Indianapolis Journal, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 March 1895 — Page 2

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THE INDIANAPOLIS JOURNAL, TUFSDAY, MAltOH 12. 1893.

you last." The point of this quiet little Joke of Howaate's He In the fact that Miss lowgate does not play the piano anil couM not have charmed- her father's attendant a narrated in the popular romance connected :with his escape.

1 XCOSI E-T. X AHfil SI E NTS. Uneeehes li- Mr. Whitney and Sir. Edmml Before the Ju(i-p. ' WASHINGTON. March 11. Assistant Attorney-general Whitney resumed his argument In sustaining; the income tax lav. be- , fore the Supreme Court of the Unite.! States to-day. Attorney-general Olney, ex-Senator Edmunds and other distinguished couneel , in the case occupied seats at the desk reserved for attorneys. The court room was" crowded, .Mr. McMillin, Mr. Springer and several other members of Congress ! who . had taken part In the enactment of the income tax being among the Interested listen Mi. Whitney addressed himself to ihe .question of uniformity In. taxation, in answer to the charges that the income tax Violated the principle of uniformity. He contended that the limit of $1,000 fixed by the law n'HH nr.- rbaa ItMyiclot'nn It a subsequent Congress had sought to amend the law by" including those not previously exempted by the $1,000 limit, this amend ment would no doubt be class legislation, as It would apply to a distinct class. Mi. Whitney reviewed rrior decisions in insurance and other cases, showing that the Interpretation of this court, on class legislation would not apply to the income tax. , Concerning the exemptions allowed to certain corporations the Assistant Attorneyseneral said it, was most surprising that this was-set up as a ground for invalidating the tax. lie read from, numerous federal tax laws showing repeated exemptions in the cases of art societies and many other corporations. The court had sustained tax exemption, to manufacturing corporations In the District of Columbia, building land loan associations and saving companies were, frequently exempted by law, as they were made up of poor people to whom the law gave special consideration. During the war the law makers even exempted the mutual Insurance companies from the operations of a general tax law. Mr. Whitney aid. .that the Supreme Court had already; overruled the contention that taxation of land -values and rentals, as made by the Income tax. was invalid. The State taxes were against tho land and not against the individual, but-the Income tax was not against the land;,' but merely against the total Income "of the Individual. That this Income, camq in part from- the; land was merely an incident. The income tax is In bio sense a 'Und tax. It is .not on gross income from land or other sources but on m-t income. Mr, Whitney took urj the iiui; inaij line--ieierai government cannot tax municipal and local securities held by Individuals, as for Instance bonds Issued by New York city. He said it had been decided In the ca-e of Bonaparte against the State of Maryland that a- State could tax bonds of the city or State of New York. If the State could exercise this power why cou'd not the federal government do the ame. Air. Whitney concluded at 1.-30 p. m. . MR. , EDMUNDS'S ARGUMENT. Mr. Edmunds,;! ; counsel against the tax was,' the next, speaker.. He spoke quietly, and In ; aV conversational tone, much as he did when a leading .llgure of the Senate. He stated the .contention of his client against an invasion of hisi rights and an inspection of his private books and papers, if there was a constitutional provision protecting the Individual it was the rock on which the contention against this tax was based. Mr. Edmunds read from the Constitution as to the protection of privats rights. These provisions, he said, were trite, and yet it seemed necessary in these days, with such legislation before us, to recall these constitutional bulwarks against an Invasion of private rights. In a question' of this gravity he would feel disposed to ask the court not only to pursue precedents and lit them to this subject matter, but to K' back and rule on the entire subject so vital to sustaining private rights. The worst tviaJiny of history wa that which came in the guise of a tax. He first spoke of the action of Congress In endeavoring to take away from the courts the right to appeal tYt rfrtrft cr . uhlnh uaa tha sc in thta ' income tax law. He did not think the time had come when there should longer be an appeal to the eotirls from acts of Congress. It would be beyond the function of the Congress to pass an act that would strip the courts of their rights, and thi3 was just as true as o the rights of the citizen as to those of the courts. Speaking of the income tax law, Mr. Edmunds referred to the provision that the taxpayer was required to make his returns to -deputy collectors. , He said the deputy ' was not recognized as a legitimate ofticer under the Constitution. "I do -not, however," he said, "mean to dwell on that, but merely refer to It in passing as one of the points of idee wh!eh bloom in the garden of the last Congress." He criticised many other features of the law providing for- the collection , of the tax, and pointed out that it left no room for resort or appeal to the courts, but left to the revenue oaicers the adjustment, who, he said, were not only the final judges, but the Inquisitors as