Indianapolis Journal, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 March 1895 — Page 2

I THE lyPIAyAPOllS JOUimAL, DNESDAY, MARCH 6,

- J 1895.

, controlled by the advocates of the sold standard. As well might our fathers have expected to win the Independence of the colonies if, while contending for the cause f liberty, they had refused to separate from, the Tories. Indent-ndence could never have been won by fighting for liberty in British regiment?. And, feilow-citlzens, this great cause will never be won without united action. It will never be won unless those who believe in it come together and elect a Congress and a President on this issue. There is no hope whatever that the Republican party as a party will change its policy, give up the gold standard and restore the bimetallic standard. There are no grounds for such, a hope, and we believe they are deluded who look for such a change of policy by this party. "The Republican party is committed by Its loaders, by its record, and by the pres behind It, to the gold standard supported by gold bonds, and to the retirement of t he greenbacks and the surrender of the Issue and control of paper currency to th banks. No less- persistent and effective is the control of the money power over the organization of the Democratic party. While undoubtedly a large majority of the. members of that party are opposed to the gold standard, they have been powerless to control the party organization against it. and much less to secure through it the restoration of the bimetallic standard. URGED TO COMBINE. " "While this is the case. It cannot be expected that the Republicans will abandon convictions of a lifetime on other questions and go ' Into the Democratic party In a . body, or Into a wing of that party. Nor will Democrats give up convictions they believe to be essential in government and go over to the Republican party, or to a division of that party. Nor Is It possible to induce Republicans and Democrats together to go Into the Populist party, for the reason, If for no other, that the platform of that party contains declarations and the party advocates theories to which they cannot give their assent. But we must, in some way, ' come together on this Issue, or the cause Is lost, and with it the independence of the people. No old party ever carried through a great reform. 'New bottles for new wine. t Therefore, no course seems possible but to subordinate for the timebeing other questions and come together in a new organization to fight the great battle of 1S96, on the one great Issue on which the prosperity and happiness of the people so largely depend. It Is believed that this cause can be won in no other way, and that to continue to contend for it only within the lines . of existing parties is to court defeat at the cutset and lose the battle in the end." - "The purpose of this movement is not to array section against section nor class against class, nor to require anybody to give up his convictions on other questions, or to sever his party relations for any other purpose than to unite in a common cause, the cause of justice against injustice, of prosperity instead of forced idleness, of nhundance and happiness instead of want and misery. There can be no doubt, moreover, that a return to the standard of gold and silver will .promote in the highest decree the business interests of the entire country; while the continuance of the present policy must necessarily be attended by a further fall of prices, imperilling business enterprises still more, and prolonging indefinitely the present stagnant condition of trade and . industry. . Better - prices under existing circumstances cannot be expected. A debtor nation cannot maintain even level prices with creditor nations. The tringle gold standard can be maintained in the United States only by forcing down the price level of commodities here enough below the price level of other countries to turn gold this way, or, at any rate, to Induce our creditors to take commodities of us for. what we owe them instead of demanding gold. Any policy, therefore, that tends to raise prices necessarily operates to expel gold. This condition of things cannot be overcome by tariffs, much 'less by free trade. In the payment of annual dues to other countries, we must compete with other debtor countries; with Argentina, Kith Egypt, with India, with all the colonies Of Great Britain, and, worst of all, with Asiatic races, with Industrie stimulated as never before by the low price of silver. These conditions from which there is no fiscape as long as the gold standard policy pursued, intensify the gravity of the pltuatioa in this country to such an extent as to compel the serious attention of all patriotic citizens. How idle, in the presence of such conditions, to expect to maintain the gold standard by an indefinite isFue of bonds; and how unwise, if not reckless, such a policy must seem to thoushtful men everywhere. It is estimated , that already the rise of gold, by increasing debts, has absorbed from forty to fifty millions of the world's- wealth. , MUST SPRING FROM THE PEOPLE. "The inauguration of a movement for relief, from these enthralling conditions must spring from t& people. Politicians never institute great reforms, and it were idle to wait for them. This cause Is the cause of the people, "arid it ' Is : balieved that It ' more profoundly concerns the welfare of the groat body of the people than any question since the civil war, if ; not, indeed, since our independence was gained, for in Its ultimate outcome the question of a sufficiency or scarcity of money is a question of freedom or serfdom for the mass of the people. "Whihv not unmindful of , the interests of the people of other, countries in this question, dt is not an issue that can be safely submitted to the decision of foreign governments or be made to depend on what other countries may do or . may not do. w hen our monetary system was established over a hundred years ago. with a populaV,on less, tnan four millions, our fathers did npt wait for or invite the concurrence ? er Powers. Nor did the framers of the Constitution contemplate any such action. They legislated for the United States and we now, as Americans, must legislate for ourselves. 'Beware of entangling alliances in this as in other matters, and especially of allurements of international conferences to delay action In our own behalf in the delusive hope that other countries will care for our interests better than we can ourselves. No other country has ever R?.a.ouJ' ,aPProval of its financial pollcv. ft is believed that the United States has power enough in the commercial world to a one restore the link between gold and silver, broken in 1S73. but, should gold for any reason temporarily go to a premium, It will none the less operate on prices generally, and certainly a premium on eold here would, like a fall in the gold prici of silver to silver countries, inure on every "'.IS,,? the advantage of the United States. "Fellow-citizens The power is still in your hands to right by the ballot the great wrong of 1873, and to save yourselves and your children from the thralldom which the gold standard policy, if persisted in. will surely bring upon you and them. We pray you, therefore, not to let the settlement of his question go beyond the election of 1896 but. subordinating all questions for the time . being to this, the supreme Issue, settle this row and settle it forever. And we especially urge on you the Importance of Immediate organization in townships and counties throughout the entire country for the purpose of carrying on this great movement for the common good of all." The address is signed by the following executive committee, appointed by the blmetalllo conference) called at Washington, Feb. 22: A, J. Warner, president American BI-Metallio, League, chairman; John P. ' Jones, United States Senator; William M. Stewart, United States Senator; J. L. Mc- . Laurln, of South Carolina; Anson Wojcott, of Indiana; George G. Merrick, of Colorado; Henry Jones, of Georgia; J. C. Green, of . California; Joseph Sheldon, of Connecticut: . C. J. Hillyer. of the District of Columbia; Byron E. Shear, of Colorado; Mortimer Whitehead, of New Jersey. If the conference had authority from the people t name a candidate for President it would name Joseph C. Sibley, of Pennsylvania, but, not having such authority, it can only suggest the name, and invite expressions from the people by petition, resolutions or otherwise, believing that nominations when made should reflect in the most direct manner the will of the people, uncontrolled by caucus machinery or by professional politicians. Petitions or letters indorsing this view should be addressed Jo Gen. A. J. Warner, chairman of the executive committee, American Bl-metalllc party. Sun Building, Washington. A committee consisting of the followingwarned gentlemen: Gen. A. J. Warner, president of the American Bi-metallic League, chairman; Hon. William Stewart, of Nevada: Henry Jones, of Georgia; Hon. Francis O. Newlands, of Nevada; Hon. Anson Wolcott, of Indiana, and Hon. J. L. McIaurln, of South Carolina, was appointed to fselect a provisional national committee, to consist of one member from each State and Territory and the District of Columbia, to take charge of this movement In the several States and Territories. It is understood that It Is the desire of the league that a Republican nhould receive the nomination for Vice President. v SILVER AD VOC AT KS.

