Semi-weekly Express, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 4 August 1896 — Page 2
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OLD RESIDENT DEAD.
BIBS. X. B. TUBJM. PASStt A*AI YBS-^ TBBDAY
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Her PeaA VM Dtte tcii StfSle of pleiy—Was a Pioneer of Vigo County.
po-
Qfffts. tiucin!5!a 'Bartow Tutell, one of 'the •nfctast -woni'g&l&Tcfrac Haute ams* oase oT tl|e5»iW*en5.l£3taae W&bagh Valley, diecl *ut tb» feoahte *»f "•Iter daughter, .Mra.:•3.epcg« 'JRi'pfiey, yesterday nuinawg a-t .10 ^j'olock. n®V3ir aa»ny years Mrs. -TfteJl, jflMtdjatoeeooneoftbe tooat itoteresttnjg «baat!aJt«r(9 to this city. Her mind *re-
CJ^a4ai€i3 .oleair ,an4 ^sferanjg &&& twr 89 ^yi&ara :to -rest -lightly ob hex.' jOCrs. T-uftil was the motfher of Hie 'Aafce 'Tfilliftaaii B. Tueli ainid tire iwidtow1 of Rei-ao® "N. Tuell, who •died iin 1S50.: January1 liH&ilast was Jtf-rs. -TueQl's biPtihday otffd iflibejceeeitved tjaiiiers »&«iring the day. ©too -Was in. such good' .Health 'that she "OWbaemjtfed to stag to&'ar.friemis. W-h&n ja jg$l iih£ Stwud & very ^sweeft vsutce, awd fwb^^wkied .that oceiafluan she (gaafie^a. "JteW-etharae of 'Attfd ''Dan^ syne" &ZV ajBwwsner t?faat -d^ei-i^tKttena.' ftser bearers. (Mas. Wvt&l iwas kSwdly -amsd afredGO'nby ^emped'aTraeftit, and neither age tuor *ii*fe4wng ohafnge-a 'her diispasM-tfn. Site wata etmtck-m with -paralysis last ff-hi&RH&ay, for -fte-n years she -had feemn -OJ& -teva-M. te ibis time she £*elkttcrtn ieft to-er thome, but at jatsi lames, ev-aa whe^r tsufle-rinig, iShe cordially wsl©oftiiiad firiieffltelis who calOed! to see her and •kept uporuch 'i-hte-rasft ®n Outside affamcfe. aaa -bhese years of invalidism the tsecfclved -tbo devoted -ait-t-eTit ion of (hufet (Aauglrer, "Mins. iNiaifiniie Wllkersoih, and of her sister, Mrs. George F. jfttpfey. HIts. Tueii was a 'tvffi-ft ^iet®r aird was .born to1 Kentucky, 3i er uifflthfer toeim-g a. motive of -A-uguSta, G'a. Will eta. a yonfig !gtiri she imoveii "With her parents neair ©ro-wnsto'w.n, JatckfiOn coun'ty, itMs state. Ajt 17 the itwln ©tetters .were irnarrieiQ on July 3, 1§24-
Mrs. TtfeM's •hUiSfoaind idii-efd &n 3S50 atfd tfhe caime here fto live the toilowtog yeaif. Her son Wti'lMaim iha'd b«en to Terfe Hautie four years In the dry goods busta'eaa .aind her .daug-hter, Mrs. George tRi.p'ley, toad .been .atrten«3iiin:g 'the semi'hai-y here con!d'u€teid by Mrs. (L/angworthy (for 't'vvo yeairs. Wlhidn she firstt came to Terhe Hautle ithey 'boardtid at White IHiajl'l, kept toy Mr. James Freemam. Col'omel Thompson and 'fainxily were also •boiaindere at .tMs Ihouse. Mrs. tuell was ,f,he OTOtt'her of 'four chaidrcm, ithiree of •whom ane now livinig. They are Mrs. ©trolly Pawlk of B'luffto'n-, Jn-fl. I^h$. K. •P. TutgW Wii'-'keaTSdn affld Mrs. 3-e.orge F. 'Ripley of th'i'S city.
A R0AST FOR CHEADLE.
erawfora»vHle Review Will Sot Support the KenegAUe. Ctnawifordsviibe, lAuig. 2.—•Thie ftomdna^ttioin .of Joseph B. Cheiajdle for congress ,by it he iPiopu list's aowi Zteniocpats hats crieatedi wiidespreaid *5 .tsaatisfactioiii Eumong the irainik and file of thie Democracy In tthiis iCOTimty, Maaiy leading iDemoorajtis laire outspokeh to itheir die-nun-diiatlon of the aotton of the eoaivehit&ora at Frankfort in 'throwing oviet*'boa'iKi such life-long D^moonats && Jim (Fippen of Tiiptom or iDr. Handy of Bootnie .flor a miarni who 'hais -been more toitter to ih'is idienomciiation of Bemocratts, bath in His 'newspaper and pub-'lic speech, than a/ny other Hepuibli', aini in the 'district. The imea who have boltieid Ohead'le ibelotng tfco 'the soliid elaiss, mtm who have adway*3 itiaken their Democracy straight anid ixnidiilutied. T!hey not on-ly comie •fmra itlhte iiamks of t!he soutnd rao-ney DemoOTats, bu:t 'from .those who are ad•vooajting ifiiee eliver. I»t i» ®&.fe to pre(dict 'bait he will lose Moinittgoimery oounity by a thouisa xnatjo'iUty. Chief among the bolten, is tthe Orawforiksvilts •Kevdew, the old reliable Democratic orgiam of Monitfeo-mery eoumty. In its ,Hssue of Jast 'Siatuirdjay under the hieiad of "No Or-eeleyilizing limi This 'District," It ©ays:"The suggestion that •Democraitl-c ca'ndida'tes for wngresis tn t'hts idiis'tirict, timie-'tiri^d amid truie, should •g'ive way to a 'Republican re.nega.de anid permit him it*) h:k.ve t!he nomtaction Ls .t'he work of ttime-^spervers-, pcxliioy imm, ihungry office seekers ami such. Ha.d Ohfeadle stood' In with ihta .party, anid inot been caift HVside by more 'amibitiious iain.d aggressive apefli of ihis parity who di noit li'ke his course, he would today, no doubt, haw •been a first-class gold bug aJid high tairlff :main. He .iis at heart'today a Republ'ioan, but 1a ia'ngry personally at his •party and would do anything to wreck lit. "We
!h«.ve
uio fiaibh in these latter day
Democrats. [Let it'hem tarry in Jeri-dho wnttl thetir beard ihias grown. Dat tihem •vote 'the t'ioket and aot with the party a few yeajrs before feppeallrag hungrily (for office. The Democracy of the nation was Greeleyized in IS72 and has cuiised the day tslbnce that it allowed a score of disappointed Republican office ©5eke.rs to dictate that importainit noiminattion.. The Democracy of this ds-trict should not be Chead1ei2ed. We have xvo use for amy each men, amid t'-here is «rto srttwtainftta.l ireta®on wha'tever it'hat tihey shouid toe ®u-ppor»ted—at l-ea®t by Democrats.