well. "It is true," he said, "that these returns are to be regarded as confidential, but how are we to know that they will always be so treated? Is it not possible that they may ba lirVHuled, for Instance, like tiie confidences of the United States Senate?" Mr. Edmunds then reviewed the cases heretofore decided, which have been referred to in the previous argument, and analyzed the points involved at length. He was referring to the Hilton case, involving the tax on carriages, when Chief Justice Fuller called his attention to the fact that Mr.' Hilton had an unusual number of carriages 125 as he remembered. "Unusual In number, yes," Mr. Edmunds asserted, "but he -possessed them, as many persons possess virtue .and, grace.". OVBUSTEPPED- ITS BOUNDS. Mrl Edmunds asked Ihe court to overrule Jtj .former decision of the income tax as Riven in the Springer, case. "Eet us," he eald, "coir e back to the tnie rule of the Constitution. We are to expect gradual and tnOnltes'ma1. departures- from the line marked out '.by the Constitution, and we may depart further and further from it, until at last, like' the mariner, after a storm, or the traveler 'n the wilderness, after the stars agai? come out, we are compelled to readjust our course In the new light that is iven." He argued (that:4he past Congress had overstepped the limits of the Constitution in Imposing this tax, because, he said,' It was short of money. ' He argued that under this law .93 per cent, of the, tax would be paid by 2 per cent, of the taxable voters. ' "It become?," said Mr. Edmunds, "an Interesting subject of speculation as to how Jour the government can last under the system- which allows those- who pay nothing to tax their fellow citizens. One evil step will lead to another, as one vice follows another, until by and by we will have revolution, then anarchy, and then a' tyrant to rule us as tha revolving changes go round." . Justice Harlan asked Mr. Edmunds if he had formulated a definition of the difference between a direct and indirect tax, and he replied that he had. He thereupon proceeded t,o give it. saying a direct tax wa3 a tax on any kind of property and on persons: not in respect ct property In existence, acquired or to be acquired, not on a calling or on the importation of goods, but in respect to the things which belong to the existence of property; while an indirect tax Included all the rest as referred to in the Constitution under the head of duties, imposts and excises, wiuch would be heavy or light on each person depending on his will. . "Do you not," asked Justice Drown, "regard a tax that is pain by a person himself as a direct tax? ' and Mr. Edmunds assented. Asked by Justice Shfras to give a defini1 'it, rf kvr1ta ha miitaH I - ici1 u anil cimii.l Johnson, where the latter says it is a "hateful tax" collected by "wretches." Justice Harlan suggested that the definition would lit his (jur. Edmunds's) idea of the income tax, to which Mr. 13dm unds replied that It did in part. Mr. Edmunds closed -with a plea for equality in taxation. He declared it to be the mission of the Supreme Court, the tribunal of last resort, to correct such mistakes, and made a last appeal for a return to the principles of equality and uniform jusitce, even if in doing so u became necessary for It to reverse a former decision. Mr. Edmunds closed at 3:30 and the court adjourned until to-morrow, as Attorney- , general Olney, who is to speak next, stated that the half hour left wait not sufficient for him. Mr. Olney said, in reply to a question from the court, that he should not require more than an hour more of time, white Mr, Carter, who is to follow, said he should desire to speak for about two hours, and Mr. Choate, who is to close, said he would probably ask for more timu than two hours. It is, therefore, probable that the

argument will consume all the day to-morrow and a large part of Wednesday. j Inconif-Tax Law Hulliii;. j WASHINGTON. March 11. The treasury I officials have made an important ruling in respect to the liability under the income -tax of dividends, received from corporations. It is held that dividends received by a resident of the United States from, corporations, foreign or otherwise, doing business wholly without the United States and hav- , ing its principal office and property out of the United States must be returned as

income. Such corporation not being liable , on us net profits, the dividends must be returned as Income oy the persons receiving the same. SIPHE31E t'OIRT DECISIONS. Two Opinion on the Collection- o f I Untie A Libel Lost. WASHINGTON, March 11. In the Supreme Court of the United States to-day two decisions were rendered in cases involving the question of the collection of duties. In the first of these, that of Beauttell vs. Magone, collector of the port of New York, the question involved was that of the classification of certain rugs woven on looms not fit for weaving carpets, but which had been assessed as Wilton carpet because the surface was cut so as to give it the appearance of plush. The case was appealed from the Circuit Court for the Southern district o2 New York, which had sustained the decision of the collector, but the Supreme Court reversed this decision, saying that the rugs were rugs and not carpets. The other tariff case was that of Cooper, collector, vs. John and James Dolson, involving the classification of certain goat hair which the Circuit Court, for the Eastern