Indianapolis Journal, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 January 1895 — Page 2

THE INDIANAPOLIS JOURNAL, TUESDAY, JANUARY 22, 1895.

adoption of a policy by which the Secretary hone to put into circulation an Increased vomme or silver certificates of small denominations In place of treasury notes. The committee decided to strike from the sundry civil appropriation bill a stipulation that for several years has been added to the Item providing for printing treasury notes to replace those received at the Treasury. Secretary Carlisle stated that It was his desire to get more silver certificates of small denomination in the hands of the people, but explained that other notes occupied the field and crowded them out. Several members of the committee led the discussion from the question at issue Into the byways of finance. . Once Representative Sibley, of Pennsylvania, asked the Secretary what objection there would be to a system of redeeming: notes in gold and silver at the option of the Secretary of the Treasury instead of the holder. "If that policy had been Inaugurated at the beginning of. resumption," answered the Secretary, "it would have worked benellcially, and no trouble would have arisen from it. But my predecessors have followed the policy of redeeming in gold or silver, at the option of holders of paper, and any Secretary who tries to change this policy and forces silver on a man who wants gold, or vice versa, particularly at such a critical period as we have been passing through, would have precipitated disastrous results." Two financial bills were Introduced to-day by Representative Warner. New York, a member of the banking committee. One, "to maintain the credit of the United States," gives the Secretary of the Treasury discretionary authority to Issue bonds in denominations of $.10 and multiples thereof. Payment in coin at the option of the TTn1ted States : after three years, and due In ten years, with Interest at 3 per cent., providing the outstanding issues shall not at any time exceed $250.Ooo.cOO. Also authorizing the aoproprfation of surplus revenue to the redemption of these bonds upon the most advantageous terms he can secure. The second bill, to "reduce the demand obligations of the United States for other fmrposes." proposes to repeal the act of 878 forbidding the further retirement of legal-tender notes, and provides that all hereafter received, except those under the act of 1890. shall be destroyed. To carry out the redemption of notes, the Secretary 13 authorized to sell no bonds at less than par similar to those described in the act of 1870, except that interest may be fixed at the most advantageous rate not exceeding 3 per pent. Also to repeal the provision of the banking act of 1882 that stipulates that no national bank that makes a deposit of lawful money withdraw its circulation for the period of six months. INDIAXA NATIONAL HANKS. Their Resources, Liabilities and Reserve on Dec. 10, 1804. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. WASHINGTON, Jan, 21. Reports made to the Controller of the Currency, showing the "Condition of the national banks in Indiana at the close of business on Dec. 19, 1894, : place their total resources and liabilities at $62,807,821.09, and average reserve held, 41.68 per cent.' The previous reports, made on Oct. 2, 1894, gave the total resources and liabilities as $60,458,093.52 and the average reserve 4L27 per cent An abitraot of the last report follows: . Resources. Loans) and, discounts.............. $32,844,981.55 Overdrafts 348,776.26 IT. 8. bonds to secure circulation 4,870,060.00 17. S. bonds to secure U. S. deposits 200.000.00 U. S. bonds on hand... 668,550.00 Premiums on U. S. bonds 310,955.99 Stocks, securities, etc 2,871,116.43 Banking house furniture and fixtures 1,312,887.09 other real estate and mortgages owned 485.830.43 Due from national banks (not reserve agents) 2,947,469.74 Due from State banks and bankers 711,050.86 Due from approved reserve agents : 7,471,931.96 Checks and other cash Items.... 303,437.81 Exchanges for clearing house.... 157,242.14 Pills of other national banks.... 1,094,049.00 fractional paper currency, nickels and cents 25,654.21 . Lawful Money Reserve In Bank: Gold coin..... $3,437,528.58 Bold treasury certificates 186,560.00 Silver dollars 226,502.00 Silver treasury certificates , 258,496.00 Silver fractional coin 136,094.00 Total specie $4,245,180.58 ! Legal tender notes...' 1,770,293.00 -U. S. certificates of deposits for legal tender notes 6,015,473.58 Five per cent: redemption fund with treasurer. 203,118.61 Due from U. S. Treasurer 15,245.40 Total $62,807,821.09 Liabilities. Capital stock paid in .....$14,452,000.00 Surplus fund 4,565,028.24 Undivided profits, less expenses

ana taxes paid 1,615,763.90 National bank notes isued $4,372,375.00 Less am't on hand... 43,137.50 Amount outstanding 4,329,237.50 Due to other national banks 1,785,871.83 Due to State banks and bankers 1,995,188.9; Dividends unpaid 18,725.06 Individual deposits 33,725,205.21 United States deposits 93,466 72 Deposits of U. S. disbursing officers .,. 88,751.15 Notes and bills redlscounted.... 31,745.28 Bills payable 66,237.26 Liabilities other than those above stated 600.00 Total ..; $62,8O7,82L0l Average reserve held, 41.68 per cent. JUDGE IlICKS EXPLAINS. , Basis of the Charge that He Wrong. ' fully Retained Clerk Fee. WASHINGTON, Jan. 21.-Judge Ricks, of Cleveland, accompanied by his counsel, has arrived In Washington to appear before the committee of the House of Representatives to answer the charges preferred against Ihim by the Central Labor Union of Cleveland. In answer to questions Judge Ricks to-day said: "The substance of the charge made is that X have retained fees claimed by me by virtue of my former clerkship, which I should have paid over to the United States. There M absolutely no truth In this charge. The whole accusation embraces three Items, aggregating some $776, and in my reports as clerk for the year 1888 and the first half of 1889 I charged myself with this very amount s part of my compensation as clerk, the charge being made on account of records In what la known as 'the Blrdsall cases The actual making of records In all clerks' offices !m always many months behind the disposal of cases, and in this way It happened that the records in these cases, in which I had sc charged myself with $776 before actually receiving the same, were not completed until after my appointment as judge, when the fees in the cases were paid to me. they amounting to $1,720.15. For this amount I forwarded to the proper department of the government a full statement and account, whioh account was so reported by me as follows: "A. J. Ricks. -late clerk United States Circuit Court. Northern district of Ohio, to United States debtor, to the amount received for making final record in eighty Blrdsall cases, as per statements, $1,720 13 Credits by amount reported as part of his emoluments for first half of 1888. the sum "?L-65' By.amo.u,,t "Ported in last half of J 888, sum of $284.52: by amount reported In first half of 18S9, sum of $217.17, making the total sum reported $766.79. By amount paid Miss Lillis per voucher, $300; by amount paid Short &. Forman per voucher, $48 75 total credits being $1,115.54. i By draft for balance tire the United States, $004.61.' "In this account, as above shown, I retained only that which had then been charged to me and the actual expense of making the records, which expense was allowed me by law. Having thus fully accounted and responded to every duty of the government in this respect. I cannot but regard the prosecuting of the charge as not only unwarranted, but as actuated by mallc'ous motives by those who have taken offense at rulings made by me as a judge of the United States courts. I am here at the suggestion of the committee, and am glad of the opportunity to meet them face to face. I have noth.ng to conceal in this matter, and the facts entitle me to complete exoneration, which I am confident will be given me by any body of men investigating he sMbject and becoming familiar with the facta." In concluding their brief, which will be submitted to-morrow to the committee, Judge Ricks's counsel says: "Gentlemen of the ( ?om mi t tee There Is no argument In criticising the source from which the accusations come, bat It is a fact well known in this circuit that fearless handling of those enraged jn riotous conduct and the destruction of interstate commerce incited atcainst the ludge of this district the implacable hostility of a certain cls of eit'zpns. H' attitude. howv and his utterance on the bench have ret thapproval cf reviewing courts and learned J"tnl authors. It i the flt tine in th h'slorv of the Judiciary vt the Unifed State 'hat the discharge of a duty by a judge hn neen made the occasion for an Inqu'sitlon into his business methods prior to his appointment as judge. We submit that not onlv should the committee acquit Judsre .kicks or me cnarges presented in the memorial, but should take pleasure In saying

'that there is nothing In the evidence to Which they should give any consideration." I'LKADED NOT l ILTY.

