Indianapolis Journal, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 January 1895 — Page 2

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3 SEE F0LL017IMG RlVY THE INDIANAPOLIS JOURNAL, TUESDAY, JANUARY 8, 1893.

to-nlsht to sit on the Court of Appeals to-morrow. He spent the evening with Jude Taft and others. He had not heard of the Kltehie memorial until he read the evenlnjr papers. To a reporter he furnished the following statement: "Home four or five years aso the McMullens brought fuit in the United State Ciruelt Court at Cleveland and on a Judgment which they recovered In Canada against S. J. Ritchie, of Akron, (.. for ronie $.",00,000. The record showed the personal service on Ritchie In Canada. When filed on the judgment In the United State court he claimed, the right to plead defenses which he should have made lit the original suit In Canada. "The case was tried before United Ptates circuit Jus'.ge Jackson (now of the United States Supreme Court), 'and Judge Ricks. The latter wrote the opinion of the court, which was concurred In by Justice Jackson, and. In that opinion, the court held that the Canada judgment had the same force and effect as the judgment of a court of one of tho States of the Union and judgment was given In favor of the McMullens on the Canada Judgment, with Interest. A writ of error was taken from that judgment to the Supreme Court of the United States, where it is still pending. The court has had it under advisement for years. "In due time the McMullens filed a creditor's bill on their Judgment so obtained, as above slated, and made Judge Stevenson Hurke, ex-Senator Henry li. l'ayne, A. P. Mclntqsh. of. Cleveland, and the Cornell estate.' of Akron, all parties defendant, seeking to reach assets and credits in their hands to be applied to the satisfaction of their judgment. This case in due time was V heard on Its merits by United States Circuit Judge Horace H. . Lurton and Judge Ricks. Judge Lurton took all the papers In the case to his home in Nashville and. after three months of careful consideration wrote a very exhaustive opinion deciding the case upon, nearly every point against Ritchie. This opinion was concurred in by Judge Ricks. So that in both decisions, Tendered in the' cases, Judge Rrcks was fully sustained so far as he participated In the cases by -Judges Jackson and burton. If he made any interlocutory orders and they were complained. of, they were fully reviewed and covered by Judge Lurlon's final opinion on the merit3 of the . cure" These are the facts, as, they will appear from an examination of the records of the court and further than this Judge Ricks declined to make any statement, deeming the other masters .too trivial ,for notice. 1 ' Judge Taft read the; above and, from a knowledge of the case, concurred therein. Di'ii'ounred' liy Payne. CLEVELAND, , O., - Jan. 7. Ex-Senator Payne, when, shown the dispatch from' Washington to-day, In reference to the memorial 'presented to Congress against "United States- Judge Kicks, said: "The charges are ridiculous and an outrageous dander., Let Mr. 'Ritchie pay Judge Hjrke, Mr. Connell and myself what he owes us and he can get his stock. Judge Ricks did not decide that case. He simply coincided with Judge Layton. of Tennessee. Ritchie borrowed money from Rurke, Connell and myself aggregating a million 'and a quarter.

JAY GOULD'S ESTATE. Tux -pjrnler McC'lure Finds It to De Worth Jf!HO,JM3,5SO. NEW YORK, Jan. 7. The estate of Jay Gould has been appraised In Its personal property for the purpose of taxation in the Surrogate's Court. Appraiser David McClure has prepared a report in which he finds the estate is worth exactly $80,934,580.79, aside from Its two million dollars in realty. This value is given as of the date of the death of the testator. The appraiser finds, however, that It should be taxed for about $6,000,000 less than this amount, as he decided that the estate of George J. Gould owns that much of Jay Gould's estate because of the services of young George for twelve years at half a million dollars a year. TO-DAY'S FORECAST. Fair and Colder Went her In Indiana, tvlth Xortlierly Winds. WASHINGTON, Jan. 7. For IllinoisFair; decidedly colder; northerly winds. For Ohio and Indiana Fair; colder; northerly winds. 