Sfame of Democrats Wlio Sinned the ' Recent MnnlfeMto. WASHINGTON, March 5.-Following are the name of the Democrats , who signed the address recently given to the public, urging all Democrats to make the money question the paramount Issue and to endeavor to place the Democratic party on record in favor of the "Immediate restoration of the free and unlimited coinage of gold and silver at the present legal ratio of U to 1 without waiting for the aid or

consent of any other nation,, as it existed prior to 18V3. such coin to be a full legal tender .. for all debts public and private: R. P. Bland, Missouri; W. J. Bryan, Nebraska; H. A. Coffeen, Wyoming; George. W. Fithian, Illinois; J. V. Cockrell, Texas; John L. McLaurin. t South Carolina; Jamej G. Maguire, California: George F.. Ikert, Ohio; Justin R. Whiting, Michigan; H. C. Snodgrass, Tennessee; George F. Richardson, Michigan; M. A. Smith, Arizona: A. W. Ogden, Louisiana: J. Capehart, West Virginia; W. H. L. Moore. Kansas; IL D. Money, Mississippi; R. W. Ryan. Missouri; B. F. Grady, North Carolina; Charles H. Morgan. Missouri; G. W. Shell, South Carolina; Edward Lane, Illinois; D. D. Donovan, Ohio; A. C. Latimer, South Carolina: Marshall ' Arnold, Missouri; VV. H. Denson, Alabama; W. J. Talbert, South Carolina; John S. Williams, Mississippi; T. J. Strait," South Carolina; A. Caminettl, California; W. H. Bower, North Carolina; Antonio Joseph, New Mexico; Evan 'P. Howell, Atlanta; J. Floyd Ding, ex-member Congress, Louisiana. , They represent sixteen States and two Territories. The paper was taken to the

senate just before the close or the session, but it was impossible to have any conference with the Senators or to see any considerable number of them. As it was not possible to make a through canvass among them it was decided to leave them out entirely so that no misunderstanding might exist between those willing to sign and those who had no opportunity to do so. Mr. Bryan said in regard to the address that it had been Issued in order to call attention of the rank and file to the importance of active work in favor of bimetallism. WHISKY WAR AVERTED. Treat Receivers ' and " Distributors Have Reached an Agreement. . CHICAGO, March! 5. Threatened trouble between the receivers of the Whisky Trust and the distributors of their product has been averted. At a conference this afternoon it was decided to allow the men who handle the spirits 1 cent a gallon on carload lots. This was entirely satisfactory to both parties. 1 The members of the stockholders' reorganization and their attorneys will meet in New York to-morrow. It is expected the fact that no assessment is levied on the stock will cause something of a sensation. . Joklchi Takamine, the president of the Takamine Ferment Company, has filed a petition in the United State court against the receivers of the Whisky Trust. Takamine alleges that in 1891 he entered into a contract with the officers of the trust for the experimentation of his . fermentation process and in the event that the process caused a saving over the old method he was to receive 20 per cent of the amount saved. In July last the Trust was satisfied that the process was an Improvement over the old method and contracted to fit the Manhattan distillery for the use of the process. In December last he began operations in the distillery named. . When the receivers were appointed they caused the distillery to be changed back to the old process. The petitioner asks that the defendant receivers be compelled to either carry out the contract or release the petitioner. Counsel for the receivers were served with notice to answer the petition before the court within the next ten days. OBITUARY. Charles , Lnnmin, Author, Editor, Artist and. Librarian. WASHINGTON, March 5. Charles Lanman, the well-known author, artist and librarian, is dead. His death was the result of heart disease, from which he had long been a sufferer. ,; Charles Lanman was born In Michigan in 1813. He was at one time private secretary to Daniel Webster, and late associate editor? of the Cincinnati Chronicle. In 1849 he was librarian of the War Department. In 1866 he was appointed Librarian of the House of Representatives, and from 1871 to 1882 acted as secretary of the Japanese legation In Washington. The last few years of his life were devoted to writing and painting. . Died at the Age of 120. - WHEELING, W. Va,, March 5. Aunt Eunice Conrad, the oldest woman in West Virginia, and probably the oldest in the United States, the subject nf so many newspaper articles, died yesterday at her home near Cedarville, Gillmore county, in her one hundred and twentieth year. She was born Aug. 4, 1775, in Pendleton county,' Virginia, now West Virginia. Her maiden name was Mace, and she was of Scotch lineage. She was married in 1805, and her husband, Jacob Conrad, servtd In the war of 1812. Aunt Eunice retained the full use of her mental facultiesrup to the last and has granted many newspaper Interviews. For many years she has made her home with her youngest son, who Is sixty-five years of age. Col. David R Clendennin. GALESBURG, 111., March 5. Col. David "R. Clendennin, U. S. A., who served with distinction during the civil war and was retired from active service April 20, 1891, died to-day at his home in Oneida, after a long illness. He was sixty-five years of age. At the time of his retirement he was coionel of the Second United States Cavalry. He was one of the military commission that tried the conspirators who planned the assassinatln of Abraham Lincoln. . Other Deaths. SAN FRANCISCO, March 5. Rev. Daniel Voorman, a pioneer Chinese missionary of the Presbyterian Church, who spent twenty years in the Orient, died at his home here to-day. Latterly he had been engaged in compiling a Chinese-English dictionary. LONDON, March 5. Sir Henry Creswick Rawlinson, Bart, K. C. B., the first interpreter of the Cimiform Inscriptions at Babylon And Nineveh and at one time president of the Royal Geographical Society, is dead, at the age of eighty-five years. . , LONDON, March 5. A Berlin dispatch to the Standard announces the death of headmaster Hofmann, of the Grey Fr!ars High School at Berlin. At one time Prince Bismarck attended this school. LONDON, March 5. Sir Joseph Dodge Weston, Liberal, M. P. for (East Bristol, aged seventy-three years, is dead. He had been suffering from influenza for some time past. At the Point of Death. RACINE, Wis.,' March 5. R. Johnson, president of the Union National Bank of Racine and of the Reshtigo Lumber Company, is dying at his home in this city. At midnight his physicians reported that they did not expect him to survive the night. He is nearly eighty years old and is said to be the wealthiest man in. Wisconsin, his wealth being estimated at about $20,000,000. He is largely Interested In timber lands In all parts of the United States. WILWAUKEE, Wis., March 5. A. V. H. Carpenter, the retired general passenger and ticket agent of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul railroad, is still alive, but his death Is only a matter of a few days, it Is thought, at the outside. , SALINA, Kan., March 5. Rev. S. E. Thomas, Episcopal Bishop of Kansas, is lying at the point of death. Inflammation of the bowels is the cause of his illness. TWO FATAL FIRES. Woman and Man Burned to Death In u. Flat und a Boarding House. NEW YORK, March 6. Mrs. Rose Kennelty, fifty years old, perished by fire to-day In the six-story double flat building at No. 270 Columbus avenue, and for a time the forty or fifty otner occupants of the building were in great peril of sharing her fate. Mrs. Kennelty lives with the family of her brother, Martin Connellan, on the sixth floor. Connellan and his wife reacned the ground by the fire escape in the rear, and as they did so appealed to two men who were ascending to save their two children, telling where they were to be found. The men rescued the little ones, but made no search for other occupants of the flat, knowing of none. Wnen the fire had been extinguished, which was done after a loss of $10,0) had resulted, tfte dead body of Mrs. Kennelty was discovered. Thomas Dougherty, twenty-two years old, was burned to death in his boarding house. No. 208 Avenue A, wnicn too nre during the night. HU bodv was burned beyond Identification. Miss Breuer, the keeper of the house, was robbed of her pocketbook containing $'H. - Iater The police were notified this afternoon that the man burned to death and supposed to be Thomas Dougherty was not that man at all. Dougherty, the police were told, had been seen. No one was able to Identify' the dead man, so the remains were sent to the morgue. Other Fires. IiOUISVlLLK, March 5. Fire to-day destroyed the distillery of J, B. Wathen & Co.. at Twenty-sixth and Beatty streets, entailing a loss estimated at from $75,000 to JICO.OO). Just how the fire started is a mystery. The fire ragel for two hours and was not under control until the building had been gutted and the valuable machinery destroyed. Insurance. R&.OOO. NEWBERN. N. C. March 5. At midnight at Kingston an Incendiary fire destroyed twenty-five buildings, twelve being stores. Loss, $40,000; insurance, $10,000. Last Thursday Kingston had a S2C0.CW fire, with insurance of $JO.c00.