Indicted Senate Witnesses Arraigned '. In the District Court. WASHINGTON, Jan. 2L President Henry Havemyer and Secretary John W. Searles, of the American Sugar Refining Company, and brokers Allen W. Seymour, of New York, and John W. McCartney, of this city, were arraigned through their counsel in the District Court , to-day. Counsel entered pleas of not guilty. The arraignment of Messrs. Edwards and Shrlver. the newspaper correspondents, was postponed until next Friday, owing to the Inability of their counsel. Judge Dittenhoeffer, of New York, to come to Washington before then. Pleas of not guilty will also be entered in these cases. Broker Chapman, of New York, came Into court in the custody of a deputy marshal, but was not arraigned pending the action of the United States Supreme Court on a petition for a writ of habeas corpus to be presented by Attorney Wilson probably to-morrow. The surrender of correspondent Shriver In order to enter into habeas corpus proceedings has" also been considered, but probably will not be done, owing to the similarity of the case with that of Chapman. District Attorney Birney has agreed to await the . decision in the habeas corpus proceedings before taking action on the cases of those arraigned. It is the intention of the government to press the cases, and the trial of the witness may begin in about two weeks. Attorney Wilson says he wl'l ask for a writ of habeas corpus in the case of Mr. Chapman before thf Supreme Court of the United States to-morrow on the opening of court. TUB GOOD ROADS MOVEMENT.' General Stone Say It In Making: Progress In Many Spates. WASHINGTON, Jan. 21. Gen. Roy Stone, in charge of the bureau that Is gathering information regarding roads, and who has been spending some weeks attending road conventions in the West, as the representative of the Agricultural Department, has returned to Washington. In reviewing the progress of the movement to-day General Stone said: "In Indiana and Missouri great Interest Is being taken in the movement. In Nebraska there is not much need for general road Improvements, except in the river counties, owing to the naturally good roads, helped lately by the very dry weather. Kansas is interested In the question and anxious to make the Improvements, and the Legislature will undoubtedly take up the matter and make decided changes In legislation.' Nearly all of the Southern States are taking some steps in road building, either by increased use of convict labor or by county bonding. A very Inergetlc movement Is in progress in Wisconsin. In New Jersey State aid probably will be doubled in amount this year. The Massachusetts State Commission has asked $1,000,000 to expend in the construction of State roads. General opinion favors convict and tramp labor for road improvement: The main idea is to use State prison convicts in preparing road materials, working in quarries where they can be guarded, and to use tramps, county prisoners and shortterm convicts in macademlzing the roads." CONCILIATING AGRARIANS. Meaning: of the Latest Move by Germany Agralnat Oar Meats. WASHINGTON, Jan. 21. The latest restriction imposed by Germany on. our stock exportatlons through prohio.tion on shipments from England is regarded here as merely another attempt on the part of the Imperial leaders to conciliate the agrarian party, who are -tingling under our recent sugar legislation. It is generally understood that England does not produce any considerable amount of stock for shipnvnt to other countries, and the restriction, therefore, is a blow to other interests than Kngland, and, to a very large extent, ours. There is no definite information at the Agricultural Department as to the number of American cattle and hogs shipped from England to Germany, and there is no way of knowing the amount of American stock taken over to Germany via England. It is believed here that the action of the Hamburg Senate was the result of a demand by the imperial authorities. Hamburg has evinced its preference for American meats, which have been proved not only cheaper than other meats that find there way there, but are acknowledged to be far superior In quality. Jndge Clarke Reconfirmed. WASHINGTON, Jan. 21. There was no delay by the Senate In reconfirming the nomination of Hon. C. D. Clarke to be judge of the Eastern and Middle Tennessee districts after the judiciary committee reported the matter to the Senate, as it djd through Senator Hill, chairman of the subcommittee, when the Senate went into ' executive session to-day. - Mr. Hill made a brief statement to the effect that the subcommittee had made a thorough investigation of the charges against Mr. Clarke and had found them to be unfounded. The committee had, therefore, recommended that the nomination be confirmed a second time. The recommendation who adopted without question on the part of any Senator and the nomination confirmed na me resident notined. No Decision tn the Coffin Case. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. WASHINGTON. Jan. 21. The presence of ex-Attorney-general Miller in the Supreme Court room this morning gave rise to the general expectation that the decision in the Coffin case would be handed down. Mr. Miller was only present, however, to oppose the motion of Mr. Lawrence Maxwell, Jr.; of Cincinnati, who petitioned for a writ of certiorari in the case of the Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton railway vs. W. R. McKeen. Morton Summoned to Washington. KANSAS CITY. Mo., Jan. 21. Secretary of Agriculture J. Sterling Morton started for the East to-night after Inspecting the local packing institutions. Mr. Morton was compelled to leave to-night, as he has been summoned to a Cabinet meeting in Washington Friday. In an interview Mr. Morton said he would probably return later to complete th inspection. General Notes. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. WASHINGTON, Jan. 21. A marriage license was granted to-day to Milton Henoch, of LaPorte, and Drusllla Davis, of Washington. At to-day's meeting of the committee on public lands Senator McLaurln called up the bill for the grant of a township of land to the Female College at Columbus, Miss.; and by unanimous vote the committee, after hearing the 'Senator, ordered a report recommending the passage of the bill. To-day's statement of the condition of the treasury shows: Available cash balance, $152,621,724; gold reserve, $70,763,117. The President has approved the following acts: To amend the act authorizing the Texarkana & Fort Smith railroad to bridge Little river, Arkansas, and for the relief of homestead settlers In Wisconsin, Minnesota and Michigan. The Controller of the Currency has declared dividends in favor of the creditors of insolvent national banks as follows: Five per cent, of the City National Bank of Greenville, .Mich.; 6 per cent, of the American National Bank of Springfield, Mo., and 10 per cent, of the State National Bank