3IondyH Loon I Observations. Bar. Ther.R.lL Wind. W'thcr. Pre, 7a. m... 29.SW a4 86 N'west. Cloudy. .36 7 p. m. .30.32 34 81 'N'west. Cloudy. .00 Maximum temperature, 36; minimum temperature. 31. The following is a comparative statement of the temperature and precipitation, Jan. 7. Temp. i're. Normal 2fi . .90 Mean 33 .36 Departure from normal 7 .2t Excess of deficiency since Jan. 1. t .29 l'lus. C. F. R. WAPPENHANS, Local Forecast OtlleiuL Xtw York "Grinned'' Again. JJEV YORK, Jan. ' 7 The grip Is once .more giving New, York doctors insomnia. Dr. John H. Gardner, who has made a study of the grip, says: "Yes, It is certainly back again, as many of my patients can certify, but it is not nearly so serious as it was the first year It came. Doctors have decided that it is caused by a germ, 'but the germ, is not yet identified." The vital statistics schedule for last week show that there were In this city seven deaths from the grip and 124 from pneumonia, of which latter about one-half were the result of primary grip. At the office of the Health lJureau it is said that there are fully three ! thousand cases of grip under treatment in the city. Corbet t SIHl Talking Fight. , ATLANTA, Ga.. Jan. 7. Champion Corbett arrived here this afternoon. When asked by a Journal reporter if he thought the light with Fitzsirrlmons, which he signed articles for, would ever take place , paid: "Of course it will. The match has ii:?eii iiiuue, mo jhuhcj is up anu me Tlgnt must and will come off. I think that it will come off in Jacksonville in September next. There is no law in Florida to pre- . vent it. Governor Mitchell used every means in his power to stop my fight with Mitchell and was unsuccessful. Resides, the people of Florida, and Jacksonville especially, are anxious for the light to take place 4n that city." Obituary. CHATHAM. Ont., Jan. 7. The Rev. Dr. ?tlng. the noted slavery Abolitionist, died lere last night. He did a. great work prior , to and since the war in establishing and maintaining colonies in Canada for refugee xlaves. The character of Clayton, in "Uncle Tom's Cabin," was modeled after the Ueceased. LONDON, Jan. 7. Sir William Lording, JC. C. B., admiral of the fleet, is dead. PARIS, Jan. 7. Alphonse Broka, the novelist, is dead. Strike of "lloner." CHICAGO. Jan. 7. About two hundred "boners" employed in the packing house of Armour, Swift. Morris A Libbev at the Union stock yards, struck to-day rather than accept a cut in wages amounting to about $S per week. The rt ;as inad. the packers say, because the condition of business docs not warrant them in paying the price they have been giving up to the presaiet time. No attempt was made to idl the )lacea of the men who had walked out. Kraker Cane to He Hrnpeneil. KANSAS CITY, Mo.. Jan. 7. Judge Phillips, in 'the United States Circuit Court, to-day granted a new trial in the Fraker insurance case. The attorneys for the defense argued that Judge Phillips had erred In allowing them but three peremptory challenges, and in support of the action quoted the decision in the Hillborn case. Judge Phillips acknowledged his error and granted tho new trial. A Disinfected KImn. Wheeling Intcligencer. But along comes a medical authority which suggests that if people will kiss the precaution should be taken to sponge the lips with diluted carbolic add. There are many prudent persons who foresee evl;, but it is doubtful whether they can be induced to go courting with a bottle , of rarbolie acid. Shades of attar, of roses; What a suggestion. '. Arrival of Jlrw. Antor'ft Hod v. NEW YORK. Jan. 7.-The body of Mrs." William Waldorf Astor was removed from the steamship Aurania this ufterneon and conveyed to Trinity Chanel and placed in tho mortuary room. A speei.il .viuh will lie placed on the body. .No urrangementa for tho funeral will be nade until the arrival in this country of Mr.' Astor. Dollar tin lit Ivnnnuit (it). KANSAS CITY. Mo., Jun. 7,-After a hard light extending over a period of several weeks, the City Council to-rilght passed an ordinance which will give Kansas City consumers dollar gas. The Philadelphia Gas Co., had made a bid to supply the city with gas at fl.W. . Movement of Steamer. NSW YORK. Jan. 7. AniveJ: La Cham -jMgne .from Havre; Aurjuula, from Livcrjwol; CrahlGljm Hull..