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VICEROY LI HIXG CHAXG'S CREDENTIALS SATISFACTORY. " With Gen. Foster, He "Will Go toHiroahima and Xegcotlate for PcacV General Foreign IVews. LONDON. March 6. Dispatches from Peking to the Times published this morning confirm previous dispatches, outlining the success of LI Hung Chang at the Chinese capital. They Bay . that after tedious telegraphing, through the United States minister, Mr. Charles Denby, the text of Li Hung Chang's credentials as peace envoy have been accepted by Japan, LI Hung Change was given an audience by the dowager Empress of China yesterday, in the presence of the Privy Council, who heartily supported the mission on which the Viceroy is engaged. Prince Kung, president of the Chinese Foreign Office, and- uncle of the Emperor of China, silenced all opposition by presenting papers showing that the failure of the Chinese to repulse the Japanese was due to the backward policy for which they themselves were to blame, and exonerating Li Hung Chang, who spoke frankly about the condition of the empire. The powers of Li Hung Chang to negotiate for peace are believed to be complete, and, the actual commission being signed, he left Peking for Tien-Tsin, where the Japanese require him to transship for Hiroshima. . Mr. John W. Foster, the American adviser of the Chinese, will join the Viceroy to-day. Under date of Tien-Tsin the Times says that disturbances are increasing. One of the Chinese generals in the Shan-Tung province was beheaded by his soldiers for attempting to suppress pillage. Similar troubles are reported at Hanan and Liao-Yang, near Moukden, which is probably taken. Chinese War Ships Taken to Japan. YOKOHAMA, March 6. The captured Chinese war ships have arrived here and the reports of the Japanese commanders are favorable to the raising of the sunken war vessels of China at Wei-Hal-Wei. The Japanese have abandoned the ShanTuna 'peninsula, including Wei-Hai-Wei, after destroying the fortifications at the latter place. John Wilde, alias Howie, the American who planned to blow up Japanese war ships in a novel manner, s ana who was captured at Wei-Hal-Wei after having Erevlously been released on patrol, has been rought to Japan for trial. The Japanese third division occupied An-Shong-Cheng on the morning of March 2. The Chinese made no opposition. BRIGANDS SUBHEADER. Reports Received from Cuba by the Spanish. Government. MADRID, March 5. Official dispatches received heref from Cuba say that thirteen rebels belonging to the Marrero Fand have yielded Yaguey, the chief bf a powerful band of brigands, which has been operating in the province of Matanzas, has also yielded his submission. This, it is added, puts an end to the uprising in that province, which was the most formidable in the whole island, i General Le Chambre has commenced operations against the town of Balre, which is occupied by the Insurgents. In the province of Guantanamo only .four rebel bands, numbering In all about 180 men, now exist. In the Chamber of Deputies, to-day, the Minister of War. General Domlnguez, denied the truth of "the report that General Le Chambre had been killed. He also said there was no truth in the rumors of insurgent successes in Cuba. Several corps of volunteers in Cuba have offered! to rfssist the Governor General against the rebels. More Like Tramps than Flshtera. TAMPA. Fla., March S.J. W. Howard, of New York who has been traveling all over Cuba during! the past two weeks, arrived on the Mascotte from Havana tonight. He ridiculed the stories of any serious engagement having taken place between government troops and rebels. The latter have a poor organization and are traveling about in bands of from three to eight, and generally disband, hide their arms and flee to the nearest village on the approach of the soldiers. If the Spaniards in favor of home rule decide to take sides with the revolutionists a sort of guerrilla warfare may be maintained in the outlying districts indefinitely, unless the government takes decisivemeasures to stamp it out. Howard met many small bands of rebels and photographed some of them. He says most of them are what in this country would be called- marauders or tramps. All disturbances that have taken place have be?n In the region between Matanzas and Ceiba Mocha, but no conflict has taken place In which more than fifty men have been engaged. It is absurd to talk about two thousand being defeated, as no such number has yet been brought together. The revolutionists profess to believe that reinforcements, arms, ammunition, food and apparel are to be forwarded to them from Key West and Tampa, Tourists and others can move about the island at will. N American In Trouble in Cuba. WASHINGTON, March 5. While it may be that .United States Consul-general Williams at Havana has acted on his responsibility in other cases, it is learned that but in one instance was he instructed by the State Department to Intervene with the Cuban authorities In behalf of an Americancltlzen under arrest for complicity in the revolution in Cuba. This was the case of Jose Maria Aguirre, to which attention was directed bv the Senate resolution offered in the 'osing hours of Congress. The consul-ge.i-al was Instructed to examine and report on this case. He found that Aguirre had been arrested in Havana and removed to another jurisdiction. The Cuban authorities, notwithstanding the fact that the island is under martial law, have arranged to try the prisoner before a tribunal and the consul-general will keep an eye on the proceedings to see that he has a fairtrial. THE KAISER SPEAKS. An Address to Newly Sworn In Naval Recruit. BERLIN, March 5. Emperor William, accompanied by the Secretary of the Navy, Vice Admiral Hollmann, swore In the naval recruits at Wllhelms Haven to-day. His Majesty slept to-night on board the German battleship Kurfurst Frtederich Wilhelm. The Empress goes to Heligoland tomorrow. In addressing the naval recruits to-day, his Majesty said: "My men, you have come here to take the oath of allegiance. It was an old custom of our forefathers, and they held it a sacred duty to perform their oath loyalty. Just ' as I, your Emperor and sovereign, devote my every act and thought to the fatherland, so you are bound to give ! up your whole life for me, for you have taken the oath as Christian and the servants of God have spoken to you in a Christian spirit. On your war flag you be hold the eagle, the noblest bird In the universe. Strong in its youth it soars high In the air beneath the rays of God's sun, knowing neither fear nor danger. So also must be your thought and act. Yoil are coming now to a time when In the serious business of your service demands "will be made on you which will be irksome, when many hours will come in which you will think yourselves unequal to your task. Then remember that you are Christians; think of your parents and of how : your mothers taught you the Lord's prayer. When abroad your duty will be to represent the fatherland by your worthiness and good behavior. Our navy is outwardly, indeed, small, but what makes Us "stronger than other navies is discipline and unhesitating obedience to superiors. Thu3 will our navy prosper and grow great in the work of peace, and for the benefit and good of the fatherland, and thus as we hope In God shall we destroy the enemy. Be you like the Brandenburgers of old." The Empress went from ' the Officers Club to the dock yards where the ceremony of laying the keel of a new war ship to replace the l'reussen, built in 1873, and now obsolete took place In the presence of viceAdmiral Hollman and the other German admirals, the director of the dttck vard and many tush officials. Ills Majesty drove the first rivet into the keel plate. TUB FRKNCH ARMY. It Numbers 0-S2.000 Men on Paper, but Only 404,000 by Count. PARIS, March 5. During the . discussion of the army budget in the Chamber of Deputies, to-day, M. Roche, reporter of the committee, said that France tried to place her army on a parity with those of other nations. But, he added, since 18S7 the military expenditures of Germany had exceeded those of France. The German military doctrine, the speaker claimed, was based on numerical strength, and Germany now possessed an army ready to fight at any mo-