of Knoxville. Tenn. Mrs. Atlnms "Wrongfully Arrested. CLEVELAND. O.. Jan. 21. Mr. U R. Adams, accompanied by Assistant United States District Attorney Rosenthal, of Chicago, arrived here to-day to be present to-morrow at the trial of Mrs. Ella L. Adams, who. with J. E. Hagger, was arrested and placed in jail last Friday for an alleged attempt to dispose of bogus mining stock. It is now quite evident that the police made a blunder in placing Mrs. Adams under arrest, and she will undoubtedly be discharged when her trial takes place. Mrs. Adams, who is a lady of culture and refinement, has already shown that she came in possesion of the mining stock through her son; that she came here to visit a sick friend, and was averse to disposing of the shares until her return to Chicago. Lanky Bob" Will Go to Syracuse. ST. LOUIS. Jan. 21. Fitzslmmons, who Is playing here, has cancelled all his dates for next week, and will go back to Syracuse. N. Y., to answer the indictment for killing Con Rlordan. He will file a new bond to appear before court and will then resume the road. "Lanky Bob" says that he anticipates no trouble from the Indictment, as his lawyers have assured him that the grand jury returned the true bill to satisfy popular clamor, but that it will not be pressed. Great sale diamonds and fine jewelry at Marcy's, Elegant stock; low prices. "The Artillery March." A fine march for piano, at Bryant's.

NO LIVES WERE LOST

PASSENGERS AND CREW OF THE STATE OF MISSOURI SAVED. There AVere Only Seventy-Nine People Aboard the Ill-Fa ted Steamer and All Are Accounted For. LOUISVILLE, Ky., Jan. 21. Not a single man was lost in the wrecking of the steamer State of Missouri, according to the captain and others of the crew. When Capt. Joseph. F. Conlon completed a list of those saved it contained the name of everyone on board the boat. However, until this list was completed, at 8 o'clock yesterday morning. Captain Conlon, engineer Wlllard Alexander and other officials of the boat were of the opinion that at least ten lives had been lost. Last Sunday morning Capt. Conlon and the other officers of the boat were at Alton, Ind., which is two miles below where the accident occurred, and set about finding just how many lives had been lost. The work was begun with the following list of the persons who were on board when the collision with the rock occurred: Cabin passengers, 9; deck passengers, 2; officers and crew, 68, making a total of 79. Thirty-three persons arrived here on the Tell City Sunday night. There were thirteen persons, including officers and pas- A sengers, at Alton; the steward, the two pastrymen and the two cooks were known to be on the Kentucky side of the river at a farm house; three passengers had been taken down the river by the steamer City of Owensboro. Mr. McCaffery, his wife and the two deck passengers, Messrs. Garland and Graves, were at the house of farmer Hardin on the Kentucky side of the river, and the rest of the crew, with the exception of Joseph Braxton, a colored fireman, whose home is in Cincinnati, were accounted for. Engineer Alexander said: "I was as certain as I am living that at least twenty had "been drowned. When I jumped into the water negroes were all about me, their heads bobbing up and down in the water like potatoes, and just' then I looked around and saw the swamping of the lifeboat with Its overload, and heard the women shriek as they went down. It left a picture in my mind that is even hard to efface by the cold facts. How they all got out will never be known." Several people who had been passengers on the ill-fated steamer refused to believe for some time that no one , had been drowned. THE "BAR-KEEP'S" STORY. He Thinks at Least Ten Negroes Were Drowned. CINCINNATI, Jan. 21. Joseph McCabe, bar-keeper of the steamer State of Missouri, arrived here to-day. He says: "We struck just about 5:15 Saturday evening at Horse Shoe Bend, over seventy miles below Louisville. There is a point of rock that runs far out into the river there. The Missouri's head passed all right, but the current swung her stern around and struck hard. She immediately tjegan to fill and listed to her starboard side. This caused the fire in the furnaces to fall out, setting fire to the deck. With a number of others I rushed to the hurricane deck. All of the officers, white members of the crew and passengers huddled together, nervous, but quiet. Negro roustabouts began jumping into the water and I saw five or six of them drawn under the boat and drowned. At least ten negroes were drowned. James Pell, jr., was at the wheel when she struck. He tried to run her nose against the bank. Her stages were run out and a negro tried to 'fasten a line to a young tree, partly submerged in water, but the tree snapped and the boat seemed to slide, sinking rapidly, all the while about forty yards out in the river. The fire burned so fiercely that, a number of us Jumped from the hurricane deck, a distance of about foty feet, into the cold water. I must have been under water fully five minutes it seemed as many, hours righting against being drawn under as I had seen the negroes. I finally came to the surface and made for the clump of trees we had tried to tie to. We hung to those trees until a farmer named Harding took us off in a yawl. We went to his house and dried out. I was so exhausted that I fell down six times while walking to the house. "While In the trees I saw the roof part from the hull and float down the river, those on it were standing about two feet in water. When some distance down a yawl took them off, making several trips. All available boats came to our rescue, and our people were taken to Altman, Rome, and our party, to Harding's Landing. One of the firemen, a white boy, became crazed with fright, and after being rescued tried twice to jump into the water, and we had to tie his hands and feet to keep him quiet. I never saw anything happen so quickly in my life; we scarcely had time to think. Nothing was saved. I jumped in without even removing my coat, leaving behind $500 in cash and $60 worth of clothing. The captain and head engineer were the last to leave, after seem?? everybody else off in safety." AN INDIANA COUPLE ESCAPED. Mayor Shannon, of Alexandria, Swam Ashore with His Bride. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. ANDERSON, Ind., Jan. 21. The bride and groom that escaped from the sinking State of Missouri in the Ohio river near Cincinnati Sunday night was Mr. and Mrs. John Shannon, of Alexandria. Mr. Shannon is Mayor of the thriving gas city and is very prominent and popular all over the entire gas belt. He was married at Greensburg Thursday night to Miss Lathrop. daughter of Rev. Lathrop. a family well known in Indianapolis. They were on their bridal trip when the accident occurred. Mr. Shannon telegraphed his friends this morning. He swam ashore with his bride on his back. They will contIn,Vex t.helr brtdal tour, nevertheless, and will take in New Orleans and all of the Southern cities before returning home. OBITUARY. Major Henry Goodspeed, a Prominent Citizen of Itnh. SALT LAKE, U. T., Jan. 21. Maj. Henry Goodspeed, who came to this city in 1860, representing the New York Graphic and Boston Traveller, died at 12:40 o'clock this morning of maladies that had made him a sufferer since July last. He was born at Cape Cod, Mass., in 1833; was educated 'In the schools there and removed to Hartford, Cone, where he was engaged in the hardware business. Encouraged to write by the success of contributions in the Eastern papers he came West and wrote a series of widely-read articles on Mormonism. During his long residence in Utah he directed the expenditure of over $3,000,000 in the development of successful mines. During President Garfield's administration Major Goodspeed was offered and refused the governorship of this Territory. A wife and a daughter survive him. The remains will be sent East for burial. Other Deaths. WASHINGTON, Jan. 21. Capt. Anderson P. Lacey, of this city, died to-night of heart disease, at the age of eighty, after a long illness. Captain Lacey was a native of Cadiz, O. He recruited Company F, Ninth Ohio Infantry at the breaking out of the war and served at its first lieutenant and captain until compelled to retire on account of physical disability. TOLEDO, O.. Jan. 21 Peter H. Shaw, aged ninety-five. Toledo's oldest citizen. Toledo's first street commissioner and one of the first pioneers of this part of Ohio, is dead. He was born in Covington, Ky., in June, 1800, coming here when a boy. He was prominent in municipal affairs and held more than one important office. TOULOUSE, France. Jan. 21. Cardinal Desparez, archbishop of Toulouse, is dead, aged eighty-eight years. He was created cardinal archbishop of Toulouse in 1879. SPRINGFIELD. O.. Jan. 21. Rev. I. L. Rodgers, a well-known Presbyterian divine, dropped dead at noon of apoplexy. ROME. Jan. 21. The Rev. Dr. Emery, rector emeritus of the Irish College, Is dead. NEW MARKET, England, Jan. 21. Fred Barrett, the jockey, is dead. Americans Murdered In Guatemala. CITY OF MEXICO. Jan. 21. Reports come from Tehuantepec that Colonel Dunn and Thomas Murphy have been murdered in Guatemala while en route for the line of the Guatemala Northern railway, whither they were taking one hundred mules, pur-

chased In this republic to work on the construction of that road. There' is little doibt that he ourage was committed by renegades along the border for the purpose of getting better ' mounts for use in the threatened conflict between Mexico and Gautemala. The murdered men were Americans, formerly connected with the Tehuantepec Railroad Construction Company. An investigation will be demanded - by the Americans in Mexico and Guatemala. TORNALO IN ARKANSAS.

Several Buildings Demolished and Over a Score of People Hurt. LITTLE ROCK, Ark., Jan. 21. A tornado struck near PIggott, Ark., last night, fatally Injuring two persons and seriously wounding nine others. Much property was destroyed. At McGaine's Mill, two miles south of PIggott. several dwellings were demolished and eleven people wounded, two of whom will die. No details of the disaster have been received here. TO SUCCEED MARTIN LICIEN BAKER CHOSEN FOR SENATOR BY KANSAS REPUBLICANS. Nominated by the Caucus Last Night on the Tenth Ballot Delaware Deadlock Still Unbroken. TOPEKA, Kan., Jan. 2L The anti-Burton caucus at 7 o'clock to-night nominated Mr. Lucien Baker, State Senator from Leavenworth, for United States Senator, to succeed John Martin, Democrat. The fight ever since the first general caucus last Wednesday has developed into a battle between J. R. Burton, of Dickinson county, who received 47 votes seven short of the required number to nominate and the field, with Major 'Hood, of Emporia, and Senator Thatcher, of Douglas county, the next candidates in point of strength, with any number of dark liorses mentioned for the antiBurton forces to unite on. Ever since then the anti-Burton men have been trying to combine on some one to beat Burton. The anti-Burton caucus met shortly after 2 o'clock this afternoon, with 58 votes represented. A large number of ballots were taken. At one time J. W. Ady received 32. Major Hood's highest vote was 30. Senator Thatcher withdrew after the twentieth ballot, receiving as low as six votes before his withdrawal. The final ballot, shortly after 7 o'clock, resulted in 55 votes being cast for Lucien Baker, without counting Jiis own vote. In the general caucus, which met at 8 o'clock. Baker received fifty-six votes on the tenth ballot, two more than were required to nominate. I. Ralph Burton, who had been the leading candidate, received forty-six on the last .ballot. He had been within two votes of being the successful candidate. To-night' a vote Insures Baker's election in joint session on Wednesday. Lucien Baker waa born on a farm in Fulton county, Ohio, in 1846. He attended the public schools in his neighborhood until he was fourteen years old, when he entered the Michigan University, from which institution he graduated as a lawyer In 1869. Soon after he graduated he settled here, forming a law partnership with LewIs Burns, which continued several years. In 1872 he ran for city attorney and was elected by a large majority. In 18S2 he was a candidate for Congressman-at-large. He had a strong backing in the State convention, and was only beaten by a few votes by E. N. Morrill, the present Governor. From 1884 to 1892 Mr. Baker was repeatedly offered local nominations and was urged to run for State Senator. In the year 1892 he consented to accept the nomination for State Senator, and he was successful. Mr. Baker's wealth is estimated at $100,000. -- - - The Tennessee Contest. NASHVILLE, Tenn., Jan. 21. Debate on the contested election bill consumed the entire day in the Senate. This afternoon there was a disposition to sit in continuous session until a' vote was reached, but at 6 o'clock an agreement was reached by which a vote on the third and last reading of the bill will be taken , by 12 o'clock, noon, tomorrow. In the House nothing out of the regular routine business was transacted, beyond the adoption of a resolution to investigate the letting of the contracts for the new penitentiary and a resolution to investigate poll tax frauds in Haywood county. To-morrow, the 22d, a separate vote will be taken in both Houses for the election of a United States Senator. Senator Harris, the nominee of the Democratic caucus, will be chosen. Republicans will vote for Mr. Sandford, of Knoxville, and Populists for A. T. Mills, their candidate for Governor in the November election. The Delaware Deadlock. DOVER, Del., Jan. 21. The situation In the senatorial deadlock remains unchanged. But one ballot was taken to-day, which resulted as follows: Higgins, 10; Addicks, 6; Massey, 3; Wolcott. 8; Tunnell. 