district of Pennsylvania had held to be free of duty, contrary to the decision of the collector. The decision in this case was set aside, and a new trial ordered. Justice White delivered the first opinion and Justice Brown the second. Justice Gray delivered the opinion of the court in the case of Catherine Goldey, appealed from the decision in the Circuit Court for the Eastern district of New York. This was a case in which Mrs. Goldey asked damages in the sum of $100,000 for alleged libel. The action was begun in a New York State court, and service was obtained on the president of the newspaper company while on a chance visit. The case was afterwards removed to the federal court, where an order was granted vacating the service. The judgment was affirmed. . The case of James Henderson et al., owners of the steamship Caledonia, vs. Mayer Goldsmith, involved the question of the liability of a carrier for loss by delay in the shipment of merchandise. The case was appealed by the owners of the vessel from the decision of the Circuit Court for the Massachusetts district, which had held them responsible for loss caused by delay in the shipment of cattle. The defense in the original case was that the delay was occasioned by the breaking of the vessel's shaft. The court held, however, that the exception was not sufficiently specific, and sustained the judgment of the court below. A vessel, said Chief Justice Fuller In delivering the opinion, must be really seaworthy; it was not sufficient that its owners should think it was seaworthy. Justices Brown, Harlan and Brewer dissented. The court announced that the Interstate commerce cases, one of which Involves the long-and short haul and another of which is known as the "social circle" case, ihad been restored to the docket for reargument at the next term. The court also announced a recess until Monday, the 25th inst., after disposing of the cases now on hearing. SENATOR TIRPIE'S REVEXGE. How the Spiteful Hoosier "Got Even" with Mr. Morjfnn. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. , WASHINGTON. March 11. The courtesy of the Senate,' which has been ; a distinguishing feature of that body since its organization, has undergone severe strains, particularly during the last session. Time was, not many years ago, when a request of a Senator for the privilege of printing in the record a document or any paper relating to the subject under consideration, was equivalent to unanimous consent. But Senator Turpie, in the last hours of the recent Congress taught his colleagues a lesson of personal spite. During the debate on the Nicaragua bill. Senators Morgan and Turpie took opposing sides of the question. The discussion evidently left some bitterness on ihe part of Senator Turpie, for when Senator Morgan, on the last day of the session, . asked permission to print in the Record certain faets and figures -bearing on the question of settling the claims of Great Britain on account of the Canadian sealers, Senator Turpie, with an air and attitude distinctly personal, objected. There was no misunderstanding among the Senators as to the motive of Mr. Turpie. All of them recognized that he was simply venting personal spleen as a cheap mode of revenge upon the Alabama Senator, because , of the latter's unmerciful skinning of Turpie on the Nicaragua canal bill. -. v STOCKS OP CORN AM) W HEAT, . Cron Report of the Agricultural Deimrtmrnt for March. WASHINGTON, March ll.-The crop report of the Department of Agriculture for March consists principally of estimates of the distribution of corn and wheat, the stocks remaining in. the hands of farmers, and the proportions of merchantable and unmerchantable. The report is based on county estimates of the percentage of last year's product remaining in first hands. Obvious errors and inconsistencies of statement being corrected and differences harmonized, all grain In the hands of farmers, including amounts remaining over from previous years are embraced in the estimates given. The corn on hand, as estimated', aggregates 475,564,450 bu, or 89.2 per cent, of the last crop. This proportion has been exceeded but four times in the last ten years. The consumption of corn for ei;jht months is an unusually small one, which fact is explained by the large amount of wheat fed to stock. The aggregate sold from farms to go beyond county boundaries Is lH2,934,li40 bu, or 13.4 per cent, of the crop. The proportion merchantable Is 999,400,600 bushels, or 82.4 per ,cent. The values returned for merchantable corn average 44.8 per cent, for unmerchantable, 28.6, making an aggregate value of $508,713,129, which is $4J.0X,000 less than the "December valuation of the crop, and averages 41.9 per bushel. The estimated amount of wheat in farmers' hands is 75,000,000 bushels, or 16.3 per cent., of the last crop, and ;i9,000,00a bushels less than last March. The explanation for this, in large measure. Is to be found In th fact that large quantities have been fed to hogs and other stock. Returns from North and Southt Dakota, Nebraska, and Kansas indicate unprecedented exhaustion of last year's crop, correspondents in many counties reporting not enough on hand for spring seed and necessary food supply. MAIL WEHiHERS, They Will lie Token from the Eligible List of the Postal Service. WASHINGTON. March ll.