xaenVr,TX?R6&&' then proceeded to maintain the superiority of the offensive system, when he waa interrupted by an insulting remark from a Socialist member. A great uproar followed and some minutes elapsed before M. Roche was able to proceed. He then said that 542,000 men ought to be serving in the French army, but, as. a fact, only 404,0iX) were serving. He then demanded that the French army should be as well organized as the German army, claiming that the economizing of a few million francs might mean defeat iu the eX'ent of war. (Applause.) ' . M. Cavaignac,--Minister of War, reproached M. Roche for exaggerating the gravity of . the situation, maintaining that the French army only numbered about SO,000 less-than the Germany army. The debate was then adjourned. Parade of Yachts at Cannea. CANNES, France, March 5. Several inches of snow fell along the Revieva last night, but when the time arrived for the Internattonal review of steam and sailing yachts and the subsequent procession of these crafts, at 1 p. m., the air was mild and the sky delightfully clear. The aquatic procession consisted of twenty-five steam yachts, including five American vessels, and forty-four sailing craft, a majority of which were racing yachts. They formed in line of review and afterwards defiled in the most graceful manner, this pleasing sight being watched by large crowds of people gathered at all convenient points ashore. Most of the yachts had invited parties on board, the largest number being on board White Ladye, the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ogden Goelet. The Prince of Wales was on board Britannia with a party of friends and the promenade was crowded with sight seers. The scene was beautiful in the extreme. The day's festivities conclude .vith a dinner at the Cercle Nautlque.

