4.50.
CATTLE--Receipts, 3 cars; steady; butch-
er steers, medium to good, 1050 to 1300 Ths.
4.2505.00; fair to medium, 950 to 1050, 3.7546
4.25; heifers, good to cholee, 3.25@4.00:
cows. fair to good, 2.75@3.25; canners, 2.00
@2.0; bulls, common, 2.50@3.00; choice, 3.25
@8.75; feeders, 800 to 950 Ibs, 3.50@3.75;
stockers, 500 to 750 Ths, 3.00@3.50: veal
calves, 5,00@5.75; milkers and springers,
common to choice, 20,00@45.00.
SHEEP—Receipts, 1 car: market ‘steady,
2753.75; bucks, 2.00@3.00: spring lambs,
4005.25.
Chicago receipts: Hogs, 24,000; cattle,
15,000; Sheep, 10,000.
MARKETS RY TELEGRAPH.
| MILWAUKEE--Flour—Steady. Wheat —
“Weaker: No. 2 spring, on track, 73¢; Ne. 1
Northern, on track, 7c. Corn—Steady; No.
Hon track, 40c. Oats—Steady; No. 2 white.
on track, 264e; No. 3 white, on track, 26@
seyje. Rarley Steady: No. 2 om track, 47¢:
sample on track, 42a47¢. Rye— Dull; No. 1
ou track, 36c, | Provisions Higher; pork,
1LS0: lard, 6.7244.
— Plour is ‘steady at 4.20@4.40 for patents:
bakers’, #,30¢3.40, and 3.10@3.25 for rye.
—Millstuifs are steady and quoted at 14.00
for bran, 14.50@14.75 for standard mid
lings, and 15.50@16.00 for siflwaukee flour
midalings.
| CHICAGO—Close — Wheat — July, T4460
Tike; August, 74%c; September, T5ig@
T5%e. Corn—duly, 38e: August, 3TKe; Sep
tember, 37%ec. Oats—July, 22%e; August,
2%H%e: September, 2e; No. 2 white, Septem
ber, 2c. Pork—Julx, 11.6) September,
11.77%. Lard—July, 6.70: September, 6.75:
October, 774: November, 6.72%: Decem
her, 6.85; January, 6.6715. Ribs—Juty.
G.8714; | September, 6.90; October, 6.8500
GST: January, 6.02%.’ Flax—Cash, 1,50;
Angust, L47: September, 1.28: October, 131
iyi” Rve-duly, ole: September, 5254%«
hie. Barley--38@i6e. “Timothy—Sepiember,
B4b; October, 3.25. Clover—October, 9.25.
ST. LOUIS—Close — Wheat — No. 2 red
cash’ elevator, T2@72Ke: track, TATE:
July, 72K: Abgust, Tike: September, THK:
December, T%c: No. 2 hard, Toiavie.
Corn—No, 2 cash, BSc: track, 3SHa@IMC:
duly, 87iger September, B6%c. "Oats—No. 2
fash, 23ic: track, 24@24Ke: July, 23%ee:
September, 22%er No, 2 white, 2TKe. Rye
He, Fins=1.45. Lead—3.05. Spelter
10.
LIVERPOOL—Wheat—Quiet, %d_ ta 1d
lower: September, 6s: December, std. Com
—Qviet, 14d lower: September, Bs10%d:
November, 3810%a.
KANSAS | CITY — Close—Wheat--Septen:
her, GGKe: cash No. 2 hard, 66@8Te; No. 3
GRaG4 Ke; No. 2 red, TO@T2c: No. 3, G6@T0
| Corn September, d5\%e: December, 32%c:
cash No. 2 mixed, so4@25%e; No. 2 white.
isUGasiGe: No. 3 aTHe._ Oats —No. 2 white.
Deaze%e. “Thye—No. 2, se.
DULUTH — Clove — Wheat -—Cash No. 1
hard, 79%c: No. 1 Northern, 77Ke: No. 2
Northern, Ta%e: No. 3, T2kKe: No 1 hard to
arrive, 79%e: No. 1 Northern do, 77i4e:
July," THe: September, Te: December.
Tie.
NEW. YORK—Close—Wheat—July, SI%Ke:
September, Se: December, 81%. | Corn
July, 48%: September, 43%c¢; December.
40%Ke.
KANSAS CITY—Cattle—Reeeipts, 9900;
market steady: native steers, 4.9525.50;
‘Texas stecrs, 2.455.385; cows and heivers,
1.20@4.85; stockers and’ feeders. ae:
Hozs—Reeeipts, 10,000: market he low
er: bulk of sales, 5.15%5.22%: heavy. 5.200
5.20; mixed, 5.105.22%: light, 4.50705.22%:
pigs, 4.35013.20. Sheep—Receipts, £000:
steady; lambs, 3.50@6.00; muttons, 3.250
4.00.
ST. LOUIS—Cattle—Recefpts, 2700; strong
to steady: native steers, 4.85@5.75; stockers
and feeders, 355@4.80: cows and heifers.
2'00@5.00; ‘Bexas and indian steers, 3 65@
4:80. Hogs Receipts. 5000: Se lower: pigs
and lights, 3205.30; packers, 5.15 75.70;
hutehers, | 5.30@5.40. — Sheep — Receip s,
2500: steady; muttons, 4.00@4.25; lambs,
2.25G5.50. f
AGH OMAHA —Cattle—Receipts, 3800:
strong; native steers, 4.40@5.50;, Western
steers, 4.00@4.€0; Texas steers, 3.60@4.25:
cows ‘and helfers. 3.4064.40; sockers and
feeders, 3.5004.50. Hogs —Rece! %
Tie to We lower: heavy, Sakis: mixed.
ROMS: Heht, 4.70705.05:_ pigs, 4.500
Reo: buik of sales. 5.024@5.07. Sheep—Ke
ceipts, 1400: stronger; muttons, 3.00@3.75;
lambe 4.°%05.25.
—Dr. John Charles Ryle, bishop ©
Liverpool. who died recently, was twice
select preacher at Oxferd and once ar
Cambridge. His father was a_ banker,
and the late bishop for a short time took
a eS in the business. Then financial
difficulties came in his way, and, leaving
commerce, he exchanged his business ca-
reer for that of a clergyman.
—Paderewski, at home, is a slave to
the piano. His work is 28 arduous there
as in public places. After his early de-
jeuner Paderewski practices until bis
second breakfast, at 12 o'clock, or de-
votes a part of the three or four hours to
musical composition.
—Steam thawers are expediting work
in the mines of the sree year.
GOLD AND SILVER.
THEIR LEGAL AND COMMERCIAL RATIOS STUDIED.
Gold Goes Where It Finds Its Value and That Value Is What the Laws of Great Nations Give It-We Must Give It the Same Value.
It has been suggested that if the legal ratio of silver to gold should be so changed as to approximate the commercial ratio, the objection to the free and unlimited coinage of silver would disappear. This is not true. It is a well-known historical fact that a very small variation of the commercial ratio from the coinage ratio is sufficient to expel one of the metals from the country and disturb all business calculations and relations.
When the first United States coinage act was passed, by careful calculation and inquiry it was assumed that the true commercial ratio was 15 to 1, and that was made the legal ratio. The mints were opened to the coinage of both metals on that basis. In a short time it became apparent that either an error had been made or the market ratio had changed. The two metals would not circulate together. Our gold coins were slightly more valuable as bullion than as money and were melted down or exported.
This situation was maintained until the act of 1834 changed the ratio to 16 to 1, and that act, which was designed to correct it, actually reversed it. It brought back gold, but drove out silver. The true commercial ratio was somewhere between 15 to 1 and 16 to 1. Fifteen to 1 drove out gold, and 16 to 1 drove out silver. After the act of 1834 went into effect silver dollars would not circulate in the United States unless they were light weight. From 1835 down to the opening of the year 1862, when paper became the currency of the United States, although the mints were opened to the unrestricted coinage of silver, the total number of silver dollars coined was $2,700,533.
In 1829, when the change in ratio was under consideration, Albert Gallatin, who had been Secretary of the Treasury under Jefferson, was asked his opinion concerning the failure of gold to circulate, and in a letter dated Dec. 31 wrote:
The present rate was the result of information, clearly incorrect, respecting the then relative value of gold and silver in Europe, which was represented as being at the rate of less than 15 to 1, when it was in fact 15.5 to 15.6 to 1. It would be better at all events to discontinue altogether the coining of gold than to continue the present system.
The Hon. S. D. Ingham, who was at that time Secretary of the Treasury under President Andrew Jackson, was asked his opinion, and advised the committee that any attempt to make the metals circulate together under free coinage would be fruitless. He wrote
The fluctuations in the value of gold and silver cannot be controlled; and even the attempt to conform the mint to the market values must produce a change in the latter. But if, after adjusting the ratio at the mint by raising the value of the gold coins, it should happen that silver should rise in the market above the mint value, the silver coins—exchange with foreign countries being unfavorable—would be withdrawn from circulation, and the only remedy within the power of the Government would be to reduce their weight, as it is now proposed in respect to the gold coins.
The committee of the House of Representatives having the matter under investigation reported on Feb. 22, 1831:
That there are inherent and incurable defects in the system which regulates the standard of value in both gold and silver; its instability as a measure of contracts and mutability as the practical currency of a particular nation are serious imperfections, whilst the impossibility of maintaining both metals in concurrent, simultaneous, or promiscuous circulation appears to be clearly ascertained; that the standard being fixed in one metal is the nearest approach to invariability, and precludes the necessity of further legislative interference.
The change in rates continued, however, to be agitated, and was advocated with great energy by Thomas H. Benton. His argument is summed up as follows in Benton's Thirty Years' View, vol. 1, page 443:
Mr. Benton said this was not the time to discuss the relative value of gold and silver, nor to urge the particular proportion which ought to be established between them. That would be proper work of a committee. At present it might be sufficient, and not irrelevant, to say that this question was one of commerce, that it was purely and simply a mercantile problem, as much so as is acquisition of any ordinary merchandise from foreign countries could be. Gold goes where it finds its value, and that value is what the laws of great nations give it. In Mexico and South America, the countries which produce gold, and from which the United States must derive their chief supply, the value of gold is 16 to 1; in the West Indies, generally, it is the same. It is not to be supposed that gold will come from those countries to the United States if the importer is to lose one dollar in every sixteen that he brings, or that our own gold will remain with us when the exporter can give one dollar in every fifteen that he carries out. Such results would be contrary to the rules of trade, and therefore we must place the same value upon gold that other nations do if we wish to gain any part of their trade or to retain any part of our own.
Benton's statements that gold would not come to this country if the importer must lose one dollar in every sixteen, or stay if an exporter could make one dollar in sixteen, would have been equally true if he said on one dollar in thirty-two. Indeed, the gain by exporting silver after the act of 1834 was passed was not more than one dollar in thirty-two. The ratio in the United States was 16 to 1 and in France 15½ to 1, and that difference was sufficient to take our silver to France.
A MILLION A DAY.
What We Pay for Tropical Products Our Islands Can Produce. The people of the United States are paying a million dollars a day for tropical products used in the manufacture of food and drink. Most of this can be readily produced in the islands which have come into closer relationship with the United States through the events of the past two years. In the ten months ending with April our imports of tropical products were over $300,000,000 in value, thus averaging fully a million dollars a day.
India rubber, fibers, raw silk, cotton, gums, cabinet woods, indigo, ivory, dye woods, and certain lines of chemicals make up the share of this vast sum. Of India rubber alone the imports of the ten months amounted to more than $27,000,000; of fibers, to $20,000,000; of unmanufactured silk. $40,000,000; of cotton, over $7,000,000; of gums, more than $5,000,000, while cabinet woods, dye woods, indigo and ivory also aggregated several millions.
Of the constantly increasing proportion of imports of food-stuffs, sugar is first. The Dutch East Indies, which lie just alongside of the Philippines, are now our largest single source of supply for sugar. For the ten months the importations of sugar were more than $80,000,000; those of coffee nearly $50,000,000; tea, nearly $10,000,000; tobacco, $16,000,000; tropical fruits and nuts, $15,000,000; cacao and chocolate, $5,000,000, and such other articles as spices, rice, olive oil, etc. add several millions to the total.
The following table shows the imports of tropical products into the United States during the ten months ending with April, 1900:
Total ..... $300,035,901
Benefits Tobacco Growers. In the Connecticut Valley the Department of Agriculture has classified all the tobacco lands, studying the influence of the soil on the character of the tobacco. In addition to this the cause of the fermentation of the cigar leaf tobacco has been worked out, and an improved method of fermenting the Connecticut tobacco has been introduced, which it is believed will revolutionize the practice in that State. This method gives a much more uniform product, and thus improves the value of the leaf. It shortens the time required to ferment the tobacco about eight months, and so reduces the insurance and the loss of interest on the money invested. It is estimated that the value of this work will amount to at least $500,000 per annum to the farmers of the Connecticut Valley. The investigations are being carried still further in order to see whether the quality of the tobacco can be further improved. There is reason to believe it can be.
In addition to these practical results, improvements have been made in the methods of soil investigation, both in the laboratory and in the field. Some very important problems connected with the physical and chemical constitution of solids are being worked out, which give promise of being of great value in economic lines.
New England Opinion.
To my mind, the one issue of the campaign will be patriotism. Here in Massachusetts there are a lot of men who are devoting their efforts to making traitors of the people, and they are thereby driving Democrats to the support of McKinley. It is,needless to say that the Republicans have made some mistakes, but absolutely the only issues that our opponents have evolved are not based upon our mistakes but upon our right actions. No party can achieve success merely by blindly taking the opposite side. I believe the Republican party will squarely meet all issues and by so doing will be triumphantly vindicated at the polls. Albert P. Langtry, publisher the Morning Union, Springfield, Mass.
Peculiar Patriotism:
Bryan says that the Republicans showed their partisanship by holding their national convention on the anniversary of the organization of the party, while the Democrats have shown their patriotism by holding their convention on the Fourth of July. Such patriotism is in line with his volunteering and then resigning his commission just before his regiment was ordered to the front.
Who Saved the Country?
The evident concern shown by the Democrats about saving the country leads one to wonder if the offices have anything to do with their zeal in the matter of country saving. It will be remembered that it was the Republican Lincoln who saved the country from Democratic rebellion, and Republican McKinley who saved it from Democratic panic and stagnation.
To Be Remembered.
After the Democrats hear from the country concerning the platform adopted at Kansas City, they will remember what Lincoln said about fooling all the people all the time.
MILLS HAVE OPENED.
THE WAGES OF WORKMEN HAVE DOUBLED IN FIVE YEARS.
Magical Effect of McKinley's Protective Tariff Policy-Twice as Many Men at Work-Reports from Two Hundred Different Pay Rolls.
"In the campaign of 1896 Mr. McKinley made one remark which went to the hearts of the people from one end of the country to the other. It was, 'Open the mills,'" said Gen. Charles Dick, Secretary of the Republican National Committee. "Those three words met with a responsive chord from those tens of thousands who had been idle during the last Democratic administration, and the empty dinner-pail brigade went to the polls and voted for a full dinner pail and for the opening of the mills.
"In order to gain some idea of the effect of restoring the home market to our own people, the Republican National Committee sent out blanks to members of the National Association of Manufacturers asking them to kindly furnish us with the number of men whom they had employed in each year from 1890 to 1899, inclusive, as well as with the total amount of wages which they had paid during the same years.
"We have received 200 replies. These show that there was a steady increase in the number of hands employed in the 200 factories until the year 1893, after which there was an immediate drop of 10,000 men in 1894. But under President McKinley's administration the increase in the number of men employed by these same factories has been startling. In 1894 they employed 90,483; in 18797 they employed 109,600; in 1898 they employed 131,428 men, and last year they employed 174,645 men. In short, the number of wage earners employed by these same 200 factories has increased from 90,483 men in 1894 up to 174,845 last year, almost doubled, in fact.
"But the contrast is even more striking when applied to the amount of wages paid, and the following table shows the returns received from the same 200 manufactories:
Year. Wages paid.
1890 $45,149,081
1891 49,875,858
1892 53,619,418
1893 48,966,250
1894 40,803,866
1895 52,851,317
1896 53,209,420
1897 54,412,774
1898 62,247,940
1899 78,835,069
Years. Averages.
1890-92 inclusive $49,548,119
1893-96 " 48,957,713
1897-99 65,165,261
The amount of wages paid by these same 200 manufacturers increased steadily from 1890 to 1892, then there was a drop in 1893 and another drop in 1894. During the next two years wages picked up, but it was not until 1897 that these same manufacturers were paying out as much money in wages as they had paid in 1892. The increase of their pay rolls in 1898 and 1899 is as gratifying to me as it must be to the men who are now busy at good wages.
"Between 1894 and 1899 the 200 manufacturers of the National Association, who reported to us, had increased their pay rolls by upwards of $38,000,000; in fact, the amount of wages which they distributed last year was almost double what they paid out in 1894.
"If this ratio of increase were applied to the whole country, without taking into account the numbers of new factories that have been started in the last few years, who can deny that general prosperity has visited the country? And what a depth of meaning those three words, 'Open the mills,' uttered by Mr. McKinley less than four years ago, has really conveyed."
Bank Deposits Increase.
The following statement of the net deposits in all the national banks of the United States is interesting:
Sept. 7, 1899.....$1,270,766,065
Dec. 19, 1893.....793,100,325
Republican increase ... $477,665,740
These three lines show that the increase in the deposit of the national banks between 1893, the first year of President Cleveland's second administration, and Sept. 7, 1899, was $477,665,-740. If we make a comparison between the end of 1896, toward the close of the Democratic administration, with last year, we have the following:
Sept. 7, 1899.....$1,270,766,065
Dec. 17, 1896.....852,604,858
Republican increase .... $418,161,207
This shows that within three years the increase in the national bank deposits exceeded $418,000,000. There was, therefore, an increase of only $70,000,000 in the national bank deposits during President Cleveland's term, but an increase of $418,000,000 during three years of President McKinley's term.
The Boss of All Bosses.
Mark Hanna is accused of being a boss because he conducted a victorious campaign and secured the election of William McKinley. Bryan has forced his own nomination, has dictated the platform, and by long-distance telephone managed the Kansas City convention from start to finish. No convention ever held by any party in the United States was more perfectly the puppet of a single man than the Kansas City convention.
More Money for Farmers
The Department of Agriculture, through the appropriations of Congress, will have $840,000 more money to spend in the next fiscal year for the benefit of farmers.
THE PRESIDENT CONSENTS.
Answer to Emperor's Appeal for His Good Offices.
CONDITIONS IMPOSED.
Kwangsu Urged to Furnish Indubitable Evidence that the Foreigners Are Alive.
Washington, D. C., July 24.—The department of state made public the Chinese appeal for mediation, and the President's reply. The Chinese appeal is unquestionably an adroit production. The President's answer is equally clever and more sincere; that is the opinion of the officials here who have carefully studied both.
The President has succeeded in asking for conditions precedent to mediation quite as valuable as those laid down in Europe, yet he has not tempered his requirements as to make them unexceptionable to the Chinese government. At the same time there is nothing in the note to which the European chancellories can object, openly at least. The President expressly states that his mediation is subject to the approval of the powers, he will not attempt to force it upon Europe. And the Chinese government must produce the ministers in safety.
Minister Wu declares that his government will meet that obligation, in proof of which he produced Sheng's telegram in which he expressed implicit confidence. Certainly, if the last promise is baseless, the Chinese government is party to one of the most barefaced deceptions ever attempted.
The department does not doubt Minister Wu's sincerity in any case, and as for that official, he is so confident that the United States government is the only one in the world to which China can look to for fair and friendly treatment, that he has exhausted every effort, personally, by appeal and otherwise, to insure the safety of Mr. Conger.
The Emperor's Appeal.