-The Postofflce Department is now making more than four hundred appointments of mail weighers ia Illinois, Iowa, Missouri, Kansas, Arkansas, Indian Territory. Wisconsin, Minnesota, North Dakota and Montana. The department regulates its payments to the railway companies which carry the mails In bulk by a periodical weighing. The plan is to weigh average loads at a season of average activity and the weights of the several classes of mail matter thus obtained are accepted as a standard to govern the compensation of the companies until the next weighing takes place. The process requires good judgment, care, accuracy and an intelligent understanding ff the general scheme of transportation. Instead of appointing outsiders, on the recommendation of members of Congress and party managers, to do the work, the department, last year, took the men from the heal of the eligible registers In the railway mail service. They di 1 this voluntarily because, as state! by the Second Assistant Postmaster-general, they were thus able to command a more efficient class of. men" than could be procure! through other methods. The appointment of men thus examined was, he said, found a decided success, so much so, that the opinion was general that the new system should be permanently enforced.. The department has called on the Civil-service Commissioners for six hundred names from which to make these four hundred appointments, and the persons taken will be employed for about thirty-three days. . NEEDED REFORM. Error lu Hills to Be Avoided by Sabutitatlnnr Type for Pen and Ink. WASHINGTON, Mareh 11. Much of the trouble that was occasioned by reason of the errors and mistakes which occurred in the engrossment and enrollment of congressional measures by hand will, it is believed, be obviated hereafter by the new method of having that Work done by print. This change is the outcome of one of the recommendations of the Dockery joint commission, and was put into practical effect

during the list Congess. An excerpt from the report of the commission on this subject sets forth the belief that in- pearly every instance the errors made were directly traceable to the clerical forces engaged in the j

work of engrossing and enrolling the measures. In the nature of things it was almost Impossible to prevent them oftentimes, in the haste in which the work was done. Before recommending the change the commission Investigated the methods pursued in the legislative bodies of other countries than our own In respect to these matters, snd found that in nearly alt the leading foreign parliamentary bodies, and in several of our own States, the old method or system of engrossment and enrollment by pen and ink has been abandoned. As far back as 1849 the British Parliament abandoned this method and adopted that of printing. They applied it at first only to bills of a public or general character for both houses. It was found, however, that the new arrangement was soon productive of economy, convenience and dispatch, and tended so much to lessen the chance of errors that they speedily applied it to private bills and resolutions of every character. Included in the commission's report on the subject recommending the change is a letter from the Treasury Department, which shows that in consequence of an error in engrossing the tariff act of 1883, by which fruit was placed on the free list, refunds were made to the amount of about half a million dollars, and an act was subsequently passed correcting the error. Tests of Armor Plnle. WASHINGTON, March ll.-The Navy Department accepted 315 tons of Harveyized nickel-steel armor, nearly half of the side armor for the battle ship Oregon, made by the Carnegie company, as the result of a trial of an eighteen-lnch plate at Indian Head to-day. The plate received two shots from a twelve-inch gun. The first was fired at a velocity of 1,465 fee.t per second and smashed to pieces on the face of the plate, which was scaled a little at the point of impact, but was not cracked. The second shot had a velocity of 1,926 feet. This penetrated nine inches and then broke up, but it cracked the plate from top to bottom. The plate, however, - was pronounced to be of good quality. A trial was also made of a small Chase-Gantt . plate, - composed of a cast-steel back faced with high chrome steel, also cast. A six-Inch shot was fired at the plate with a velocity of 2.100 feet. The shot was broken up, but the plate was badly cracked and a corner was broken off. The makers of the plates professed satisfaction with the result of the test, which was better than had been attained at Sandy Hook last year. Further trial could not be had because of the smallness of the plate. Proposed Xew Money Order. WASHINGTON, March 11. Postmastergeneral Bissell has under advisement a new design of money order which will give more facility in handling it and in separating the coupon from the money order. It is more nearly the size of the ordinary bank check and : this fact it Is thought should Increase its use. This statement is contained in 'a letter sent by Mr. Bissell, Feb. 11, to the joint committee on Congress inquiring into the methods of transacting business in the executive departments. The Postmaster-general incloses a report of the superintendent of the money order system which, he says, shows that the decreased charge for money orders has Increased the business, and that the amount of decrease in fees received for the quarter ending Sept. 30, 1894, has been more than counterbalanced by the amount saved in the reduction of the rate of commissions to postmasters; and