Ill-Treatment of Soldiers. BERLIN, March 5. When the debate on the army and estimates waa resumed in the Relschtag to-day the question of the alleged abuses in ' the army arose and Herren Bebel and Vollmar, Socialists, vigorously denounced the regulations respecting the lodging of complaints made by soldiers. The speakers also Instanced alleged cases of the 111 treatment of soldiers by their officers and demanded reform on the procedure of trying military cases. The Minister of War, General ; Von Schellendorff, in reply, said that he must protest most emphatically against the allegations that the Emperor was opposed to reform in the procedure of v trying military cases in which military men were involved. Continuing the Oeneral remarked that there had been a marked decrease in the number of cases of maltreatment and he was convinced that the likin for the army and zeal for the service were not diminished. German Husbandry Council. BERLIN, March 5. The German ; husbandry council opened here" to-day. ' The Prussian Minister of Agriculture, Herr Von Hammersteln, made an address complimenting the council on the thorowgh manner in which it dealt with husbandry questions. Baron Von Cotta offered a resolution demanding -the refusal of the most-favored-na-tlon treatment to countries outside of Europe competing with Germany, the eventual establishment of a custom union of the European husbandry states, an international settlement of the currency question and the immediate adoption of measures for raising the prices of cereals on the basis of Count Von Kanitz's motion for a State monopoly of cereals. - . Election Riot in Brazil. BUENOS AYRES, March 5. Advices received here from Rio de Janeiro are to -the effect that serious election riots have occurred in the state of Pernambuco. Senhor Jose Marie, manager of the Journal la Provincia, was killed. The commander of a regiment at San Pablo attempted to foment a rising in favor of ex-President Peixoto, but the plot failed. The government has issued orders for the arrest of the leaders and they will be severely punished. , Doesn't Please Parnellites. DUBLIN, March 6. Mr. Timothy Harrington, Parnelllte, secretary ; of the Irish National League, at a meeting ot that body to-day said that Mr. John Morley's Irish land bill, introduced in the House ot Commcr.8 yesterday by the Chief Secretary for Ireland, filled them with sorrow and dismay. According to Mr. Harrington this measure "is a betrayal of the evicted tenants which has no parallel in Irish history. The Panama- Ditch. COLON, March 5 M. " De La Tournie. chief engineer of the Panama Canal Company, who visited the Isthmus for . the purpose of examining the' eanaV,"has ' taken his departure for France; As a result of the investigation he made he reports favorably on the canal. The material on hand and the cuttings are In good order. He approves the lock system, and it is said will propose hydraulic excavation at Culebra. Cable Notes, A large number of troops have been dispatched to Santander, Colombia, to suppress the rebellion there. , Influenza in a mild form is spreading rapidly in Vienna. All the hospitals are crowded with patients, 'and almost every house in the city has occupants who have the disease. ., A heavy fair of snow in East Prussia has greatly interrupted traffic. According to the Weser Zeitung an entire hussar regiment crossed the river Fulda on the ice at Cassel. The hussars were on horseback and all crossed at once. A receiving order has been granted at London, on the application of the creditors of Messrs. Wynne & Son, solicitors, 31 Lincoln's Inn Fields, W. C. Their liabilities are estimated at $1,250,000. The firm is composed of Llewellyn Malcolm Wynne and Campbell Montague Edward Wynne. TELEGRAPHIC BREVITIES. Two carloads of oranges were shipped from Los Angeles, Cal., for Florida, yesterday. The body of W. C. Coup, the veteran showman, who die in Jacksonville, Fla., Monday, has been embalmed and sent to Chicago for Interment. Henry Raphael, manager in New York for the Armour Canning Company, was arrested yesterday for selling oleomargarine In violation of the tate law. The Ohio river's present rise has let a large amount of coal down from Pittsburg to southern points. The shipments yesterday aggregated 5,000,000 bushels. Wyatt Mayberry colored, went to church and left his three children locked up In the house. The house caught fire and the two youngest children trere burned to death. The Minnesota Legislature yesterday. In joint session, paid its respects to Henry Watterson, editor of the Louisville CourierJournal, and listened to a brief address from him. The American Tobacco Company, headquarters in New York, is about to absorb the firm of H. Elliss & Co., of Baltimore, maWng three factories In that city consolidated In the American company. The long ov rdue five-masted schooner Governor An.es, which left Salem, Mass., Feb. 5 for Baltimore or Norfolk and for whose safety there were grave fears in shipping circles, arrived at Norfolk yesterday. Gen. O. H. LaGrange has been sworn in as fire commissioner of New York to succeed President Scannell. General LaGrange was formerly superintendent of the mint at San Francisco and served under General Grant during the civil war. 1 , . . George W. Bush & Sons' Company, extensive dealers in coal and lumber, and who run a line of barges between Philadelphia and Wilmington, have gone into the hands of receivers. The liabilities are about $250,000 and the assets about $450,000. The steamship Willampa has left Port Townsend. Wash., on her Initial trip for Alaska with a full cargo of freight and eighty passengers. Every steamer going north Is loaded down with miners and adventurers rushing to the Yukon gold fields. Ch.rlcs Tyler, a farmer from Chelsea, Allegin county, Michigan, was stopped at Albany. N. - Y-, yesterday. Tyler had $261 in his pocket, and was on his way to New York to buy green goods. A ticket was purchased for him by Chief of Police Willard and he was sent home. Henry W. Iane, senior in Amherst College, broke the world's college record for strength in the Pratt gymnasium at Amherst, Mass., yesterday. Nash, of Tufts, has a record of 1,302. and Klein, of Harvard, has become famous with 1.446 points, but Lane score a total of 1,6."0 points. i ii - Chicago' Do Show. CHICAGO. March 5. The annual .dog show of the Mascoutah Kennel Club was ptned at. the Lake Front armories to-day. The exhibit is an unusually large one, 816 dogs being present, representing the- very oreme de la crome of canine aristocracy. Among the entries are George Gould's pointers and two of his fine Russian wolf hounds. Dr. Hilton's Woodland Park kennel with its bulldogs, collies and sheep dogs, and J. Pierepont Mogan's prize winning cc Hies. Among the bulls are the champions Walhampton, Graven Image and King Orry. The latter is an imported swell with a record of 118 victories on the other side and an already large number in this country. The famous Gordon setter, champion Heather Ijad Is also on exhibition and George Rapier, of Sheffield, England, has six fine dogs In the contest,