The following correspondence between the President of the United States and the Emperor of China was made public by the state department today:
The Emperor of China, to His Excellency the President of the United States—Greeting: China has long maintained friendly relations with the United States and is deeply conscious that the object of the United States is international commerce. Neither country entertains the least suspicion or distrust toward the other. Recent outbreaks of mutual antipathy between the people and Christian missions caused the foreign powers to view with suspicion the position of the imperial government as favorable to the people and prejudicial to the missions, with the result that the Taku forts were attacked and captured. Consequently, there has been clashing of forces with calamitious consequences. The situation has become more and more serious and critical. We have just received a telegraphic memorial from our envoy, Wu Ting Fang, and it is highly gratifying to us to learn that the United States government, having in view the friendly relations between the two countries, has taken a deep interest in the present situation. Now China, driven by the irresistible course of events, has unfortunately incurred well-nigh universal indignation. For settling the present difficulty China places special reliance in the United States. We address this message to your excellency in all sincerity and candidness, with the hope that your excellency will devise measures and take the initiative in bringing about a concert of the powers for the restoration of order and peace. The favor of a kind reply is earnestly requested and awaited with the greatest anxiety.
This cablegram was at once communicated to the President at Canton, O., and the following is his reply:
The President of the United States to the Emperor of China—Greeting: I have received your majesty's message of the 19th of July, and am glad to know that your majesty recognizes the fact that the government and people of the United States desire of China nothing but what is just and equitable. The purpose for which we landed troops in China was the rescue of our legation from grave danger and the protection of the lives and property of Americans who were sojourning in China in the enjoyment of rights guaranteed them by treaty and by international law. The same purposes are publicly declared by all the powers who have landed military forces in your majesty's empire.
I am to infer from your majesty's letter that the malefactors who have disturbed the peace of China, who have murdered the minister of Germany and a member of the Japanese legation, and who now hold be-leged in Pekin those foreign diplomats who still survive, have not only not received any favor or encouragement from your majesty, but are actually in rebellion against the imperial authority. If this be the case, I most solemnly urge upon your majesty's government to give public assurance whether the foreign ministers are alive, and, if so, in what condition; to put the diplomatic representatives of the powers in immediate and free communication with their respective governments, and to remove all danger to their lives and liberty; to place the imperial authorities of China in communication with the relief expedition so that co-operation may be secured between them for the liberation of the legationers, the protection of foreigners and the restoration of order.
If these objects are accomplished, it is the belief of this government that no obstacles will be found to exist on the part of the powers to an amicable settlement of all the questions arising out of the recent troubles and the friendly good offices of this government will, with the assent of the other powers, be cheerfully placed at your majesty's disposition for that purpose. (Signed) WILLIAM M'KINLEY.
July 23. 1900.
By consenting to act as mediator the President has assumed that Minister Wa and the Chinese authorities in Pekin are acting in good faith. Secretary Hay did not even require any proof from Minister Wu that the request for mediation was genuine. He accepted the fact that it was presented at the state department by the accredited diplomatic representative of the Chinese empire as sufficient guaranty of its authenticity. The theory on which the administration is acting is that if the Chinese government is really acting in good faith the United States will be in a much better position by crediting the official communications received and that if it should turn out that these communications are not what they purport to be the position of this government will not be any the worse. Meanwhile efforts will be pushed to relieve the ministers in Pekin.
Why China Appeals to America.
The position of the Chinese as they would like to have the world understand it is that the imperial government has at no time participated in the anti-foreign outbreak or in any attack upon the ministers or other foreigners, but has done all in its power to restrain and prevent such attacks; that the taking of the Taku forts by the powers was an act of war against China, and that the imperial government is justified in regarding with suspicion the motives of the powers, which, having previously despoiled the empire of territory, are now suspected of seeking opportunities to enlarge their territorial possessions.
The United States is the one power that is not suspected of coveting Chinese territory, and this fact, taken in connection with Rear-Admiral Kempff's refusal to join in the attack on the Taku forts, is given as the reason why China has appealed to the United States now to en-
deavor to bring about a peaceful settle ment.
KEMPFF RAISES A RUMPUS.
Demands a Rear-Admiral's Salute of Thirteen Guns.
London, July 24.—The Globe's naval correspondent at Taku writes: "Admiral Kempff has raised a storm in a teacup on the salute question. He is second in command of the station, and thus entitled to eleven guns as rear-admiral, and this was recently given him by the Endymion at Yokohama. He claimed thirteen guns, stating that no American admiral got eleven guns, their value being: Full admiral, 17; vice-admiral, 15; rear-admiral 13. The United States having just started the grade of admiral it is probable Kempff thought out the regulations in pure ignorance, as there appears to be no reason why a United States rear-admiral should be worth more powder than any other rear-admiral. To his protest Rear-admiral Kempff was informed that the captain of the Endymion will give him as many guns as he wanted if there was sufficient powder on the ship, but until they published their regulations we had to go by ours. The Orlando (British armored ship) arriving at Taku, knew nothing of this squabble and rubbed it in by saluting the Chinese rear-admiral with thirteen guns, then the Russian rear-admiral with thirteen and then the United Staes rear-admiral with eleven guns. Whether distance made it difficult for them to distinguish the number or a delicate hint was intended, the Newark had the good taste to return thirteen.
FIGHTING NEAR CHARBIN.
Russian Convoy with Women and Children Threatened by Boxers.
St. Petersburg, July 24. A dispatch which has been received here from Gen. Grodekoff, at Khabarovik, dated July 22, reports that the steamer Odessa, which left Charbin July 16, brought tidings of the Russian force that left Te-Lin July 7, en route to Charbin. It appears that 200 men started with a large convoy of Chinese Christians, women and children. After constant fighting, which was often at close quarters and with bayonet, they were again attacked by Boxers July 12. The Russians lost heavily and ran short of ammunition. At last accounts they were threatened by 15,000 Boxers. Engineer Jugovitch, at Charbin, had found it impossible to send efficient help, as he required all his available forces to defend Charbin, which place contained thousands of unarmed employees with their families, who have been concentrated from along many sections of the railway.
Gen. Grodeckoff considers the situation as bad. Attacks are daily threatened and rebels and marauders are overrunning Mauchuria. The general says the local governors have little authority and that fanatics dominate the situation.
MADE OF GOOD STUFF.
Son of One of the Heroes of Manila Bay Risks His Life for Duty's Sake.
Boston. Mass., July 24.—Lieut. John P. Gridley, U. S. M. C., the son of the commander of Dewey's flagship, and attached to the Boston navy-yard, has been refused permission to go to China partly on account of his youth and part-
J. B.
LIEUT. JOHN P. GRIDLEY. ly because he is lying flat on his back at the Marine hospital here. Lieut. Gridley was so severely injured internally while performing heroic work at the fire at the navy-yard last Thursday that the surgeons are unable to tell when he will be able to leave his bed. He has made every effort to be assigned to duty in China. He is only 20.
FIVE WERE DROWNED.
Bathers Precipitated Into the Waster from a Rickety Raft and All Perish.
Ventura, Cal., July 24.—News comes from the Eastern part of this county of the drowning of five persons in Wiley's lake. The dead are: Mrs. Byron H. Wiley, aged 40 years; A. Wiley, daughter of Mrs. B. H. Wiley, aged 13 years; Miss Foshun, aged 19: Broderick, a young man; unknown boy, aged about 13.
It was an exceedingly hot day and Mrs. Wiley's title party of five went in bathing. They went out to a raft which suddenly began to wobble and some of the bathers fell into the water. The others made a desperate attempt to rescue their companions and in so doing perished
Master Wiley, a child about 10 years old, stood on the bank and witnessed the awful event, too frightened to run for aid. He has not yet recovered from the shock. The lake is situated near the Wiley residence, some six miles from Filmore. It does not cover an acre of ground and the deepest portion is but 20 feet deep.
PRINCESS GRANTED ADIVORCE.
First Royal Decree Issued by the Courts of North Dakota.
Grand Forks, July 24.—The first divorce granted in North Dakota, to a person of royal family has just been issued by Judge Fiske of this city to a cousin of King Oscar of Sweden. The woman, Princess Anna Josephine Charlotte, ten years ago married Emil H. Halvorson, a young man of good family, though her social inferior. The match was opposed by her friends and forbidden by the King.
For eight years the young couple lived in various European cities, and during this time, it is alleged, the husband developed into a profligate, finally driving her from him with a blow. She then came to North Dakota to secure a divorce, and has lived here incognito over a year. The present address of Halvorson is unknown, and he was not represented at the trial.
MAKE GENERAL ADVANCE.
Roberts and His Army Finally Get Away from Pretoria.
Baden-Powell Reports Having Attacked and Scattered a Force of 1000 Boers.
London, July 25-12:45 p. m.—The war office has received the following dispatch from Lord Roberts, dated Vandermerwe Station, July 24.—We made a general advance yesterday from the position we have been holding, east of Pretoria, since June 12. Ian Hamilton, from the north, reached Dustfontein, seven miles north of Bronkhorst spruit, on July 22. This so completely surrounded the enemy's line of retreat that they abandoned the strong position they had been occupying in front of Pole-Carew. Stephenson's brigade advanced yesterday unopposed to Elands river station. Our right was protected by the First and Fourth brigades of cavalry under French, and Hutton's mounted infantry. The former crossed east of Wilge river. Railway and telegraph communication were restored last night.
"In the supply train captured at Roodeval there were 200 Welsh fusiliers, most of whom had been prisoners. Dewet's force is continuing to move northeasterly. It was at Roodepoort July 22, with Broadwood not far behind and Little's cavalry brigade following Broadwood.
"Baden-Powell reports as follows from Magato Farm, July 22: 'Col. Arey and Lushington, with 450 men, drove 1000 Boers from a very strong position and scattered them with considerable loss. Our casualties were six killed and nineteen wounded.'"
It is not clear whether the supply train and 200 fusiliers mentioned in the above dispatch are identical with the train and 100 Cameron Highlanders, the capture of which was reported by Lord Roberts in his communication of July 22.
The following dispatch from Lord Roberts has been received at the war office, dated Bronkhorstspruit, Tuesday, July 24:
"We marched here today. This is the place where the Ninety-fourth was attacked December 20, 1880. The graves of the officers and men are in fair preservation, and will now be put in good order. The march was unopposed, but French's cavalry and Hutton's mounted infantry, making a wide detour on our right, met bodies of the enemy. These were driven back, leaving several dead and wounded. A good many were also captured. Our casualties were one killed.
"Broadwood reports that he captured five of Dewet's wagons today. He was waiting at Vredefort until Little joined him."
Boers Are Trekking.
Bronkhorst Spruit, Tuesday, July 24. The Boers, having got wind of the British advance, have evacuated all their positions and are reported to be moving to the northeast, towards Leydenberg, whither President Krager is going. A portion of the Boers remain north of Bushveldt, whence they may attempt to intercept communications on this line. The bridges here and smaller bridges to the west have been destroyed. The British force comprises two brigades under Gen. French and a brigade and a half under Gen. Hamilton. It is not likely that the advance upon Middleburg will be contested. The Boers remaining upon their farms state that most of the burghers are anxious to bring matters to a finish but that the foreigners are persistent.
Chamberlain is Sustained.
Chamberlain is Sustained. London, July 25.—Discussion of the colonial office vote led to a spirited debate in the House of Commons today, in the course of which Liberals again aired most of the old charges against the colonial secretary, Joseph Chamberlain, and indulged in criticisms of the war in South Africa. Finally, Sir Wilfred Lawson moved a reduction of Mr. Chamberlain's salary as a mark of censure of his policy.
Mr. Chamberlain, replying, welcomed the issue raised by the motion, which, he declared, meant that the war was wrong and that, consequently, annexation of the South African republics was wrong and their independence should be restored to them. In his opinion, however, the war was just and righteous, and should not be judged by its consequences in loss of life. John Bright had defended the Civil war in America as just and righteous, although the loss of life was as thousands to units as compared with South Africa.
Mr. Chamberlain charged the Radicals with condoning rebellion. The policy of the government, he declared, however, was not vindictive, and instead of subjecting the rebels to the death penalty or imprisonment, it only proposed to disarm them politically for ten years. The opposition did not spare Mr. Chamberlain. Liberal members sharply interrupted him and charged him with misquoting other speakers and reminded him that the whole history of South Africa the past seven years had furnished substantial ground for him to be suspected in all his actions.
A. J. Balfour, first lord of the treasury and government leader in the House, moved closure, which was carried, 169 ayes to 100 noes. The motion on reduction of Mr. Chamberlain's salary was then lost, 208 noes to 52 ayes.
CLOUDBURST FLOODS A TOWN.
Heavy Damage at Solomon City, Kas.—Rains Elswhere.
Salina, Kas., July 25.—There was a terrific cloudburst at Solomon City, fourteen miles east of here, yesterday. The residence district lying between a railroad and a hill to the north is flooded from 1 to 8 feet deep. In the business section water was a foot deep in the streets and flooded every basement, ruining thousands of dollars' worth of goods.
Hoopeston, Ill., July 25.—This vicinity was visited with a heavy rainstorm this afternoon, inundating streets and sidewalks and flooding cellars, doing much damage to property. In the country great damage was done the crops.
Kansas City, Mo., July 25.—Heavy rains fell all over Kansas and Iowa and in parts of Missouri yesterday and this morning. The rains were especially good in the corn districts.
Sioux City, Ia., July 25.—All rainfall records for Sioux City and vicinity for one month were surpassed yesterday. The excessive rain has damaged small grain in low lands and in some places promising fields have been ruined.
SWINDLED A FARMER.
Land Buyers Prove to be Sharks and Steal a Guaranty of Faith.
Portland, Ind., July 25.—John Franks, a Noble township farmer, was swindled out of $2500. Two men, who registered as W. H. Harris of Indiana and W. C. Brown of Hamilton, O., visited Franks for the ostensible purpose of buying his farm, telling him he must produce $2500 to prove his responsibility. Franks put his money into a satchel. The men were to put $5000 in another. They switched satchels and Franks got a bundle of paper.
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Entered at the Milwaukee P. O. as second-class matter.
The cloudbursts and tornadoes in Texas are sad reminders that there are troubles at home as well as abroad.
In making estimates as to the probable attendance at future national conventions, it would be wise to consult the railway passenger agents.
The sausage trust which has been formed in New York city is composed of manufacturers. Consumers maintain their trust in sausage on the sly.
The announcement that martial law has been proclaimed at Cape Nome may be accepted as proof that there is gold there; but not enough to go round.
A horse named Milwaukee beat Lucas, the Derby winner, in a $1000 handicap at the Washington Park course in Chicago recently, and the name of Milwaukee continues to be famous.
The outbreak of anthrax at Greenleaf provides a serious task for the state veterinarian. It will be sad for the farmers of Wisconsin if the disease cannot be stamped out.
Lord Beresford's plan of educating the Chinese in the handling of modern weapons is not recommended by the skillful artillery fire of the Celestials at Tien Tsin. If all the Chinamen could shoot straight the situation would be hopeless. Twenty square miles of California forest burned over, and the fire still raging, is the result of a little girl's celebrating with a few firecrackers. California is so dry that toying with sparks out there is like playing with matches in a powder factory.
The New York Tribune states that the man who cannot swim but who goes into water beyond his depth, has begun his work with a rush this season. The same might be said of the man who knows how to dive, but who lacks the wisdom to look before he leaps.
Will Cumback proposes to employ the talent in the Western Association of Writers, of which he is president, in the authorship of a composite novel. Why not give it the title of The Cat, Will Cumback, and employ as many authors as the cat has lives?
The policy of promoting enlisted men to lieutenancies is a wise one. It will inspire all soldiers with hope of advancement, and encourage them to a faithful performance of duty. Some of the brightest names in the annals of war are those of men who rose from the ranks.
Another case of lockjaw at Marinette recommends the abolition of the giant firecracker. The authorities of all cities should pass prohibitory ordinances at once, and thus give manufacturers of pyrotechnics ample notice that there will be no market next year for the destructive bombs.
It is now apparent that when the yacht Idler was struck by the squall which capsize her she was carrying mainsail, foresail, staysail and jib, a spread of canvas ample for a brisk breeze during fair weather. A captain who would await a squall with that much canvas up ought to be severely punished.
The skipper of Sir Thomas Lipton's Shamrock is coming over to watch the new Herrereshoff 70-footers which are the leading yachting attraction at New York this season. He will see enough to convince him that in order to "lift" the cup a challenging yacht will have to be as slippery as the proverbial eel.
When the trial of the men accused of the murder of Goebel began at Georgetown, Ky., the people were met at the door of the courtroom by a deputy sheriff who informed them that he had orders to search all who entered, in order to remove concealed weapons. The crowd was turned back, to a man, but all returned and passed the necessary examination. The "gun" is as common in Kentucky as the bottle of "mountain dew."
The death of Rev. Dwight Galloup, the "fighting chaplain" who participated in the charge up San Juan hill, will cause general regret. The militant spirit of the chaplain when he seized a rifle to assist in punishing those who were firing on Red Cross nurses revealed the latent fire which burns in the heart of every true American. The remains of the "fighting parson" should be interred at Arlington.
The Hull-Ottawa conflagration and the burning of the steamship docks at Hoboken each by itself involved a heavier de-
struction of property than the average fire loss throughout the United States and Canada for an entire month. Not since the year of the great Boston fire—1872—have flames wrought such havoc in this country as during the first six months of the current year, the total for the United States and Canada reaching $103,298,900. These figures are more impressive than any comment could be.
The fifteen hundred Afrikander women at Capetown who adopted a resolution declaring that peace would be impossible were the South African republics annexed were simply assistant shouters for Olive Schreiner, the author of "The Story of an African Farm," who has shown spirit enough during the contest of the Boers to place her in the front rank of political campaigners. She is credited with having said that every trench dug by the British soldiers in the war was a part of the tomb of the British Empire.
Dauphin county, Pa., is nonplussed over what to do with money in the treasury that is without an owner. This fund, comprising almost a thousand dollars, was collected last year from bicycle owners who were taxed under the sidepath law. Since then the act of Assembly has been declared unconstitutional, and the Dauphin commissioners do not know what to do with the cash. A number of other counties are in the same predicament over like tax funds, and it is probable that the courts will eventually have to grant some motion for the disposal of the moneys in question.
The emergency ration carried by the British soldier consists of four ounces of cocoa paste and a similar quantity of concentrated beef, which are packed in a small flask suitable to carry in the pocket conveniently. The package is sealed and is not to be opened except in the case of the direst necessity, and even then only under orders from a superior officer. This small portion of food will keep a man alive for thirty-six hours and is either spread upon a biscuit or cooked up into a soup. A soldier found without his emergency ration is dealt with severely. At every inspection it is displayed in the soldier's kit, and he is expected to carry it with him on all kinds of duty.
Admiral Seymour's first acquaintance with the almond-eyed Celestial was in the bloody Chinese war of 1857-58. As midshipman, he commanded the Calcutta's launch, which was sunk in the destruction of the enemy's fictilla in Fatsham Creek. He also took part in the capture of Canton and in the storming of Peiho (or Taku) forts, which are now once more to the fore. In 1860 England was again at war with China, and Admiral Seymour served as lieutenant on board the Chesapeake. At the relief of Sing Poo and the capture of Kah Ding in 1862 he distinguished himself in command of a small-arm party from the frigate Imperieuse.
It is reported in London that there is a great falling off in the receipts of the clubs, consequent upon decreased patronage of the bars. Soda and brandy, Scotch whisky, and all other "hard drinks," have given way in the British metropolis, this summer, before the popularity of a non-intoxicating and cooling draught compounded of barley and water mixed with lemon-juice, sugar and ice. The fashion started at the Guards' club house, and quickly spread throughout London. The cost of the new drink is so slight that it is supplied without charge, and the beverage is so satisfying that even habitual users of tipple are contented with it. Here is a London fashion that might be followed with advantage throughout the world.