it is further shown that the abolition of the postal notes has resulted in the use in its stead of money orders which afford greater protection to the people using them. Attorney' Pension Fee. WASHINGTON, March 11. Assistant Secretary Reynolds, of the Interior Department, has rendered a decision holding that fee agreements fifed since Dec. 13, 1893, not acknowledged before an officer competent to administer oaths, as required by Section 4, of the act of July 4, 1884, are invalid and may not be approved. The matter came before the Assistant Secretary on an appeal from a firm of Washington claim agents from the action of the pension bureau in allowing them but $10 as fee in a certificate of pension Issued April 10, 1894. On Dec. 18, 1893, the pension claimant executed in the firm's favor duplicate articles of agreement for a fee of $25, but before filing them the firm neglected to acknowledge the same before an officer authorized to administer oaths, and the Commissioner of -Pensions held that they were informal and could not be admitted. ... ' Mr, Dockery's Figure. WASHINGTON, March 11. Representative Dockery, of Missouri, a member of the committee on appropriations, to-day made public a statement containing a comparison of appropriations by the Fifty-first, Fiftysecond and Fifty-third Congresses. It shows, says Mr, Dockery, that the appropriations of the Fifty-first Congress were 1, 035,680,109; of the Fifty-second, $1,027,104,547, and of the Fifty-third, $990,438,691. In other words, the Fifty-third Congress has reduced the appropriations under those of the Fifty-first Congress $45,341,418 and below those of the last Congress $36,705,856. Mr. Dockery also asserts that for the first time In a long series of years the regular annual appropriations which come within the supervision of Congress are smaller at the concluding session than at the first regular session. Argentine Embezzler EscaueM. WASHINGTON, March 11. Judge Miller, in the Police Court of the District of Columbia, to-day decided an important point of international law in the case of Manuel de Almagro, charged with the embezzlement of $3,000 from the Argentine minister resident in this city. The attorneys for De Almagro put in a plea that he was a fart of the Argentine legation, being translator and secretary to the minister, and as such was not subject to criminal or other jurisdiction of the United States. After discussing the subject in all its bearings. Judge Miller held that the statutes cover the case of De Almagro. and he ordered him discharged and the case against him dismissed. I Fonr War Ships at the IMlimu. WASHINGTON. .March 11. Cablegrams received at the Navy Department, to-day, announce the arrival of the Aiert at Panama, from San Jose, and the Raleigh at Colon, from Trinidad. So the United States now has four war ships on the Colombian coasts, making a formidable fleet combined. At Colon there are the Atlanta and the Raleigh ; at Buena Ventura, on the West coast is the Ranger, and at Panama, on the same side, Is the Alert. It is probable that the Atlanta will profit by the arrival of the Raleigh at Colon to return to Bocas del Toro, where her marine guard is supposed to be stationed. ?iew Star Routes. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. WASHINGTON, March 11. New star route services have been established in Indiana as follows: Elkinsville, by Cooper, to Belmont, three times a week, by a schedule of not to exceed three hours' running time each wav, from July 1, 1895, to June 30, lsaO; Crozier, by Sparta, to Moores Hill, six times a week, bv a schedule of not to exceed one hour 35 minutes' running time each way, from July 1, 1895, to June 30, 1899. Storekeeper Held I n in Daylight. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. GOSHEN, Ind., March 11. Two masked robbers this morning held up C. D. Vinson at his place of business, and, after securing $87, locked him in the store and escaped. Vinson was trembling like a leaf when discovered a few moments afterwards by a customer. General , Xoles. The gunboat Yorktowri arrived a t Chemulpo Saturday. . The Indian Office has received information that the Indians No Shirt and Little Chief, . arrested at the Umatilla agency, and for whose safe keeping the Indian agent asked United States troops, have been released and thatno further trouble will follow. It is expected that No Shirt, Eittle Chief and Peo. of the Umatilla tribe, will visit Washington in a short time. District Attorney Birney said to-day he had decided to call up, next month, the cases of the recalcitrant witnesses in the Sugar Trust investigation. The Secretary of the Treasury has abated the internal revenue tax, amounting to $640,794, on 711,991 gallons of spirits destroyed by fire April 5, 1S93, while stored In a bonded distillery warehouse at Louisville. The spirits were owned by William E. Bradley, the Allen Bradley Company and John MCKim. To-day's statement ot the condition of the treasury shows: Available cash balance, $184,184,111; gold reserve, $90,COJ,608. Liable for a Paeiirer' Ha intake. CINCINNATI. O., March 11. Judge Hunt to-day charged a jury that the porter of a Pullman palace car, in assuming charge of traps of passengers, makes the company liable for their loss to the owner. The jury gave Anna Bruns a verdict for $113 5! against the Pullman Palace Car Company. She sues for $232 for diamond earring:, etc., stolen between Jersey City and Pittsburg.