CHINA'S OFFICIAL ORGAN.
Emperor Is theEflltor lii ChleT of thePekin Gaietts. The court circular «f China is the pek'in .Gazcftte. It is 3n every fesipeict a uniique proiduotion In journalism. It is Ihe oldest ^xiistins ne'wtapaper in the florid. The eimip^ror aiCts as a sort cf edi'tor-ln-idhief, anil, wlieh not too busy, indilte® n»?.te« and ob=erv»at' o.ns on \tfce margin iwJth a ted lead .pencil. The dociutmente, notes and all, its posted up on a b:g board ouiside t'he (gates of the jxala^ce ^vi/tMn the P.u.ripLe ForbOcfden City, and is -transcr.ibed ewry day «y certain pr'ivi-l-e'ge.d iwri)'eit3, wl.o make a handaoffie thing out of -the busin^-s-. Their ooailes are beautifully engrossed and are snmliligjliea 'by hand, and soil to the •principal offiifialis, ^rovernors erf province, leading merchants and so on. T»he iprtva'te printing iirma are ai-so on t'he subscription list ifbr first editions, and they have blocks made frttm the'ir copies, and ci-rcul^ite the t^e"product, ons on very Vhin rice- paper at prices ra:nging doiwn to ltbJle more than the equivalent to a iSthiRing per month. China—native Oh.ina—is tbatdiy off f-or newspapers. I Ibeleve the peopie ctf Iceland can tbbotst tf more, says a wr?ter in .the Pall Mall Gazette. Buil the eufpply is pretty well equal to the demaawJ, for the. good CM nee dems not read mudh ibeyond the "preoptB" unleiss he gets h'.s reading: very cheap. It is lor this reason fchat twtoole fiaimilie-s, «ven the ibeJtter ciasises. go shares in a «tftieoriipit'ion to the Gazet-te, and take turne—Khe older "folks first—«Sn perusmgr «.
Afnd'^gu'ised purpose af the of China to keep t'he peoof which it is
not toonwerrienft tSM^iJPhiey »bould know. tjtfi Ifgpt t(hrtrfrh» Jfirtn raaywfte is %i^6iy of- iles- It ixtWht be w#e- aiton^ttemt li w4|£ », Tjttle ttlvftEy Jraw .au& vugaAa, Wft -Itnythdag imore fcvmdfWm d^ill /than the avena^, -*,trtfti JidSd-fto discover. lT?^'ii^^ulcitJcMis take tfhemse lives, very Ismww, and, regarding it
encourage A^fet^r^t^ey give prfbBcJty to virtuous acftioh's. In 'the ni'Mst of »ea?3p
I"'"
change and t^tie Itke^t'he •tfoilo-wtpg PrJ" jc&aanwtloii aipfjearea toot ^ei'y -ivm epo.:[
ArfhjweS, lauds it he coodtrtft of a you-nfer lady iwiho comimltteJd SUfc?de on heiarin^ Of 'thfe^deaJth-oe penmiis^tm to ^sresst a nwsmatial arch to. her memory." "She twais the- ^eoontd Cousin *f IiU -Chij^^ij a mttos ~ot' WmfaAa, *&fc{ Ohinig?t*w p^etfesftuT^, bow masE'st'raite of S&um-cfieiife, Ahawiet^ She was ibeltrtyHhefl 'Wtiile a child to afc^
undergradua:te
.ica'lleid T'ien Wen-ttsao,
belongtng to a liiterary and official faan4Vy salt 'tell %e ..)nm0iej« M. whifeh committed suicide Vr'hen the citjr. was disturbed ~lby rebel's. Tihiiis Jaitteri faJot was in drue courwe ^epQrt«d. to tlife throne fay iw:*fsi'0Ti fWunit«3J,R) errot a 'fefefPte to 'their imetmofly. -SUt the young- lady, being' away with her iflaither a't Hlwain-%-g," in pf 'tie faJte *tf tefer tevtWrttve^-«nrffll early part of ithe .oeW yea*» xtstoen her fa'thet receCwed a letter inlforming hiitrv ,«f son-in-law's death. On Ithe 15th of ith^ ^same «n»^n the -yoasriig. 4ady henseilf. iShe •TO.as Just 17 -at %e Tier health. The t-ate^31ht IS 'I6tfrrd6b--rated iby •«$•* ^PtHBe«s»s Oititea: .suffitnieaaes weSS. jajcsq^iaiMed with 4th e" fiitory. S^-a'g. a virtuose .ejPt of ee®-,saicr,ifftce on 'tihe ipart oi_ pi»e .PyouSfe -id6»9«VeS Hp 'fee la^ffieTiSibriated. ISie .i»mio:pa-l'M -And® 4&&t tfce *tfe-ro«e wm pleased to .aHasr .the fu^tomai-y -honiore (a nn««3'Qr-'a^
t0
M'yere e'aia: 1 ^V-K£-
t4The
lilneteenth chapter. K.