The Los Angeles Express estimates the capital invested in orange growing in California at $44,000,000. When it is considered that the bulk of the oranges comes from seven of the southernmost counties of the state—Los Angeles, Riverside, San Bernardino, Orange, San Diego, Santa Barbara and Ventura—some idea may be gained of the vast utility of this work of sunshine in the United States to Uncle Sam. The number of non-fruit-bearing orange trees in this district is said to be about 1,227,300, and those now yielding fruit 2,072,400. When all these trees are yielding the luscious California oranges—apples of Hesperides—Californians, it is estimated, will reap a harvest of gold from this source alone of $10,000,000 a year.
It seems that Southern cotton mills are contributing indirectly to the agricultural development of that part of the country. It is said that there is a decided tendency among the "poor whites" employed in these mills to return to small farming, just as soon as they have saved enough in wages to do so. One case cited is that of the father of ten children, who gave up his "patch" when the mill started, took five of his offspring with him as "hands," and had at once an income of $6 a day. Within five years he had saved enough to pay his debts and purchase another farm of eighty acres. That happened in North Carolina. In the same state a farmer and seven sons have just removed back from mill to farm, paying off a $400 mortgage and buying 100 adjoining acres for $1600.
All About Moses.
Two residents of Cleveland have returned from a four-months' trip across the big pond, spent mostly in Egypt and in the Holy Land. They went out from Boston in the New England, which proved a smallpox ship, and suffered delay and quarantine at Naples. "Going up the Nile," said Mr. Morgan, "I had as a dragoman a German, who had long adopted Cairo for his home, and who spoke very good Bowery English, having lived in this country some ten years prior to his last hegira. "What's this?" I asked, pointing to a curiously-shaped building on the bank. 'Dot,' responded the dragoman, 'dot iss der view, der outlook, you know. Der blace were you look owdid mit der glass.' 'And why was it built here?' I persisted. 'Oh, because it ees der Moses blace.' 'Why is it called Moses place?' was my next question. 'Vy, he responded, apparently surprised, 'don't you know abowid Moses? Moses, you know, von der Bible. Vell, diss is der blace vere they fint him.' 'But how did they find him?' I asked. 'Oh,' was the dragoman's reply. 'I guess dey eggs-cavate him. Don't it?'
—Gen. Charles A. Woodruff, who is on his way to the Philippines to join the staff of Gen. MacArthur as chief commissary of subsistence, served with Gen. MacArthur in New Mexico twenty years ago.
TALMAGES
(Copyright, Louis Klopsch, 1900.) IN this discourse Dr. Talmage (who is now traveling in Europe) puts in an unusual light the mission of Christ and shows how divine power will yet make the illnesses of the world fall back, text, Matthew xi., 5, "The blind receive their sight, and the lame walk, the lepers are cleansed and the deaf hear."
"Doctor," I said to a distinguished surgeon, "do you not get worn out with constantly seeing so many wounds and broken bones and distortions of the human body?" "Oh, no," he answered; "all that is overcome by my joy in curing them." A sublimer and more merciful art never came down from heaven than that of surgery. Catastrophe and disease entered the earth so early that one of the first wants of the world was a doctor. Our crippled and agonized human race called for surgeon and family physician for many years before they came. The first surgeons who answered this call were ministers of religion—namely, the Egyptian priests. And what a grand thing if all clergymen were also doctors, all D. D.'s were M. D.'s, for there are so many cases where body and soul need treatment at the same time, consolation and medicine, theology and therapeutics. As the first surgeons of the world were also ministers of religion, may these two professions always be in full sympathy! But under what disadvantages the early surgeons worked, from the fact that the dissection of the human body was forbidden, first by the pagans and then by the early Christians! Apes, being the brutes most like the human race, were dissected, but no human body might be unfolded for physiological and anatomical exploration, and the surgeons had to guess what was inside the temple by looking at the outside of it. If they failed in any surgical operation, they were persecuted and driven out of the city, as was Archagathus because of his bold but unsuccessful attempt to save a patient.
The Surgeon in History.
But the world from the very beginning kept calling for surgeons, and their first skill is spoken of in Genesis, where they employed their art for the incisions of a sacred rite, God making surgery the predecessor of baptism, and we see it again in H. Kings, where Ahaziah, the monarch, stepped on some cracked latticework in the palace, and it broke, and he fell from the upper to the lower floor, and he was so hurt that he sent to the village of Ekron for aid, and Aesculapius, who wrought such wonders of surgery that he was deified and temples were built for his worship at Pergamos; and Epidaurus and Podelirius introduced for the relief of the world phlebotomy, and Damocedes cured the dislocated ankle of King Darius and the cancer of his queen, and Hippocrates put successful hand on fractures and introduced amputation, and Praxagoras removed obstructions, and Herophilus began dissection, and Erasistratus removed tumors, and Celsus, the Roman surgeon, removed cataract from the eye and used the Spanish fly; and Heliodorus arrested disease of the throat, and Alexander of Tralles treated the eye, and Rhazas cauterized for the prevention of hydrophobia, and Percival Pott came to combat diseases of the spine, and in our own century we have had, among others, a Roux and a Larray in France, an Astley Cooper and an Abernethy in Great Britain and a Valentine Mott and Willard Parker and Samuel D. Gross in America and a galaxy of living surgeons as brilliant as their predecessors. What mighty progress in the baffling of disease since the crippled and sick of ancient cities were laid along the streets, that people who had ever been hurt or disordered in the same way might suggest what had better be done for the patients, and the priests of olden time, who were constantly suffering from colds received in walking barefoot over the temple pavements had to prescribe for themselves, and fractures were considered so far beyond all human cure that instead of calling in the surgeon the people only invoked the gods!
But notwithstanding all the surgical and medical skill of the world, with what tenacity the old diseases hang on to the human race, and most of them are thousands of years old, and in our Bibles we read of them—the carbuncles of Job and Hezekiah, the palpitation of the heart spoken of in Deuteronomy, the sunstroke of a child carried from the fields of Shunem, crying, "My head, my head!" King Asa's disease of the feet, which was nothing but gout; defection of teeth, that called for dental surgery, the skill of which, almost equal to anything modern, is still seen in the filled molars of the unrolled Egyptian mummies; the ophthalmia caused by the juice of the newly ripe fig, leaving the people blind by the roadside; epilepsy, as in the case of the young man often falling into the fire and oft into the water; hypochondria, as of Nebuchadnezzar, who imagined himself an ox and going out to the fields to pasture; the withered hand, which in Bible times, as now, came from the destruction of the main artery or from paralysis of the chief nerve; the wounds of the man whom the thieves left for dead on the road to Jericho and whom the good Samaritan nursed, pouring in oil and wine—wine to cleanse the wound and oil to soothe it. Thank God for what surgery has done for the alleviation and care of human suffering!
Surgery Without Pain.
But the world wanted a surgery without pain. Drs. Parre and Hickman and Simpson and Warner and Jackson, with their amazing genius, came forward and with their anaesthetics benumbed the patient with narcotics and ethers as the ancients did with hasheesh and mandrake and quieted him for awhile, but at the return of consciousness distress returned. The world has never seen but one surgeon who could straighten the crooked limb, cure the blind eye or reconstruct the drum of a soundless ear or reduce a
dropsy without any pain at the time or any pain after, and that surgeon was Jesus Christ, the mightiest, grandest, gentlest and most sympathetic surgeon the world ever saw or ever will see, and he deserves the confidence and love and worship and hosanna of all the earth and hallelniahs of all heaven. "The blind receive their sight and the lame walk, the lepers are cleansed, and the deaf hear."
I notice this surgeon had a fondness for chronic cases. Many a surgeon, when he has had a patient brought to him, has said: "Why was not this attended to five years ago? You bring him to me after all power of recuperation is gone. You have waited until there is a complete contraction of the muscles, and false ligatures are formed, and ossification has taken place. It ought to have been attended to long ago." But Christ the Surgeon seemed to prefer inveterate cases. One was a hemorrhage of twelve years, and he stopped it. Another was a curvature of eighteen years, and he straightened it. Another was a cripple of thirty-eight years, and he walked out well. The thirty-eight years' case was a man who lay on a mattress near the mineral baths at Jerusalem. There were five apartments where lame people were brought, so that they could get the advantage of these mineral baths. The stone basin of the bath is still visible, although the waters have disappeared, probably through some convulsion of nature. Christ the Surgeon walks along these baths and I have no doubt passes by some patients who have been only six months disordered or a year or five years and comes to the mattress of the man who had been nearly four decades helpless and to this thirty-eight years' invalid said, "Wilt thou be made whole?"
Christ the Chief Surgeon.
The question asked not because the surgeon did not understand the protractedness, the desperateness, of the case, but to evoke the man's pathetic narrative. "Wilt thou be made whole?" "Would you like to get well?" "Oh, yes," says the man. "That is what I came to these mineral baths for. I have tried everything. All the surgeons have failed, and all the prescriptions have proved valueless, and I got worse and worse, and I can neither move hand nor foot nor head. Oh, if I could only be free from this pain of thirty-eight years!" Christ the Surgeon could not stand that. Bending over the man on the mattress, and in a voice tender with all sympathy, but strong with all omnipotence, he says, "Rise!" And the invalid instantly scrambles to his knees and then puts out his right foot, then his left foot, and then stood upright as though he had never been prostrated. While he stands looking at the doctor, with a joy too much to hold, the doctor says: "Shoulder this mattress, for you are not only well enough to walk, but well enough to work, and start out from these mineral baths. Take up thy bed and walk!" Oh, what a surgeon for chronic cases then and for chronic cases now!
This is not applicable so much to those who are only a little hurt of sin and only for a short time, but to those prostrated of sin twelve years, eighteen years, thirty-eight years. Here is a surgeon able to give immortal health. "Oh," you say, "I am so completely overthrown and trampled down of sin that I cannot rise." Are you flatter down than this patient at the mineral baths? No. Then rise. In the name of Jesus of Nazareth, the surgeon who offers you his right hand of help. I bid thee rise. Not cases of acute sin, but of chronic sin—those who have not prayed for thirty-eight years, those who have not been to church for thirty-eight years, those who have been gamblers, or libertines, or thieves, or outlaws, or blasphemers, or infidels, or atheists, or all these together, for thirty-eight years. A Christ for exigencies! A Christ for a dead lift! A surgeon who never loses a case!
In speaking of Christ as a surgeon I must consider him as an oculist or eye doctor, and an aurist or ear doctor. Was there ever such another oculist? That he was particularly sorry for the blind folks I take from the fact that the most of his works were with the diseased optic nerves. I have not time to count up the number of blind people mentioned who got his cure. Two blind men in one house; also one who was born blind; so that it was not removal of a visual obstruction, but the creation of the cornea and ciliary muscle and crystalline lens and retina and optic nerve and tear gland; also the blind man of Bethesda, cured by the saliva which the Surgeon took from the tip of his own tongue and put upon the eyelids; also two blind men who sat by the wayside.
Work of the Oculist.
In our civilized lands we have blindness enough, the ratio fearfully increasing, according to the statement of European and American oculists, because of the reading of morning and evening newspapers on the jolting cars by the multitudes who live out of the city and come in to business. But in the lands where this divine surgeon operated the cases of blindness were multiplied beyond everything by the particles of sand floating in the air, and the night dews falling on the eyelids of those who slept on the top of their houses, and in some of these lands it is estimated that 20 out of 100 people are totally blind. Amid all that crowd of visionless people, what work for an oculist! And I do not believe that more than one out of a hundred of that surgeon's cures were reported. He went up and down among those people who were feeling slowly their way by staff, or led by the hand of man or rope of dog, and introducing them to the faces of their own household, to the sunrise and the sunset and the evening star. He just ran his hand over the expressionless face, and the shutters of both windows were swung open, and the restored went home crying, "I see! I see! Thank God. I see!"
That is the oculist we all need. Till he touches our eyes we are blind. Yet, we were born blind. By nature we see things wrong, if we see them at all. Our best eternal interests are put before us, and we cannot see them. The glories of a loving and pardoning Christ are projected, and we do not behold them. Or we have a defective sight which makes the things of this world larger than the things of the future, time bigger than eternity. Or we are color blind and cannot see the difference between the blackness of darkness forever and the roseate morning of an everlasting day. But
Christ the Surgeon comes in, and though we shrink back afraid to have him touch us, yet he puts his fingers on the closed eyelids of the soul and midnight becomes midnoon, and we understand something of the joy of the young man of the Bible who, though he had never before been able to see his hand before his face, now by the touch of Christ had two headlights kindled under his brow, cried out in language that confounded the jeering crowd who were deriding the Christ that had effected the cure and wanted to make him out a bad man. "Whether he be a sinner or no I know not. One thing I know, that whereas I was blind, now I see."
Wonderful as an Anrist.
But this surgeon is just as wonderful as an aurist. Very few people have two good ears. Nine out of ten people are particular to get on this or that side of you when they sit or walk or ride with you, because they have one disabled ear. Many have both ears damaged, and what with the constant racket of our great cities and the catarrhal troubles that sweep through the land, it is remarkable that there are any good ears at all. Most wonderful instrument is the human ear. It is harp and drum and telegraph and telephone and whispering gallery all in one. So delicate and wondrous is its construction that the most difficult of all things to reconstruct is the auditory apparatus. The mightiest scientists have put their skill to its retuning, and sometimes they stop the progress of its decadence or remove temporary obstructions, but not more than one really deaf ear out of 100,000 is ever cured. It took a God to make the ear, and it takes a God to mend it. That makes me curious to see how Christ the Surgeon succeeds as an aurist.
We are told of only two cases he operated on as an ear surgeon. His friend Peter, naturally high tempered, saw Christ insulted by a man by the name of Malchus, and Peter let his sword fly, aiming at the man's head, but the sword slipped and hewed off the outside ear, and our surgeon touched the laceration and another ear bloomed in the place of the one that had been slashed away. But it is not the outside ear that hears. That is only a funnel for gathering sound and pouring it into the hidden and more elaborate ear. On the beach of Lake Galilee our surgeon found a man deaf and dumb. The patient dwelt in perpetual silence and was speechless. He could not hear a note of music or a clap of thunder. He could not call father or mother or wife or children by name. What power can waken that dull tympanum or reach that chain of small bones or revive that auditory nerve or open the gate between the brain and the outside world? The surgeon put his fingers in the deaf ears and agitated them and kept on agitating them until the vibration gave vital energy to all the dead parts, and they responded, and when our surgeon withdrew his fingers from the ears the two tunnels of sound were clear for all sweet voices of music and friendship. For the first time in his life he heard the dash of the waves of Galilee. Through the desert of painful silence had been built a king's highway of resonance and acclamation. But yet he was dumb. No word had ever leaped over his lip. Speech was chained under his tongue. Vocalization and accentuation were to him an impossibility. He could express neither love nor indignation nor worship.
Unloosing the Barred Tongue.
Unloosing the Barred Tongue.
Our surgeon, having unbarred his ear, will now unloose the shackle of his tongue. The surgeon will use the same liniment or salve that he used on two occasions for the cure of blind people—namely, the moisture of his own mouth. The application is made, and lo, the rigidity of the dumb tongue is relaxed, and between the tongue and teeth was born a whole vocabulary and words flew into expression. He not only heard, but he talked. One gate of his body swung in to let sound enter, and the other gate swung out to let sound depart. Why is it that, while other surgeons used knives and forceps and probes and stethoscopes, this surgeon used only the ointment of his own lips? To show that all the curative power we ever feel comes straight from Christ. And if he touches us not we shall be deaf as a rock and dumb as a tomb. Oh, thou greatest of all artists, compel us to hear and help us to speak!
But what were the surgeon's fees for all these cures of eyes and ears and tongues and withered hands and crooked backs? The skill and the painlessness of the operations were worth hundreds and thousands of dollars. Do not think that the cases he took were all moncyless. Did he not treat the nobleman's son? Did he not doctor the ruler's daughter? Did he not effect a cure in the house of a centurian of great wealth who had out of his own pocket built a synagogue? They would have paid him large fees, and there were hundreds of wealthy people in Jerusalem and among the merchant castles along Lake Tiberias who would have given this surgeon houses and lands and all they had for such cures as he could effect. For critical cases in our time great surgeons have received $1,000, $5,000 and in one case I know of $50,000, but the surgeon of whom I speak received not a shekel, not a penny, not a farthing. In his whole earthly life we know of his having had but $62½ cents. When his taxes were due, by his omniscience he knew of a fish in the sea which had swallowed a piece of silver money, as fish are apt to swallow anything bright, and he sent Peter with a hook which brought up that fish, and from its mouth was extracted a Roman stater, or $62½ cents, the only money he ever had, and that he paid out for taxes. This greatest surgeon of all the centuries gave all his services then and offers all his services now free of all charge. "Without money and without price" you may spiritually have your blind eyes opened, and your deaf ears unbarred, and your dumb tongues loosened, and your wounds healed, and your soul saved. If Christian people get hurt of body, mind or soul, let them remember that surgery is apt to hurt, but it cures, and you can afford present pain for future glory. Besides that, there are powerful anaesthetics in the divine promises that soothe and alleviate. No ether or chloroform or cocaine ever made one so superior to distress as a few drops of that magnificent anodyne: "All things work together for good to those who love God." "Weeping may endure for a night, but joy cometh in the morning."
Tiger aud Lion.
Naturalists assert that the tiger is a much stronger animal than the lion. When these monarchs of the jungle engage in a combat Leo is generally whipped by his striped antagonist.
110 Mason St. Tel. Main 527. General Repairwork. Estimates Furnished. TONEY THE ARTIST FINE ART Shining Parlor
2161 GRAND AVENUE
Opposito Flanner's Music Store
MILWAUKEE, WIS.
GEO. W. DEWEY,
Furniture, Stoves, Carpets,
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230-232 West Water St.,
MILWAUKEE, - - WIS.
Cash or Easy Payments.
Established in 1881. Furniture Exchanged.
THIS IS THE PLACE
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322 Wells Street
Sustaining Life
on the choice juicy meats served by us is just what our athletic, bicycle riding, tennis playing and golfing twentieth century men and women need. P days have gone with the spin ning wheel. Good bone, muscle and tissue is what is needed now. You can get them by patronizing the Chicago Market. Our meats are fresh, tempting and choice, and are sold at prices that will let you feast in comfort.
WILLIAM RASCH GENEVA LAKE, WIS.
RAPIDLY DEVELOPING NORTHERN WISCONSIN.
The settler and manufacturer who have located in the northern portion of the Badger State are developing and improving that immense tract of rich country very rapidly. Tillers of the soil are coming in and new factories are going up. There is reason for this. The quality and quantity of iron ore, clay, kaolin, marl and timber lands tell the secret. Nature yields its riches to those who toil. Opportunities are still plentiful, for much of the rich undeveloped land is awaiting the settler and manufacturer. It can be obtained on easy terms and at low figures.
The Wisconsin Central Ry.
The pioneer road of the northern section of Wisconsin, affords cheap and excellent transportation facilities, thus opening the markets of the entire country to the products of that section. Those interested can obtain free illustrated pamphlets and maps upon application to W. H. KILLEN. Land and Industrial Commissioner. Burton Johnson, G. F. A. Jas. C. Pond, Gen. Pass. Agent. Colby & Abbot Building, Milwaukee, Wis.
Marquette
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Through Sleepers
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Leave Milwaukee
12.35 a.m.
Daily, and
5.15 a.m.
Daily Except Sunday.
Same Excellent Service
South Bound.
TICKET OFFICES,
Chicago & North-Western Ry.
102 Wisconsin Street and
Depot on Lake Front.
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---
MOBRULEINNEWORLEANS
White Citizens Inflamed to the Point of Desperation.
Innocent and Inoffending Colored People Shot and Killed Indiscriminately.
New Orleans, La., July 26.—All last night and up to half-past 3 o'clock this morning mobs ran riot through this city on a hunt for negroes, and those unfortunates who fell into their grasp were either killed or so badly wounded that they were left for dead. After the mobs got started the negroes became terrorized and took shelter in their homes and the outhouses of white people who protected them, so it was only the unsuspecting and inoffensive negroes who were the victims. The police were powerless; as fast as they apparently dispersed a crowd in one section it only reformed and moved to some other point to continue its devilish work.