NEGRO PUT TO DEATH .

LY.XCIIUn IIV 3IISSISrtPIAX FOlt ASSAULT .WD ItOimEUV. ' One ,ew York Woman Horned to Death by Another Dully List' of Crimes A Chicago Trial. JACKSON, Miss., Jan. 7. Spenqttr. Costello, a negro burglar and desperate! was lynched, to-day, near Flora, tiiiifyf niles west of here. Last Saturday night he entered the store of E. II. Green, at Green's Crossing, and asked to see some articles. While the clerk, a young man named Deweese, was showing him the same, Costello dealt him a blow on the head with a hatchet. Costello then robbed Deweese's pockets of J3. the drawer of 113 and left the store, believing Deweese dead. Later Deweese recovered sufficiently to crawl to a neighbor's house, near by, and tell what had happened. Deweese will die. -OTAIILI3 MlRUEIl TRIAL. Swede of the Northwest Prosecuting r Chicago Policeman. CHICAGO, Jan. 7. Over 125,000 Swedish citizens of Chicago and the Northwest are interested directly in a murder trial that was called for hearing before Judge Horton in the Criminal Court to-day. This was the long delayed trial of expollce officers Thos. J. Moran and Michael J. Healy for the alleged causeless killing of the young Swede Swan Nelson early Christmas morning, 1S93. The trial has bean deferred on one pretext and another till feeling has crystallized among the dead man's countrymen all over the Middle and Northwest States that decisive msasures should be taken to bring the accused to justice. It is claimed that perjured testimony was Introduced In the early progress of the inquiry to save the policemen from prosecution. The trial is made more formidable by a, distinguished array of counsel, including Luther Laflin Mills, who has been, specially retained by the Swedish citizens. When the prosecution seemed lagging to the point of failure the Swedish entireties took up the matter and fifteen Swedish societies took a hand. A concert v as given and 1,000 singers appeared on the stage at the Auditorium and the Immense hall was thronged by what Is said to have lean the greatest number of people gathered there before or since. , - TrJe court fcoom was crowded when the trial began to-day, among the notables present being Andrew Chaiser, editor of the Swedish Tribune, and F. A. Lindstrand, editor of the Swedish American nawspaper. It is believed it will take a veek to get a jury, and that it will take perhaps two weeks more to try the case. DICED OF "LIZE, THE MAX." Threw a Lamp at IJridget Gorman mid Horned Her to Death. NEW YORK, Jan. 7.-Mott street, in Chinatown, was the scene early this morning of a shocking murder. The victim, Bridget Gorman, was burned to death. The murderess, Lizzie Brown, known to the police as "Lize, the Man," and one of the most notorious characters in that section, used a lighted kerosene lamp for a weapon. During a quarrel she threw the lamp at her victim. It broke; the flaming oil set fire to her clothing, and In a moment the unfortunate woman was a mass of flames. Apparently not a bit moved by her dreadful work, the murderess stood for several moments watching, her victim writhe in agony; then she fled and was caught later bv the rmlir-B Tho vlntlm .. . I k. i 1 1 1 WOO UUXI1CU UT yond . recognition before assistance reached her, and died within ten minutes. A Lawyer' SeiiMiitlonnl Testimony. CLEVELAND, o., Jan. 7. There was some sensational testimony brought out today in the coroner's investigation of the mysterious murder of General Passenger and Freight Agent Caven, of the Valley railway, -which occurred some time ago. Walter I. Shoup, a well-known attorney, testified that he knew Caven's murderer, and could put his hand on him at any time. He refused point blank, however, to give the name of that much-sougnt-for person, saying that the party was nis client and that he, Shoup, could not, therefore, be compelled to divulge his name. Later, he might do so, however. It was brought out that Caven had been much in the society of a certain married woman, whose husband had applied for a divorce on account of the intimacy. A man was employed to watch the pair, and obtain conclusive evidence and, at ' the same time, wound Caven slightly, if possible. The shot, however, went to Caven's vitals and he died almost instantly. Attorney Shoup, who was fotmerly district attorney at Mansfield, O., will probably be placed in jail for. contempt, unless he divulges the name desired. Fatal Fright and a Tragedy. AUGUSTA, Ga., Jan. 7. Mrs. Eailey Johnson has died here from fright. A "root doctor" visited her "and told her that she was filled with lizards. When the voodoo doctor told her this, she immediately tqok to her 'bed and her death followed. Her children accused their father of having conjured the old woman, and some of them proposed to move their mother from her home and cary her to their home. The old man, believing there was another reason for the removal of his wife, remonstrated. Bailey, his son, grew very-angry and attacked the father. The old man, in defending his own life, slew his son. He was arrested, out has been released. Farmer Flogged and AYhtteenrt Shot. CINCINNATI. Jan. 7. A dispatch from the town of Brazil, Ky., about thirty miles from Cincinnati, reports the whipping of farmer George Lonsford, by a band of indignant neighbors and the fatal shooting of George Menne, accused by Lonsford's brother Ott of being one of the Whitecapoers. Lonsford. who has been married twice and separated from his second wife, was accused of having improper relations with his stepdaughter, who had refused to accompany her mother. Lonsford was terribly 'beaten, each one of the twenty regulators taking a hand. The affair is not yet ended. Ott Lonsford has been placed in jail. Two Drunken Tough Killed. SOUTH ENID, O. T.. Jan. 7. James Smith and James Brown, who lived twelve miles southwest of Enid.xwefe in the city last night in company with two women. Both men had six-shooters belted around them and all four were under the influence of liquor. Night watchman Dillon undertook to arrest them. They drew their pistols and Dillon fled. He went for Chief of Police Williams. Smith and Brown again drew revolvers, but Chief Williams was the quickest to shoot. Brown was instantly killed. Smith is mortally wounded. Held for Strangling Women. DENVER, Col., Jan. 7. After carefully sifting the testimony of Victor Manchenaint and Alphonse Lemars, the police have reached the conclusion that Lemars murdered Lena. Tapper. Marie Contassoit ana kiku Oyama. the Market-street women Avho were strangled to death a few months ago. Manchenaint will be held as an ac cessory as, according to his story. Lemars told him what he intended to do before each of the murders. The object of each of the crimes was robbery. Guilty of Stoning a Man to Death. FREEPORT, 111.. Jan. 7.-Three months ago August Altemier was stoned to death by a gang of local toughs, seven of whom were arrested on a charge of murder. The trial ended to-day. The jury acquitted live and found Thomas Beverly and Otto Herblgg guilty of murder. Beverly was sentenced to hang and Herbigg gets eighteen years in the penitentiary. llrlile and Mother Fatally Shol. MEMPHIS, Tenn., Jan. 7. In an encounter near Newport, Ark., Samuel Swims, in attempting to kill James Fields, a successful rival In love, fatally wounded Fields's bride and her mother. Mrs. Mary Cooper. The women were trying to shield Fields and sprang 'between him and Swims' s gun. Swims U in custody. Mm. Luthrop'a Funeral. - JACKSON. Mich.. Jan. 7. The funeral of Mrs. Mary T. Lathrop, State president of the W. C. T. V.. and one of the leading temperance advocates of the world, was held this afternoon. It was one of the largest gatherings ever held in this -city. In addition to the funeral services there were eulogistic addresses by Rev. Samuel "Tackle and local W. C. T. T, members, letters from Frances Wlllard and Ldy Henry Somerset were read. Miss YViUard has sent out a request that memorial gerv-