tfhe tmctet ©awn'Sd ^tory fti all liter^tuj«N icontains a marraitiive of 'th^ la^t el^tfering o'f the son of God- 'Recently in our oity 'in a political address this ptory •w'as used as an il'luettratton to ^tnp'hasize a poiftt in pontiles. Tie -reiferenice was in very Ibted taste It was a misuse at soone'ttotog "which ia iheid yeary i&acred, theld very reverently toy imliiipne of loyal, 4oiytoer heartis. It .bordered very ©lowly upon eacriletge to any retferemce to t!his sacred narrative before a jeering, Cheering ind excited crowd. That epeaJker iwe'il anight have femip'has-lised at that time a great traitih had tie chosen to do so, had lie dared to do so. -He .mi'gthit Oiave said thft despite all .pollti-cal parties can do, there is (but one hope ifor our distressed and burdened people, atid tiiat t-hat h^ie res'te in the t'horn-«rowned and •suff ering son oif God that political .organizations inever have and never can ibrintg the relief iwhWh the people seek. Tie RepxtfblWan party has promised repeatedly t'haJt ilf we voted- their way ^n:d adopted thejr theories there would dawn upon the nation a ne»w day» arifd that disaatistfaictkm and unrest would vanish, and that t'he people who iy£'re oomplaining and digeattefied would, find peace and plenty. We voted their way and adopted' ithalr theories. Th? Republican party went into po-wer "ftnd, failed to keeip its promises. It grwniieed imore than it couild do.. "iAnd 'tlhen t'he •DemO'&rats pfbmi'sed repeatedly that if we woU'ld adopt their theories we 'would have an afbundance, but Kt did not come. 'Now we are_told that w6 should adopt a douible standard of money, which urteanss a silver atandard, and' tthen we would ibe all right, Hhen iwe would have tnoii&y. In albundance. They Bay they have an albhorrence df a Igold- 'bug, but t'he dh'ange would result only in the »ufbstitution of a silver tbug for a gold bug it iwould only mean a difference in the powers thaJt -would oppress the poo¥ and exercise tyranny and selfishness. "The same old unrest returna.. I te'll you, ffriends, that the Voters in 'tthi® land look in vain to polrlloal organizations to Ibring iforth that ifor which they are longing. Just One hope 'for humanity, and that is in tihe thorn^eriiw#l*e.d
Savior, in the cross df Jesus Christ^ To .receive that story told Us in thfe nineteenth chapter oif John and to (believe it .will do more for VoUt hottie and your 'heart than all t'B'S jKlitioal parties that faave Existed do of will do for 'us. I think .many of thehi intend rigTit, ibut tihey cannot 'help us. "That 'which co-nl,trticates our eoo=nomic and feocfal -quctstons And t'ha't which (brings greatest disturbance is not in ^ovetTi'ment, Ht ife ih the hiiman heart, In the very nature of 'men. We shall never have that regulated pe&ce until we seek 'it the croSij df Christ There is tihe position to take, if we are going to have the problrrns in the world df tnlte!lect solved. We 'have got to come and stand 'Where he suffered and di^d. Then iwe c-h'aM find out social life adjusting Itself properly. Men will then And work, employed will cease to (be tyrants ahd 'good will shall prevail. "Our ^eholara may investigate as they ^vill the past and prophecy or guess as to the .future, .btrt they will never get the 'true conception of the past or a right conception or the future until they 'take their place where the 'burdens roll off. I do not care what kind o»f a -government we have or whSch political party is in power the next fou^-ycars if this company could be :peffeu^ded ito ibelieve that ctory of the crucified Chriet then, whatever the nation might have, you and 1 would have ©efetpe."
Ship Btirtiek Rt S*#.
Philadelphia, lAfcg. 3.—'New® o-f the aibtandorsment at sea of the British Jb-afk Floi*a P. Stafford, which had caugTit fire, .presuraa'bly through spontaneous combustion, was received toiri^ht. As far as Jckti *te learned ail 4ut four oif tthe creV of twenty haV-e Ibeen ao ©ouirted (for, and the mlss.n^ men h&ve no doUibV perished.
*sf-
MATHtTMI) AT.
CO n*T, was
\:y'0'™?S
tedy 'belo-ngiinjBF So ¥tm gK&P W, who P0®soneid iierEeafTon hearing oif tJi'S de^h of W' aett«)tfh«a, a-n^. thepeifoce, ield to jiope they -wilt'be gran'led -in tihe^a^e^t icase. Beta's 'ithe ereotip ft ?f «n -arch, tfee aneioao.ralis't wouitd ask jtfeat the young lady^tt# &<m :in the anfoeetral'tenTiflpJe^the Yien fa«niily, along wi'fh ijti^t of ^er foe«trol hs«, i'hait.^he imay ^n3&y '^fih oi t'he sa,cri'ft!Qe and (wpr^hTp. ^"'e boaiti of fjtes is^^aio
BQY OI^ATOlt SCCH^ED.
Chicago PastorN. ©rttlrtWn «t Per«4*Wott« Retv. Johnston Myeote, pastor t?tf Ifeananuei ®apti£lt JChua^h, pre.a-ched laM jiagbt on "The •Oreiw® «f Thorny Q-nd the Cross of e«y» $®esxs£ Ohrota'icle. Tthe ^pea^er ae8pa5red of the probalbility oi ipolitS^l pkflttes i%-* deieHHiag the oou'tftry If roan lis .diletresg, and, ift this Jconneietioa, crKi'ejsed. a certain po-liticAl Oi-atot -nvtbo «6»a «h? nineteenth .chsypter of Jolhn in itlusbratms politHcal aBgwmepit. R^v. ^#?.
TERRE HAUTE EXPRESS, TOESEjAY MORNING, AUOTST 4,189b.
Despite Parental Opposition the Ceremony Took Flnce Yesterday in ^,1,.,. jnm.jEPKfct-'
New fTorit 3".-?pra^a» "V^uderibiJt. Jr.. and Miss Grace Witeqp w^ .«n^r5ba at jSt^a lbd*y «it the Wilson Vesidiaooe iby the tlev. 5H. (Pott, laasSstamtTwator of Bt- Thomas' Ch-uwfli. ^lje tweddl^ Was private. ^Thei^ were 'Ssr^e^ift SCt-. *h3 alts. R. jr. .witeeip, vi ia» &frv 8 i& Bfefe. Oltn^ WlJBot^ ^Wbterti -Goefet, ffr., Jr., 5r(»jher WkaaBi. pdk. ^C3c«toQ» who a«te4 a#4e#t «i*n. The 4a0«ily 'Wte® H&t pr6seht.