1. Records and Fennlmore, two Wolcott supporters, were absent. Wilson Losing: Votes. SEATTLE, Wash., Jan. 21. The vote for United States Senator at Olympia at the end of the sixteenth ballot stood: Ankeny, 16; Wilson, 27; Allen, 11; Jones, 1; McMillan. 12. Ankeny gains 7 and Wilson loses 3 since the first ballot. TO-DAY'S FORECAST. Fair Weather, Colder In Southest ' Portion of Indiana. WASHINGTON, Jan,' 21. For IndianaFair; colder in southeast portion; westerly winds. For Illinois Fair; westerly winds. For Ohio Fair, preceded by local snows near the lake; colder; westerly winds. Monday's Local Observations. Bar. Ther. R.H. Wind. W'ther. Pre. 7 a. m.. 29. 44 54 91 South. Lt. rain. .05 7 p.m.. 29. 70 30 89 S'west Lt. snow. T. Maximum temperature. 58; minimum temperature, 30. Following is a comparative statement of the temperature and precipitation Jan. 21: Temp. rre. Normal 27 Mean 44 Departure from normal 17 10 .05 .05 4Q Excess or deficiency since Jan. 1.. 7 PIUS. C. F. R. WA rrl!iinAjS, Local Forecast Official. Worst of the Season. CHICAGO, Jan. 21. Dispatches from many points in Iowa, Illinois, northern. Indiana and Wisconsin late to-night state that the present storm has been the worst of the season. A heavy snow has fallan and the temperature has dropped from twenty-five to forty-five degrees. Much minor damage was done by the furious gale which accompanied the snowfall. Drop of 49 Degrees. OTTUMWA, la., Jan. 21. The thermometer in the last twemy-four hours dropped forty-nine degrees. It was 63 degrees above yesterday and 16 degrees above to-day. A howling gale is blowing and it is growing colder. There is some snow. Prise KlgJiters Convicted. FORT WORTH. Tex., Jan. 21. To-day, in the County Court, Kid Lewis, the first of a gang of prize fighters indicted In this county, was" tried and convicted. His sentence is $500 fine and sixty days in jail. His fight was advertised as a sparring exhibition with four-ounce gloves. His partner in the exhibition was E. C. Fenner. The other two are Reddy Gallagher and Henry Bohannon. the latter colored. This is the first conviction ever had In Texas under the statute enacted in 1893 making prize fighting a misdemeanor. The case .will go to the Court of Criminal Appeals. ' Hanged Himself In a Cemetery. IjOUISVILLE. Jan. 21. An unknown man committed suicide by haniing himself in Cave Hill Cemetery last night or early this morning. The body was found dangling from the limb of a tree this morning about 8 o'clock. The man used a window cord about four feet long, and is supposed to have been a carpenter. Howard Jolly In Jail. MEMPHIS. Tenn., Jan. 21. Howard Jolly, the alleged defaulting Memphis agent of the C, O. ft S. W. and the Cotton Belt roads arrived from Kansas City this mornlnc. under charge of an officer, and was committed to jail, having waived preliminary examir.atlcn. He refused to talk. No Safer Remedy can be had for coughs and colds or any trouble of the throat than "Brown's Bronchial Troches." Price 25 cts. Sold only in boxes.

WILL BE BELEASED

EUGENE V. DEBS AND HIS ASSOCIATES TO BE LET OUT OF JAIL. Ball Bonds Fixed at f 2,000 Each by the Supreme Court Another Blow at the K. of L. WASHINGTON, Jan. 21. Following Is the full text of the order granted by the Supreme Court to-day in the hebeas corpus case of Eugene V. Debs and others: "On motion of the Attorney-general of the United States, and in consideration of the stipulation signed by counsel for the petitioners and the Attorney-general, entered Jan. 17, 1895, it appearing to the court that it is stipulated that the time for the return of the rule hereinbefore granted may be extended until the last Monday of March next, and that in the meantime the petitioners may be let to ball In the sum of $2,000. It is now here advised that. the hearing on the return to show cause w'hy the writ of habeas corpus should not issue be, and the same is hereby set down for Monday, the 25th day of March, 1895, and that pending the date mentioned in this proceeding the petitioners be admitted upon bail in the sum of $2,000 each, the bonds to be conditioned to abide the further order of this court, and to be approved by either of the judges of the Circuit Court of the United States for the Northern district of Illinois." VOTED TO SECEDE. Eastern Brass Workers Have Decided to Desert the K. of L. NEW HAVEN, Conn., Jan. 21. Seventysix delegates of the National Trades Assembly, Knights of Labor, representing 100,000 brass workers, chiefly from Connecticut, New York and New Jersey, met in convention here, yesterday, and voted to secede from the Knights of Labor and establish a new organization. John F. Fitzgerald, of this city, presided. Edward J. Lynch, of Meriden, read a report, claiming that he, with others, was unjustly unseated by the New Orleans convention in October. Resolutions were passed condemning the action of the national convention of the Knights of Labor In unseating legally elected delegates and seating others with no constituents, for the purpose of perpetuating themselves in power. The National Trades Assembly could not honestly continue members of a body which willfully and maliciously stooped to such mean and petty .devices. It was voted unanimously to secede and organize the Independent Order of K. of L. of America. Charged with Intimidation. HAVERHILL, Mass., Jan. 21. Four enthusiastic strikers, named Max Miller, Samuel Rosen, Jacob Ratner and Simon Lorden, were arrested last night on charge of intimidating Lewis Stegher, a non-union workman employed at Chick Brothers' factory. Steigler claims that the four men under arrest threw bricks and other missiles at his house, one going through the window and striking a baby which was sitting on its mother's lap. He also claimed that the men called on him and tried to intimidate him from going back to work on Monday. It is stated that warrants are out for two other strikers for threatening bodily harm to one of Winchell's employes if he went to work to-day. The Shoe Council held a protracted secret meeting yesterday and made arrangements for a monster mass meeting and parade for Tuesday. A number of prominent laborers will speak. BOO Men Laid Off. .OMAHA, Neb., Jan. 21. Five hundred employes of the Union Pacific, mechanics and laborers In the shops between Council Bluffs and Cheyenne, got their time checks last night. Master Mechanic Manning, of the Nebraska division, said that the amount of business did not Justify retaining the men, .but that they would be taken back as soon as It did. He thought the men should have known this. The Missouri Pacific began to retrench to-day also. The r.en in its Sedalia shops were laid off in. halves. SHOT TO SCARE. (Concluded from First Page.) as Tompkins, and returned about half past 3, loaded with men. some few of whom were expert motormen. They were soon ready for work, and at 4 o'clock the first car for a full week and more was started down Broadway. It was unmolested, but at every