XTtffiSK

V'fc v ' v. v'tvus iuvai uts till iugiivviv it'v United States on Sunday, Jan. 20. I flWl 1r..ul iinmvid Vi rri unhont r 1 GENEROUS VANDERB1LTS Give 9350,000 to Columbia College and S ion ne Offer 200,000. NEW YORK, Jan. 7. President Seth Lowannounced at the regular meeting of the trustees of Columbia College to-day that two princely gifts had been made to the College of Physicians and Surgeons. One was of $350,000 from Cornelius, William K, Frederick W. and George W. Vanderbilt, who contributed an equal amount each. The other was in the form of a resolve from William D. Sloane to erect a new maternity hospital to connect with the present one and to form a part of it, the whole to be known as the Sloane Maternity Hospital. It is estimated that It will cost Mr. Sloane about $200,000 to carry out his intention. Mrs. Sloane, who is a sister of the Vanderbilts named, agrees to furnish funds for the maintenance of this new hospital after it has been erected, equipped and furnished by her husband. The Vanderbilts specify that their gift is to be used in extending the main medical college building and also for enlarging the Vanderbilt . clinic. The College of Physicians and Surgeons was merged with Columbia College in 1S91. Before that it was nominally its medical department. Cornelius Vanderbilt is a trustee of the College of Physicians and Surgeons as well as of Columbia College. BARBAROUS JAPANESE AX EYEWITNESS'S STORY OF THE ATROCITIES AT PORT ART1IIR. "A Ghastly Inferno, to Re Remembered wKh a Fenrnome Shudder Until One'M Dying Day." LONDON, Jan. 8. The Times publishes a letter from Kolbe, Japan, describing the Port Arthur atrocities. The writer says: "The English and American military attaches witnessed the scene from Boulder hill, and were equally amazed and horrified as myself at what they described as a gratuitous ebullition of barbarism. Tha atrocities were npt confined to Wednesday. Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday were spent by the soldiers, from dawn to dark, in murder' and pillage, in mutilation of every conceivable kind and in nameless atrocities until the town became a ghastly inferno, to be remembered with a fearsome shudder until one's dying day. The corpses of women, children and men were strewn in the streets by the hundred, perhaps thousands, for we could not count them, some with not a limb unsevered, some with heads hacked, cut crosswise or split lengthwise, some ripped open, not by chance, but with careful precision, down and across, dls-embow-ele I and dismembered, with occasionally dagger or bayonet thrust into the lower part of the trunk. I saw groups of prisoners tied together in a bunch, with their hands behind their backs, riddled with bullets for five minutes and then hewn in pieces. I saV a junk stranded on th? b.each, filled with fugitives of both sexes and all ages, struck by volley after volley, until I can say no more, of the awful sights ot those four days. Why repeat them all in painful detail?" A Distinguished Jiiuuee Diploma te. SAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 7. K. Kato. the newly appointed Japanese minister to Great Britain, has arrived from Japan on the steamer China. Kato Is one of the most distinguished and able diplomats in the Japanese service. He has recently been head minister of the bureau of politics, in the department of foreign affairs at Toklo the position filled by Kurlno until his appointment to the office of minister to the United States. He will succeed. Viscount Kaoki as the Japanese minister to the court of St. James. Viscount Kaoki has been filling the two offices of the minister to England and Germany and this relieves him of a share of his burdensome duties. Kato has been given the British, mission. Viscount Kaoki will remain in Berlin. Mr. Kato said that no intimation of the terms under which Japan woula agree to a cessation of the war has been made thus far. China has asked the Japanese government for a statement of what indemnity it would require as a condition for the cessation of hostilities. The reply was that the matter would only be discussed when China consented to send plenipotentatiaries to Japan to negotiate a' peace treaty. Minister Kato does not expect to see the Chinese capital taken while cold weather lasts. He will leave for the East this evening. - Inst ructions to Chliieme Envoy. PARIS. Jan. 7. A dispatch from Shanghai states that the Chinese envoys appointed to negotiate . peace with Japan are instructed to accede to no demands for the surrender of Chinese . territory. They will treat only on the basis of granting independence to Corea and paying an indemnity to Japan. The two Chinese generals, Ching and Chen, who were reported by LI Hung Chang as having died heroically while facing the enemy at Port Arthur, have turned up unscratched. THE BISHOP'S SUCCESSOR. Large Xuiuher of Minister Mentioned for the Honor. ' The question of the successorship to Bishop Knickerbaeker is almost the sole topic of thought with the Episcopal clergy of the State. It is against the- sense of propriety, a Journal reporter was told yesterday, for a priest of the church to announce himself as a candidate, and it was said that to do so would be sure to bring upon the candidate the displeasure of those upen whom he would have to depend for election. Hence, there will be no formal announcements by clergymen or their friends of the desire to wear the purple. It is impossible, however, for those who are talked about to prevent publication of the fact. Among those who have been mentioned in this connection are Rev. J. J. Faude, rector of Gethsemene Church, in Minneapolis, where the late bishop formerly preached; Rev. G. A. Carstensen, rector of St. Paul's; Rev. Dr. Bradley, lector of St. Agnes's, in New York, and formerly rector of Christ Church, in this city; Rev. J. Everest Cathell, rector of St. Paul's Church, at Richmond, and Canon Taylor, of Fond du Lac, Wis. There are some who believe that Rev. Mr. Seabreeze, of Fort Wayne, would wear the mitre with credit. The elevation of any clergyman now n the diocese would, it is said, possibly complicate him in some rivalries, and there is a sentiment that, perhaps, it would be -better to go out of the diocese to find the prelate. It has been urged in connection with this election that the groundwork in the strong and growing diocese was so well laid by the late blshor that it does not require a man of the same practical and executive character as Bishop Knickerbaeker to till the office, it is eenerallv admitted that such a man is ore among a thousand and that it is im possible to find anotiic- HKe mm. rne election occurs Feb. 6. O. II. 1. Ilelmont's Hobby. New York Advertiser. O. H. P. Belmont is probably on? of the most amusing x-haracters In society. Bearing a name which is known as one of Gotham's "old families, you know," he has inherited his father's physical traits, and even some of his mental characteristics, in a rpmarkahlc d?cree. He is about fortv. a little man with a perentual frown, a choleric color ana ine nervous, quica movemniti; whlih Mr. Kiolinir thinks are so typical of Americans. He has large es tablishments in ootn .Newport anu ew Vrrlr htro ho n t fr t a i li s on s mapnlfirpnt scale! His hobby is horses, and he owns and drives several coaches. On these occasions he dresses in the full regalia of the British hunting squire of thirty years ago. with pearl-colored' bell hat, scarlet i-out prod iy cnat. with lirss. buttons "htyh black stock and lilies of the valley in his button-note, it is a signi xor goas ana men. Liek the Envelope. Boston Herald. Don't lick the mucilage on the postags stamp, but moisten thi comer of the envelope instead. That Is a good rule to fellow whether the quality of the stamps is up to the standard or not. It is tht neat thing to do. .