OPTION IN TAXATION

MEASURE THAT BTEW YORKERS WAST TH B LEGISLATURE TO PASS. Speeches in Advocacy of the Bill Chicago Said tor Be the Home of Corruption. NEW YORK, March 5. A public meeting, under the auspices of the Tax-reform Association, of New York city, was held to-nlghi in Masonic Hall, to advocate the passage of, the Ainsworth bill, now pending in the Legislature, providing for county option . in taxation. Ex-Surrogate Ransom presided. Among the vice presidents of the meeting were Judge Geo, P. Andrews, C. C. Baldwin, Judge Henry Bischoff, Clark Bell, Prof. H. R. Boyesen, Judge Henry W. Bookstave, James C. Carter, Cyrus Clark, James S. Coleman, F. S. Coudert, Dorman B. Eaton, Charles S. Falrchild. John W. Goff, Gecrge J. Gould," A. S. Hewitt, Joseph J. O'Donough, Gustave H. Schwab, William Stelnway and Louis Wlndmueller. Ex-Surrogate Ransom, in opening the meeting, said he had come there to learn, not to explain, and hence he would make way at once for Louis Windmueller, the first speaker. . ' Mr. Windmueller said that in Hamburg and Bremen taxes had been raised by voluntary subscription. Each man put a certain sum in an envelope, sealed it up and handed It in, and that was all that was required of him. Whether enough could be raised in New York- in thl3 manner to clean the streets was doubtful. The taxation of money, he said, was wrong, because of the facilities with which It was evaded. The millionaire could invest in bonds which are exempt from taxation, and then hypothecate these bonds for the'ir face valud and use the money in trade and commerce or speculation. Julian Davies said the Ainsworth bill was one to provide for home rule in taxation. It sought to leave to the boards of supervisors in each county the right to determine If taxes for country or city purposes should be levied on personal property, land with or without improvements, or on all three. The promoters of the bill, he said, were wise in their frankness. They say plainly that the purpose of the bill Is to permit the city of New York, If it sees fit, to exempt personal property entirely from taxation. The system of taxing personal property, which is one of comparatively recent origin, he denounced as a shame. He gave a history of the methods of collecting taxes in the past in the various States. In Maryland, bachelors over twenty-five years of age were taxed, and in New York; a tax on wigs took the place of the Maryland tax. It was obvious, he said, that if our system was so successful In the city of New York that all the personal property liable to taxation was discovered, the city would lose its commercial supremacy and capital would fiy to other cities where it is not taxed, or where the vigilance of the assessors is less searching. He 1 said the system would be destructive to prosperity if it were enforced, and that it is only tolerated because J it cannot be and Is rot carried out. The Ainsworth bill would be a step towards its abolition. Wheeler H. Peckham said the Ainsworth bill, as he understood it, was chiefly valuable because it gave the people home rule, and that was a most desirable thing in every locality. It was asserted that farmers In the other end of the State of New York should not only require the payment by the city of its portion of taxes, in addition to its local burden, but should specify the manner In which that tax was to be collected. Mr. Peckham said that if the principle were carried to its logical consequences, capital would depart from New York; there would be no industry there. He denounced the Inquisitorial system as degrading to humanity and as putting a premium on falsehood and dishonesty. The following committee was appointed to go to Albany to argue in favor of the Ainsworth bill in committee; F. .Edward Lauterback, Cyrus Clark, Thomas G. Shearman, B. F. Romaine, H. F. Deming, Bolton Hall, James McMahon, Ernest H. Crosby, George W. Wanamaker, Benjamin Doblin and I. S. Vanderbilt. Leslalators Scored by .a Governor. v AUSTIN, Tex., March 5. Governor Culberson, disgusted with the way legislation is going on, sent in a stinging message to day In which he says:- "The Legislature has practically been in session sixty days, in which time the Constitution contemplates that the work of the session may be accomplished, and the fact that no measures of urgency or general importance have been enacted Into laws compels, me to call attention anew to those of larger consequence and the Imperative duty which confronts you In reference to them. The grades of crime In our State, Involving moral turpitude, are increasing and enactments which encourages the miscarriages of justice are permitted to remain unchanged against a just demand approaching popular revolt. Conspiracies against the freedom of trade, ' entrenched behind organized capital, and Impelled by avarice and greed dominate our commerce, and every year take deeper and more dangerous root." Continuing the Governor advised the enactment of a comprehensive anti-trust law, enactment of laws Increasing assessment of railroad property at its true value, laws Increasing rate of taxation of railroad insurance, telegraph, telephone and express companies, and a law prohibiting the consolidation of railroad companies. Corruption In ; Chicago. SPRINGFIELD, 111., March 5. In the State Senate to-day Senator Johnson offered a decidedly sensational resolution. It charges that corruption exists in every department in the city of Chicago and Cook county. It provides for a joint committee of three from the Senate and four from the House to have full power to investigate the whole city and county machinery and report its findings to the General Assembly. It charges that the Chicago Council has bartered valuable franchises to individuals and corporations without the least regard to the public welfare, and that the police department la corrupt and grants immunities to criminals and shields the unlawful element. The resolution Is sweeping In its charges and alleges crookedness in all quarters. ' ' Still No Senators Elected. BOISE, Ida., March 5. The nineteen men who have, supported Sweet for Senator voted for him again to-day, although their caucus organization was dissolved last night. The Popdlists transferred their votes to A. J. Crook, the result of the ballot being: Shoup, 20; Sweet, 19; Crook, 15. One of the Sweet men said they wanted to show they could stay together without organization. It Is asserted now the anticipated breakup will begin to-morrow. DOVER, Del., March 5. One ballot was taken for United States Senator to-day. It resulted: Higgins, 9; Addicks, 6; Massey, 4; Wolcott, 5; Martin, 3; Bayard, 1. Aptl-Clsrarette Bill Passed. LINCOLN, Neb., March 5. The House passed the anti-cigarette bill. Omaha has been especially, bitter In this fight, but the rural churches have succeeded In Influencing their members. The Woman's Club and the Ministerial Association have assaulted the cigarette smoker, but it was not expected the bill would pass. The chief reason xor this fight has been that the dealers i sold to the small boys. Woman Suffrage . Defeated. BOSTON, March 5. The bill to grant full municipal suffrage to women in Massachusetts was defeated in the lower legisla tive body to-day by a vote of 1L'7 to S7. The question was on ordering the bill to a third reading. The motion brought out an immense audience of women and occasioned lively debate by the legislators. Kicking a Dead Mule. ALBANY, March 5. The resolution which passed the House yesterday congratulating the State on escape from further danger to Its, Industries at the hands of the Fiftythird Congress was discussed for an hour in the Senate to-day. It went over until tomorrow, when Senator O'Connor, Republican, will move its passage. ' Indictment Quashed. CHICAGO. March 5. Judge Freeman this afternoon quashed the indictment against the Meadowcraft brothers, the bankers, charged with receivng de-posits when they knew the bank to be insolvent.: The Indictment quashed is practically the same as that on which the defendants were recently sentenced to one year each in the penitentiary and to-day's action will have an important bearing on the case. The quashing of the Indictment was the result of a public tender of his money to one of the defunct bank depositors who appeared as complainant.