EEVISIONISTS' WORK

CHAXGES IX t OXSTlTVTIOX. AM) C VXOXS OF THE P. K. eillRCH. .ew LniTH for the Conduct of the (ieneral . Sj-noil nnl Government of Ihe Diocese. . NEW 'YORK, .March ll.-The joint committee appointed at the general convention of the Protestant Episcopal Church of the United States of America to revise the constitution and canons of the church has submitted the result of its protracted deliberations , in a report which wa3 made public to-day. The commission consists of the Right Rev. 'John Williams, bishop of Connecticut and presiding bishop; Rt. Rev. William C. Doane, bishop of Albany; Rt. Rev. ' Thomas U. Dudley, bishop of Kentucky; Rt. Rev. Henry C. Potter, bishop of New York; Rt. Rev. Haret, bishop of Maryland; Rev. Alexander Burgest bishop of Quincy;, Very Rev. E. A. Hoffman, D. D., LL. D.; Rev. J. S. Stone, D. IX; Rev. C. A. L. Richards, D. D.; Rev. Charles I, Hall; Rev. J."L. Seaborun,-D. D. ; Rev. Hall Harrison, D. D.; Secretary W. H. Lightner,. Edward J. Bradford, F.- B. Swayne, Charles C. Saunders, John A. Beal Frank H. Miller and " W. R. Laidley. The revision : provides that there shall be a general synod, consisting of the house of bishops and the house of deputies, which shall sit and deliberate separately, and that freedom of debate be allowed. Either house may originate and propose legislation, but every act must be adopted by both houses and be certified by the signatures of the presiding officer and the secretary of each house. The-house of bishops is to be composed of every bishop of the church having jurisdiction, every bishop ' coadjutor and bishops Whose ' resignations of jurisdiction shall have" been accepted. A majority of all the bishops entitled to vote, exclusive of missionary bishops, shall be necessary to constitute a quorum. The house of bishops shall elect by a majoritv vote from its own number a primus to be its presiding officer, who shall hold office for life unless he resigns, be removed for Incapacity or for canonical cause. . . . . The church In each diocese which shall have been admitted to the general synod shall be entitled to be represented in the house of deputies by not more than three presbyters canonically resident in the diocese, and three laymen, communicants of this church and having domicile In the diocese. Each diocese shall describe the manner in which its delegates shall be chosen. In either house anv number less than a quorum may adjourn from day to day. Neither house, during the session of the general synod, shall adjourn without the consent of the other for more than three days, nor to any place other than that in which the synod shall be sitting. The general synod is to be the supreme legislative authority;-- It shall also have power to enact canons of discipline and exclusive power to enact canons defining the offenses for which bishops, presbyters and deacons may be tried and determining the penalties. The court for the trial of a bishop is to be composed of bishops only. Many other powers are clearly defined. The revision also provides for the uniting into provinces of the diocese and missionary jurisdictions. Every province must include not less than five contiguous dioceses, and in each province a synod, composed of the bishops and of clergy and laity, shall be constituted by the action of a majority of the convention of the dioceses witnin such province and with the bishops therein, for the exercise of such legislative powers as are not Inconsistent with the constitutional powers of the general synod. The bishops of each province shall elect one of their number to the primate of the province. In every diocese the bishop or bishop-coadjutor shall be chosen agreeably to such rules as shall be prescribed by the convention of the diocese. Missionary bishops shall be chosen by the house of bishops. A. bishop shall confine the exercise of his office to his cwn diocese or missionary Jurisdiction, unless requested to perform some episcopal act In any diocese or In a missionary jurisdiction by the ecclesiastical authority thereof, or authorized , and appointed by the house of bishops, to, ac temporarily in case of need beyond the tfrrrtorial limits of the United States.' T " ' ' : Y V No one shall be ordained and consecrated bishop until he shall be thirty years of agenor without the consent of the majority of the bishops exercising jurisdiction in the United States.. No one shall be ordainea and consecrated by less than three bishops. A bishop may not resign his jurisdiction without the consent of the House of Bishops. Bishops may be consecrated for foreign lands with the aofcrobation of a majority of ' the bishops of the church, but , .such , bishops shall not be entitled to vote in the House of Bishops, nor shall they "perform any act of. episcopal office in any diocese or missionary jurisdiction of this church unless requested to do so by the ecclesiastical authority thereof. There is also a provision that in every diocese there ;i shall- be a standing committee appointed , by the ' convention of the diocese. , , ' A new diocese may be formed and erected with the consent of the general synod and of the provincial synod, out of the existing diocese or by the junction of two or more dioceses or parts of dioceses or a missionary jurisdiction, but such consents shall not be given unless the proposed diocese contain at the time the consent is given at least