WANT WORK OR BREA D

THREE THOUSAND X EWFOV NUL.WDERS YEnOlXG OX STARVATIOX. - : ', . ' r .. They Threuten to Loot Store If Aid Be Xot . Rendered 1,20 People Drowned In Rio Harbor. ST. JOHNS, N. F., Jan. 7. This morning a crowd of about 3,000 worklngmen who were thrown out of employment by the financial collapse gathered before the legislative chambers. Later they formed, into line and paraded the principal airoets. At the head "of the procession was borne' a white flag bearing the .words, Work or bread." The movement created consternation. At the first the polics prepared to disperse the crowd, but as their actions were peaceful nothing further in this direction was done. Aftsr hooting the government the procession went to the dry dock where is berthed the British war ship Tourmaline, which was sent here to help preserve order. ! A committee of th unem ployed boarded the ship and retires mted to Captain Poore that they and their fam ilies were starving. . .They declared that they were willing to work; if no work was available they insisted that the government should - feed them. They threatened to take the necessaries from the stores. Captain Poore intimated that such attempts would be repressed with a stern hand, his orders being to preserve the peace and to allow no interference with private property. He, however, expressed his willingness to help the w-orkingmen as far as nz could. He promised to write to the gov ernment representing their case and urg ing that help be extended to them. He said that he would have an answer to-morrow to Iris letter and would communicate it to them. With this assurance the delegation withdrew. - . ' Starvation is becoming more peneral daily. The government was waited on by a committee of the clergy of the Marcus Church. In reply to th committee the government said that arrangements were mak ing to provide employment for the relief of ths people. Lady O'Brien's committee started two soup kitchens to-day, one in each end of the city. 1 Protested bills of exchange to the amount of thousands of dollars were returned by yesterday's mail." The revenue during thepast month was not a tithe of what it was during the corresponding month of last year. . .1 . -.MSMUUm ISO DROWXED. Disastrous Result of an ExoIomIoii on Hoard u Steamer. , ' RIO JANEIRO, Jan. 7. A terrible ac cident, resulting in great loss of life, has occurred in the bay here. The boilers of the steamer Port, Nichtheroy, which had , quite a large nambef '.'of excursionists on board, exploded, and the shock drove the red hot coals, in the furnaces in every di rection. The steamer -caught fire and a great 'numbeVoT fhtise ' 'o'n board of her jumped to escape . the flames. Altogether 120 persons were drowned. STEVEXSOX'S DEATH. Lloyd Osborne Deerlbe the Xovelfst's 'Last -Honrs. LONDON. Jan. ' IJoyd ' Osborne, step son of Robert Louis Stevenson, the distin- ; guished novelist, who died in Samoa, in a letter to Sidney Colvin, published in the Times this morning, describing Mr. Stevenson's death and burial, says that on the day he died Mr. Stevenson said he felt so stronsr and well that if the worst came to the worst hi Samoa, with the Germans intriguing for possession of the islandsi he would go to .yVme;rici and try to raise public opinion by a -course of lectures. Describing the last moments of the gifted novelist, the letter says: "When we returned from summoning the doctor it was dark, the lights were lit in the great room, and Ijouis was lying on a chair breathing very laboredly. -iiie' was unconscious from the beginning, and for about an hour we waited there, seeing his life ebb away. He was , dressed in his sailor's jumper and trousers, and kept his high color to the last. When he passed away we lowered t v. cn-cat m-;-.n .ioflj. u' flv nvpr th housp and covered a tiie, body with the flag he Moved. It is a cause of thankfulness that death came suddenly, nnmng mm ousy anu happy. It was just at sunset and time for dinner, and he and my mother were preparing some little delicacy together, a salad for the evening meal. He got up a bottle of extra wine, too,, for .this little feast; some old Burgundy that he prized. My mother caught him, and he suddenly seemed to turn faint and, giddy, and he asked her, 'Do I look strange?' , and she tried to reassure him. She managed to get him into the great room ., and into the chair. He showed her ... where the pain was in his head, and this was his last consciousness. There he now lies in the big room, with the" flag cast over him, his hands joined ' together across his breast, and our poor people showing the last signs of respect within, their power by watching the night out where he lies." The writer, under date of Dec. i, continues: "Mv previous letter was interrupted by the arrival of several of our truest Samoan chletV with their presents for Louis, the fine mats that the bodies of great men must be wrapped in. All nignt they sat around bis body in company with every one of our .people,' in stolid silence. It was in vain that I attempted to get them awav. 'This is the Samoan way, they said." and that'-ended the matter. They kissed his hand one by one as they came in. It- was a most touching sight. You cannot realize what giving these mats means. They are the Samoan's fortune. It takes a woman a year to make one, and these people of ours were of the poorest. It was alwavs his wish to be buried on the top of the mountain that bounds Vailima. He even had a window cut in his study, so that he should always see the place. I was determined that his wishes should be followed out, so I sent that night to our best friends to bring in their men. Forty came with their chiefs, and several of Mataafa's chiefs came, too." The letter then proceeds to describe the funeral. STILL IRELAXD'S FRIEXD. Gladstone Thanks Amerleans for the ' Gift of an Album. LONDON, Jan. 7 The resolutions of the Friendly Sons of St. Patrick, of New York, which were adopted March 17 last, St. Patrick's day, were presented to Mr. Gladstone at 7 o'clock this evening by T. P. O'Connor by special appointment at Whitehall court. When the album, which was given to Mr. O'Connor by Patrick A. Collins, the United States Consul-general, was received, Mr. Gladstone expressed the greatest graification. Mr. O'Connor in an interview after the presentation said that he had conversed with Mr. Gladstone for half an hour and found him to be looking extremely well and having a much better color than formerly. He was much pleased at the wording of the resolutions, but Mr. Gladstone said he had made It a rule never to give written replies to addresses. He showed the ereatest interest in the Society of the Friendly Sons, of St. Patrick and made many references to the part played by the Presbyterians of the north of Ireland in the American revolution. Mr, Gladstone wished emphatically and distinctly to slate two things. First, that his inter est in Ireland would last unabated as long as his life lasted, second that every Irish Nationalist ought to understand that discord must' mean the adjournment cf consideration of the Irish claims and there fore every man who could bring about the reunion of the Irish nationalists was bound to do so as otherwise he would assume a terrible responsibility. Mr. Gladstone hoped that some agency would be found in which different sections of th party would be brcusht together and especially asked that some powerful an1- influential men in America where friendship for Ireland is universal should make a concerted appeal to the Irish Nationalists. .. . . V . Alleged Borgia on Trial. ANTWERP, Jan. 7. Trial of Mme. Henri Joniaux, accused of poisoning her sister, brother and untie, was commaicc4 here to

day. The court was" crowded with interested spectators. The prisoner was very pale and trembled. She replied to the questions put to her in an almost inaudible tone.