The mobs were composed almost entirely of boys under 21 years of age and they had no leaders, but acted on a common impulse. The movement started from a gathering of men at the Lee statue, corner of St. Charles avenue and Howard street. Being ordered to disperse, the crowd moved up St. Charles street, gathering force as it moved and gradually becoming inflamed to the point of desperation. It was not until after they had stopped in Morrison square, on Washington avenue and Franklin street, near the scene of the assassination of Capt. Day and Officer Lamb, that they listened to a speech from a man hailing from Kenner, and then started out to way lay the negroes. Most of the colored population had taken warning from the excitement of the night before and kept indoors, but there were some returning to their homes from work and it was one of these who was the first victim.
Indiscriminate Shooting.
He was in a crowded Henry Clay avenue car, near the square and when the mob saw him, they rushed for the car and dragged him out, firing one shot in the car. He turned out to be Alexander Ruffin, a Pullman car porter, and he was badly used up. He was cut and shot and beaten over the head. There was another negro with him in the car who hid under the seat and after the car had started they discovered him, but they could not catch it. J. Cluny, the conductor of a Peters avenue car, was shot in the foot on Franklin street and the car riddled with bullets. E. G. Davis, the motorman on the same car, was also shot in the foot. Frank Shepard, a white man who was in the crowd, got a bullet through his right arm.
Coming down to Jackson avenue, they met T. P. Sanders, the colored porter of Post & Bowles' insurance agency. He had heard the indiscriminate shooting and stepped out of his gate to see what it was about. He stepped into the arms of the mob and they made short work of him. They stabbed him, shot him in the back and took his watch away from him. They left him for dead. A dozen or more of the mob went out further into the rear of the town and met a negress named Esther Fields standing in her door, and brutally beat her.
Shot a Colored Roustabout.
The main crowd continued on downtown, heading for the Parish prison. They were met a block away by a squad of police who stopped them. They then began breaking into the second-hand stores on Rampart street in that neighborhood, hunting for arms and ammunition. The police made a demonstration and drove them off. After lingering around Rampart street for an hour, the mob divided, one section going downtown and the other starting back uptown. The latter crowd started for the new basin in the vicinity of the Illinois Central depot, as that is a popular rendezvous for negroes. Before starting, they indulged in a little pistol play and wounded Oswald McMahon, a 12-year-old boy, in the leg. The boy had been following the crowd. On the way up they went through the Poydras market and found a negro watchman, George Morris, whom they proceeded to chase through the market, shooting him as he ran. When he fell with two shots in the back, one of the young fiends stabbed him to finish him, and nearly did so.
Second-Hand Stores Looted.
John Deeds, a white man, was shot during the indiscriminate shooting in the Poydras market. They searched the vicinity of the basin thoroughly, and failing to find anyone, walked out towards Franklin street, where they passed a negro seated in front of a bar-room, whom they promptly shot. He was Dap White, a roustabout, and got a bullet in his right wrist.
About 1 o'clock they headed for the neighborhood of Canal street and on the way looted two second-hand stores. They were trying to break into one place and fired several shots into it with the result that they wounded one of their own crowd, a man named John Doran, who got a bullet in the leg.
They moved on down to Canal street and at the corner of Rampart started to break into another second-hand store, but a patrol wagon full of police came up and they desisted. They stood there for half an hour and then gradually melted away.
The downtown mob, however, did terrible execution and kept up its fiendish work until half-nast 3 o'clock. A notorious character named Pepe Roses took the lead and they headed for the neighborhood of Franklin and Custom House street. They found no negroes and were going down Villiere street, towards some negro hovels, when they saw a negro in a crowded Villiere street car. They halted the car, pulled the trolley off, ordered about twenty passengers out and then murdered the black. He was dragged out and filled with lead, being instantly killed. He was evidently a laborer. His name is not known.
Terrorized the Town.
They moved on out to the vicinity of the old basin, on Toulouse street, and terrorized that neighborhood, but evidently found no negroes. Then they went down as far as Keleree and Dauphine streets, where they found an old negro 75 years of age, named Baptist Filo, whom they beat and shot almost to death.
Coming uptown again, they headed for the French market and met an unknown negro on Decatur, between St. Philip and Ursulines, whom they promptly beat into an insensible condition and left
Hill Wasn't Advertising
Not long ago the New York state newspaper men gave a banquet at Stanwix hall in Albany, and among the guests of honor were ex-Gov. David B. Hill and Gov. Theodore Roosevelt. The latter entered the hall first, wearing an evening suit and his famous brown sombrero, made famous by the Rough Riders. It was a combination costume at once original and picturesque. Among the last of the guests to arrive was Mr. Hill, who was conventionally attired, even to his silk hat. "Ah!" exclaimed Col. Roosevelt, in his peculiar staccato
for dead. He was discovered an hour later and died shortly after. He had been pulled from a meat wagon, which he was driving to the French market. They found another negro in the market and promptly put an end to his existence. He is not known. They located the porter of the Louisville & Nashville pay car and chased him up the levee. He ran into the customhouse, where he was protected by the night watchman at the point of a Winchester. The crowd sulked around for a while and then gradually dispersed. Acting Mayor Mehle issued a proclamation at half-past 11 o'clock, calling on all good citizens to keep the peace, but it did not stop the rioting.
Just before daybreak the remnants of the mob gathered in the vicinity of the Spanish Fort railroad to waylay negroes as they were going to their work at Chalmette. Some of them came along and the mob chased them, firing as they ran. William Armstrong, a negro, sitting on the Claiborne bridge, was shot in the thigh last night by a mob that passed by. He made his way home and only reported his injury this morning.
Call for the Militia.
The mob spent itself about 5 o'clock, when a white baker, whose name is unknown, was shot in the leg, while a crowd of rioters were chasing a gang of negroes. The mayor, the police and citizens, arranged today to take precautions against a recurrence of the disorder. The mob was composed of boys and hoodlums and was without a leader. Leading citizens express great regret over the disturbances and declare that the mob in nowise represented the better class of citizens.
PANAMA BESIEGED.
Crisis.
Kingston, Jamaica, July 26.—A private telegram from Panama today says that city was this morning attacked by rebels.
Colon, July 26.—A special train left here at 7 o'clock yesterday evening with Sevanilla reinforcements under Gen. Serrano. This addition to the government forces promises hopeful results of the civil war.
An ambulance corps from the British cruiser Leander is assisting to the utmost in the care of the wounded in Tuesday's battle. The killed and wounded number over 500. The rebels' loss was terrific. The hospitals are full and some of the wounded are being brought to Colon.
Colon, July 26.—A terrific engagement still continues between the government troops and the insurgents around Panama, but the former are still holding their ground. Many have been killed and wounded, and a four-hours' armistice was agreed upon to attend the wounded and bury the dead. The steamer Bernard Hall arrived at Colon from Savanilla at 3 o'clock this afternoon with reinforcements for the government numbering 1000. They were brought by Gen. Campos Serrano, governor of the department.
Success of the Rebels.
Kingston, July 26.—The steamship Darien, which left Colon, Colombia, Monday, brings news that the revolutionists are sweeping all before them and that their success, in fact, is far more startling than is to be gathered from the dispatches that are permitted to be sent from Panama.
The retirement of the government forces at Corozal, near Panama, Sunday was an utter rout. It is believed that Colon has fallen since the steamer left, and the fall of Panama is momentarily expected.
The Panama railway is held by Gen Herrara, the leader of the revolutionists, and Barranquilla, the key to the republic, defended by Gen Campeo Serrano, is hotly besieged by the revolutionists. The governor of the department of Panama has implored Bogota, the capital, to send help, while Bogota, surrounded by revolutionary guerrillas itself, is in urgent need of relief.
Government Troops Mutinous.
Government Troops Mutinous.
The Colombian government is short of money, and the troops, wanting pay, are mutinous. If Barranquilla falls it probably will be impossible to prolong the government's resistance, and the war will end immediately. Gen. Herrara fights humanely, and the fact that he conducts his campaign on modern lines makes it more difficult to combat disaffection among the government's troops.
British marines from the warship Leander have landed and are guarding the Panama consulates, protecting American interests in default of an American warship.
Yellow fever is epidemic in Panama.
Armistice for Twelve Hours.
Panama, July 25.—Firing between the government and revolutionist troops around Panama continued throughout the night, but this morning the two camps agreed on a twelve-hours' armistice to collect their wounded and bury their dead. An ambulance from the British warship Leander was landed to assist in this work.
Two Rebel Generals Killed.
Among those killed last night on the revolutionary side were Gen. Temistocles Diaz and Gen. Joaquin Arosomena, and on the government side Col. Barona, Majs. Holguin and Rolando Linares, and Capt. Pedro Pacheco.
The American consul is conferring with the revolutionary forces. Never in the history of the country has such a calamitous state of affairs been known.
Washington, D. C., July 26.—Bulletin.—The state department has just received a dispatch from Consul-General Gudger at Panama announcing the collapse of the revolutionary movement there. He states that the Liberals unexpectedly surrendered and that quiet now prevails at Panama.
Government Troops Fled.
Kingston, Jamaica, July 26.—Advices from Colon announce that after a desperate battle Tuesday, July 24, the government troops turned and fled to Panama, throwing away their rifles. The government general, Lozada, has sought refuge on board the British cruiser Leander.
So much disorder prevails at Panama that ninety marines have been landed from the Leander for the protection of the consulates. American residents complain that there is no United States warship either at Colon or Panama.
The statement is again repeated that 1500 well-armed rebels are at Corozal, two miles from Panama, and 1500 more are reported nearby. Barranquilla, the key to the republic, is now besieged by rebels.
The rebels have taken Tumaco island, at the mouth of the Barbacos river, with the custom house. The town of Barbacos is also held by the rebels. This is an important position, as Barbacos borders on Eucador, from whence the rebels get their supplies.
manner, as he grasped Mr. Hill's hand, "now we have with us a real Albany swell. Gov. Hill is the only man here tonight with a silk hat." "I've a slouch hat myself," returned Mr. Hill, softly, "but I left it at home. I've given up wearing it since I went out of the advertising business."
—In the bottom level of the Gold Sovereign, a Crippie Creek property, a good strike is reported, the vein at this point bulging to a width of 8 feet, but narrowing down to 2 and 3 feet. The entire vein is ore, and assays taken are said to run very high in gold.
JOLLY JOKER
Exactly.—"Do you think it possible to love two girls at the same time?"
"Not if they know it?"
"Are you golfing this summer. Ethel?" "Yes; I've got a lovely golf hammock."—Indianapolis Journal.
"Have you lived very long in the suburbs?" "Not so very long; only about fourteen cooks."—Brooklyn Life.
Doctor—After this you ought to sleep like a baby. Patient (anxiously)—I hope you don't mean like my baby, doctor.
Some men, it is said, carry their sense of honor so far as to spend all their time in idleness because they object to take advantage of time!
"Yes, sir; I put in months of hard work forming that girl's mind."
"Well?" "Then she said she wouldn't have me."—New York World.
"How much money have you, Sammy?" "Well, if I didn't owe grandma a dime and sister a nickel I'd have fifteen cents."—Chicago Record.
"Our bookkeeper seems to be stepping high this morning." "Yes; some girl has either accepted him or gone back on him."—Chicago Record.
"I thought you and Rebecca were the same age." "We were; but she seems to have receded, while I've been going on."—Indianapolis Journal.
Ma—"Tommy, you seem to love pa better than you do me." Tommy—"Oh, ma, I don't mean to; but y' see, pa allus has his pockets full o' nickels."
The little girl slipped something beneath the edge of her plate. "I wish," she said, under her breath, "there was an anti-crust law! That's what I wish!" "Daughter, I notice that Harry isn't a bit gallant to other women." "No. indeed, ma; I broke him of that right after we were married."—Indianapolis Journal.
He—"I asked your father's consent by telephone." She—"What was his answer?" He—"He said, 'I don't know who you are, but it's all right.'"—Harvard Lampoon.
Clerk—How did the alarm clock work? I suppose you got up the moment it went off? Blake—I had to. Didn't have anything in bed to throw at it.—Boston Transcript.
"Can you depend on what Bondword says?" "You bet your life! Why, man. I've known him to quit a poker game loser just be cause he'd promised his wife he'd be home early."—Puck.
"Jones, you'll never get rich like other men if you take so many afternoons off to base-ball games." "Oh, I don't know; I'll outlive them and catch up in the long run."—Indianapolis Journal.
She—You told me you love me, but I suppose you have told the same thing to fifty other girls at least. He—What of that? You wouldn't want to marry a freak, would you?—Boston Transcript.
Mrs. Hatterson—"What! You have breakfast at half-past seven? Isn't that very early?" Mrs. Catterson—"Yes. But it is necessary now since my husband has given up business to play golf."—Life.
"David, dear. I won't go a step to the Paris exposition without you." "Now, Eliza, do you really want my loved presence, or do you want somebody to push you around in a wheel-chair?"—Indianapolis Journal.
"I cannot sing the old songs." she sang at a high pitch in the torture chamber, which is the music room. "I don't think you can sing the new ones either." growled the man on the porch—Detroit Free Press.
An Explanation.—Undertaker (to bystander at a funeral)—"Are you one of the mourners?" Bystander—"I am, sir." Undertaker—"What relation to the deceased?" Bystander—"None at all—but he owed me $5."—Chicago News.
The Palmist—"This line in your hand indicates that you have a very brilliant future ahead of you—" Simkins—"Is that so?" The Palmist—"Yes; but the other line indicates that you are too slow to ever catch up with it."—Chicago News.
Cleverton—Now that you have succeeded in getting on such intimate terms with New York's most exclusive literary set and meeting so many distinguished men, I don't see what you want to quit for. Dashaway—The fact is, I haven't a cent left.—The Smart Set. Wiggles—"Some persons hold that there is no such thing as perfect happiness in this world." Waggles—"Guess those persons never watched a young woman in oblivious contemplation of that brand-new ring on the third finger of her left hand."—Boston Transcript
Mrs. Hoon—"They say that Mrs. Swiftsmith is greatly troubled with insomnia." Mr. Hoon—"Yes, I understand that she discovered the fact a week ago, that her husband talks in his sleep, and she hasn't slept a wink since for fear of missing something."—Harper's Bazar.
"What a fine complexion Miss Homewood has," said Mr. Beechwood to Miss Northside. "I'm so glad you like it." chirruped Miss Northside. "It's a new complexion just brought out by a deserving druggist of my acquaintance, and I hope it will become popular."—Pittsburg Chronicle.
"It's gittin fashionable now, it seems, among the high-tone clubs to buy the most expensive chinware they kin find," said the good old soul, looking up from her paper. "You don't say!" exclaimed her husband. "Yes, indeedy; it says here. 'The Boston club has just paid $2,000 for a new pitcher.'"—Philadelphia Press.
He Organized the Chinese Army and Gave It High Standing.
An American is entitled to the credit—if credit it is—of reorganizing the Chinese army upon a basis approaching its present efficiency. Frederick Townsend Ward was a soldier of fortune and a native of Massachusetts. In 1860, when the Taoping rebels were everywhere successful, Ward, who was 26 years old, and had served in the French army, found himself in Shanghai. He organized a band composed of men of various nationalities, and offered to capture a city for a fixed price. The first achievement of his small army was the capture of the walled town of Sungkiang, which was held by 10,000 rebels. As a reward he was made a mandarin of the fourth rank. Ward then cleared the country around Shanghai, being paid so much cash after each victory he won. After a while he disappeared and was next heard of when the natives attacked the city in large force, when Ward appeared at the head of three well-armed and well-drilled native regiments, who rescued Shanghai. Thereafter he became one of the leading men in the defense of Shanghai. He adopted the Chinese nationality under the name of Hwa, married the daughter of a wealthy mandarin and was made a mandarin of the highest grade and admiral general in the service of the Emperor. General Ward died as the result of a wound received in directing an assault on Tsekie. The Chinese paid him the highest possible honors after his death by burying him in the Confucian cemetery at Ningpo. Ward's successor in command of the Chinese forces was Major Charles G. Gordon—"Chinese" Gordon.
SUN DIALS OF ANCIENT TIMES
How the Flight of the Honors Was indicated to Children of the Roar
It is probable that the earliest sun dial was simply the spear of some nomad chief stuck upright in the ground before his tent. Among those desert wanderers, keen to observe their surroundings, it would not be a difficult thing to notice the shadow shortened as the sun rose higher in the sky and that the shortened shadow always pointed in the same direction. The recognition would have followed very soon that this noonday shadow changed in its length from day to day. A six-foot spear would give a shadow at noonday in latitude 40 degrees of twelve feet at one time of the year and of less than two feet at another time.
This instrument, so simple, so easily carried, so easily set up, may well have begun the scientific study of astronomy, for it lent itself to measurement, and science is measurement, and probably we see it expressed in permanent form in the obelisks of Egyptian solar temples, though these no doubt were retained merely as solar emblems ages after their use as actual instruments of observations had ceased. An upright stick, carefully plumbed, standing on some level surface, may, therefore, well make the first advance upon the natural horizon. A knob at the top of the stick will be found to render the shadow more easily observed.—Knowledge.
RIGHT AND LEFT FACES
Physicgnomies Which Arc Stumbling Blocks to Photographers.
"One of the principal obstacles in the way of successful portrait photography," said an old-time local expert, "is the asymmetry of the average human face. The features of ninety-nine people out of a hundred are deniably asymmetrical—in other words, the right and left sides are different in size, shape and general contour. We don't notice this variation unless our attention is attracted to it, but it is there all the same, and for some reason that I am not able to explain it is generally emphasized by the camera. What I say applies, of course, to full-face pictures only, for when the head is turned slightly the deviations are scarcely ever discernible.
"Among men asymmetry often lends great strength to a countenance. Bismarck was a striking example of that fact, and so was Gladstone. If you are skeptical take a full-face picture of either and cover one-half of it with a card. Then reverse the process and examine the other side. You will be surprised. In fact, you will discover four different men, all distinct types."--New Orleans Times-Democrat.
Eutretaction Is Life.
Putrefaction is probably not death, but the contrary—the life that follows death, or a sort of resurrection. The laws of conservation and of conversion apply to vital as well as to inorganic forces. Fermentation or putrefaction is a vital process, reciprocally generated by and generating inconceivable millions of impalpable organisms, which charge the atmosphere and are everywhere at work, transmitting dead organisms into elementary living ones—and why not passing on the vital activity into higher forms?
Squirrels by Thousands
Colorado has sold sixty acres of timber near Devil's Head Mountain, where it is estimated there are 30,000 gray squirrels, which have lived and multiplied there for years, protected by public sentiment. The squirrels will be evicted by the woodcutters.
Working Children.
In Coburg-Gotha there are 5,455 children under 14 years of age employed at their homes in making buttons, dolls and toys for the factories. They work from four to six hours a day.
After a man passes fifty, he is second-handed as surely as an old wagon that the owner is willing to sell at less than half its original value.
A night latch is like a tombstone when it is put up for a late husband.
SELLING BY CANDLE.
A Quaint Old-Time Custom Which Still Prevails in Wales.
The custom of "selling by candle," an ancient ceremony, still prevails in several towns in England, notably at Aldermaston. It is letting land, not selling, however, and the property is a piece of meadow, the "church acre," which was bequeathed some centuries ago to the church. The custom of ceremony is as follows: A candle is lighted, and one inch below the flame is duly measured off, at which point a pin is inserted. The bidding then commences, and continues until the inch of candle is consumed and the pin drops out. To the one who is bidding as the pin drops out the land belongs. Every three years this ceremony is performed.
At Chedzoy the church acre is let every twenty-one years by this means, and at Tatworth a sale by lighted candle takes place every year. At Warton the grazing rights upon the roadside have been annually let by the same means, a custom which has been observed since the time of George III. The one who presides at the auction produces the old book containing the record of the annual lettings since 1815. An ordinary candle is then cut into five equal portions, about one-half inch long, one for each lot. At the last auction, attention was drawn to the fact that the sporting rights over an old gravelpit were included in lot No. 1, but unfortunately there were no fish in the pond. "Get on, gentlemen, please; the light's burning," was a frequent exhortation.