JO* yo^
ivandedbt* Wt fale. iWtleOn «hItsras the *«fcr awuwiaif *oStti, to. %iswai «he Odrefi«nV te^Jt ***ce. ieanfck on of iter 4Bai»er, M&o ifer awfeay, iXfe&ti Wfepe tto ferriteWftStida •Th» SraiWint a deee#6 te4 ^#ith taA Aomafb- Tttfe eeretao«r wms ein^e btter Mr. V«a«e®W4t'» ^rfesfent to A1& ito*** a ixm&bttting thirty diamonds ra.1^® sratpjpihire. His present to jhe be^t iman, tm. *. fcltt The
Ibride was alttorea 16 a (traveliwg diress 'Mvte kSk, '60-Vere.d Wfth «. KcJb filiig^Q. (She Word white gloves' With S)road,4laidt stri^ejl, a tftaaw iha t, ffxre'tJtHy triaatatedi with J^ink jfloW^B, gfee carried in jher iand a. toaete fltf tferos ^and sfmiiSl! whitfe flower®. iB^tSi she and Mr. YaiidetMlt looked ia/djaaitly lidsppy, -and' iSRirSed aJt' each ^(thser a* iihe lu^kst^id iher into -the carriage. As sfoe ^seated faefrsdelf iter eyes ngelil .njKcn a 'gto«up &t ^the Jatoily servants at one tf the flseu&eifcfcnt Windoiws ojf bfer father!® iwnfre. ®he femiled at thean, nodded «ooa-ftiyfei# afed threWr 'th'SWd Jk®e. A» -the (carrifc^e Wa« rolling aw^y «he threw -ta paftl-tfg- kiss to .tier fatih-fe.r, Who bwaS w&.tciAn'g: toer from one oi "Che parlor rwifakioftte. ICt i#a» assr joertajin-ed- thoa Mr. 'VjarsaenfelSt's vafelt, Jhad secured 'tififltets for ithe. couple for iS'iri^tog&iJFhei'e a portion .«f t4ie honey%noon will toe ®pen!t, Thfere ivwere mo invkatiotts to t'he -wedfling tissued, but the cords eent oosb anraoimd'n'g the maarriage,. read as folioiws:
Mr. ia®»d M?». -Bt. T. Witeon. ajnmjoiUin)eeft^ a3ixtri.age-Of .the4t daii'g'liiter
'l JwrteetStos Vtairaaeribttt, Jr., ., pCotmaay, August 1890, ^i ij^o. SLi "FtMi AveaWie.
Z'T''z', H»« People Opposed It. ,,f A. eSng^le -carriage stood In. fro-nit pf 'ith^' Wilson (residence during 'the oerenioiry, in wttiiicSi the Ibridal cotliple were oonvejred 'to the railway station.
The Kxmrtsfc'ip oi yomrag 'Via-nd'Bribll't, jr., gon off Coftiolius VanderfcCTt, Who 4s the ih-ead of the N^w
ToTk
G«4j-
tjra4 •gyStein, a»d i3®tss Wilson, dlaug-h-i~er Oi R. Wilson, has Ibeeh stormy enough, crwlng to p-arental inltertfe-r-^nce, -to «p!guiie In 'the pages of a society .hiovel. The beginning oif it -was at Sfewport, a yoar ago 4ast June. A't dbait tim6 gossipe at the ifajmous report first began to notice the interest ypupS Venderibil't was ibeginning to ita&e 'In the young woman, iwho. w'ae ea'sriy ten y-e^irs his senior. At,, first ihe idle g-osgip passed unnoticed by the faaiilles of -the young coujp-le. In. two .ttnonths it (became so marked it was fonoed upon them. Then the trouible
The Witeons approved of tlhe ma!tch, and encouraged their daughter in what ehe W^fe doihg:. Th!6 VaSdeilbilts, ite the, contrary, olbjected. They termed the affair a case of Jboyish Infatuation. They -dettSed that -an engAig^ment iWtts about to 'take place, ibut seereftly tlhey tame to understand .which 'way the "Wind was Iblowlng, and they defcid^di to nip the gfrdiwl-np Jnutoh in rte .toud. Th^y sent the boy abroad, expe6ti$g that albsence from his fiante-ee Hv^uid cool the ardor oi fliis love. It -60£ happened, bowe/ver, that iMiies Wilson also Went albroad, where she joined youiig Vand-eilbi-l't, and the courtship was *sontini.ued as -at Ne.wport. 7
The final anthouncement bit' thB':'en-g-agemen't iwas given out 'by the ^WW30ns June lOfch and wap admitted' toy ail, but was puibllcly disapproved' by the Vandeilbllts the same day. An ifhmeifliiaite wedding was to take place, ttoe Ibrideferoom even going so -as •to order his bride's bou-quet.^ But ttheumatisin interfered and the wording ,was postponed. Since that day society has -been agog for the coming' tm arrive. The date has been Chanded haif a dozen tSmes, and postponed as many •tllmes. iS-toM-es oif a breaklri.g' off to the affair Wave ateo been .cJitiCU'iated, bult they have proved untrue.
Cornelius Vandetrtrtrt, Jr., 'Was born in 4S74. In, 1895 he was graduated from Tale and Went direct to Newport. .Miss Grace Wilson is th£ second daughter of Msr. R. T. Wilson, who made hi© 'money dhleHy Jn Tennessee State bonds after the war. Her oldest sister. May, married1 "Dgden GoeWt. -Her oldest brother, Mr. Orme Wilson, m.arrled Miss CarQ'l'i'Jlfi,.Astor, daughter oif W'i'Hiara B. Astor. ,r Vi
Alfter the wedd'in-g congTatulatory oalbleigrame were re'eewed frotm the (Prince of Wales, the Earl and Countess oif Peiribrc'tke and tlhe Duke and Dudheas oif SVl'arilborou&h, tthe lattfer a 'cousin of t'he bridegroom.
AMERICAN ADMIRERS OF MEXICO. One o!f tihe strangest 'things a'bouit the present free silver craae is that it has developed that fact that there' are some persons who really think the present condition O'f IMexLoo i& 'belter
than
that of the United' States and that
t'he
latter ought to try and rea^h the saime condition, dbserves the Inahwiaipolis Journal, and the ifact thai tfcey advocate such views shows that they are Sacking in intelligence as well as in patriotism, but they exist, and in. the general license of speeiah they have a right to talk- A'fter ali thp assumption that Mexico is unore prosperous than the United States Is no more, absurd t'han most of the oth-?r so-^cgJled "arguments'* .whic-h the advooatds of the free and unlimited coinage ver are using.