Mrs. Henri Joniaux, daughter or uen. Jules Ablav. and wife of the chief engineer of bridges and roads for the Ministry of War. was arrested at Antwerp, on April is last, on the charge of poisoning her sister. Leonle Ablay, and her brother, Alfred Ablav. in order to obtain insurances of 70,000 francs and 100,000 francs, respectively, on their lives, and also with poisoning her uncle, Jacques Van Den Kerchova, in order to inherit her share of hi3 estate. Merely Friendly Olmervatloim. PARIS, Jan. 7. Concerning the employ ment of medical inspectors of emigrants in France and Germany by the United States, Embassador Eustis has issued the following notice: "The nretended protest of the French eovernment was limited to a , few friendly observations in order to have it under stood that the medical agents had no diplomatic or consular character, and that they were allowed to prosecute their mission purely as a matter of courtesy. The American eovemment accepted these friendly conditions and pointed out that the employ ment of these agents saved tne i niteu States from returning to France undesirable emigrants which neither the ministers nor the consuls could detect. The incident is regarded as amicably closed and the agents have been accorded all facilities." . Avalanche in Franee. PARIS, Jan. 7. In addition to the ava lanche at Orlu, in the canton of'Alx Les Thermes, Pyrenees, on Saturday last there has been a similar accident at Bazerques, in the canton of Ax. This second avalanche killed three persons and seriously injured three others. Numbers of small hamlets have been overwhelmed with snow and avalanches and many houses have been swept away in the mountain districts n the southwest and east of France. The inhabitants were generally warned in time and escaped, but there have been several fatalities in addition to those recorded. On the island of Corsica there has been ereat loss in live stock owing to the heavy snow, and communication between Ajaccio and uartia nas been cut off. i Yietorla'n Secretary Stricken. OSBORNE, Isle of Wight; Jan. 7. Hon. Sir Frederick Ponsonby, G. C. B., private secretary to Queen Victoria, was stricken with paralysis at Osborn cottage to-day, and Is now in a critical condition. Sir Hen ry Ponsonby dined with her Majesty yesterday evening. He was born in 1825 and was formerly equarry to Prince Albert, tne prince consort. Xot Held for Killing n PuglllKt. NEW YORK, Jan. 7. A special cable from London received here to-day says: The Aus tralian pugilist Dummy Winters, arrested for killing George iSmith in a glove contest in England, was brought before the Old Bailey tribunal yesterday and discharged. The grand jury threw out the bill against Winters and all others concerned in the affair who are under arrest. Pacific Mull Steamer Ashore. NAGASAKI. Japan. Jan. 7. The Pacific Mail steamer City of Rio de Janeiro, Capt. Smith la hnrA south of Knenshlma Thf extent of the damage has not yet been , i n . . , . r . : i . jearneo. ine io ue Janeiro arnveu at Yokohama Jan. 3, from San Francisco, and, evidently, was on her way to Hong Kong, wnen tne acciaeni occurreu. The Kaiser and Ilixmnrck. BERLIN, Jan. 7. On New Year's day Emperor William telegraphed to Prince Bis marck as follows: "I hope, honored Prince, that during 1895 you will fully recover from the bitter loss witn wnicn you were recently afflicted, and 'that you will continue in good health and spirits." The telegram was signed "Your affectionate Emperor." Heir to the Throne of Slain. BANGKOK, Slam, Jan. 7. Prince Thoon Kramon Tno, who is now being educated in England, has been chosen as heir to the throne in succession to Prince Maha Vajirunhis. who died on Jan. 4. The Queen's mother is seriously ill. ' Five Armeniuns Shot. VIENNA, Jan. 7. Fifteen Armenians who were imprisoned at Shabinkarahtear, province of Sivas, charged with being concerned In a political agitation escaped and were pursued by troops, who shot live of them. The others escaped. Xuvnl Oflleer Killed In u Duel. GEE3TEMUNDE, Jan. 7. A duel with pistols was fought near here, to-day, between Lieutenant Buerski and Captain Mittler, both officers in the German navy. The latter was killed. Cable Xotes. It is reported from Egypt that the Dervishes defeated the Italian troops near Kassala. A heavy snowstorm is seriously interfering with traffic In Scotland. Several trains have been snowed up. The German Red Cross Society has forwarded 10,000 marks to the Japanese Red Cross Society in aid of 'the wounded. A dispatch from Odessa says that six British steamers have gone ashore in the Nicolaieff river, owing to the fog -and ice. The British Foreign Office nrgards the proposed annexation of .the Congo Free State by Belgium as being preferable to the present state of affairs M. Ernest Carnov, son of the late President of the French republic, was elected yesterday a member of the Chamber of Deputies, representing Beaune, department of Cote d'Or. The will of the late John Walter, proprietor of the London Times, shows a personal estate of 293,573 sterling, all of which is left to his children, the greatest portion going to his eldest son. The total value of the imports into Great Britain during the year 1894 was 408,505,718 and the exports 216,194,239, being an increase in the value of imports of 3,817,540 and a decrease in the value of exports of 1,900,626, as compared with those of 1893. , . The1 De Beers Diamond Mining Company, of South Africa, has sold its entire output for 1895 to a London syndicate. The sale is at an advance on previous rates, and it is reported that the total output for this year will be 3,500,000. A rumor current in London yesterday to the effect that Sir William Harcourt, Chancellor of the Exchequer and Liberal leader in the House of Commons, had resigned, and that a dissolution of Parliament was imminent, was found to be baseless. Yesterday was the anniversary of the death of Empress Augusta, grandmother of Emperor William. His Majesty, accompanied by Empress Victoria, went to the imperial mausoleum at Charlottenburg, where they both prayed, after which they placed wreaths upon the mausoleum. SIM COY'S PROPERTY. The Mortgagee Swears Ont a Warrunt for the Dead Man Sons.' The police were looking last night for James Coy, a son of the late Sim Coy, for whom there is a warrant alleging embezzlement. Anson Wilste procured the warrant, in which he claims he held a mortgage upon the personal property of Sim Coy at the time of his death, but that' the son has fraudulently taken the property, which is described as one, Brussels carpet, bedstead, a chair, one' set of springs, etc. 7 . , Thieves Rob Express Employes. Sneak thieves entered the oflice of the Adams Express Company at the cast end of the Union sheds last night, carrying off two overcoats and three pairs of trousers. Tho apparel was the property of the night employes, who were busy outside of the office at the time of the robbery. One of the emnloyes saw three men leave the office hurriedly and a moment later the theft was discovered. The men were followed some distance, but separated and got away. One of the overcoats taken contained G0 in monov, which the owner had left in the pocket of the garment. It is supposed that the thieves expected to find more valuable property. Looking for Hull Pliiyer. Manager Watkins is said to seeking to attach Wittrock and Fisher to the Indianapolis club for next season. Poth have been released from Cincinnati's string. Toledo Is also bidding for these two players. In Loe with Xordlen. Lowistoa Journal. That Is a strange story of the disappearance of Prof. Kaschoska. the pianist and accompanist of Nordlca. who is sail to have become infatuated with her, and to have committed suicide on this account. It In said that, he told several friends of bH passion while Nordlca was abroad, and when she returned to this country, Nov. 9. sent sixteen telegrams to her at her hotel, but feared to call on her personally, knowing that she was already aflianced. No woman that ever went from- Ma'ni could smile on a fellow so heart-breaking-Iy as this jlumji and ;harmlng Liiy,

Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report

MISS FANCHER'S CASE FOR X EARLY THIRTY Y?3 VRS IT HAS MYSTIFIED THE PHVSICIAXS. All that Time She Lay nm Dead, Motloiileftft. Speechless A Linking" of Spiritual and Material. New York Recorder. In a neat volume, under the title of "Mollie Fancher, the Brooklyn Enigma." Judge Abram H'. Dailey, the Brooklyn spiritualistic leader in Brooklyn, has published what he calls an authentic statement of the facts In the life of this psychological marvel in the niiicteenth . century. She was born in Attleboro. Mass., in 1848. Her parents moved to Brooklyn when she was but two years old. When dying, Mrs. Fancher said to her sister, Miss Susan. E. Crosby: "Mollie, I can see, is a child of sorrow, and will need your t?are, and I want you to make me one promise, that if anything should happen to her you will look after and care for her as your own daughter." That promise has been kept. Miss Crosby herself had a strong intuitional nature and had prei ion of her niece's coming disaster. Mollie Fancher, when fir g her studies at the Brooklyn Heit, Seminary, 'was. tall, slender, graceful, .beautiful of face, ambitious, brilliant. She was known as a fearless equestrienne. She was thrown by a vicious horse on May 1, 1864. Her head struck with great force on the curb and two of her ribs were broken. A year later she was thrown from a street car and dragged for more than a block by her skirt. After that pulmonary hemorrhages andvspinal troubles began. Sev eral times the doctors said she was dying and singers sang hymns about her bed- i side. But her pulse continued to beat. Then began those trances, the mystery of which has baffled science and become the wonder of the world. Her jaws were set. She had all the appearance of one dead. These trances always followed violent spasms. Seven and eight persons were often required to hold her in her bed. In May, 1866, after desultory periods of consciousness, Miss Fancher went into a long trance. All efforts to break the spasms failed." The smallest quantity of medicine or food gave her agony and she rejected them. The doctors thought her insane, "but." she says, "I was nevermore rational In my life. I begged to be let alone. Spasms and trances were essential to my life, but this my physician did not know. It was only in these conditions, strange as it may seem, that I got any rest, and it ever since has been so. When they stop I shall surely die." There was no form of treatment known .to science burning, freezing on. ice, elec tricity, everytning wnicn was not useu in the effort to break her spasms. Bound in wet sheets, she burst them with her elbows. Strait jackets were used. She was placed In hot baths of beef tea, in the hope that she might thus absorb nourishment, for the physicians were convinced that without it she would die of starvation. From every new treatment she emerged with some new complication. Deafness, dumbness followed. The only way she could hear was through her nostrils. On Feb. 22. 1866, her eyesight failed her, and she has never recovered it. "I can see," sh says, "but not by the use of my eyes. When I first became conscious of my failing sight I was greatly alarmed, but hoped to recover it again, When I came out of my trance I Jound it suddenly growing dark, and 1 supposed it was th& approach of night, and asked my aunt to light the gas In my room so that I could see. She replied: 'It is lighted, darling; can't you see it?' I replied, 'No, it is all, dark.' " MARVELOUS EXHIBITIONS. The doctor found that,' by touching a spot back of her ear, she knew him. She recognized him by a peculiarity of one of his thumbs. All this time she was in perfect possession of her mental faculties. Her fingers bscame cramped into her palms, but her thumbs remained free. Gradually her hearing and power of speech returned. Then began the marvelous exhibitions, the stories of which set the whole thinking world agog. Mis Faucher says: "My aunt had got into the habit of opening and reading my letters and communicating their contents , to me. Upon one occasion a letter came, and 'she proceeded to open it and rzad it to me. I insisted that she should give it to me. She replied, 'Why, darling, you know you can't read it,' but I persisted, and she gave it to me. I at once took it in my hands and read it to her. She was astonished, bacause she saw at once that I did it without the use of my eyes. Then my friends began to make various tests, asking me all sorts of questions as to what they had in their pockets and in their hands, and it was found that I could tell them correctly. My .sense of feeling was not gone, probably.more than a week or ten days, and when it came back I possessed it more keenly than ever before." Miss Crosby's diary, Which is embodied in the book, bear out Miss Fancher's narrative. Miss Crosby writes: "Some of the remarkable things which she has done during her sickness are as follows: She could tell the exact time by simply pasing her hand over the crystal of the watch, also tell the exact time across the room; she could tell the approach of a thunderstorm some hours before it came; she could also tell the fire bells were going to ring sometimes as much as five minutes before they really did ring. She has very often told what certain persons were doing over in New York, and even further away. Persons ringing the doorbell at the house she could recognize before they entered the house." She could see, spiritually, through the walls of her room, and describe persons in other rooms who were strangers to her. Her strange, but, nevertheless, accurate, vision reached even to distant houses. While in a trance one day she laughed. Upon being twitted by those present she turned upon one of the gentlemen and said: "See here, old friend, be careful. That was a very pretty girl you were coming across the ferry with." Then she described the young lady accurately, and the gentleman owned it was true. The most rigid tests were made of her mysterious powers of mental vision. Blindfolded, she was placed, face downward, on the bed, with her face buried in the pollows. but could tell precisely what every person in the room was doing. ! Then came the long trance, as her friends called it. It began in June. 1866. Miss Crby writes: "For the nine years which followed she has no recollection whatever of anything that occurred or anything she said or did. During that period her right arm was up in a rigid condition back of her head, the fingers of both her right and left hnnd were rigidly closed. She had the use of her left arm. During those nine years she had spasms and trances; sometimes her eyes were turned upward and backward in her head, but always remained sightless. During those nine years. I am informed from unquestioned authority, she J wrote upward of 0,500 letters, worked up i lw.ut j ounces ot worsieu, am a vast amount of fine embroidery, and a great, deal of ! very beautiful wax work, cutting and coloring the flowers and leaves in the most ingenious and perfect , manner. When the use or two hands was required the work was done above her head. Her writing was don? by inserting a pencil or pen in

Between tne closed nngers or ner left hand in the palm, so that the pencil or pen was held in the fist. Her handwriting was very regular and beautiful, her powers of composition very superior. She has made numerous acquaintances during that time, as her room was constantly beset by strangers from all parts of the country, anxious to see and converse with her." AN ENIGMA TO HERSELF. When at the end of the nine years her hand and lanbs relaxed and she awoke to consclouFness. it .was like the awakening of Rip Van Winkle. Looking at Miss Crosby she cried out: "Why, aunt! What has become of your red cheeks? You look so old and changed: Her brother, ho. in the years that had passed, had grown out of her recollection, went to her bedside, but was repulsed as being altogether too familiar for a stranger. To her physician she syM : . .-, .... "Well, doctorjjd-jixroUK'r get W,it