switch had much difficulty in progressing, as the switches were all frozen. ' NEW MEN JEERED. Large crowds assembled at these places, notably at Reid and Sumner avenues, but beyond jeering and some little verbal abuse the new men were not interfered with. Six cars inj all were sent out, the instructions being to go slowly and take on no passengers. All of them returned safely at 6:10 o'clock, and not a stone or other missile was fired at them, on the route. A few minutes before 6 o'clock the officials became somewhat alarmed at not hearing anything about them. Captain Gorman called in several of the mounted men and sent patrol wagons and Captain Ennls down the street, meeting them near Chauncey street. Stones and building material had been thrown on the track. As the fog and darkness made delay' dangerous the police themselves secured a coal cart and a few men and had the men and obstructions removed at once, for the prospect of an attack on the returning cars was good. Captain Gorman has acted judiciously throughout the entire disturbance, and deemed it more desirable to do this work than to court a disturbance. No cars were sent out after half-past 5 o'clock on this line, and all the new men were held in the depot to prevent the strikers from coaxing them away. y One of the members of the strikers board said: "The linemen have determined to refuse to make the necessary repairs to wires, etc., when called on to do so by the companies." This action on the part of the linemen is equivalent to their going on strike. As trolley cars Nos. 1500 and 1524, of the Gatesavenue line, in .charge of motorman Theodore Alter and William Essel, were passing through Gates avenue, near Central avenue, at 6:23 o'clock this evening, they were assailed by a fusillade of stones from the house tops and the windows on both sides of the avenue. The crowd which lined the sidewalks joined in the attack and sent volley after volley of stones into the cars. Patrolmen George Shackelton, Dennis Bush and James L. Coollhan were severely injured. Coolihan's nose was broken and Bush and Shackelton received several contused wounds about the face. The ears were stopped and the stone throwers ran away. The policemen's wound3 were dressed 'by an ambulance surgeon in the Ninth precinct, to which station the injured were conveyed. At 8:45 p. m., as a car of the Halseystreet line was being run into the depot at Broadway and Halsey street, a mob of over one thousand men and boys gathered there and threw stones at the car, smashing all the windows. The two policemen on the car got off and fired their "revolvers at the mob, but so far as could be learned no one was injured. Pickets of the Seventh Regiment stationed there made repeated charges, and finally drove the crowd back. The ranks of the strikers in Brooklyn to-day were swelled by the addition of gangs of tramps and loafers from New York. All day through the rain and fog these hood'ums tramped from New York over the Brooklyn 'bridge, bound for the point where instinct tcld them there would likely be more trouble. It Is estimated that during one hour this morning five thousand persons crossed the bridge by way of the promenade. TWO POLICEMEN SHOT. While three cars on the Gates-arenue line were on their way down town at 6:30 o'clock this evening they were surrounded by a howling mob at Gates and Stuyvesant avenues. Missiles of every description were hurled at the men in charge of the cars and at the police who were escorting them. A portion of the mob had gathered on the house tops in the vicinity and from this vantage ground bricks taken from chimneys were hurled with terrible effect on the police, several of whom were badly injured. Emboldened by the fact that the latter were comparatively powerless to make resistance: the mob pressed forward and a number of shots were firei, several of which took effect. Policeman Patrick Colllgan, thirty-two years old, and James Degan, aged thirty-two. of the Second precinct, who formed a portion of the guard, were hit. Degan was Phot through the arm and Colligan throueh the hand. They were taken to a neighboring drug store, where their wounds were dressed by an ambulance surgeon who was summoned, after which they were taken to their homes. The mob, after this, succeeded in wrecking the three cars, which were taken j down opposite the Ninth precinct police I station on Gates avenue by reserves who I had been summoned from, there and who

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finally succeeded in dispersing the crowd. During the melee Kate Karney was detected throwing missiles from a window. She was placed under arrest. Uhe greater number of new employes of the Brooklyn City Railroad Company which was taken to the Rldgewood-avenue stables this afternoon have desterted and Joined the strikers and to-night there ie not a single man in the stables who can operate the cars, which the railroad company announce they will send out in the morning. The strikers succeeded in winning the men over this evening, and are taking care of them for the n.gut. The taxpayers of Kings county will have to meet the burden of the strike, so far as a monetary sense is concerned. The pay of the troops, as well as the cost of their maintenance, will fall on the taxpayers of the county, and the longer it lasts the more they will have to pay. It is estimated that the expense of having the soldiery here will foot up between $15,000 and $16,000 per day. About six thousand National guardsmen are in Brooklyn, of which about 1,500 are officers who receive an average of $4.50 per day, the privates getting $1.25. This creates a pay roll of $12,o75. It costs about 40 cents per man or $2,400 for food. Then cornea the question of transportation, which at the lowest estimate will average 10 cents per head or $600 more. Then every trooper is allowed $2 a day for his horse. There being about one hundred troopers on duty makes an extra $200, or a grand total of $15,575. At a meeting of the board of aldermen held to-day Alderman Leech propsed the following resolution, which was adopted: "Every motorman employed in this city must be twenty-one years old or over, a citizen of the United States, having resided one year in the State and four months in the county. Each violation to be punishable by a fine of $25 on the company." Should Mayor Schieren sign this it will become a law and will discharge every new man employed by the railroad companies to -replace the strikers. LIST OF INJURED. Following is a list of injured to-day as far as obtainable: DENNIS BUSHE 'policeman, contused wounds about the face, caused by a stone. COLLINS, private, Company H, Seventh,, head cut open with a 'brick, not seriously hurt. PATRICK COOLIHAN, policeman, nose broken by aL stone. PATRICK CALLIGAN, policeman, of the Second precinct, shot in the arm. CAM PEN, mounted policeman, head cut open by a rock. - , JAMES DEGAN, policeman of. the Second