One af 'fh&ie Amwican admirers or Mexican institutions w.rites 10 t^e jocal free silver organ as foilows: -1 "For instance taike- t'he farmings products of Mexico. Wiheat is worth fl.85. The fanaier who produces 100 toiwhe^s osf wiheast can get ?185 for ft in Mexican money. Now for an iHufftratioi^ Suppose he desires to cross the border and come over into our country to spend it and converts his $185 inlto bur smoney for convenience. He gets $92.50 fot Ms $185 of iMexican money and has $42.50 worth of fim at our efcpense, wake up next morning: tfo find (he has «t411 left $50 to ooamneufca ibustneeia .with his. f«u.
brother lAmertoan fawner, (who (Has just
fwrttf }mu*f TJriWftea* trr SO oer btohei or |K in Our de&t$y
SOTS
fceJ&Ved goid-itandard ilbon«f therf 4s Ito B£e£&£a it^Ark-efl^peft iit fiand the iounrai is «flfeJbte to afty i^effieb 3Eeaf"1s wofth $1.85 -a lbi®hel there in 60-cent dollars or mot. Prdbaily tie f»riee i8 «reat3y e*a«S*ratedt ~ut let that q?ass. At the price stated h£ BDekioah &rttttr %oUlA get a little ore for his wheat tbaa t'he Aneitoaa armer, but ate he Bias to pay (fully afe mifceh for ail thi neceesarie* pfe ire one re6pe5T, thowever, he has .the' i.dvan'tage, (Cor ill MeMfco t)he neeessarb« af autre & v&tf ti&ek&t «o\ifl^t. All iqJteWgenlt tmv&lers «swse 4hat tihe poverty one encounters on every hand in that country 3S fkt more albjeot than aay -ever seen 3were
This AjmerLcan adknirer of ^C^xicail ins'tlbutlonB eays:
4"It
J!nteres.t,
Assuminig that the Popocrajts .aire honestly delirious of bringing about the bleeaimigs of a dietpreciated silver currency as soon as poissible St is surpr.sing that they meigiected to insert dn their platform a piiank d«.mending that Mexioan silver doWarts be made 'legal terud-eir in- -the Umit-ed States., Congress has unidoubt?ed authority to do this. The oomefe^tu t-ion -says cong.i%ss stfi^il have power "to^coiii :mortey, re&ulate 4'h.e value thereof, a-nid of forei'gti crin." Under -this piHJvisiioh con.gW«s MrtS' at "different times parsed te.n o-r twelve diltteTer.it 'laws d'eclairtiinig the Valu& and legal tender quality of foreign -coins i-ti the United 'S tates. There is -no doubt whatever that it has the -fathiQ atitftiority to d'acl-are the '50-dent Miexicain silveir doillar legail tender at' its face vhlue in the Utiiitted Stiait-es that it .has to «o derf-are a &3-cemt American silver dolfer. The effect of such a law would, be to m.akie the Uihit-ed States a very attractive field Cor thie ctrcuiLatiom of Mexican dollars-, a-iid In a sihort tinue the country would be flootdeid with t#ie-m. In this way tihe retaMSiaitiioihi iof the silv-nr miili^eniniium could be grfra'tfly expedited and the. American .people -would get the benefits of cheap money much .soOh-eir th.ain t'hey will ble if obliged to dep^M on- itheir ow.ni mint®. As the Mexican' diallar contains flVe graiiha ot pure si.h"er more tHan our sliatida.M doHar, thel*e outat riot to -be amy objection to such a flaw on- the part of the friends of silver. As one j-mpor-•taftit -change iha3 alrea-dy been made tfi
Chicago platform .s'-nce the c&nivet)lon ad'j-outwed, ttaiafrECy. that i-h the rc-50lu'tl6n regarding gold contracts, it may -not be too 'late yet to "have a resolution at3detd d'smand-iin-g 'that Mexican dollars be made full lf-jal tend«T tn the Un'M-ed, St'atie-s. W i.
The a*" Mttst TrJefl.
OiMmMj, Ohio. 3.—Ju.3?e Pugh today in the count ctf common pleas, declined fto permit the Central Trust Company to -fhdraw its $8,000,000 Hocking Vailey auiit a.ga'inc-t Judge Eufke and others. Judige Pugh het'd that having entered into an agreement w.t-h tlhe bondtroldens that it would bring it his suit and having ended such an agreement, the trust co-mpany couCd not dismiss the case wittiouit tfhe op-n-sent of the bond-holders.
A Veil of Mist.
wivl.'1" IJV-U
Rising at morning or evening from some lcWIanids, often carries in its folds the seedG oif malar ia. Where malairial fe^-er pre\-ail no one is saif1?, unless protected by some Efficient medWCnal safeguard. Hortetter's Stomach Bitters is both a protection and a remedy. No peteon who infhabita, or sojourns in a miasmatic regiioh or Country, should omi't to procUre this for trying agent, which is also t'he finest known remedy for dyspepsia, constipation, kidney trouble and rheittatism. '.i -'-C .. 4*
MLpii
loeiks. to me roni
a financial poi2t «f view that Mexico is not stranded very Ibadly when IMexicaa £-per-cent .bonds eetl «t 94% per cent in Irond«n.'v It is cfefe to 'that no such sale has taken place. The foreign debt of (Mexico on J-une 80, 1S94, ooasisted of ?108,4355,009, feeaHfig 8 pfe-r bemt
and St i* not likely shd
has placed any .bonds since alt a lotwef rate of interest: Mr." George BoultOn, manager of the tforejg» eashaage isuisihess of the First iNiatfcifenal \Bank of Ohicago, wrote a ffew days ago: "The wfftei' had odcsa^loii "laet imonth to Ibuy to the City o£ Mexico iJSO.OOO af bonds issued- by tihe Mexican gov-^-mimisnt. bonds tweffe t»USht at the rate of 48 cenbs o« tihie doUar 4n silver, t-he net o»t to the purcftiaser being $24,1?0 4n Mexican ©ilyer. As the utaoh^y ito pa.y iot these (bonds came from this country,the amolint Off American {funds used in ithe purchase Of $50,000 Mexican government 'securities was tl8,fl^,'ll, or aibout 26 cents oa the dollar."