Highest of all in Leavening Power.- Latest U. S. CoVt Resort

WEATHER HCHKAU. FIGURES. Temperature Records Yesterday Morning and Lnat Mght. " C. F. R. Wappenhans, local forecast 'official of the Weather Bureau, furnishes the following observations . taken yesterday at the places and hours named: - 7 a. in. 7. p. m. Bismarck, N. D.. 2 IS Rapid City, N. D 0 , 14 Pierre. S. D 10 -22 Huron. S. D 6 23 Yankton, S. D .14 , . .. St. Vincent, Minn 4 12 Moorhead, Minn 0 18 Duluth, Minn.................. 2 " - : 14 St. Paul. Minn 14 ' 20 LaCrosse, Wis. 22 North Platte. Neb 1 30 Valentine, Neb 6 38 Omaha, Neb . Zi DesMoines, la 20 . 28 Davenport, la. 1(5 28 Keokuk. Ia..... 20 Concordia, Kan 28 . 32 Dodge City, Kan 30 30 Witchlta, Kan 34 8 Kansas City, Mo 30 1 32 St. Louis. Mo 28 38 Springfield, Mo 32 ' 42 Chicago. Ill 8 28 Springfield. Ill 2 32 Carlo, 111 30' 02 Marquette. Mich 8 14 Grand Haven, Mich 23 24 Indianapolis. Ind - a 30 Louisville. Ky 24 46 Cincinnati. O 22 42 Cleveland, O IS 18 Parkersburg, W. Va.... 24 36 Buffalo. N. Y 4 16 Pittsburg, Pa 38 SO New York, N. Y. ....... 16 26 Boston, Mass 18 Washington. D. C 23 34 Charlotte, N. C 34' 46 Atlanta, Ga. 28-; 48 Jacksonville, Fla. 64 62 Chattanooga, Tenn. 30 . Nashville, Tenn 26 -; 43Memphis, Tenn. 32 52 Vicksburg, Miss 40 66 Fort Smith, Ark 28 66 Little Rock, Ark 30 64 Oklahoma, O. T 30 46 Amarlllo, Tex .24 32 Abilene, Tex 40 64 Palestine, Tex 34 62 San Antonio. Tex 43 64 Galveston, Tex 60 64 Shreveport, Tex 36 68 New Orleans, La 42 63 Wednesday's Forecast. WASHINGTON, March 5. For Indiana and Illinois Generally fair; variable winds; slightly colder in extreme southern portion. For Ohio Fair; slightly warmer; westerly winds. Tuesday's Local Observations. Bar. Ther. R.H. Wind. Wther, Pre, 7 a. m.. 30.35 20 72 S. W. Clear. T . 7 p. m. .30.31 .31 87 N. E. Cloudy. T Maximum temperature, 37; minimum temperature, 17 Following is a comparative statement of the temperature and precipitation March 5: Temp. Pre. Normal 36 .13 Mean .; 27 T Departure from normal 9 .13 Excess or deficiency since Mch 1 28 .20 Excess or deficiency since Jan. 1446 2.82 C. F. R. WAPPENHANS. Local Forecast Official. The Lick Kstate Settled. SAN FRANCISCO. March 6. Within a few weeks th board of trustees who have managed the Lick estate since the decease of the pioneer will ask the Superior Court to approve their accounts and discharge them from further duty. The board has handled millions of dollars left by the pioneer and now that all bequests have been settled they wish to be absolved from further duty. Janes Lick left almost all his money for educational purposes. The Lick observatory and the Lick School of Mechanical Arts being the two most .important bequests. When the claim of James Lick's soni was compromised for $535,000, in 1878, the trustees estimated -that the estate would fall to carry out all the legacies by $500,000. Accumulated interest and Increase of values during so many years has improved money for every bebequest and left a surplus of over $1,000,000. Savannah's Mayor Congratulated. ST. LOUIS, March 6. After a two days session, the Missouri division of the American Protective Association adjourned tonight. By unanimous vote the following, resolution was adopted: "The annual meeeting of the State Council A. P. A. of Missouri sends congratulations to the Mayor of Savannah, Ga., and the American people of that city, for the manly stand taken hy His Honor when unAmerican cowards sought to trample under foot the right of free speech in this libertyloving land of ours, and we offer assistance, either In money, men or rations, to uphold the Constitution of the United States and the laws of Georgia, which guarantees to every man the right to honestly criticise another's religion and to denounce foreign interference in American affairs, both in private and public and at all times and places." The Actor Preacher Indorsed. , OAKLAND, .Cal., March 6. Ministerial criticism of the methods employed by Hey. Edward Davis, the actor preacher, have aroused the parishioners of the Central Christian Church to his defense. Officers of the church have passed resolutions indorsing the methods of their pastor. The Pacific Christian, the organ of the church on this coast. Is editorially in accord with the church In Oakland, and it also advises Rev J. V. Coombs, of Indiana, who was to come to Oakland to discipline Davis, to remain at home. ' The Pacific Christian is mistaken in regard to the Rev. Coombs. In a card to the Journal recently that gentleman said he never wrote to the pulpit waltzer, and did not know him. " ' Patching a Political Quarrel. HARRISBURG. Pa., March 6. Mayorelect Warwick came to thiB city this evening with Senator Penrose, and Is a guest at the executive mansion. "Dick" Quay also reached here about the same time and had a conference to-night at the executive mansion with Governor Hastings, Mr. Warwick and Chris Magee. It is believed that the meeting was for the purpose of adjusting the trouble in Philadelphia between David Martin and the followers of Senator Penrose. Friends of Senator Quay declare that the quarrel will be settled and that a Senate committee will not be appointed to unvestlgate the municipal affairs of Philatielphia. - Two Girls Suffocated by Gas. CHICAGO, March 5. Two sisters were suffocated by gas last night, in their rooms at No. 914 Ogden avenue, and were found dead in bed by their landlord to-day. They were Maria Bohan, twentytwo years old, and Anna Bohan, twenty years old. The young women were orphans, and occupied a suite of rooms alone. When found the gas in their sleeping apartment was turned on full, and both girls had evidently been dead several hours. It is believed that the deaths were accidental, as the girls had a fair income from a relative's estate, and no cause for suicide 13 known by their friends. Outcome of a Frolic. BUFFALO, N. Y., March 5. Minnie Snyder, the girl who married Lewis Bacon, of Philadelphia, a medical student, one night In a frolic, was brought Into public court this morning on a charge of truancy by her father, but the court held that as long as she was a married woman he could not hold her on such a charge and advised the father to have the girl swear out a wari ant for nonsuoport against her young husband. This was done, and Snyder swears he will make young Bacon take the girl off his hands. Bacon will try to have the marriage contract annulled. Shoe Company Assigns. ' ' LOUISVILLE. March 5. The R. - I. Stephens Shoe Company, doing business at Eleventh and Main streets, thi city, assigned to-day to the Louisville Trust Company. The failure was due to dull trade. The concern was Incorporated with a paidup capital stock of $42.WXi, and employed a large number of hands. President Loving said he couid not. at this time, way any thing about the assets or liabilities, but -J thought the company wouia pay uouar lor dollar. " . When the New Woman Travels. Washington Capital. Rachel Foster Avery says she Is often vexed at the charge frequently preferred against the younger women of advanced ideas, that they neglect their home and children. Speaking for herself,, she nays she never leaves her family for more than

Co?