precinct, shot in the head. JOSEPH DONNELLY, conductor of the trolley car, knocked senseless while running a car on Gates avenue. ENNIS, private. Company H, Seventh Regiment, head cut open by a stone; sent to his home; seriously injured. WILLIAM GOLDENBURG, a motorman, assaulted by strikers and badly cut about the head. VALENTINE KUSSLER, of Sixty-ninth street, Brooklyn, hurt in a collision at Bath Junction. KIPP, major of the Seventh Regiment, struck 'by a stone thrown from ambush; received a severe wound in the leg. MARKMAN, policeman, Cedar street-station, ankle sprained in the Gates-avenue fight. RYAN, private in the Seventh Regiment, Company F, struck in temple with a missile In Gates-avenue riot. FRANK RYAN. Brooklyn, hurt in collision at Bath Junction. GEORGE SHACKLETON, pollceman.contussed wounds about the face, caused by stones. ELMER E. VANDYKE, private in Twelfth Regiment, compound fracture of skull, broken jaw and fractured leg caused by a fall resulting from an attempt to escape from a guard room at Seney Hospital, and will probably die. WILSON, policeman, Cedar-street station, hurt in chest by a flower pot thrown from a window by a woman. JOSEPHINE ZEIGER, Brooklyn, struck by a car at Broadway and Haywood street, taken to the Eastern District Hospital in a precarious condition. UNKNOWN MAN, fell from an elevated station on Myrtle avenue, Brooklyn; taken to St. Catherine's Hospital; will die. TWO UNKNOWN MEN, suffering from slight gun shot wounds, treated at St. Catherine's Hospital and sent home. Legislature May Investigate. , ALBANY, N. Y., Jan. 21. In the House, to-night, the principal topic of discussion was the Brooklyn strike, precipitated by the introduction of resolutions by Assemblyman Friday and a report from the board of arbitration on the matter recommending that the Legislature frame a law making the term, "ten hours for a day's work," more definite, so that trouble between capital and labor might be averted. Assemblyman Friday's resolution, after a long preamble reciting the inconvenience and expenses reverting to the county and State, reads as follows: "Resolved, For a better protection of the lives and property of our citizens, this Legislature appoint a special committee of five of its members to examine into the causes leading up to the strike, fix the basis of responsibility therefor, and! report to this Legislature at the earliest possible moment their conclusions, with such recommendations as will prevent a recurrence of the same." . Possible Strike In Jersey- City. JERSEY CITY, N. J., Jan. 21. It is alleged that the employes of the Consolidated Traction Company In Jersey City have decided to tie up the trolley roads in the event of the Brooklyn strike resulting in a victory for the men. The Jersey City conductors and motormen are members of the Knights of Labor, and are well organized. The leaders say the Newark employes of the company will also strike if the Brooklyn strikers win. The company employs about 1.200 men in New Jersey, operating nine lines. The men have for several months been talking strike. They sent a petition to the company several weeks ago asking for increased wages and shorter hours, but have received no reply. MEASURING THE SENSES. Interesting Experiments by Professor Scripture, of Yale. New York Sun. Everybody knows how easily children in general take up a suggestion, and what curious exceptions to the rule there are. One little girl will believe everything you tell her without question, and will Imagine she sees or feels anything that the teacher suggests to her. Another child will persistently doubt the teacher's word, will be a skeptic on all questions, and if he grows up to be a philosopher, will probably doubt the evidence of his own senses. It is to measure this difference of suggestibility that Prof. E. W. Scripture, of Yale University, has been conducting a series of interesting experiments. Professor Scripture gives the following account of the process: Here Is the way In which it can be done. Through a thin wire I send an elec ric current just strong enough to make the wire slightly warm. I ask some one to put his finger on the wire before I send the current through, and, taking out my watch, I note the second at which I sent it through. He is to tell me when he feels the slightest warmth. And I note how many seconds pass before he feels it. Then I perform the test twice again, and note the time as before. I hold the connecting cords in my hpjid, and the current can pass only when the two points touch. On the last two tests I do not let the two points touch, and so the wire does not in reality become hot at all. and the sensation which the person had was the result of my suggestion that the wire was going to be hot. The time it takes for that suggestion to work will give some idea of the person s suggestibility. , Last year's experiments were made on about 1,400 children in the public schools of New Haven. They were done under the supervision of Dr. J. A. Gilbert, of the Yale laboratory, and are reported in "Studies from the Yale Psychological Laboratory." As experiments with the thermo-suggester cannot be performed rapidly enough, a set of suggestion weights was devised. It conslsts of a large block (D of wood and a small block (d) filled with lead. Both of these blocks are exactly equal In weight. When a person lifts first one and then the other of these blocks between the thumb and finger It is impossible to believe that they are of equal weight, even if he knows the fact. The eye suggests that the big block must be heavier, because all our lives we find big things to be heavier than little ones. But when the hand raises them we are surprised not to find this the casa with the blockv, and the discrepancy at once suggests that the small block is heavier. It is a fact that after a year's familiarity with these blocks;, and after having many times weighed them on the scales I cannot undeceive myself. Even today the small block actually feels the heavier. 1 In the new psychology we are not contented till we can measure everything. The