t?n duly organ'zed and self-supporting congregations and ten presbyters who have1 been at leist one year canonically resident," and for the same period holding a cure ' wdthln the bounds of such proposed diocese and qualified to vote for a bishop. Ndr shall such consent be given If any existing diocese shall be so reduced as to contain at th same ti-" less than fifteen duly organized and selfsupporting congregations and fifteen presbyters residing therein, and qualified as above mentioned, nor without the approval of the bishop or bishops and of the -convention or conventions concerned, nor until the general synod has satisfactory assurance of a suitable provision for the support of the episcopate. ,. .,.. In case a diocese shall be divided into two or more d'oceses the bishop of the diocese divided may choose the diocese to which he will be attached. In ease a diocese shall be formed out of parts of two or more diocese each of the bishops and bishops-coadjutor .of the several dioceses out of which the nw diocese has been formed shall be entitled, in the order, of senority and conseoration. to the choice. The general synod may , accept the ceas'ng of a part of the territory of a diocese by a vote of two-thirds of the house of deputies votmg by dioceses. . - , , ,. The articles referring to the qualifications for ordination . and consecration, the Book of Common Prayer and future amendments to the constitution contain no innovations. Canon 36 defines the standard B ble of the church and says: "Unt,U further order be taken the British Oxford quarto edition , of 1852 of the Holy Bible is recognized by this church as the standard of typography and punctuation. : ; . ,t -Annual Meeting of the C. T. M. A. A. UTICA, N. Y,; March 11. At the annual meeting of the Commercial Travelers' Accident Association of Ameriea, held here today, the following' officers were elected: President, Henry D. Pixley, Utlea; secretary and treasurer, Edward Trevelle, Utlea; directors, Russell1 H. Wilkes, Charles I. Hurd and Judson T. Stevens. Among the vice presidents are David W. Coffin, of Indiana, and George B. Karr. of Illinois. Motions were adopted indorsing Bill 1003, which was introduced Feb. 21 by Mr. Tennyck, and is now pending before the State Legislature, compelling hotels, tenements and factories to have fire escapes - and indorsing the amendment to Bill 509, introduced by Assemblyman Glen, making it compulsory for each and every railroad in the State to issue one-thousand-mile ticket to cost not over $2t. these tickets to contain, stop-over privileges. - - '- t - Old Methodist Church. NEW YORK, March. 11. The eld For-; sythe-street Methodist Episcopal Church last night celebrated the 105th anniversary of its founding. It was built in 1790 by the Rev. Thomas Norrell. who was a major in the continental army and was on Washington's staff, and who was also presiding elder under Bishop A&bury. It was rebuilt in 1833 and reconstructed into its present form in 1874. .. ChlcaiiwniK.t Heroes. To the Editor of the Indianapolis Journal: In your paper of March 1 appears an article in regard to the field of Chickamauga and the part taken by the troops of Indiana, in which it Is stated that the positions of Indiana commands should be properly designated by monuments on the field before September, 1895. Tbis article was written by Gen. H. V. Boynton, of Washington, D. C, who Is thoroughly conversant with the situation, and Is selected by the government as an engineer to put that battlefield In shape as a national park. In his letter Conrradt lioyctoo enumerates the Indiana

field officers engaged in that battle, and i among them those who were in commani of brigades, in that list he omitted the name j of Col. Jo?eph B. Dodge, of Warsaw, Ind.. , who commanded the Second Brigade of the

Twentieth Corps. At this battle this brigade was composed of the Seventy-seventh , Pennsylvania, Seventy-fifth and ThirtJK fourth Illinois and the Thirtieth Indiana, of which latter regiment J. B. Dodge was coionel. A braver man or a more efficient officer was not on the field the 19th and 20th of September, 1853. He lost two horses In that battle, and during the night attack of Sept. 19 was captured, but marched his two captors, with their guns, into our lines. The members of thn Thirtieth Indiana save good cause to hold in memory our comrade and commander. Colonel Dodge, and, though he has gone to the reward, his comrades hope to meet and greet him. ; N. N. BOYDSTON. Warsaw. Ind., March 10. STRIKERS HAVE "WON SCALE DEMAXDED WILL BE PAID BV RIVER OPERATORS. Probably Three-Fourths of the PIttburts District Miners to Return to Work nt Once. , PITTSBURG, March , ll.-The river operators, at their meeting this afternoon, de- , elded unanimously to pay the 69 cents until L the barges in the river are filled and while the boating stage lasts, but the railroad operators as unanimously refused to accede to the demands of the miners and will pay no more, than 55 cents They declare that it is impossible to' pay more In the present demoralized condition of the market, and with, the keen competition from the West Virginia fields, the freight rates from that section being so much lower than rrom here. By the decision of the river operators the entire river district will resume work tomorrow, which creates great rejaic ng among the men. President Cairns Is well pleased and says four thousand miners will be added to those already at work. He says these, together with those who have had the. demand granted before, in both rail and river mines, will make the number between 13,000 and 14,000 at work out or the 20,000 in the district. Secretary McBryde, of the Miners' Union, Is in the city. He says: "The arrangements suit the miners to a T. We only asked for payment of the rate agreed on a year ago until the year ended, May 1." The stipulation in the river miners'; agreement to pay the rate while the boating stage lasts will keep the riien at work' until the year expires. . . ., . 