This ^ta'teta'fen.t bears iinternal' evidentee otf accuracy, and It cothpletely refutes t'he assertion it'hat M-exfean 6-per-cen.t Iboinds have sold in X«ondbn at 94% cents. iSlnce Mexico went to a «41)ver basils she has lost very heavily in foreign e»ctoangek A financial atithorfty says." "The burden of 'her totfeign deib't hais doubled since the te•eJihe silver, the cost o:f exchange amOuht'ing .to as tmucSl as former annual interest." American advofeutes oif ifree silver who find do iintstsh to ad-Ih-ire in the condition should ermgr^-'te to that country.
5Ut3GIE$TI0N FOR THE FREE S1LvemtES. -If & d'epredlated: ejlvter cunrency is .41 good tiling, sayis the Indianapolis Journal, itihe 'more 'the cottntry iao of it tihe bettter, aard if the advooatea of tree silver really .befcievie tlwrt lit WiJi be '& bieiasiiig to the people tiuey ought ito wish to .iBiaipe ittoe blefis/i^g ia& ^eraero-ud atid univers®l ass possible. TSwit b-eitng- thfe case tihey e'aioul'dt faVor atiy poli^'' 'that Wiffl flood the couintry 'with cheap silver idbl'i'ans as sooih «und as .poanpiete'ly as pcssfihite. h£ fnee and unlimited coiinage of siay^r at t'he raitib of 16 to 1 would do thisitt timie, but it would takie sevaiial j-eairs. tfr bning about it-he tdssuned 'degree of inlla'tioai ianid .pHelt-hora of ch-^p tti'^B^y., The expu&sion of about $600^00,000 of gtoil'd? from circulation, would leave that vacuum to -be filled before ithe volume tof curnemcy woulid reach its pheate^t atatus, and as aft would have to be filled with dollia'ra worth only £0 to 52 cenits it wpu'id tflitoe miearly 1,200,000,000 of them to do it. The director o-f the mailt says tlhat if alii the mints were put to coining silvef diollar© they couid met' co"i-n m-oire tfliam 100,000,000 year antfd keep up the either necessary ooinage of sUbstldiJary silver, mi-ckefe atiid omts. Thus it Would take, about six yeai« to coin as m^uny silver dollars ae t:here would be goki dollars driveaii out of circuaatiion, a»md» allowing for difference of value, nearly twice as long. Even then the volpimje of. the currency wouvd only .be what it is jut present. True, -the dies&red oon'ditcoilof inflation and- cheap imoney might be accelerated- to another way,' for the CMe&£o .platfoi-m aii«o d^-ftiidds that c-cm'SraHS shall issue paper, which shal4 be a. a-^gail t-entder for all d-ebte, j)ubii-S and private. In any levfent, hoWever, it would -be isieveral years before the cJheap money .millennium cOuld -bdreached1.
TiduiU r*i«S# 1TO1KI txi CV*rtLA*D.
«0K|
BROWK
,jr«T
Mllttin Stationed In Different Parts of the City-tks 8ltnstUk Amoiif __ miVHSfk •f\'.
Ckrslamd, A-r»» Wiw fltttfntkm to this city is ait critSoai stage tOKtay. Ono touu^ped aiwl fifty •nmtemboin, mail went ,to HioVk. At 4fte Srtrtrn hote«t% %^Hes tiiis «oriifeg. They were guair^kd by four xwnpa«nd of ma-tttM. amid a. lairg^ force of police. A. b% crow^ of Untaii men were |rw^ttt, bat 06 outW^a)k oicttJnfed. t'h* JKH litsfe adMi ad60Het& ®oept tl«6 strikers moving sbhid^wouM «a»t permit itb«eiaa tj) «ta-bd «a one pdace anew* thatt f«w iibian^es.
The bag sympattluetic 0*riibe imovenieait, W-AioB has ,b^ ittoeast)e«^i the strike ax the Brown Oo.'s works, begail eleven, weeks ago, began Uua ^aOr-nin^. SligAty-sdviib fiken "festspioy^ka by Che VSui Wagoraeir and Wui'iUbms Co., ha-Fdwiare mauLuUfaotuD£iri3, Said vitoiMn -Uue-ir tools and waJk&d out of ithe works. Ttine men said «hat their ohiy grievasioe was their ayaupiatby iot the (Brows Boistaag Co.'s •Dienv and tttia-t the emp4oy^ ot oofe*r «e«nc4rfi3 -WoUld 0001a follow ttoeir tread. Cato&uiJtt'^fea wene sent out 4o other faetonieb along .t-be 'lake Whore to soti^y-i-he meo -tMxat fchey w&pe caJlted out cm s:rikie. jOiie of the ieadtecs otf .thfe Van Waguneir etrakers eaiid ttoait they w*ou4d ttemaind o£ Mayor Mieiiiissaa thtast tire inoh-u-niionl^stss be dusarm «U aaad if this was refused thie «tr4teero wouid ainm t'heimsedves and coiapei a2h6 ,1iOa-»nlonisits to give up -their weapons by force, if necessaaJy Shortly "beBorfe nOwi. DirecfW
Police Abbott oa*Bfcrei4 ano,the!r company ctf mnf'.w tiia. to ithie Wbtrks, ihatantg livte com:panies «a a£i. The idEr^tAor &iaM that he ihad caoeivved pifevate iafonaia,tloo, which satisfied him oh ait tlhe condition of affal'ts was t&r more £trlous ttaun appeared on^the siirf-jioe.
A CfcowTd of {UdTion meai gathered at the Oanmea- of Hamilton andl Baldi&n treats ithiis mommiihg, arid wthen- oi-'cliered to dispense, iiefused. Lieutenamt Thompson and a squad of police charged on t'he crowd amid took into custody sevaiial of their number. They .were la&e-h to tlhe Second' pre-daiot stab-on a-nid charg-ed •wiitli violating tihe s^dsewaik ordLnaaice. A 'big crowd fofflowied the ipa-trod wagqia itthrougii the streets And Shore larr&ts were threatened, but none was made.