At funerals in some parts of Wales there is a curious custom. A poor person is hired—"a long, lean, ugly, lamentable rascal"—to perform the duties of sin-eater. Bread and beer are passed 'o the man over the corpse, or laid on it; these he consumes, and by the process he is supposed to take on him all the slias of the deceased and free the person from walking after death. When a sin-eater is not employed glasses of wine and funeral biscuits are given to each bearer across the coffin. The people believe that every drop of wine drunk at a funeral is a sin committed by the deceased, but that by drinking the wine the soul of the dead is released from the burden of the sin.
In some places it is the custom to send to the friends of a family, after a death, a bag of biscuits with the card of the deceased. These funeral biscuits—often small, round sponge cakes—were known as arvel bread—arvel meaning ale. When arvel bread is passed around at a funeral each guest is expected to put a shilling on the plate.
Even the Court Had to Laugh.
Former Judge Pimbrick of Arizona, while visiting a New Yorker a few weeks ago, related an amusing experience which he had in his younger days when presiding over a police court in a Southwestern town. His story was something like this: "One morning an Irish policeman brought a man amed Sisson up for trial. The man stuttered very badly and when I asked his name he stammered out, 'S-s-s-s-sis,' and then gave it up. "Again I asked his name. 'S-s-s-s-sis,' he same futile attempt.
"After a few more efforts to obtain his name, which called forth more 'sisses,' Iurned impatiently to the policeman and asked: 'What is this prisoner charged with, officer?'
"'I don't know for certain, yer 'Oner,' he replied, his eyes twinkling, 'but I suppose it must be sodawater.'"
"It was some time before I could restore order in court. In fact, I was a bit hilarious myself."
—Robert Graham of Evansville, who had a leg cut off by the cars, died at a Janesville hospital.
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THE TRIBUNE'S financial columns never mislead the public. Its facilities for gathering news, both local and foreign, are far superior to those of any other newspaper in the West.
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It is the "cleanest" daily printed in the West.
William Humphrey of Watertown Dies from His Injuries.
Mr. Humphrey was a Prominent Mason—Was Unable to Give Information as to Assailants.
Watertown. Wis., July 25.—[Special.]
—William Humphrey, the Watertown
liveryman who was brutally assaulted at
his barn in this city shortly after 9
o'clock last Friday night by two tramps,
died at 7 o'clock this morning.
After being assaulted, Mr. Humphrey
never gained strength enough to give a
satisfactory account of how the affair
happened, and the police have no clue by
which they might be assisted in hunting
down the murderer.
Mr. Humphrey was 51 years of age and unmarried. He was a prominent secret society man. He was a 32d-degree Mason, and belonged to Milwaukee Tripoli Temple of Shriners, was a member of the Milwaukee consistory, and was also secretary of the Masonic and Odd Fellows' lodges of this city. The people are considerably wrought up here over this murder and nothing will be left undone to hunt down the guilty ones.
AFTER FORTY YEARS.
Sisters United After Long and peculiar Separation—Each Supposed the Other Dead.
Chippewa Falls, Wis., July 25.—[Special.]—Mr. and Mrs. O. C. Williamson of Indianapolis are in the city, the guests of Mrs. David Kirk. The above mention contains a very strange and interesting story of two lives in one family that drifted apart while almost in childhood. Mrs. Williamson is a sister of Mrs. Kirk's, and the two have just been reunited after a separation of nearly forty years. They drifted apart when young girls, Mrs. Kirk coming to Wisconsin and Mrs. Williamson going to Chicago. After a few years the correspondence which they had been carrying on became very meager, and they lost track of each other. After the great Chicago fire Mrs. Kirk could never find any trace of her sister, and has always believed she perished in that great conflagration. Mrs. Williamson, who narrowly escaped death in the fire, made several efforts to locate her sister and never succeeding, finally came to the conclusion that she was not living. About a year ago she became possessed of facts which enabled her to locate Mrs. Kirk, and the two sisters, who have not seen each other since childhood, and who have each, for over twenty-five years, supposed the other dead, are at last reunited.
HIGHWAY ROBBERY.
An Appleton Servant Girl is Held Up by Masked
Appleton, Wis., July 25.—[Special.]—Mary Manthey, a servant girl employed at one of the summer cottages at Aloha Beach, an Appleton summer colony on Lake Winnebago, three miles from this city, was held up last night and robbed of her purse containing a small sum of money, by a highwayman disguised by a handkerchief over his face for a mask. The girl had been to Appleton and returned home on an interurban car which stops at Waverly Beach, nearly a mile from Aloha. She was walking down the track toward home when stopped by the highwayman, who snatched her pocket-book and made off.
On Sunday night Capt. N. M. Edwards was knocked down on a residence street, early in the evening, by three unknown men. After a brief struggle he escaped. It is not thought any robbery was intended, but the attack was in mere drunken wantonness.
FOOLED THE MOTHER.
Daughter Slips Away and Gets Married and Groom Has Irate Parent Arrested.
Spring Valley, Wis., July 25.—[Special.]—Mrs. Erdman and daughter Jennie of Ono went to Ellsworth on business yesterday. While there the girl slipped away from her mother and eloped with a young man named Clapp. To make it unique, the groom, after the ceremony, had Mrs. Erdman arrested and lodged in jail charged with making threats of bodily injury to him
Janesville, Wis., July 25.—[Special.]—George Vaughn of Rockford, Ill., arrived in the city this morning in search of his daughter Nellie, aged 18. He said the young woman left her home at Rockford yesterday afternoon and he had traced her to this city. She was seen alighting from the train yesterday afternoon and also on the streets last evening. The father is very much worried and with the aid of the police has been searching the city for the girl all this morning.
BOOK BY MADISON WOMAN.
Miss Eliza R. Scidmore's "China, the Long-Lived Empire."
Madison, Wis., July 25.—[Special.]—Madison people are particularly interested in the success of a new book by Miss Eliza Ruhama Seidmore, called "China, the Long-Lived Empire." Miss Seidmore is herself a former Madison girl, as the early years of her life were spent here, after the family's removal from Clinton, Ia. She accompanied her brother to Japan when he was made vice-consul-general, to Yokohama. She has called Yokohama "home" ever since. Although it is a long time since Miss Seidmore has lived here, she has kept in touch with many Madison friends, and has frequently visited her aunts, Mrs. David Atwood and Mrs. G. M. Oakley. The last time she was here was in the summer of '93, when she attended the meeting of a scientific society of which she is a member. This is by no means Miss Seidmore's maiden effort, though it bids fair to be her most successful. She is the author of other books on travel, among them, "Java, the Garden of the East," "Westward to the Far East," and "Eastward to the West," the last of which has been translated into French.
ADAM KUTA HELD FOR TRIAL.
Eaton Farmer is Charged with Attempt to Murder.
Green Bay, Wis., July 25.—[Special.]
—Adam Kuta of the town of Eaton, who was arrested for alleged cruel and inhuman treatment of two imbecile and deformed children, was held for trial in the circuit court. Bail was fixed at $200 and this was furnished. The charge against Kuta includes three counts, the first of which is attempt to murder. Kuta does not speak English and a Polish interpreter was necessary to take his testimony.
Father Shoots Bird and Saves His Daughter from a Terrible Death.
Sheboygan, Wis., July 25.—[Special.]
An eagle measuring 6 feet $1\frac{1}{2}$ inches from tip to tip of wings was killed by T. Smith, a farmer living in the town of Sheboygan Falls. While at work he saw the large bird fly close to his children and clasp his daughter Mary, aged 3 years. The man secured a rifle and shot the eagle. The child and bird fell to the ground, the child not being injured. The eagle was the first killed in Sheboygan county in a long time.
THEY ARE NOT DEAD.
Word is Received from Wisconsin Missionaries Who Are
Appleton, Wis., July 25.—[Special.]—A letter was received here yesterday by friends from Mrs. Elizabeth La Doux James, wife of Rev. Edward James, a missionary at Nanking, China, which encourages the belief of friends here that both are safe. The letter was written June 15 from a little place far up in the hills, about 100 miles from Nanking, where many families of missionaries go for the summer and where about 1000 women and children were at the time the letter was written.
So quiet is this little place and far removed from the scene of the Boxer outrages that Mrs. James at the time of writing had evidently not heard of the trouble at all, as no reference to it was made in the letter. Rev. Mr. James, at the time of writing, was at Nanking and it is probable that even he knew nothing of the troubles or he would have warned his wife.
Both Rev. and Mrs. James graduated from Lawrence university at Appleton in 1896.
The safety of Mrs. George W. Verity, formerly of Appleton, who for some years past with her husband has been doing missionary work in China, was still further assured yesterday by a letter received by Matthias Verity of Appleton from Mrs. Verity, who is now at Shanghai. The letter was written June 27 and mailed from Shanghai June 29 upon her arrival there.
The letter just received is dated "On the Canal, June 27, 1900," and reads as follows:
Dear Father Verity: I know that you are feeling very anxious these days about George and so am I for he has been away from me now just four weeks and how much has happened during this short time! He sent a telegram about two weeks ago saying that he was shut up in Pekin and telling me to come to Chinkiang (near Shanghai) with Mrs. Dr. Barrow and her little girl of our mission. Mr. King of the Baptist mission, who is engaged to Dr. Barrow, is escorting us. Before we started another telegram came from Tien Tsin ordering us to proceed immediately. We traveled eight days by cart over the roughest kind of a road and we had to put up in some of the dirtiest sorts of inns. But all these hardships count for nothing if I could only know how George is situated. We are traveling by boat now and expect to reach Chinkiang tomorrow or next day. I can scarcely wait for I have there to hear from the dear boy. China is in a very critical condition now and it looks as if the time for the long-talked-of partition has come at last. I am afraid our poor Christians will suffer—some have already!
Your letter to George came a few days before I told Tai An, but I did not forward it for I knew that there was no probability of it reaching him. Am keeping it until I can hand it over. Now that the English admiral with 1500 men has entered Pekin it seems as if we might hope that the foreigners shut up in there might soon be able to come away. I feel that the good Father will take care of our dear boy. Well, I will not write any more now but finish after I hear more.
Headed "Chinkiang," and evidently added to the letter at a later date, is the following:
We arrived here safely but there is no definite news from Pekin yet. A large force is on the way from Tien Tsin and probably by this time all the foreigners are safe. I am sure, we shall hear from him soon.
GUN SAVES LIVES.
Its Explosion Saves a Family in a Burning House from Cremation.
Madison, Wis., July 25.—[Special.] The family of John Loy in South Madison was saved from probable cremation by the explosion of a loaded shotgun early this morning. A fire that broke out in their dwelling house from some unknown cause spread until the flames enveloped the gun and ignited the powder it contained. The discharge awoke the family of five members and saved them from being burned up. The structure, which was consumed, was a two-story frame building. The loss is $1000 and insurance $500.
FALLS TO HIS DEATH.
Hudson, Wis., July 25.—[Special.]— Hans Thoen, a farmer from Pleasant Valley, fell from the porch of the Harres house and was killed. The body was found early this morning. He came from Baldwin last night and was on his way to Minneapolis. He was a brother of ex-County Clerk Thoen.
CATCH TWO YOUNG EAGLES.
Eau Claire Mail Carrier Captures Descendant of Old Abe.
Eau Claire, Wis., July 25.—[Special.]
—Henry Hadley, the rural route No. 1 mail carrier of Eau Claire, in addition to collecting mail scooped a couple of very young eagles into his buggy the other day. They were captured in the vicinity of Brackett. They are a pair of very lively birds and are mated. It is said Old Abe came from the town of Washington, so these must be either lineal descendants of Old Abe or in some way related so that historic bird.
LOGS FOR OSHKOSH MILLS.
High Water in River and Lake De- lights the Loggers.
Oshkosh. Wis., July 25.—[Special.]
The abundant rain of the last week has raised the lake and river level so that all the logs hung up can be floated down to the city. There are 3,000,000 feet of Keshena Indian logs to be brought down to the Radford, Paine and Hollister mills. There are many Red river logs to be brought down to Fond du Lac, Neenah and Menasha. From 75 to 100 men will go to work tomorrow.
SAVES HIS BROTHER'S LIFE.
Paraboo Boy, Sucks Poison from a Rattlesnake Bite.
Baraboo, Wis., July 25.—[Special.]—Louis, the 10-year-old son of Albert Young, living a few miles south of this city, was bitten by a large rattlesnake. His brother, who was with him, sucked the poison from the wound and afterwards he was taken home and medical aid summoned. It is thought the lad will recover.
Passenger Train Wrecked Near Wabasha, Minn.
DUE TO HEAVY RAINS
Earth Gave Way Shortly Before Train Came Along-Engineer and Fireman Killed.
La Crosse, Wis., July 24.—The Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul passenger train No. 2, which is due here at 3:05 a.m., was wrecked about 5 o'clock this morning at King's Coolie, near Wabasha, Minn., by running into a landslide at that place. Engineer Hathaway and Fireman Thomas were instantly killed and several passengers in the forward coaches were injured, some seriously.
The track runs between high bluffs and the Mississippi river between St. Paul and La Crosse and the heavy rains of yesterday loosened vast amounts of earth on a steep bluff which gave way shortly before the train came along. Trains passing there only a short time before report a soft track. A wrecking train has been sent to the scene from here.
RACINE ALDERMAN IS MISSING AGAIN.
Writes to Chief of Police to Look in the Lake for a Floater.
Racine, Wis., July 24.—[Special.]—Aiderman Albert Linck of the Sixth ward has again created a sensation here. This morning Chief of Police Schumacher received in his mail a letter from Mr. Linck stating that he had left the city for reasons which he could not explain and that he had gone to Chicago hoping to borrow some money, but had failed to secure what he needed. He further wrote that the chief had better look in the lake as he would probably find a "floater" there. Linck has been missing from the city for several days. His mother, with whom he lived, says that he told her he was going to Union Grove to work. He gave up his position in the machine shop here where he had been employed for some time. His friends do not think that he has killed himself, but think he has left the city for some reason which they refuse to make public. Several months ago he disappeared from Racine and was gone some time. He was found in St. Paul. He claimed that he knew nothing of where he had been from the time he left the city until he was found.
MURDER IS CHARGED.
Police Officer of Marinette Arrested on Complaint of Cigarmakers' Union.
Marinette, Wis., July 24.—[Special.]—Christian Eck, a member of the local police force, was arrested this morning on the charge of murder in the first degree. The complainant is C. F. Jensen, a member of the Cigarmakers' union. Eck shot and killed Joseph Mitchell, a journeyman member of the Cigarmakers' union, early Sunday morning. He was escorting Mitchell to jail for being drunk, when the latter tried to escape. The officer fired at him and the bullet struck him in the head, inflicting a fatal wound. The coroner's jury practically exonerated the policeman, but the Cigarmakers' union decided to make the complaint. The Trades council, which includes all the laboring unions of this city, held a meeting last evening and passed resolutions of sympathy with the efforts of the cigarmakers.
BODIES IDENTIFIED.
Men Murdered at Amazonia, Mo., Were Guy Shelliam and Henry Speth of Platteville.
Platteville, Wis., July 24.—The identification proves the parties killed at Amazonia, Mo., to be Guy Shelliam, aged 21 years, son of John Shelliam, chief of the local police, and Henry Speth, aged about 20 years, son of Christian Speth. Both were born and brought up in Platteville. They had been away from home several weeks and were supposed to be making their way to Kansas City, looking for work. They were murdered on a train. The particulars are unknown here. Arrangements will be made for the bodies to be brought here to the respective homes immediately. Both were well known in Platteville.
F. R. MOULTON RESIGNS.
No Longer Assistant Superintendent of Wisconsin Division of North-Western Road.
Janesville, Wis., July 24.—[Special.]—There is an authoritative rumor in railroad circles here that Fred R. Moulton, assistant superintendent of the Wisconsin division of the North-Western road, extending from Chicago to Fond du Lac, has resigned and that his successor will be named in a few days. Mr. Moulton admits that he will quit his present job very soon and go to running a train again. He has held the place of assistant superintendent over six years. The cause of his alleged resignation is said to be friction with those both above and below on the operation staff.
PEA PICKERS FROM SHEBOYGAN
Seven Hundred People Put to Work by Manitowoc Company.
Manitowoc, Wis., July 24.—[Special.]
—The Albert Landreth Pea Canning company brought here from Sheboygan, over the North-Western road, a crew of 698 pea pickers. The rains during the past week have quickened the growth of vegetation so much that the peas are ripening at a rate too fast for the local canning factories to handle. It was therefore, necessary to import outside pickers. They will arrive here every morning and leave every evening by train for the next week.
Find Skeleton of a Man.
Baraboo. Wis., July 24. While some telephone line repairers were in the vicinity of Mr. Zautow's farm about six miles south of this city, they discovered what they supposed to be the skeleton of a man, together with clothing, a carpet and a tin pail. Mr. Zautow remembers an old man in his vicinity last fall and identified the carpet and tin pail, which the man had with him at that time.
Wounded Farmer May Recover.
Racine, Wis.. July 24.—The name of the man who shot Farmer Frank Jandl is Joseph Raim and his home is in Chicago. This information was given by Frank Sloup, the partner of Raim, and who first went to the Jandl residence with the assailant, but he was in Chicago when the assault was made. Raim was traced to Milwaukee and there trace was lost. Jandl is resting easy and the physicians believe he will revover.
HELD UP BY THREE DRUNKEN POLANDERS.
Mrs. Charles R. Smith of Menasha Has an Exciting Experience with Thugs.
Menasha, Wis., July 24.—[Special.]—Mrs. Charles R. Smith, wife of the president of the Menasha Woodenware company, while returning last night from Appleton in her carriage with her coachman, maid and four children, was attacked by three drunken Polanders on the outskirts of the city. The men held up the horses and threatened to kill the occupants of the carriage. The driver whipped the horses and was able to get away. The men ran after the carriage into the city, where they were arrested and taken to jail. Mrs. Smith and the children were badly frightened. The men were brought up in the municipal court this morning and gave their names as Frank Schiglefski and Victor and Conrad Smolenski, employees of the Woodenware company. Conrad was fine $100 and costs or six months in the county jail, while Frank was fined $4.3S and Victor was discharged.
IRON MINE ON A ROCK COUNTY FARM.
Farmer John Malone, Town of Johns town, May Have Made a Very Rich Discovery.
Janesville, Wis., July 24.—[Special.]—John Malone, town of Johnstown, has discovered what he thinks to be and what experts tell him is an iron ore mine on his farm. He bought the place some three years ago and the spot where the ore shows above the surface is about 8 feet square. Grain or grass will not grow on this spot and that is what called Mr. Malone's attention to it. He has dug down about three feet and the material is full of iron and sulphur.
J. T. HEMPHILL DEAD.
He Married Frances W. Candee of Milwaukee Once a Banker at Sparta.
Minneapolis, Minn., July 24.—[Special.]—J. T. Hemphill, formerly secretary of the board of trade, died at his home after an illness of three days. Mr. Hemphill was born at Wooster, O., May 16, 1826. He married Frances W. Candee at Milwaukee in 1860. He studied law and in 1850 went to Australia, returning to the United States in 1856. For the past twelve years he had been a resident of Minneapolis. He came to this city from Sparta. Wis., where he had been for years engaged in the banking business and was recognized as one of the town's most substantial and able business men. He leaves three children, William A. Hemphill of Philadelphia; John H. and Allen C. Hemphill of Minneapolis.
John Dunneback, Kenosha.
Kenosha, Wis., July 24.—[Special.]—John Dunneback, one of the early pioneer settlers of Kenosha county, died at his home in the town of Somers this morning, at the age of 74 years. The deceased was born in Germany and came to Southport in 1840.