or m two or three davs at a time. She went to Philadelphia in the middle of last week and spent a day with her little ons. When she goes anywhere for a long stay she travel wlrh three children,, a nurse.- a governess and two typewriters. She took her whol family with her for her six monthtf sojourn in Chicago, and had them all with her here at the last triennial council. llolmnu lias Saved Nothing. v iisimi&iuii ,cpevia4 ill iew 2 orn UTlDUne. "I: should not .advise any ; young man." ' said the veteran Mr. Holman, of Indiana, addressing a roup of Com-rressmen on the floor of the House this morning, "to enter public life. There is nothing in it. I reach this conclusdon after an experience covering a period of nearly thirty-five years. From a financial standpoint, at lea.st, it does not pay one. I have lived frugally since I first came to the Thirty-sixth Congress, but I have never been able to save a penny "You leave Congress, then, as poor an when you entered It?" interjected one of . the group. - . . , - . "Poorer," replied Mr. Holman. with a smile. "My farm of 106 acres, which .is a few miles from Lawrenceburg, on the Ohio hills, is not worth as much to-day & it was-when I came here, while I have nothing to show for my long service." "What are your plans for" the future? inquired another of the Judge's auditors. "I shall go back to my farm and try to make a living out of it. I hope 1 can dp that." As a rule, all the members of the House will follow Mr. Holman's example of returning to their homes with little if any delay after the adjournment to-morrow. Some of the number may remain a week or ten days, arranging . their private affairs, and in a few cases others who live In the colder latitudes of the North may stay until the approach of warm weather. The majority, however, will leav Washington before the close of the coming week. - , Recollections of Fred Douglass. Writer, in New York Mall and Express. His lecture that evening was on "The Evils That Beset the Republic." and during the first part of it he read largely from" his manuscript. He appeared to be ill at ease, and was. I observed, continually working; at the lapei or nis coai wun m imnu. Before long, however, he turned from the desk and his notes, walked slowly round to the front of the platform, buttoned his coat, gave his mane a sort of shake- and then for nearly two hours made that kind of a speech which but few men In this world have been able to make. At its close I went up to him to express the pleasure I had felt and I recan tnai. as he walked toward me, he had unbuttoned his coat and put both hands in his vest pockets expressive apparently of honest nridft and satisfaction at the performance. When I had finished my edifying remarks he said: "I delivered that Jecture sometimeasro in Baltimore and at its conclusion a pompous young Southerner came up to me t . . l . 1. 1 n-inM- - cam. wl t). ana oefjan wimi - sums . . the remark: "Mr. Douglass, I am the son nf n. United States Senator. I cut him ; short," said Douglass, "by saying: I havegood reason ror Deuevmg mat. i, ioo, am the son of a United States Senator." The. young man," he added, "didn't say another word, but looking at mo turned and left tho platform." Bills Signed in Haste. Washington Post. If the historians who have- been holding fast to the story that the President waa going to minutely-serutlnlz every item of every appropriation bill could have been at the White House between 11 and 12 o'clock to-day they would have been shocked. They would have seen the President working his pen arm with the automatic regularity of the piston of an engine. He would seize a bill, flip the pages through his fingers with lightning dexterity, affix his signature and. grab hold of the next, only to go through tVia cama rrmtirmfL Thf Kneed he attained In 'signing bills, resolutions and other documents that were shoved under his nose be- , came marvelous as the minute hand on the clock negan streaKing towara ine top or ine , riat , TsTnthinf like it has been Keen in re cent years. If" he . could have had more time to insist upon comparisons he might have discovered that in the hasty enrollment of some of the " big money budgets many things had been left out and Berlous mistakes made. The clerks having the work in hand are saying this afternoon that half a hundred bad blunders have crept Into the appropriation bills which may hereafter give rise to vexatious embarrassments and complications. This "hurry work" Is not all sporf. Shlnn-les for Plates. West Coast Lumberman. ' It Is now a fashion in the shingle districts to use ce-J..r shingles at church socials, musical and literary entertainments, where the prog'-amme concludes with refreshments. The shingle is used as a food tray, and is coming into general popularity at church BoeiaU There is always a disposition on the part of some of the ungodly who attend church socials to steal the plates on which the refreshment are served, but when the luke-warm coffe and ancient sandwiches are passed around on a cedar shiugia -worth about 90 cents a thousand, even the small boy has no desire to steal his plate. Last Maht's Fires. A defective flue was responsible for a $15 fire at No. 1$ Bates street, last night. The housa is occupied by Hugh O'Connor. Shortly after 11 o'clock the tower -watchman Aherved a blaze southeast, and he sent - . . , . 1 nraa COVttpal mllAA Tram the city, so the department did no go to It. Dr. Price's Cream Baking Powder World's Fair Highest Award. SBAD Shirts READY TO WEAR. Erery garment GUARANTEED. Tit. Finish. Fmsalotu TneBest. ASK YOUR OUTFITTER FOR THEM Writ for our complete "Souvenlrof Fashion.- ire y Mai CLUETT, COOH & CO., Makers, ""M EPCCATIOSAL. BBYAXT S STRATTON Indianapolis 7 UmVERSIT li nv,. in., TEMPORARILY RliMOVED ta N. E. corner of Ohio and iielnwaw ttreet. Ga-. ton Blook. 8paoioUB. UnUt room. Lartre faculty. Kull attendsnce. Day and Nteut School. Enter now. CallTeL 49!. or write for particular. KLI F., BKOWN, Superintendent; L. J. lit LB, Proprietor. NATIONAL TubeJVorks, mOUGHT- IRON PIPE FOB Qas, Sleavi and Water Boiler Tntwis Ca as Mftiluiibl Iron tutlufia V black ftml kuItuiiixm). Ives. Stop Coika, Eiilne riuunlK. i-t'-sm Guttuva, Ptlo Ton k, Cutters, V !, Screw Plat and l Wrmclin, Sfcsmn Traps, Pump.i, Kl'cUou elnk. Ho, lifiltiliir. Iil.l.lt Met). Hiilder. White ami t'olorfxl Wlp. tug Waule. ami all wther Sup. pile uaetl lu coin vctloii wli uu, Strum anl Water. XaU ural Ga Mavpltas a peoi.uty. 8tam lioiitiiiir Apparatus fur I'utilia ltullilins, Moraroouia, M11U. thoia. t actor-Ian, Ljkuo. dries Lumber Iry Houimi, etc Out and I liroa1 to ortlrt aay t7 WrontcUt tron l'li frm H inca la I J inches diaaa. ter. Knight & Jillson ' 75 and 11 s. rsaKaiLYAHU. a a

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