in time for his chicken potpieT referring to an Incident which happened on the afternoon she had been taken with the trance, nine years before. She says of her awakinr: "I was, and still am, an enigma to myself. If anybody can tell me who 1 am and what I am when they have heard the remaining experiences of my life, I would be glad to have them do so. I am told that there are five other Mollie Fanchers. who, together, make the whole of the one Mollie Fancher known to the world. , Who they are and what they are I cannot tell or explain. I can only conjecture. v It seems to me at times that I go into various parts of the country or city and see persons and places, and know what is happening, and w-henever I do, and I take pains to find out from the persons whom I visit upon these occasions whether they were at the places at which I saw them and were doing the things which I saw them doing. If they are able to recall the circumstances at all, they invariably satisfy me that In some manner inexplicable to myself. I was either absent from the body and was with them, or was able to make my observations without the obstructions of material objects, unaffected by distance." I have often been as far away as Michigan." The personal acquaintance she has with the other five Mollie Fanchers. whom she . has named Sunbeam,- Idol, Rosebud, Pearl and Ruby, is remarkable. She knows their history and describes her conversations with them. Her friends have, through her, had interviews with them, and the stories of these are weird indeed. Will Carleton, in a recent letter, says of "As a neighbor Mollie Fancher is valuable and charming. A friendly half hour chat with her is a tonic. She knows all the news and much history; she can converse about the great events of the world the only kind of gossip that she l - not belittling. She is sagacious and sparklf,' Hi. conversation; her remarks are entertB enough for the most exacting salon. sound of judgment on business matter, -.ei: mind is gifted with the vertebrae: pfvcom.mon sense." HOW 'BE. HI II" WAS XV HIT TEX". Gen. Wullace Tells How the Hook! Was Originated and Finished. New York Tribune. Gen. Lew Wallace, author of "Ben Hur, a Tale of the Christ," "The Prince of India." and other works, lectured in the . Brooklyn Academy of Music last evening on "How 1 came to write Ben Hurr." An audience of a thousand persons listened to him. The lecturer was greeted with applause, and began by telling how in early ennanooa ne was interested ana rascinatea by the story of the visit of the Wise Men from the East. led by the wondrous star, to the babe of Bethlehem. Continuing, ho said: "In 1875, when I was getting over the restlessness caused by the war, l began to write out the story of the Wise Men. I thought it -might prove interesting as a serial in a magazine. I' was not influenced by religious sentiment in the least. I had no convictions of God or Christ. I neither believed nor disbelieved. Preacher had no influence upon me. I had perfect indifference to what a French scientist called 'The to-imorrow of death.' But the work was begun reverently and was prosecuted at times with awe. but this was purely natural. My characters became living persons to me, and they would arise, sit, look, talk and behave. like living "persons. I heard them when they spoke and knew them by their features. They would answer when I called, and some would become familiar and call me and I would recognize their voices. "At first I had no thouaht of the complete work and wrote only the first part and laid it aside. In 1876 I heard a discussion of God, heaven, the hereafter, and Christ, and as I was trudging along home I felt ashamed because I V:njw so little of these things, and decided to study the whole matter. I made up my mind to eschew theology and commentaries and to give my attention to the four gospo's. How to interest myself and make this a pastime was the question, and I thought of the story which iended with the Mrtli of Christ, and decided to complete U by. going on to His death. The subject was dramatic and; full of possibilities in the revelation of God in person. But there w.is a long .jap between His boyhood and reappearance as a man with a mission. "After weeks of reflection I decided ta show the social, religious and political conditions of the intervening period. There was no lack of incident and person, and Rome furnished the poltics. I had to conceive the religion, and so created the Hur family as types of the Jewish race. In the Christian incidents I set forth the power of a miracle. I had never been to the Holy Land, so I had not only to study its history and? geography, but to study the customs and costumes of the various peoples. I sent for everything I could discover bearing upon the. land and peoples, and wrote with maps and authorities at hand constantly. The greatest difficulty I .found was not the invention of incidents and the choice of characters. 1 knew the Christian world would not have a novel with Christ the hero, but I had to bring Him in, and I had to avoid all sermonizing. To do this I held the reappearance -of the Savior until the last hours, having Him always coming, but not appearing. Then I de-. cided not to have Him an actor in any scene I invented. All His utterances were to be in the words of the gospels. In the five years given to the work only a small period was given to the writing, but the greater part to the study and . research needed. I carried the subject with me .on railway journeys and wrote one chapter on a delayed trip to Indianapolis. 'T wrote most of the book at my home in Crawfordsville, Ind. I have done much under a great beeeh tree rear the Tru''e. I wrote the last chapter of "'Ben-Hur" at Santa Fe, in the old adobe palace. I chose the name "Ben-Hur" because it was biblical, euphonious and simple. I became a believer in God and Christ long before I ended the work. I had not visited the Holy Land before I had wr.Uten the work. But afterward, when United States minister to Turkey, I paid an official visit to the Holy Land. I found I had made no mistaken, and also that many things I had - merely imagined, were real. It seemed to me that I had written in the book of things I had seen in some former period of existence." In conclusion General Wallace faid that he had frequently been tufced wh-it pt-rt of the book he thought the best.- All he coult say was that the part which gives him the greatest satisfaction was that, which described the interview with Ben-Hr and the two friends to whom be described h experiences In following the Christ. Tho writing of it convince 1 him of the divinity of Christ and the authenticity flf the record of His life, -s ' - ' ' He Saw the Joke. London Tid Bits. "One day." says. an American. "I went into a bookshop in the Strand and asked lor Hare's 'Walks in London.' In America the book is sold in one thick volume. The clerk brought it in two. Oh, I said as I looked at, them, 'you part your 'Hare In the middle, do you?' 'I. sir?" he said, with a bewildered look. "Oh, no, slrl I saw he didn't see the joke, so I didn't explain, but bought the books and went away. A week later I went to the same shop. As soon as the clerk saw me ho rushed from the back of the shop, laughing vociferously. 'Good!' he shouted. 'Capital! Part your 'Hare in the ' middle! That's capital, fir, capital 1' " . Dr. Price's Cream Baking Powder World's Fair Hijhest Medal and Diploma. in Triors ML, TubeJTorks. WROUGHiMRON PIPE roa - Gas, Steam and Yater Bcllfr TubO! C'nKt itad MaileaM iron Fitting (black and tfalvaiiizeo. i rimudtiga, i-t-aiu (ijini-. Pipe Tuuvs, Pijie t'ulleia, ViveA. Screw I'iatca nl Iea, WreucUen. "Steam T r ;t ; . Pumps, Ktcb-i blnkn. lluss, Uritiim. l)ih!t Mcl.il. M,1. der. White atut -olml Wiping Wattle, fciiti all otlir Mup. lie ami iu ccrn ectiuu with 8 team ami Water. ' Nuu nral Ga SuppiitMi pX',;.iitj'. Hteura heating Apparatus tur Public ISiit'iitiucn, .SinrertMuu, Mtlla, fhopa, Ki:tori, Lua. drt. Lumber Dry Huum, etc. Cut and brvuiit ta rdnay at; Wrought iron I'i.s from s inch to Xi tuchi-a di;a. ter. Knight &"Jillson .. . - 73 Pd 77 '

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