A. B. Carpenter, Arthur.
Platteville, Wis., July 24.—[Special.]—A. B. Carpenter, aged about 60 years, died at his home near Arthur this morning of consumption. He was an old soldier and highly-respected farmer of this community, and leaves a family.
Cook Jones, Georgetown.
Platteville, Wis., July 24.—[Special.] Word has been received of the death of Cook Jones. He was aged 73 years and a farmer living near Georgetown. He was one of the oldest settlers in this section. A large family, all grown, survive him.
NOT TAXED ENOUGH.
Sixty Society People of Racine Summoned to Appear Before Board of Review.
Racine, Wis., July 24.—[Special.]—About sixty of the most fashionable and prominent ladies and gentlemen of Racine are considerably agitated today on account of the action of the board of review, which has summoned them to appear before it tomorrow morning at 9 o'clock and testify in regard to the valuation of their personal property. It has been stated that the people have not been paying high enough taxes on their property and the board means to investigate.
The action of the board was brought about by statements made during the review of the assessment of the Racine Water company, which company is fighting its advanced taxation. The company was this year assessed on a valuation of $300,000, an increase of $115,000 over last year. The company, represented by Senator Quarles and Attorney Karney, appeared before the board and argued upon the advancement. Mr. Karney presented a list of sixty persons who, he claimed, were being under taxed. The list thus presented contains the names of the people summoned to appear before the board tomorrow. Many of the people say that they will not appear as the summons is not legal. They say that to be legal the summons must be made out by a justice of the pea
TO SUE FOR $40,000.
Marinette Lumber Company Starts Action Against "Soo" Road.
Marinette, Wis., July 24.—[Special.]—The Cook brothers have instituted another action for $40,000 against the "Soo" read for the loss of the cedar at Cavour. The case will be tried in Marinette at the October term. It is said that the complaint charges specifically that the defendant company by its negligence and failure to live up to an agreement entered into by the Messrs. Cook and the foreman of the company caused the loss complained of. Having neglected to provide the necessary freight cars when needed the plaintiffs had obtained these from other lines and loaded the cedar on them. When this had been done the company pleaded, it is alleged, that it did not have the engine to spare to do the hauling. A locomotive was also secured from another line, but no shipments were made, and soon afterward fire swept the property out of existence. It is also claimed that at the time the plaintiffs began operations at Cavour they had secured a promise from the railroad company or its authorized agent to have cars ready at hand to enable the Messrs. Cook to ship at frequent intervals that no great amount of stock might accumulate, but that such agreement was not complied with at any time.
Home from Dawson City:
Madison, Wis., July 24.—Jesse Edgren, whose wife died at Dawson City nearly two years ago, leaving a baby girl a few days old, arrived home from Alaska yesterday afternoon. The child was brought here a short time after its birth and has since been cared for by its grandparents, Capt, and Mrs. James Bennet.
Burglar's Steal Tobacco and Pipes.
Chippewa Falls, Wis., July 24.—[Special.] Thieves entered the store of R. E. Grafton at Cartwright and carried away the entire stock of cigars, pipes and tobacco. The goods were valued at $200.
A Dastardly Attempt to Derail a Passenger Train.
HE PREVENTS A WRECK
Alex Swan, a Laborer, Removes Obstruction from Track Just in Time.
Three Lakes, Wis., July 23.—[Special.]
Some time during last night eighteen ties were piled on the railroad track five miles south of that station. Alex Swan, a laborer, at Wilson & Co.'s camp at Stella junction, was coming to town early in the morning and noticed the obstruction just in time to remove it and prevent passenger train No. 27, due here at 4:29 a. m., from being wrecked. In addition to the pile of ties there were large rocks piled on a bridge a short distance north of it, which Mr. Swan succeeded in removing also. The train consisted of one coach, baggage car and two sleepers, one of the sleepers bearing a fishing party of thirty or more members of the Three Lakes Rod and Gun club of this place. All on board owe their escape to the heroic act of Alex Swan, who removed the obstruction after hearing the whistle of the engine in the distance.
TWO BODIES FOUND.
Manitowoc Mysteries Are Cleared Up-Missing Men Are Both Dead.
Manitowoc, Wis., July 23.—[Special.]
Arthur Hann and Emil Fehring, the two Manitowoc men who disappeared so mysteriously more than two weeks ago, and for whom a continual search has been made but without result, have been found. Brakeman Schwarz of the North-Western road, white engaged in the lake front switchyards, noticed something that resembled a human body oating about half-way down the slip. He notified Officer Sniffin and the two procured a boat and on arriving at the place found the body of a man, but they were unable to recognize who it was. They took the body to Vogt's undertaking rooms, where Frank Hahn identified the body as that of his missing brother. Arthur Rahn, who disappeared July 10. He was working with a crew of three men at the Reiss coal docks. The three men, including Rahn, sat down to their dinner at noon of Tuesday, July 10, and after finishing dinner Rahn left the other two men. When 1 o'clock came Rahn failed to report for work and the foreman, asking the two men where he was, they said he had gone off for a walk. He never returned, however. His coat, hat and dinner pail had been left on the docks. A reward was offered for his discovery, but was withdrawn a few days ago. Two of the carferries were in the slip, side by side, yesterday and it must have been through the working of their wheels that the body was brought to the surface. It is supposed that somehow or other Rahn accidentally fell into the slip and was drowned before help could reach him. He leaves a wife and two children. The body will be taken to New Holstein, where he formerly lived, for burial. He was about 45 years of age.
The body of Emil Fehring was recovered Saturday evening. Samuel Randolph, Jr., was walking along the dock on the lake front when he saw the head of a man appear above water. He jumped into a boat and with the help of Officer Sniffin brought the body ashore. They both believed it to be the body of Rahn, since it was quite generally supposed that Fehring was in Antigo. Wis., where he has a brother and was working at his trade. Letters found on his person addressed to him and the name on his key-ring soon showed that it was not Rahn, but Fehring. Fehring disappeared July 9 and nothing had been heard of him since. It was said that he had some domestic trouble and therefore left home. He was a cigar manufacturer by trade. The inquest took place before Justice Markham this morning. It is thought that he also fell into the river accidentally and that it was not a case of suicide.
AN INHUMAN FATHER.
Farmer Terribly Abuses His Children-Forced Them to Drink Whisky.
Janesville, Wis., July 23.—[Special.]—James Arner, residing on the McCue farm, in the town of Beloit, was brought into the municipal court this morning, charged with assault on his young son Thomas, a lad 12 years of age. Arner entered a plea of not guilty. Judge Fifield held him for trial. In default of $300 bail he was committed to jail. This is not Arner's first appearance before the court on the charge of abusing his family. He was arrested once before for assault and forcing his children to drink whisky, and on one occasion forced one of the boys to drink a pint or more.
When the sheriff arrived at the house last night Arner was beating the children and making himself a terror to his family. He was immediately taken in charge by Deputy Thomas Brown, the complainant. The oldest of the children had a black eye and has his face cut and the rest of the family showed the effects of a recent beating. Deputy Brown said the house looked like a slaughterpen, blood being spattered over everything from the cuts and bleeding noses of the children, caused by the beatings given them by the father. The children, Thomas, Myrtle, Mary, Julia and a younger child range from 12 years. They all show the effects of numerous beatings and punishments inflicted by the inhuman father.
EXTENSION TO JANESVILLE.
Milwaukee Road will Soon Have 300 Men at Work.
Wankegan, Ill., July 23.—[Special.]
—The Milwaukee railroad is arranging to cut down the grade on its Libertyville branch, preparatory to making it a through line to Janesville. Wis. The extension from Fox Lake to Janesville is now under construction. In reducing the grade a big job will at once be undertaken in cutting down the hill just east of Libertyville. Work will begin this week at laying additional tracks at that point and 300 men and much apparatus will be employed on the job until winter sets in. The reduction of the grade will enable the road to make faster time from Chicago to Libertyville and Fox Lake next season and later on to Janesville and that region.
SON OF PROF. PEARSON DIES.
Walter Pearson of Beloit Passes Away After Long Hiness.
Beloit, Wis., July 23.—[Special.]— Walter Pearson, aged 16, son of Prof. C. W. Pearson of Beloit college, died Sunday afternoon after a protracted illness. La Crosse, Wis., July 23.—[Special.]— Harry Turnbull, for twenty years connected with the Chicago. Burlington & Quincy railway, died suddenly this morning of liver troubles.
APPLETON BOY DIES IN THE PHILIPPINES.
Sergeant Albert H. Cockayne of the Signal Service Killed by the Insurgents.
Appleton, Wis., July 23.—]Special. [— Sergt. Albert H. Cockayne of Co. E. United States Signal corps, who was among those reported killed in the Philippines June 20, is an Appleton boy, the son of William Cockayne of this city. He served in the regular army in the Cuban campaign and was promoted for distinguished gallantry at El Caney and transferred to the signal corps. After the close of the Spanish-American war, through the influence of his company and regimental officers, he secured an appointment in the regular signal corps, and after a course at the signal college at Fort Meyer he was assigned to duty in the Philippines. No particulars are given in the cable dispatches regarding his death.
MAY BE MURDER.
A Tramp Shoots a Racine County Farmer Four Times and Escapes.
Racine, Wis., July 23.—Frank Jandl, a farmer of the town of Caledonia, lies at St. Mary's hospital with three bullets in his body and may die, having been murderously assaulted and shot by a man known only as "Joe." The stranger and a companion named Frank Sloup applied at the Jandl farm for work eight days ago. They proved worthless and were driven away. "Joe" returned and was permitted to remain. While Jandl was getting the breakfast, "Joe" enter the kitchen and deliberately shot him in the breast and ran from the house. Jandl followed and when outside the man fired four more shots, two taking effect in Jandl's arms.
The assailant is described as 21 years of age, 5 feet 6 inches tall, smooth, peaked face and weighs 140 pounds. He came from Chicago and said his father was a business man of that place. Officers and others scoured the country for him. Jandl is about 45 years of age and well-known in Bohemian circles.
It is learned that the man was seen soon after the shooting at Mahrbacher's saloon near Caledonia, where he asked for some beer. He offered the proprietor a $10 bill, which could not be changed. He then disappeared through the rear door and was not seen again until a Milwaukee, Racine & Kenosha electric car came along, which he stopped and got on. The police were informed last night that the fellow offered the $10 bill to the conductor and got it changed. The man left the car at National avenue, Milwaukee.
WORK ON THE ROAD.
Bradley and Collins Pushing Work on the Railway Out of
Tomahawk, Wis. July 23.—[Special.]
—When two men of such sterling business ability as W. H. Bradley and W. G. Collins possess become associated in railroad building it is a forerunner of assured success in such an undertaking. The extension of the Marinette, Tomahawk & Western railroad has already begun at a point eight miles from this city, where it will take a southeasterly direction to the Prairie river, thence due east to Antigo. Fifteen miles will be built and put into operation this year. The contract has already been let to Fuller & Huss, Chicago contractors, for the first fifteen miles, which will cost between $9000 and $10,000 a mile, without equipment. Next year the road may be built to Menominee. This route will open up valuable territory.
SURVEY COMPLETED.
Wisconsin Valley Advancement Association will Meet at Tomahawk July 26.
Tomahawk, Wis., July 23.—[Special.]
—The next meeting of the Wisconsin Valley Advancement association will be held on Thursday, July 26, at the Mitchell hotel. C. B. Pride of Appleton has written Secretary Rose that he expects to finish the survey of the Wisconsin river this week. "It is an extensive piece of work," writes Mr. Pride, "and I have had engineers constantly employed since I began the survey, but I think you will be satisfied with what has been done. I hope to deliver the report in person and go over it with you in detail."
E. S. Shepard of Rhinelander is preparing a mammoth map of the valley which it is expected will be submitted for inspection at the meeting on Thursday next.
MILLS RUNNING AGAIN.
High Water in the Mississippi River Allows La Crosse Sawmills to Resume Work.
La Crosse, Wis., July 23.—[Special.]— The rise of five feet in the stage of water here has made possible the resumption of the sawmilling business. The Holway and Nichols mills, two of the largest in the city, announce that they will begin sawing this week, and the Coleman mill will soon resume also. This is a great relief to the working people of La Crosse, a large number of whom are dependent upon the lumber companies for a livelihood and many of whom have been in hard straits owing to the shutting down of the local concerns.
AN OLD OFFENDER.
Lisle Graves of Green Bay Recog- nized by Prison Authorities.
Appleton, Wis., July 23.—[Special.]—Charles Kelley, claiming to be from California, captured in a box car at Appleton junction from which he had broken the seal, appeared before Judge Goodland in circuit court, at his own request, and pleaded guilty to larceny, receiving a sentence of six months at the Green Bay reformatory. He was leniently dealt with on account of his youth and a doubt as to his criminal intent. Upon his arrival at the reformatory he was recognized as Lisle Graves, a Green Bay young man, who was the third prisoner committed to the reformatory upon its establishment a few years ago, and the first one to be discharged from that institution after serving two years for larceny, and once making a desperate effort to escape. He will probably be transferred to the state prison at Waupun to serve his term.
BAD INDIAN SENT TO PRISON.
Money Penny Follows His Uncle's Example and Goes to the "Pen." Madison, Wis., July 23.—[Special.]—Money Penny, the Indian, who escaped from custody recently near Ashland, by jumping from a train, but was recaptured, was sent to the prison at Stillwater for two years by Judge Bunn in the Federal court today for selling liquor on the Odanah reservation. It was the fifth time he had been up for the same offense within about two years. He is a nephew of the Indian murderer of the same name now serving a life sentence at Waupun.
Made the Waiter Sad.
One of the greatest sorrows of famous
personages is that it is impossible to live
1p to the ideal opinion which the people
whom they meet in the ordinary affairs
of life have formed of them. It is re-
orded that a certain literary man of
high reputation had occasion to remark
1o a waiter in the restaurant where he
<ometimes: lunches: | ‘*Waiter, this beef-
steak is very tough.” The waiter looked
it him with a sorrowful expression and
sighed See “Perhaps you will tell
me.” said the literary man, “why you
sigh in that fashion?”
“Ah, sir,” replied the waiter sadly,
“you see I took you for a man who al-
ways said original things, and here you
come and say just the same thing that
all the rest of them do.”
Try Grain-O: Try Grain-O!
Ask your grocer today to show you a
package of GRAIN-O, the new food
drink that takes the place of coffee.
The enildren may drink it without injury
as well as the adult. All who try it like
it. GRAIN-O has that rich seal brown
of Mocha or Java, but it is made from
pure gtains, and the most delicate stom-
ach receives it without distress. ~One-
fourth the price of coffee. 15¢ and 23¢
ner nackave. Sold by all grocers.
Football for British Prisoners.
A firm of athletic outfitters in London
sent twelve footballs to the Gloucester
regiment at the seat of war, who have
arranged with the Boer general to for-
ward them to Pretoria for use of the im-
prisoned men of the regiment.—Indianap-
olis Press.
—_——
OVARIAN TROUBLES.
Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound
Cares Them —Two Letters from Women.
‘Dear Mrs. Prnkuam:—I write tr
tell you of the good Lydia E. Pink-
ham’s Vegetable Compound has done
me. Lwassick in bed-abont five weeks.
‘The right side of my abdomen pained
me and was so swollen and sore that I
could not walk. The r
doctor told my hus- a
band I would have to 8 =,
undergo an operation. BS . :
‘This I refused to do a ap
untill had given your Agsil/fea
medicineatrial. Be- is eS
fore I had taken £ mL
one bottle the ga mr
swelling be- GV PS
gan to disap- >)
pear. I con- { ‘XY
tinued to use tA(!
your medicine ——\|
until the swelling
was entirely gone.
When the doctor # L
came he jas very = SS
much surprised to SA
see me so much <s
better.”—Mrs. Mary Suitu, Arlington,
Iowa.
“Dear Mrs. Pinknam:—I was sick for
two years with falling of the womb, and
inflammation of the ovaries and bladder.
I was bloated very badly. My left limb
would swell so I could not step on my
foot. Ihad such bearing down puins I
could not straighten up or walk across
the room and such shooting pains would
go through me that I thought I could
notstandit. My mother got mea bottle
of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com-
pound and told metotry it. I took six
bottles and now, thanks to your won-
derful medicine, I am a well weman.”
—Mrs. Exsiz Bry ay, Otisvilie, Mich.
ABSOLUTE
SECURITY.
Genuine
Carter’s
Little Liver Pills.
Jie Pzad
Very small and as easy ;
to take as sugar.
lI eo |FOR HEADACHE.
\CARTERS |ror oizziness.
FOR BILIOUSNESS.
IVER FOR TORPID LIVER.
PILLS. FOR COWSTIPATION.
* 1POR SALLOW SKIN.
—_ FOR THE COMPLEXION
IAIN ver nave youarune,
of its | Parety Vegetable, <Ae-.7e icc
CURE SICK HEADACHE.
TO PURCHASE,
Homestead Rights of Union
Soldiers, their widow: or
heirs, who made a Home-
j stead Filing on less than
SOLDIER 1e0.actes ‘before June. 2,
1874, no matter whether
final proof was made or not.
Will pay 81.25 A. cash,
HOMESTE ADS Bend stamp. far par:
Slewlars Wa, SuLTER,
Hardesty, Okla.
RTIFICIAL LIMBS.
Latest Patented improved Legs
Eraces ter Ail Deformities. gus Fraa
. Milwaukes
The Coerflinger Artificial Limb Co, wisco:isin’
gw es and Gents’ Clothes and al-
LACE kinds of Family Dyetng at reai
sonable prices Sail Srdere prompt:
CURTAINS ly attended to. Wrie. HACK &
ALTEN, 534 Clinton Street, Miu-
25 40c par waukes, Wis.
NSIONZ2* W. MORRIS,
Washington, D.C,
pareeenatwLre es ates Clnime:
Syrs in civil war, 15 adjudicating claims, atty since,
D R oO P SY NEW DISCOVERY: gives
quick relief Aasaree worse
‘PitkL Dee ME Greae’s Sons, Box'8y Adasen Oat
MLN Uncearcsensesessneneennnsnen NOs 30, 1900
eae WHEN WRITING 10 ADVERTISERS
please say you saw the Advertisement
in this paper.
“_PISO’S CURE FOR’.
¥ tes Good se
re in time. Sold by druggists. 3
‘CONSUMPTION. %
TEA-TABLE SALAD.
A baby crocodile at the Philadelphia
= has been christened “Teddy” Reose-
velt.
On the Voyage to Paris.—First Pas-
senger—"Did you have breakfast, sir?
Second Passenger—"Yes, for a while.’ —
Brooklyn Life.
The Henpecked Husband—“Is my wife
going out, Mary?”
“Yes, sir.” 2 :
| “Do vou know if I am going with her.”
| —Tit-Bits. =
i Hewitt—“What are you raising whis-
kers for?” z
| Jewett—"Well, I don’t mind telling you
that J am wearing a necktie my wife
gave me.”—Harper's, Bazar.
“Oh, James, here's an account of a
hen who -laid five eggs in one day.
“Well, maybe she was getting chead
with her work so she could take a va-
cation.”"—Detroit Free Press.
“Where does the pain seem ta be?”
inquired the owl, in a sympathetic toue.
“The pain,” impatiently replied the
snake, “is in my spinal-column. Did you
‘ihenk it was in one of my legs?’—An-
swers.
;. A young man from the country walkeit
into one of the most stylish bar-rooms in
Bangor, Me., the other day, leading 1
| young heifer, and tied the animal to the
foot rest of the bar while he drank two
schooners of beer.
Little Nettie was learning to read, and
part of her lesson ran thus: “The cac
has a rat.” “Huh!” she exclaimed, “the
man who wrote this book didn't know
much. Cats don’t have rats; they have
kittens.”"—Kansas City Star.
Mrs. Johnsing—“Can’t stay long, Mrs.
Suow; I just come to see ef yo’ wouldn't
jo'n de mission band.”