Aili of 'the mem who struck today out fiif sympatby with- tiie Barowa sWikers deoidteid to return to work tomorrow morning, and it iis mot believed the strike will spreald unless .the Can-tira'l liabor Union takes & band In the trouble. A meeting of «the Barown Strtkers W4S tieilid tWs a.ftiannipofl -when Master Workman James O'Connelfi made a speech, in w.hlch he declared that the agreement between, ttbe Browin Co. and tba strttoers bad bee» ni3und«retoo-d tfliat it was tofceir.pretg»d one way by the jjothpaihy a-nd a di«ereM way by the #nis®. Ite is -repaot'ed to bave ©aid .that the "battle &om now on. vnould- be Watched with tiiutiemftst by tihe labor "WoWd. .. "The tn-ayisf, -pOlibe^ amid tio soldiecrs, he declared, "haVe ar.m€»d to crush us. We have a. duty to ipeTCorto—that of self preservation."
The authorities aire fu-l'ly prepared for trouble, and squads of mliiitla were stationed in various pants of the Oity this afternoon to prevent itrou-ble when the non-union mem 'Weire tatoen to theiir homes.
Will Mnk thfe frnirftaefe**
Sharon, pa., Aug. 3.—-The fu«iafcmen of the Shenango Valley .met here today and: decided not to ack^pt a r.eduOtion to wage®. -AS a result all the furnaces Will be banked. About 400 me.n. will be tbTowoi out of employment.
Ble Mills ciofce.
FhilladeSplhia, Xug. 3.—RbO-ades & ©rother« bd^ textile mills on Ohestter Oneefe, cloE-ed today until further noti^e Over -600 hands are affected. Tih£ cause a-e'^ned is depression to the textile trade.
COAL MINER SHOT.
Danville Miners Fl*ht Orer Stpali Sum of Money. Special to the iSxptess. (Dainrvil-le, 111.. Aug. 3.-The regular coal mining
pay
day shooting scrape
occurred thera 'today on GOtoto street. George Braxton, alias Joe Yates, fatally e'Mt George Young. They are HxWh icoloredr 'Brasjton sot a dollar and a half from Young, -who i3 a coal ihihe'f. The latter resisted and was sho-t w.th liis own revolver, which ne attempted to use. Bessie 'Lee, a v.-ihlte -woman, and the friend df Braxton beat Young over 'the head aifter he was shot. -Both she arid (Braxton wetre arretted.
Determined Miners. Special to The Exsresa.
Su'liJivah, Ind., Aljg. 3.—The Ihing siitusition is uni'inprOVad. The strikers at Star Orty and vicinity spent Sunday discussing the -matter and seemed deteomined that the small force, oif -mftn 'WWkihg shall stop. A comhiLttee called on the men at -S'ta-r Cit^* atid Currys'ViHe today with this purpose in vi«w, ibut did not suiocee-d. Some wild 'tthreats were made by the strikers on receiving this 'word and the -mine owners hardly know whai't to expect. HoweVer, t'hey are better prepared for trou(bie than when the iHymera property iwas destroyed. State President Knigh-t o'f ith'6 Miners' Union is on -the scene ithis evening, tout 'it is doulbtlful if he can do much toward pacifying some of •the h'at-hea'ds amohg the men..,.^. ^.
Fire at Sullivan.
Special to the Express.
Sullivan, Ind., Aug. 3.—(Fire (broke out in the two story bHck building owned and occupied by J. IM. Lonig & Co., clcithiiers, tonight. The principal loss was caused by water. The basement, which was filled with stGck, was flooded. There was $14,000 insurance on the building and the stock.
NATIONAL CAMPAIGN WORK.
It Has Began lit Earnest at Washington, D.'C. Washington, Aug. 3.—Chairman Junes of .the Democra-Wc national committee, Who arrived last -night, began today on the accumulation of campaign work which awaited hfcn. He took temporary quarters in Scmaitor Faulkner's private office, at the congilaisiona.1 com-mtitt-ee hea^ju'arter^. Soon after his arrival he was joined, apparenctly by apixjn-tonenit, by iSemait'DT Gorman, Senator StewmJt Sin's MiSS-fers. Berret and Nonris of Washington-, Mr. Nonris hav4rag but rtecent-ly appointed a member of the natibraal committee. The ocmiference 'lasted" half am -hour, and the getitJenven pres^n^ depara,ted to maet again at thecap^tol ait woon. No iofor*
Ing »reri aoadbetf of dlHulb. A repent oudMHt «bout healAuuairter* chaA Mr. (Sonhim woUJfi 4m member eWoMPtW^ ^eoawliitetee. and possibly Ha chairman. There was 00 verifl?ation of 4We report but tbs preseaca •A Wf. ^Sortnwn tb0B«1 TO me ?525®OTrt in tfhatt d£Mat4oo. TTtintrriMBi Janes busied himself at a.'U «Quure xnomentd -MA dii«kj xt aafl. An offltJiai oon-n-ected .wia, the 6niihSttte^ Says that s,roe^(ni®Kfioe is uAp«Wo6i»detA«a.
service of tweuty-&iir years he haa
ee®?'
fucfa P»Wi« iwtamrt in «(.
ciainaed
"It
'6
ttrat the Tetters
receive mt** JSepubKcao defection from MdSOuley, due to sih-w. Mr. Gorman joined OhairoiaiQ Jnw9
ISa^lxoi ^hOb^y after dvoooi, whters tfiwV"-1lyrt( Wsefeftj' Jit the 60&unlt>tea room.^ 4«*»pnlMaGft mrw hours. At the close of the extend-ed talk Mr. Jones sand theiie wias nothing .to be ttsafiie public. "Will fjot Take a Chairmanship. j»i
Ma-. Gorman was asRfed as to the carthat he wowfcf be 00- 4^ C^ximttsee aad^ pce5.i'.Wy its chairmarf. "H% au'ihxnized tbe statement that the -would mot -tedce any chairmanu«dier amy circumstances!
Is. the same, now as An 18S8 and 1S92," fii& said, "when gave eveiy aid in my power to fte*. Whiirtney and Mr. Harrity, but wouM-AOt take a chairmanship. in the present caimpaig® I ^IdBseRa'Sbt -fcFheo !fei eri&ry way .pcs&&te, b^6 Um®ef ito wOu&if I assume the dutt^ss of otninbate of tfee fixectttdv® oofflioaiittee." When aefced as to whether he would be a member of 1tti.§ ©c*Tim%it'(?^, Mr. Goir'maJhi replri^Ui ^nat chaSiriha'n was pTacHcally the comaflittee.