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! v rr if question arises, How much heavier does d seem than D? The answer gives the effect of the suggestion of size on the feeling of weight. To obtain the measurement a set of blocks, all of the same size, are used. One of the blocks of this set is of the same weight as the blocks D and d; the others are successively lighter or heavier. Suppose this set of middle-sized blocks varied in weight from fifteen ounces up to eighty ounces, and that the blocks D and weighed fifty-five ounces. Then you first pick up the middle-sized block that seems to be equal in weight to D, say. for example, the twenty-five-ounce block. - Then you pick out the one equal to d. say the seventy-ounce block. Now we have caught you. D and d are exactly alike, yet you make a difference of forty-five ounces in, weight between them. When the experiments were made on h children nothing was said but "Pick out the middle-sized block that is of the same weight as the large block; pick out the middle-sized block of the same weight as the small one." The children did not suspect that D and d were alike. In this way we obtainedr an unbiased measurement of the influence of the size of a thing on the child's judgment of its weight. As in all scientific work (and in all civilized communities except the United States), the metric system of weights is used. Our blocks were weighed in grammes. An ounce is equal to 28 grammes. The blocks D and d actually weighed 55 grammes, and th middle-sized blocks ranged from 15 to 80 grammes. About 100 children of each age from six to seventeen were taken. The average effect of the suggestion was as follows: Six years. 42 grammes; seven years. 4o grammes; eight years, 48 grammes; nine years, 50 grammes; ten years, 44 grammes; eleven and twelve years, 40 grammes; thirteen years, 38 grammes; fourteen to sixteen years, 35 grammes; seventeen years, 27 grammes. For all ages the average was above 25 grammes. The suggestibility slowly decreases from six years to nine yearn; after nine years it, steadily decreases as the children grow older. The results, when separately calculated for boys and girls, show that at all ages the girls are- mora susceptible to suggestion than the boys. wiin me exception or the age of nine, where both are extremely succeptible. I These are average results for large num'uers oi cnnaren. .Many young people, however, were so succeptible that our set of middle-sized blocks did not range far enough to suit them. At the range of seven years 37 per cent, of the children declared that the large block was lighter than the lightest block, and that the small block was heavier than the heaviest. The actual difference between them waa 65 grammes; thus the effect of suggestion was more than the weight of the suggesting blocks D and d. MRS. MEYER'S LITTLE BOY. Miss Peterson Will Not Surrender Him Without a Struggle. New York Commercial Advertiser. Miss Valborg Peterson will not give up the Meyer baby. "1 took that boy," sh said, "and saved his life, and now I won't part with him until the courts compel me to." The baby In question Is Arthur Meyer, the two and a half year-old son of Dr. Henry C. F. Meyer, the convicted poisoner and Mrs. Meyer, who was discharged from, the Tombs on Wednesday last. Wh?j Mrs. Meyer was arrested, charged with being aa accessory in the murder or Baum, alias Brandt, her two children were incarcerated with her. They were Arthur, then a year old, and a baby Just born. The baby died,' killed by the foul air in the Tombs, but little Arthur's life was saved by being removed to St. Barnabas' Home. Miss Peterson found him there and wished to adopt him. Mrs. Meyer made no objection and so Miss Peterson, who is a nurse, took him, though no formal papers were made out. When Mrs. Meyer was discharged she notified Miss Peterson that she would take Arthur West with her. The news came as a great : shock and ehe has : notified Dr. O'SuUivan, Mrs. Meyer's cuunaei, mai sne wui not part wltn little Arthur without a legal struggle. The State University Scheme. Butler Collegian. , . - : The proposition was not so much to remove the present institution as to estblish at Indianapolis a university of the highest rank, one that should be- on srucb footing as Chicago University, perhaps, or, at "asi, me equal or ancnigan university. 4. ius wouia mvoive me expenditure of vast sums of money a million dollars for buildings and material equipments to start with, and, foa current expenses, annual appropriations ten times larger than any that our Legislature has ever made. In the present financial condition of our State, government the idea is simply preposter-. ous. We, who are friends of higher education, of course, would be rejoiced to. have a real university In our State. We appreciate the advantages of such an institution, and those of us who are candid,whether biased or not by local or ecclesiastical considerations, will frankly avow that Indianapolis is the one place in the. State where such an institution could be maintained. But the proposition is hopeless; a man might as well pucker up his mouth and blow against a blizzard as to bring it before the taxpayers of Indiana at this juncture. A Dainty Dish. New York Evening Post. , An elegant way to use apple's for a dlnrier dessert or luncheon is to remove the cores, steam them until tender, and then fill thehollow left by taking out the core with candied fruit. Select apples that are large and s tart and have red skins. For the filling in eight apples Mr. Rorer uses four ounces' of candied cherries and two oi candiea p'ne- ' apples. Chop the fruits and simmer them .' in a halfcapful of sugar and a cupful of water. Arrange the apples when cooked on an ice-cream dish or a chop plate; fill the centers heaping full of the fruit, draining it . free from the syrup. Boil the syrup vntll ? thick as honey, flavor with vanilla or good ! sherry, and baste the apples with it. Serve cold with whipped cream heaped around the apples Just before serving. Movements of Steamers. LIVERPOOL, Jan. 21. The Journal of Commerce reports that the leading transatlantic steamship companies are making a working agrement to take effect In the spring, which will lead eventually to an amalgamation, ine present object of the agreement is to offer severe competition to the lines running from Southampton.. LIVERPOOL, Jan. 21. Arrived: Brlttanic, from Newport News. - NEW YORK, Jan. 21. Arrived: Stuttgart, from Bremen. Seeking Notoriety. SARANAC LAKE, N. Y., Jan. 21. Capt. Wm. Fi Mannix to-day issued an appeal for volunteers to so at once to Hawaii for the defence of the republic. Fire In the boarding house of Mrs. Stewart, at No. 308 South Illinois street, last night, damaged the interior to the extent of $50. Origin unknown. Big sale Rogers Bros. plateware, 1847 goods, at Marcy's; also clock sale this week. "This Dream of Life." A beautiful new song at Bryant's. 4 Dr. Price's Cream Baking Powder '7 World's Fair Highest Medal and Diploma. NATIONAL TubeJVorks. WROUGHT- IRMf PIPE ob Gas, Steam andWater Bollr i Tubes. Cut an 4 Milcalls Iron J-'ittiuss black sud galvanii.;. alvpn. stup focka. fcutns rimiinn. m am tiauoa. Pilie Tout', i'lpa Cutters, Viat'ft, Screw l'iatea suit liiea. Wrenches, steam Trap a. Pump. ivllch.Mi btnka. Hum, lititiutr. Babbit AtetMl. XoU ' der. White and 'lured Wip. lug Vat. suit all other Hup. plies npij iu con eniiuti wlt& ua. Hteam uml Water. Jiau oral Una MiHilieu a apecialiy. Bteam tie.itiiiu Appuratua for I'.ibiie liullitincn. siioreniuina, Mill. I itctor'.an, Lauu. dnee I.niuMr lry liuunea, etc Cut and 1 bread to ordtw auy ilit Wrought irou I'ipv, frm H Inch to 1 - Inchee diaiav ter. , Knight & Jillson 75 aad 77

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