Mrs. Snew—‘Fo’ de lan’ sakes, honey,
| doan come to me. I can’t even play on
a monforgan.”—Woman's Journal.
Lord) Sayvan-De_ Livrus—Ah! but
your leisure: clawss in this country have
no. titles,”
| Miss Sharve—‘Nonsense! What's the
matter with ‘hobo,’ ‘Weary Willie,’
| ‘Dusty Roads,” and’ so on?”—Philadel-
phia Press.
| Foreigner—“Have you any American
composers?”
; American (proudly)—‘Lots of ‘em.
| There's Schlossenwertz, Sweipicrensciek,
Mickiwitz, Ouscaspiel, Sweitzerwasser-
andt, and ever so many more.”—New
York Weekly.
Always in Season.—‘Oysters are out
of season, I believe?” said the puffy
party.
“Yes,” replied the head waiter, glane-
ing across at the dude who was dining
a sonbrette, “this is the lobster season.”
—Philadelphia North American.
‘The Ways of Babies.—“Pa, I wouldn't
have a little sister for anything.”
“Why, Tommy?” ;
"Cause, pa, Jimmy Dobbs’ little sister
cries an’ eries until he gets down on th’
floor, an’ Jets her tramp up an’ down on
his stummiek.”--Indianapolis Journal.
Swipsey—‘Muggsy swiped a pair a’
shoes from a store cr
Lifter—“Did they fit him?”
Swipsey—“I don’t t’ink so. I heard one
o' de fellers say dat a couple 0’ cops come
along while Muggsy wuz tryin’ de shoes
on, ‘an’ dey pinched ’im.”—Philadelphia
Record.
Cahill—“Oi hod two brothers thot niver
yoted the Dimmycratic ticket in their
loives.””
Costigan—“They must hoy bin blame
queer.” ger
Cahill—“They was! Wan av thim died
coming over and the other wan niver lift
Oireland.”—Judge.
Diner (to restaurant waiter)—“What
have you got for dinner?”
Waiter — Roast beef fricasseed chicken |
stewed lamib hash baked and fried potatoes
College pudding milk tea and coffee.”
Diner—“Give me the third, fourth,
fifth, sixth, eighth, teenth and nineteenth
syllables.” —Tid-Bits.
“There you are,” said the senator who_
was seeking a renomination, handing ov- |
er a goodly check. “There's my contri-
bution to the campaign fund.”
“I don’t suppose,” said the machine
boss, ‘that you'll want a receipt for it.”
“No. You just reseat me, that’s all.”—
Philadelphia Press.
“Bixby went into a French restaurant
| and called for ‘caffy oh lay.’ ”
| “That's all right. ‘Coffee with milk.’
| What then?’
“Why, he got mad.”
“What for?”
“Because they didn’t bring him. coffee
and an egg.”—Cleveland Plain Dealer.
| “I,” said the gentleman who had fairly
prospered, “am humbly proud of the fact
that IT took ‘Get thee behind me, Satan,’
as my motto when I began business life.”
“There is nothing.” said the second
gentleman, who had measured business
wits with the first gentleman, “like hav-
ing good backing.”—Indianapolis News.
Wife (reading)—“Another mysterious
suicide—unknown man throws himself
from a cliff.”
Husband (thoughtlessly)—“Bet his wife
was at the bottom of it.”
Wife—"Charles!”
Husband (hurriedly)—“Of the cliff, my
love; not the suicide.”—Collier’s Weekly.
MeJigger—“I just saw Hallroom down
the street. He——"
‘Thingumbob—‘Huh! That fellow!”
MeJigger—*What’s the matter? Evy-
erybody at your boarding house seems to
be down on him. Is it because he pays
his board promptly?”
Thingumbob—* *Umph! It's worse than
that. . He lends the landlady money.”—
Philadelphia Press, ua
“Very well,” concluded the lady of the
house. “I will engage you.”
“Yes, ma'am,” said the pretty cham-
bermaid, “and I think I’d better tell you,
ma’am, that I’ve got a steady beau that
I'm very fond of.”
“Oh! that’s all apts
“Yes, ma’am. ‘0 if you catch your
husband tryin’ to kiss me you'll know it
ain't my doin’s.”—Philadelphia Press.
When it was become winter, the Grass-
hopper went to the Ant and asked for a
cold _hand-out or something,
. “No,” said the Ant, “it is nseless to
importune me, I am adamant!”
“And what,” exclaimed the Grasshop-
ber, turning away, “is to be expected of
a ——ant?
This fable teaches that one may be
shiftless yet equally — witty.—Detroit
Journal.
Not Good on the Servant Question.
“My wife is mad and I don’t blame her.
and I'll tell you why,” said Jones yester-
day. “We have kept house for twenty
years, and I figure that during that time
we have had at least eighty hired girls,
Several years ago Mrs. Jones was for-
tunate to secure a jewel of a girl: bnt
she was indiscreet enongh to brag about
it around the neighborhood, with the re-
sult that one of the neighbors enticed
her away, under promise of paying her
higher wages, and ny wife has not for-
given the woman that did it to this day.
Ever since she has had a dream that
some day she would be lucky enough to
draw another prize in the hired-girl mar-
ket, and when she did she had her plans
all laid to keep her.
“Well, the other day the jewel was se-
cured and Mrs. Jones simply hugged her-
self with delight when she realized what
a treasure she ae
“The girl had only been with us one
week when Mrs. Blank, one of our nei¢h-
bors, called and casually remarked that
she saw that we had another girl.
“ ‘Yes,’ answered Mrs. Jones with a
sigh, ‘I'm only going to keep her ti!! I
get another. She is simply unbearable!
She is insolent, lazy, slovenly, impudent
ORIGINAL MODEL WAIST.
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ef Se a f
Sa Ds as!
“a s nm . 3
. el Se
This smart little waist is an example of the variety which may be attained
in this apparently-simple style of dress. ‘Lhe material 1s a pale-blue taffeta, orna-
meated and enriched with cordings, stitchings, lace guipure and narrow black
velvet ribbon, The blouse portion, which is finished with a round open neck and
band of stitching which overlies the small guipnre yoke, is slashed open’on each
side of the front in a novel way and held together by small buttoned straps
which are outlined in black velvet. Plaitings of white mousseline de soie show
beneath the buttoned straps with very pretty effect. The small caps at the pe ot
the sleeves, which are tucked and ontlined as they join the main sleeves by a
line of guipure lace and black velvet, make a fashion note which deserves atten-
tion, as the effort to give breadth to the shoulders constantly is showing itself in
small shoulder caps, epaulettes, and over falling collars. From Lord & Taylor.
|
and doesn't know enough to start the | nny
kettle boiling. She— | -F ON 2 | S
“*You’re-a loir, mum!’ burst upon her it BRIEF NOTES OF NOTABLES. )
astonished ears, and there stood the new | ete
girl in the doorway with all her Irish up.| —Brig.-Gen. A. R. Chaffee, U. S. V..
‘An’ I'll have ye understand, mum, thot | will deliver a course of lectures on the
Til not stay another minute in a honse | lessons of the Spanish-American. war al
where they blackguard a poor, hard-| the Newport naval college, at Newport,
working gur-rl’s character!’ and with | during the present summer. Some army
that she flew to her room and packed up. | officers may be detailed to the college tc
“Mrs. Blank has the girl now, and she | hear the lectures.
never loses a chance to tell what a treas-| —The late Prof. C. A. Buchheim, pro-
ure she has and how Mrs. Jones abuses | fessor of German at King’s college, Lon-
her girls, which makes my wife simply | don, was one of those who made’ Dick-
wild.” —Detroit Free Press. lens’ name familiar in the Fatherland.
Sere i a | His translations of some of Dickens
CONDUCTING A CAMPAIGN. | »evels into German have had an im-
duous Undertaking.
From the day that any party conven-
tion nominates a candidate for President
until the ballots are counted in Novem-
ber the chairman of that party's National
Committee is an exceedingly busy man.
The task of “running” a Presidential
campaign has become very large.”
The business transacted at a national
headquarters is varied and extensive.
The raising of the money for the cam-
paign is an important and delicate task.
The “liverary bureau,’ which prepares
political matter for the party newspap-
ers, or to be distributed as leaflets, is
very busy, Then the bureau of speakers,
or “spellbinders,” as they are sometimes
jocosely called, requires skillful direction,
‘The different nationalities demand atten-
tion, and tor those yoters who cannot
apr English, political arguments in
their own language must be prepared
and circulated. There are, besides, pic-
tures, songs, cartoons, buttons, badges
and numberless devices for winning
voters with which the National Com:
mittee must deal.
The election of a president will always
be a serious matter, requiring thought-
fulness, skill and energy of the highest
order, Moreover, a large sum of money
is needed for iegitimate expenses of a
campaign. This a necessary evil, for the
money must be raised by voluntary con-
tribution; and those who give largely, to
campaign funds, if they do not look for
something in return, are always sus-
pected of doing so.—Youth's Companion.
Recognized Him Immediately.
My companion pointed with his whip
across the fields to a house, says a writet
in the Lewiston Journal.
“Deacon Andrews lives there,”’ said he.
“The deacon's wife got pretty near scared
to death last fall. She thought he’d been
killed. Vil teli you how it was, He
started to drive into the village one day
and got down a few houses along the
road and found one of the neighbors kill-
ing his hog.
“*What are ye going to do with the
insides?’ the deacon asked.
‘Nothin’ much,” said the neighbor.
““Give "em to me, will ye?’
“‘Jest as soon ye'd have ‘em as not.’
“Pll care for ‘em when I come back,’
said the deacon.
“*Ye needn’t bother to do that,’ an-
swered the neighbor. ‘I'll send the man
right up with ‘em to your house. He can
go jest as well as not.’
“So the man dumped the whole aggre-
gation into his big oilcloth apron and
started for the deacon’s house. He
kicked at the door with his foot, holding
his apron hunched up before him. ‘The
deacon’s wife came to the door.
“‘Here’s the deacon’s——’ he com-
menced‘and as he talked he lowered the
apron so that she could look at its con-
tents.
“She let one howl--‘I allus said that
horse would get away and smash him up’
—then she fainted on the kitchen floor.”
Opened Her Mouth and Put Her
Foot In,
We have all met people whose pride in
their own possessions is so great that
they can see _no charms in those of oth-
ers, relates Tit-Bits.
A young botanist was showing a party
of ladies and gentlemen through a con-
servatory, and explaining to them the
properties of some of the choicest plants.
Among the visitors was a would-be
young-looking middle-aged lady who, at
every description, volunteered the state-
ment that the plants and flowers she had
at home were quite equal to anything e<-
hibited here, or, indeed, anywhere. Just
as they were passing a giant cactus she
was heard to exclaim:
“Well, this is nothing extraordinary. I
have a cactus at home that is stil] larger.
I planted and reared it myself.”
“Reared it yourself?’ the botanist gen-
tly observed. “How remarkable! This
specimen is sixty-three years cld, and if
yours is still larger-——”
The lady did not stay to hear any
more, but executed a strategic movement
to the rear.
BRIEF NOTES OF NOTABLES.
| —Brig.-Gen. A. R. Chaffee, U. S. V..
will deliver a course of lectures on the
[Tessons of the Spanish-American. war at
| the Newport naval college, at Newport,
| during the present summer. Some army
| officers may be detailed to the college to
| hear the lectures.
| _—The late Prof. C. A. Buchheim, pro-
| fessor of German at King’s college, Lon-
'don, was one of those who made’ Dick-
|ens’ name familiar in the Fatherland,
| His translations of some of Dickens’
novels into German have had an im-
mense circulation.
—The Princess Eulalie of Spain will
remain in Paris only during the proceed-
ings for separation from her husband, as
her health is poor and is causing great
anxiety. Her physicians advise a speedy
return to Madrid, where she will prob-
ably live in her former palace.
—Samuel Smith, 3... P.. whose recent
motion in the Hous of Commons with
regard to what nave neen called “un-
Smith-like plays” attracted so much at-
| tention, is a tall, spare man, slightly bent
'with years. He wears a long, straggling
|heard of yellowish-gray color and his
hair is iron gray.
| —Prof. Max Muller in a recent inter-
view said: “I lost very little time on uov-
els before my illness. Now I delight in
them. Not that I read them extensively
myself. They are read tq me. The old
novels are very good. I am never tired
of Sir Walter Scott, but modern fiction
is mostly poor stuff.”
—The death of the grand vizier, Sir
Hamed Ben Musa, has caused, in north-
ern Moroeco at any rate, no disturbance
whatever among the natives. His sue-
cessor is his cousin, Hadj Mukhtar Ben
Abdallah, The new grand vizier is a
typical! Moorish government official, in
character as well as by descent.
ae McCalla of the cruiser New~
ark, who is in command of the American
contingent under Admiral Seymour of
the British fleet. is a teetotaler. Corre-
spondents who were thrown with him
when he was in command of Guantana-
mo hay in the Marblehead, or “Tub of
Blood,” as that little ship was known in
the navy, say that he was a most hos-
pitable soul and never received a friend
‘in his cabin without offering him a drink,
but the drink was invariably raspberry
vinegar.
/ —Viscount Doneraile, grand senior
warden of the English Free Masons, is
the lineal descendant of the only lady
who was ever made a Freemason. His
ancestress, the Hon. Elizabeth St. Leger.
the wife of Col. Richard Aldworth, and
the mother of the first Viscount Don-
ertile, who assumed the name of St.
Leger, hid in a recess in a room in Don-
eraile court, County Cork, during the
holding in that room of a meeting of a
Masonic lodge. She was discovered
and immediately initiated into the Ma-
sonic mveteries, «
Tested by His Whistle.
| “Talking about the queer ways some
people have of sizing up a man’s capabili-
ties for a job,” said a resident of Pater-
son, N. J., the other day to a Washing-
ton Star man, “there recently died in my
town a boss carpenter named Hebart,
who had one question which he always
asked of journeymen who applied to him
for employment. If the applicant was
found to possess all the other necessary
qualifications Hebart would ask:
“What are your favorite tunes?”
| “Why, what do you want to know that
for?”
| “You whistle and sing some at your
work, don’t you?”
| “Oh, get
“Well, what tunes do you generally
whistle or sing?”
“Oh, there's ‘Old Hundred,” and ‘Auld
‘Lang Syne,’ and ‘Down by the Weeping
Willows,’ and—”
“That's enough!” the boss carpenter
would exclaim. “You won't do for me.
These tunes are ton slow for me. Good-
day.”
On the contrary. if the applicant an-
swered, “Oh, I generally whistle ‘Yankee
Doodle,’ or ‘The Fisher’s Hornpipe,’ or
something of that sort, the carpenter
would say at once:
“T think you'll do. Take off your coat
if you want to and go to work.”
Chinais Postal System. |
The postal system of the Chinese em |
pire is still in a primitive condition. It
is carried on under the direction of the
minister of war by means of post carts |
in the eighteeen provinces, and there are |
2040 offices for runners scattered over |
the empire. There are also many private |
postal couriers, and during the winter |
the foreign customs office maintains: a |
service between Pekin and the outposts. |
—New York Tribune.
—"
Cc ipati
onstipation.
You cannot possibly enjoy good health un-
less you have at least one free movement of
the bowels each day. When this is not the
case, the poisonous products are absorbed in-
to the system, causing headache, biliousness,
nausea, vomiting, dyspepsia, indigestion.
Ayer’s Pills
are a gentle laxative, suitable for any and
every member of the family. One pill at bed-
time will produce one good, natural movement
the day following.
25 cents.a box. All druggists.
« Ayer's Pills have done me and my family great good. They are
like a true friend in trouble. There is nothing equal to them for
sick headache and biliousness.”—Mrs. JuLia Brown, St. Louis,
Mo., Dec. 5, 1899.
| WW GUN CATALOGUE FREE
Tells all about Winchester Rifles, Shotguns, and Ammunition
Send name and address cn a postal now. Don't delay if you are interested.
, WINCHESTER REPEATING ARMS CO.
180 WINCHESTER AVENUE - mi ee - NEW HAVEN, CONN.
| ROPEMAKING BY ELECTRICITY.
An Economical Innovation at the
Charleston Navy Yard.
This morning electricity formally sup-
planted steam as the motive power in the
big ropewalk at Charleston navy-yard,
and. electrieity is for the first time prac-
tically applied to ropemaking.
‘The new plant, which, in addition to
the electrical generating apparatus of
mammoth proportions, is _ entirely
equipped with modern and improved rope-
making machinery in every department
and every detail, worked most successful-
ly. Commander John E. Pillsbury, chief
of the ue department. who sug-
gested the change, overcame many of the
difficulties that stood in the way, and
who has personally directed the installa-
tion of new power pint and machinery.
‘came in for general congratulation from
Admiral Sampson, Capts. Johuson, Dyer,
Wadleigh, Farenholt, Commander Kear-
ney, the chief engineer; Naval Construct-
or Baxter and other heads of depart-
ments, all of whom dropped in during the
day to witness the operation of the plant,
which was running in every detail, to-
day's practical operating test including
every machine and piece ofapparatus in
the entire plant.
The starting up was gradual, as a mat-
ter of precaution, and by reason of the
nonappearance of some of the men called
within a day or so for work under the
new conditions, and also because of the
lack of, familiarity of some of the new
men with the new arrangements. “But
by noon every machine in the break,
preparatory, spinning and all the new
modern vertical ropemaking machines
were running to their full capacity, and
the quarter-mile ropewalk was humming
with the buzz and whirl of the seventy-
two big double flying spinning machines,
the big break and carding machines and
the twenty-two new vertical ropemaking
machines of varions sizes which haye
been installed in the place of the long
lines of small spinning jennies and the
old-fashioned break and card machines
of various sizes, all nearly a half cen-
tury old, and which bad practically been
worn out in the service.
‘The vertical ropemaking machines are
an advance in the direction ef modern
methods, as formerly there were but four
or five of these, and they were used only
for the manufacture of the very small-
est size of rope, all more than a coupie
of inches in dimension having been laid
up on the big quarter-mile alleys on the
lower floor, with all the tronble and care
and practically the same expense for la-
bor as would have been required in turn-
ing out a 25-inch hawser.—Boston Post.
TRUANT LONDON CHILDREN.
Many of Them Brought to School by
a Monkey Trick.
Monkeys are very amusing creatures,
but one hardly thinks of them as useful
in educational work. However, their aid
has lately been sought by the London
school officers, with admirable results.
It seems that in one of the school dis-
tricts there were not as many children
reported by the parents as being of
school age as the officers knew there
ought to be—so, to ascertain the real
number they called in the monkey to
ney them, in this way:
Two monkeys were gaily dressed, put
in a_wagon, and, accompanied by a brass
band, were carried through the streets of
the district. At once crowds of children
made their appearance. The procession
was stopped in a park. and the school
officers began their work; distributing
sweets to youngsters, they took their
names and addresses. They found out
that sixty parents kept their children
from _ school This ingenious method
brought to school about twe hundred
boys and girls.—Indian Witness.
ania taaa iain Olan.
At last M. Baltet, the great French
specialist, has been enabled to grow
strawberries on plants of a_ decidedly
tree-like nature. The method is simplici-
ty itself. The runners are trained up
vertically and tied to a stake, in the same
way that a pot tomato plant it, and then
the lateral buds are pinches out. Result
—a strawberry tree on a small scale.—
London Daily Mail.
BEST FOR THE BOWELS,
No matter what ails you, headache to a
cancer, you will never get well until your
bowels are put right. CASCARETS help
nature, cure you without a gripe or pain,
produce easy natural movements, cost
you just 10 cents to start getting your
health back, CASCARETS Candy Ca-
thartic, the genuine, put up in metal
boxes, every tablet has C. C. C. stamped
on it. Beware of imitations.
Shot by a Dead Man.
After the battle of Spionkop one of
the English soldiers was found dead with
his finger on the trigger of his rifle. A
Boer who.attempted to take the rifle out
of his hands was shot dead by a slip of
the dead man’s finger.