At tfee Rfeputolicafc conyras&iona*. hesdquantiecs the 4airge working force is kept very busy. Hter-e, too, it ds stated that the publi-e lnit?ef®6t in politics, as indicated -by the -earteht -df the mall, is u-rt-pi^eceindteatevlt Tixk iw&st VarSfd sujgesteoirs, are offered. Mainy cam^ai®w poeims andi songs, eomte witsh .music, a»e offered. A 'letter received from Louisiana assures th§ com.mil tee that there •aire (Stirong S»pes Of cSffifyiHig Ahat sta^s for McKtaley.
At the nartionial ^-er ^ieadiqupartets cu niunntoer of interesting letters were recedve& ttoday. "One Trom tSie mayor of tLiaiCms^e, Wis., asked for a stf.pp.Ty of German and -Soairi'ifeh'k^a'n. titera.t.ur-3, and adki'ed that the siiVter movement •n-Hs ma-kfi-ragr rapid progress An th locality. Another te-tter, fro-m the Pennsylvania W^trict in Mr. Sibley ts a candSdate for congress, asserted that -his election Was 'beyom'd-flOu^Ht, andthat his strength was ai-dthg the national ticket. World T-rom Maasac!husett'ts is to the effect that many sliver clubs a.re being formed th*re. Sev?eml ieatdters tend'eiretd theDr serv.-cee on the stump.
CAUGHT BY A DEVIL FISH.
Ida Pallet Has a ifelr Raisin ft Eiptrlrt* 7 at Mauliattaa Ilfeach. M^s Ida Fuller, t'he serpen tCme diancesr who recenSfly appeared at H'arriaon Park, had a terming e»ncouMe4- Subdajr Wi-t:h an octoptus, or d'evid fisfti, white •bathing a-t 'Mahhattan -Beiach. A Near York dtispaitob contains the folia wing account of Che experience: "Miss FuMer was .bathing in front of the paviilieai at o'clock to company with bee brother Frank, said1, being a&i expert swimmeid, bad gone just beyond tthie life Jin-es, which eact-end about 20D feet from the shore. Her 4i»£her waSi same diistauiice away. Suddenly the girl, so she says, almost hysit«riGa41y as siw? recollect® the dfeadfulaeas of the tbibg, felt something coil its^Mf anou«d befr "left leg. She thought it was seawe«dl and, fearSn'g to beconite ea-taingOed, turned oveir Obi irertoack -cud Wicked violently. Instead of releasing -ftiM-sMi from* thie la^baih^lemeift, the stringy subsStasice seemetS to ifelgiteteto until th* prte^ure was patoful.
S
4,nk and se-i-ziug her -heCd Iher above the water uMl'l a 'life Sav&r cam® up aiK3 hau»e»d the -ifcflra acid woana« out of ithe wat»r. Mr. Pa^k&r &a*& be felt tha •long, slimy arms of the creature, and to prove it exhibi-tia'd marks upon ita (limbs. The stiil Unconscions Wift-a-n was cairf.i-fed to the Mu-ntoarttan Beach H-atfel. There fc'he gradually revi^'sa. iDr. Campbell, who attended -h«r. saM i'jheire were, tied •ifia'fkis Uk'e the w-e'-tc of a whip ch her 1-?S
Art houir after M«s Fuller's rtence a petrforitt'l'.hS 'Bgy.ptiah. Who "hais gone for a batb, Tan back 'to the Street# o'f Cairo incJosure, screan^n# VLfOO bairtash," wBiCh beihg transla.t'ed means •ea snake. The man waa utilue6t4o.T«•Tyly frightened, amd It w3f3 fOihe tirfuft before he could •ftescribe jU3t wb*t b« haid He ."Sfid the mOiMtter h«-d a c? a body like a boa xrons'triibfor and a tail like a. doiph^-
VOTED AGAINST IT.
Cincinnati Teople Dffeat rn-opesltleB t» Sell the Cincinnati Sontl»»»rn. Cincinnati, Aug. 3.^-Thfr Cincinnati (Southern Railway, runningr from this city to Chattanooga, a d.istance of 338 miles, is owned by this city. It is a part df the Queen A Crescent system, and has Ib£en leased to the Orn.ctnr.ati, New Orleans & Texas Packftc aalfcvay, the latter company being in the hard3 of a reviver. A proposition (from A»dwiws & Taylor, representing the Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton iRa.Iway Company, was Recently made to buy the road f?«m Cincinnati ttt ChWttanoo®a with ts ten.iiinals, etc., for 31$,000,000. The proposition had been a~ voralbly passed upon by tie board of ednsinistra't-ion and the sinking fund commission and was toflay sU^wnK".«?di to the people for ftna* action. The vote resulted: Yeas, 1S,3©2 nays, 1»,?39. The proposition to sell the road was lost toy 838, just one vots. tor each mil© of road« ..
Nca
1
•Still suspectlimg nothing motie awful than seaweed, Miss 'FuSter turned again and 'du-ck'ed do-wn, intending to d4sengiagie hte-cse-lf wiith her ihaaidB. She says she then saw a ihaige hea«d, jesetnfe?lng a. co^Oa-niat just it comes from «ie tree, from wbiisb b-urwlrads of sirjngiitoe iiteiata-cSes swung and sWay»d tn thie waiter. As .she stoo^-d one oi theea coI'Sed jawurtd 'heT right tbigh.
Crying "Help" at the top of her voice, Mfes iPuller struggled to free hersalf, but the clutches of Wve thiihg, wfiatever !tt was, seifttned only too surely to bo eftraggi.-ng 'Wer be-ft^at tfte -i!4r^ace. 1 drtd not fear •airo'wni.ng," said Miss Fufl,fer ton^ht, "but tbe e-t'in|fiirt|t sen^aUo-n ifir.-ted me with horror afrd the thought iof having my bl-oocT eUCked out by -tlw creature neatly killed hva with fright.
After utteming a terrific gcreaan Miss Fuller fainted Ih tlite wafer, the dt-ptti of frhtoh was fully fifteen fefct. Th« only swimmer near her was'a. Mr. Parker, a guest at t'he Manhattan 'Beach Ho.•le,]. a wom«OT Scream he turmeid and saw ,t-he dancer disappear beneath the water. With a fJ'W v.-gOi-o.us strokes toe reached the place where -foe
XS%A
I Sift
$H
jit