—Recently “Pilgrim's Progress” has
been translated into Chinese, with illus-
trations by native artists. Before the
Boxer outbreak By ote said it was hav-
ing a large sale in Pekin.
—It is estimated that there are 240,-
600 women domestic servants in London,
and that 10,000 of these are always out
of situations or changing their places.
A Dean's Witty Repartec.
Dean Dickinson, the dean of the
Chapel Royal, Dublin, who preached be-
fore the Queen on Good Friday at the
Viceregal lodge, is well known fer his
witty repartees as well as for his en-
thusiastie advocacy of temperance. On
one occasion he was asked if he could
suggest something suitable to put over a
refreshment stali at a charity bazaar.
He immediately said: “Here the wild
asses quench their thirst!” (Psalm civ.
11.) At the General synod he never faiis
to give his opponent a smart answer. A
violent attack was once made on him by
a North of Ireland gentleman named
Brush. After he took his seat, the dean
rose and calmly said: “I am unable te
conceive what handle I can have given
to Mr. Brush to make such a sweeping
accusation against me.” Another time,
when he heard that Mr. Fitzgerald, snr-
geon-oculist to the Queen in Ireland, was
paying a holiday visit te Niagara. he
promptly remarked: “He'll find a_cata-
tact there that be can't remove.”—M.
A. Pe. = p
What Do the Children Drink?
| Don’t give them tea or coffee. Havre
sou tried the new food drink called
'GRAIN-O? It is delicions and nourish-
ing. and takes the place of coffee. The
more Grain-O you give the children the
more health you distribute through their
systems. Grain-O is made of pure
grains, and when properly prepared
Estes like the choice grades of coffee.
but costs about 4 as much. All grocers
sell it. We and 2he.
: In the Interest of Science.
Portugal was decidedly liberal to scien-
tifie men at the time of the recent eclipse.
‘The customhouse employes were ordered
to give astronomers every facility for
‘the entry of their baggage, their instru-
ments being admitted free on the presen-
tation of 2 certificate from an astronom-
ical observatory countersigned by a
Portuguese consular agent.
Crosby Transportation Co. and
Grand Trunk Ry. system, Grand Haven
Route, Shortest, cheapest and most
popniar line to all points in Michigan,
Canada and the East. Steamers ieave
Milwaukee every night at 9:15 p. m.
Write or call at ticket office, 400 Exst
Water St.
Pennsylvania's Coal Output.
Pennsylvania's coal output is greater
than that of al! other parts of the coun-
try combined, equal in quantity to the
imine returns of Great Britain, and larger
than is taken from the mines of all aa-
tions in the world except the United
Kingdom. ep ees oa
Do Your Feet Ache and Burn?
Shake into your shoes Allen's Foot-
Ease, a powder for the feet. It makes
tight or new shoes feel easy. Cures
Corns, Bunions, Swollen, Hot and Sweat-
ing Feet. At all druggists and shoe
stores, 25c. Sample sent FREE. Ad-
dress Allen S. Olmsted, LeRoy, N. Y.
Bad Shooting.
Of the 45,000,000 bullets fired by the
Russians during the Crimean -war 44,-
952,000 failed to fulfill their errand of
enthe Sak 2
Lane's Family Medicine
Moves the bowels each day. In order ta
be healthy this is necessary. Acts gently
on the liver and_kidneys. Cures sic!
headache. Price 25 and 50c,
Largest in the World.
The Parliament building in Wellington,
New Zealand, is the largest wooden
structure in the world.
| Did You Ever Run Across
an old letter—ink all faded out. Couldn't
have been Carter's Ink, for it doesn’t
fee
—Owing to the scarcity of boy labor
the District Messenger company of Lon-
don has been forced to utilize 18-year-old
girls in four of its offices.
‘ Seen
| Halls Catarrh Cure
Irs taken internally. Price 75 cents.
i
| —The total number of cattle in the
world is estimated at 190,000,000, of
which 44,000,000 are in the United
States.
I do not believe Piso’s Cure for Con-
sumption has an equal for coughs and
colds.—John F. Beyer, Trinity Springs,
Ind.,, Feb. 15, 1900.
—The distancé from Liverpool. Eng-
land, to Halifax, N. S., is 2450 miles.
Cockroach Exitor ix a sir’ exterminator for
cock roaches. beduugs, red ants, ete, Sent iy mail f+
| $1. M. Frve & Co. 218 Sycamore St.. Milwaukee. Wis.
| —Canada’s foreign trade has grown
$46,000,000 during the past year.
(| Fisher's Flavoring Extracts arc Exdorset
by pure foul laws and th= U.S. go. ernment for their
| PUaIIY and SIRENGTH, A.J. Hilbert Co,, Milw.
—-Nearly all the shoes worn in Japan
are made of straw or wood.
ae eee
Mrs, Winslow's Sooraixe Syrvr for children
teething. softens the gums, reduces intlamiuation,
allays pain, cures wind colic.” 253¢ a bottle.
—It is said that salmon, pike and gold-
fish are the only fish that never sleep.
| “Western Australia has thirtcen bank
holidays.
SCENES IN THE WHEAT COUNTRY.
OOD OOO GOGO OOS OOOO OOO SOOO OOOO ~.
SS With — p@CEg
SSS got EE = ee We ce Ma
: aS ss A aa¥ Li LE Lares
J PE BAS EASE I LEER EES
‘4 A QUARTER OF A MILLION Za at Ss ie
|. SUSKELS WAPLE JESS ae
; y AN
.
5 | See SIDS = ——~ S:
hss TO Pe — —=S Ss
es < : ss
Seo Cie SS Sh iT ae a
> re Ca ask 2 ae ea | Ree gE
| cl ee 27: ‘i : (pes eee
: fa can Ree cas <° <2 = I ee ate
cae ct fj A TM : Kos ao ~
a =e ge Sr a 1
Yl — —— eee aL 2 Ltn 1:
i se = SEM}, ae
Sh 2 MGS S$ Co ct ‘
“Wi = g = y f
»& | os #. UY :
& aN Gi
a a |S eid fl A
| | h Ney Me Ez . -
sal MENS M aN Lo Ff
il Ae Ve il.\
ee A a _ GN
- NR EWHEALR 7 In fia! he i ee fi Ly
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| ma Es ” Hee
tS ; | fe
i : 2 <li mat.
ego & i | i) | ee as a
i: | & om“! 6S cae Sarr
ed By J maT
Sl Al k= & & Ale
) ae LN Se | = iro es ff y FA
, — ~277Fr SS + Se
: Se =< a ii Ri
: <a “ZA ef Y f 7 e Loos: Wasa i Hi
: NO NLL Ld LIS NBER NNGZZ
OEP AEE ASSET ESSE ONT
+ MOVING THE WHEAT CROP. $
7. A Gigantic industry Gomloying Millions of E
: Capital and Countless Hands. z
Pesci siieschoini aciic a meme seni a nLe aie aaeene ee
At the present time the quantity of
Wheat which is sent abroad from the
United States and Canada annually is
about 250,000,000. Yet this, large as
it is, will certainly be more than dou-
bled within the next ten years.
Sir William Crookes, the distinguish-
ed president of the British Association
for the Advancement of Science, writ-
ing recently of the proportion between
wheat production and wheat consump-
tion, ventured to name the year 1931
as a date when the world’s bread-eat-
ers would cry for more wheat than the
world’s farmers conid produce. This
may be an overestimate, yet the statis-
ties from which such prophecies are
drawn show how very closely the con-
sumer treads upon the heels of the pro-
ducer, and how imperative is the neces-
sity of distributing the crop—-crown
perhaps half a world away from the
centers of consumption—as soon as it
is shaken from the threshers in a mill-
ion fields, in order that every white
man shall have his loaf, and have it
before his last supply has run out.
Great Britain eats her entire wheat
crop in about thirteen weeks, and then
she must be supplied immediately with
the products of America or Central
Russia or India, or else she nrust Suffer,
If the United Kingdom be compietely
blockaded, say by the ships of allied
Europe, her population would probably
be totally extinguished by starvation
within three months. The like is true
of every country in western Europe,
although in some of them actual star-
vation could be much longer averted.
When a European tiinks of food he
thinks in terms of ‘vheat. He is the
greatest of bread-exters. Yet in the
best of yeurs Europe never produces
enough, even includiug the crops from
ihe vast fields of Russia, to supply her
own needs. She is therefore absolute-
ly dependent on the United States,
Canada, Indian, Australian and Argen-
une.
Progressive Wheat Growers,
+ The American and Canadian farmer,
and particularly the Northwestern
wheat farmer. who ploughs and reaps
and threshes by machinery without so
much as touching his produet with his
hands, is becoming pre-eminently a
man of business. The Governments
have supplied colleges for educating
him, and they send him regular bulle-
tins containing the results of long-con-
tinued experiments conducted by the
Department of Agriculture. He is a
wide reader, sometimes a thinker, and
always a politician. Every morning
during the days of harvest he receives
the reports of the Board of Trade or
the Chamber of Commerce where his
wheat is likely to be sold. He has also
on his desk daily prices and a general
advisory letter from his commission
men.
The primary movement of wheat is
the natural flow to the loeal flour mill,
where it is ground to feed the farmer's
. family, and toward the granary, where
it is stored up for seed. Tne propor-
ion of wheat thus actually retained
and consumed in the country where it
is grown is very large.
| When the farmer has amply provided
for himself, he begins to think of sell-
ing his surplus—which in 1898, for the
| United States and Canada, amounted
to the enormous total of 450,000,000
bushels. Of this, something less than
half is consumed in the cities of the
United States and Canada, and some-
thing more than half is exported to
foreign countries. either as wheat or as
| flour.
| The wheat crop of the average year
is, therefore, divided into three more or
| Tess equal parts, the first being con-
siened by the farmer and his immedi-
pate neighbors of the smaller towns and
| villages, the second going to supply thie
concentrated masses of population in
the great cities, and the third being ex-
ported as wheat or flour to feed the
foreigner. :
Mr. Ray Stannard Baker, in an article
a the Movement of Wheat, in Me-
Clure’s Magazine, tells‘of the manner
| in which the wheat crop is disposed of
| by the wheat farmer.
| There are three general methods by
which this fs done. In the prolific
Northwest. where large numbers of
farmers are cultivating from 5,000 to
10,000 acres of wheat a year, where
the various farm buildings are con-
| nected by telephone, where the plough-
ing is done by complicated machinery.
where the farmer owns from two to
ten threshing machines, from twenty
to fifty reapers and hundreds of cattle
| and horses, the sale of a crop becomes
a large business proposition,
| But the great mass of smaller farm-
ers. especially throughout the winter
wheat districts, still sell in the old-
fashioned way, to the local elevator
man or buyer. They keep themselves
so thoroughly informed, however. as
to the reigning prices in the great
marts and the probabilities as to rise
Oy) ec st aece eh” Rae
KEENE? A ifs (i i Kas.
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LAKE VESSELS LOADING AT A CHICAGO ELEVATOR.
or fall, that the commissions of the
local dealer have been scaled to the
lowest wotch. Indeed, in this day of
many railroads, if the small wheat
grower is dissatisfied with local prices,
he can combine with his neighbors—a
not infrequent occurrence—and ship
directly by carload lots to some city
commission man, who is only too will-
ing to buy his grain at the highest pos-
sible price.
System of Elevators.
So fierce is the competition among
the wheat buyers that at some centers,
most notably Minneapolis, vast sys-
tems of elevators have sprung up, each
controlled by a powerful central house
at the terminal point. There are no
fewer than thirty-six elevator com-
panies in Minneapolis, controlling 1,862
country elevators with a combined ¢a-
pacity of nearly 50,000,000 bushels of
wheat.
A single company controls 115 coun-
try elevators having a capacity of 4,-
750,000 bushels of wheat. And the
head of this company is also the head
of other companies there, having lines
of elevators in Minnesota and the Da-
kotas with a combined storage capacity
of nearly 10,000,000 bushels. He also
has lines of elevators in Nebraska and
Kansas.
Perhaps no one thing so simplifies
and facilitates the movement of wheat
as the present rigid system of inspec-
tion and grading. In former times a
load of grain must needs be carefully
examined by every prospective pur-
chaser, were he miller or commission
man; and if this buyer sold again, a
second examination became necessary,
| with its attendant disagreement as to
(quality, The business of wheat buy-
ing, indeed, was full of time-consuming
details, and in the end neither party
to a trade was likely to be satisfied.
AS a consequence, the State’ govern-
ment, or, in some primary markets, the
local chamber of commerce, stepped in,
and assumed charge of the whole sys-
tem of grading and inspection; and
now no portion of the great wheat bus-
iness moves with more ease and effi-
ciency. a degree of care and accuracy
simply amazing to the outsider being
constantly maintained.
| At present the four great wheat ele-
yator centers are Minneapolis, Duluth,
Chicago and Buffalo. In the last-named
| city some of the elevators have a stor-
age capacity of from 100,000 to 2,509,-
000 bushels, some of them built of steel,
operated by electricity from Niagara
Falls, protected from fire by pneu-
matie water systems, and having com-
plete machinery for cleaning, crying
and scouring the wheat, when that is
necessary.
The elevators are provided with so-
called “legs,” long spouts, containing
moving bucket-belts, which are lowered
into the hold of a grain-laden vessel.
Here the wheat is shoveled by zrimy
workmen, toiling in a cloud of dust,
into the pathway of huge stear s"ov-
els, which, in turn, draw. the yellow
load—it looks from above like so much
sand—to the ends of the “legs.” where
the buckets seize it and carry it up-
wards into the elevator, and aiziribute
it among the various bins. .A cargo of
180,000 bushels can thus be unloaded
in a few hours, while legs on the other
side of the elevator will reload it into
cars, six at a time in five minutes, or in
an hour fill a canal boat.
The cost of all these operations has
been reduced to a ridiculously low fig-
ure—the entire work of unloading,
storing and reloading rarely adding
more than one cent to the price of a
bushel of wheat.
Carriage to Seaboard.
‘The transportation of wheat from the
{ West to the seaboard is a business of
almost inconceivable magnitude. It
means millions of dollars a year to
railroad and ship owners, and during
the rush season of the late fall, so great
is the demand for transportation that
shippers find difficuity in obtaining
enough cars and vessels.
Most of the wheat of the Northwest
now goes by way of the lakes, through
the Sault Ste. Marie canal, to Buffalo,
where it is shipped by rail or canal to
New York, Boston, Baltimore and Phil-
adelphia.
Few appreciate the magnitude of the
lake shipping interests, which have
been developed to a considerable extent
by the transportation of wheat. Du-
luth-Superior is the second port in the
United States in point of tonnage, be-
ing exceeded only by New York. The
Sault Ste. Marie Canal passes two and
a half times as much tonnage in eight
months as the Suez Canal passes in a
full year. Lake shipping furnishes,
moreover, the cheapest transportation
in the world, the rate being approxi-
mately three-quarters of a mill per ton
per mile.
Some of the greater lake vessels car-
ry enormous cargoes—up to 250,000
bushels of wheat in a single load. With-
out comparisons, it is difficnlt to form
any conception of the immensity of a
cargo of this size. In Duluth, 700 bush-
els are estimated as a carload. At that
rate, a cargo of 252,000 bushels, which
has actually been transported from Du-
luth to Buffalo, would fill 360 cars, or
nine trains of forty cars each. At fif-
teen bushels to the acre, this cargo
would represent the yield of 16,800
acres of land. In many localities a
farm of 160 acres is looked upon as a
large one. It would take 105 such farms
to raise enough wheat to furnish this
one cargo.
| Until recently New York had the
lion’s share of the wheat export busi-
ness; but latterly Boston, Baltimore
Philadelphia, New Orleans, Galvestor
and Montreal have been large exporters
For the fiscal year 1899 New York took
only 28.8 per cent. while New Orleans
and Galveston had 16.9 per cent. each.
Boston 12, Baltimore 9.4, and Philadel.
phia 6 per cent., the remainder being
scattered between Montreal, Portland
Norfolk and Newport News.
To quote again from Mr. Baker, the
average yield of wheat per acre is grad.
ually creeping up. In 1890 it was only
11.1 bushels to the acre; in 1895 it was
13.7 bushels; while in 1898 it had reach.
ed 15.3 bushels. By the use of machin.
ery, combined with cheaper rates of
transportation for-supplies, the farme1
can produce a larger yield more cheap
ly than ever before, so that, although
the farm prices for wheat do not aver.
age higher from year to year, the farm
er’s profits are larger.
An outward laugh ofttimes conceals
an inward groan.
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we A INION....
Laundry and News Co.
328 Wells Street
GEO. W. SAY LES.
«ALL WORK CAREFULLY DONE...
Lowest Prices and Satisfaction Guaranteed.
Th
e Emerson Shoe Co.
CORNER GRAND AVENUE AND THIRD STREET,
MILWAUKEE, WIS.
M*- GEORGE A. SCHECK, the man-
eS ager of R. B. Grover & Co., manu-
facturers of the Celebrated Comfortable Custom
Made Shoes, begs leave to announce to the
many citizens of Milwaukee and vicinity that
they have opened a new store in this city in
the new building on the northeast corner of
Third St. and Grand Ave. and carry a full
line of goods. This makes 31 stores run by
the firm at the present time.
A Goodyear Welt costs $3.50 and a Handsewed
—: The goods are honest all through and inspection is
MILWAUKEE...
| GAS STOVE Co.,
| am
PERFECTION GAS RANGES
destinnsiatietaetaemne Poe taomnes
Adjustable Needle Valve,
tan Week $0. toons
Before Starting on Your Travels
Geo. Burroughs & Sons
PREMIUM TRUNKS
VALISES, SAMPLE CASES, Etc.
424 & 426 East Water St., Milwaukee.
WHEN IN MADISON
Call at the —__——
Avenue
Hotel...
M, J. REGAN, Prop. |
$2.00 Rate....... '
a ——__ Free Bus. |
For the Safest and
Quickest Road be-
tween * % % %
Milwaukee
and Chi
icago
Take the Chicago
Milwaukee & %.
Paul Railwav..* .« .<
BEFORE PLACING ————em.
FIRE AND BURGLAR ALARMS
in your residence zon, would do well
CHAS. D, MILNE Electrical Contractor
And General Repairwork. The best in the city.
fel. Msim 527 NO MASON ST.
Do You Wish to bea
MASTER PAINTER
You know Good Painters make from $5.00 to
$10.00 a dag easy.
is so explicit that even Boys can become Masters
of the trade.
PAINTING POINTERS
on Sign, House and Carriage Painting. Decora-
ting, Graining, Gilding, Silvering and Calsomin-
ing. This Book will also teach you how to
CONTRACT FOR BUSINESS
on profitable basis. It will teach you all we
know after having spent a life time in the bus:-
ness, and will generally
SAVE YOU MONEY.
Mailed postpaid for only 50c.
VAL. SCHREIER SIGN WORKS, Milwaukee, Wis.
REV. G. W. MUGGAGE,
Pastor A. M. E, Zion Church.
idence:
Simons st., Fond du Lac, Wis.
REGULAR SERVICES—SUNDAYS:
one. serves ++10:45 a. m, and 7:30 p. m.
Bunday School........+eeeeeeeeeeese 3 PD. ML
Prayer Meeting. ........0++++++++-9:30 a. Mm.
Class Meeting. ...........ecceeeeres es 12m
ZR, O. BesessccscssctnvcssocnssOS0 D. In,
WEEK DAYS:
Thursday Night Prayer Meeting, 7:30 p. m.
Sacraments Quarterly Meeting, 2d Sunday
every 34 month.
Baptism of Infants, Special Day.
Baptism of Adults, Easter Day.
| $PECIAL SERVICES—BASTER DAY.
Missionary Collections.
CHILDREN’S DAY.
| Endowment Collection. 50centa Money—Now.
BOARD MEETINGS.
| Omclal—First and third Monday In each
mont
| ‘Trustees—Monday after second and fourth
| Bunday.
& S. Board—Call of Pastor.
Quarterly Conference—Call of P. BL
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