'f-u, . Co:. W. p. Rend, ot Chicago, " is in the city, and when asked, if it were true that he had sent a telegram denying that he had 'granted the increase to his men he refused to confirm or deny the report. The fact that his men" are at work is considered evidence that he is paying the 69cent rate. ' . Derlniou Againut Hewitt. a OMAHA, Neb., March 11. W. D. Cornish, special master in chancery of the Union Pacific, has decided Frank Hewitt, the Laramie fireman, is not entitled to re-' Instatement in the employ of ' the Union! Pacific. The case has been Watched Wkh a great deal of Interest by every employs of the Union Pacific and the decision has ,been anxiously awaited. .Hewitt waa ;t fireman on the Union Pacific fast anail, running from Laramie to Rawlins. June 25, 1894, Hewitt reported , to the company's physician at Laramie that he was :ll and asked for a layoff. This was granted him. July the American Railway Union called out its members. Hewitt was ordered to go to work and refused to do so, claiming his illness prevened him. The master says In his report that Hewitt took active part in the meeting of the strikers and maa several speeches, stating that the men would stay out. The master also says that the cause of his discharge was his participating in the strike. His attorneys fllea an exception to the decision, hut the master overruled it. - Shoemaker Seek Work.. HAVERHILL, Mass., March 11. In consequence of the vote of the strikers, yesterday, to declare the big shoe strike off, there were crowds before the door of every fac-; tory long before the time for opening today. More than five hundred of the seven hundred strikers applied for their old places, but? up to noon only about one hundred had been reinstated, and the majority of these were female operatives and machine stitchers. Most of those taken back obtained work at the factories of Chick Brothers and Gale Brothers. The other firms received but few of their old employes. It is evident that at least two hundred of the strikers will have to leave town to secure employment. Most of these will bo foreigners. Agent Pomeroy, of the strikers, said to-day that he regards the strike a victory for the strikers" in ssveral ways. BarberV National AsNocIation. PITTSBURG, March 11. The Barbers' National Association is in session- In this city. About fifty delegates, representing all sections of the country, are present, and the first meeting was held this afternoon for organization. The business of the convention will begin to-morrow evening, and from to-day only evening sessions will be held. The principal work of the convention will be to try to effect a consolidation of the national and international associations. Both have the same objects in view, and it is probable that a combination will be made. Another important object is to make the apprentice rules so strict that the cheap 5-cent shaving shops will be wiped out of existence. Two Nea-roe Shot by Strike. NEW ORLEANS, March 11. Soon after 10 o'clock this morning a crowd of white screwmen who are on strike went to the head of St. Andrews street, on the levee, and made a murderous assault on the negroes who are working there. . Some thirty or forty shots were fired by, the whites, and two of the negroes, John Parker and Philip Fischer, were hit. The wounded men were removed to the hospital in a dying condition. Strike of Hat Finisher. NEWBURYPORT. Alass., March 11. The finishers employed at C. F. Coffin's hat factory to-day decided to quit work pending a settlement of the scale of wages, which were reduced about one-third beginning to-r day The matter had been referred to the Central Labor Union, at Haverhill, for settlement. After finishing work on hand it Isexpected that the trimmers will go out, unless the troubles are previously settled. . VENEIIABLK WHALE KILLED. One of the Oldeitt Inhabitant) of the Deep Slaughtered Off Xahant. BOSTON, Mass., March 11. A whale about seventy-five feet In length was killed off Nahant last night by a picked crew of experienced men from Nahant. The whale had been reported by several parties during the last few weeks, and Friday night two fishermen who were out In their boats were forced to make a hurried retreat to the shore In order to escape undue familiarity on the part of his whaleshlp. The whale is evidently an old one, and he 13 half covered with sea weed. Deeply imbedded in his back is an ancient harpoon badly rusted, but with the inscription: "Hiram K. Swain, Nantucket, 1853," still legible. The Nahant whalers are In high glee, as there has been considerably rivalry between them and their Swamscott brothers over the prospective capture of the monster. Amignment of a Maltster. BCFFALO, N. Y.. March 11. John B. Manning, the maltster, made an assignment to-day to John A. Kennedy, of the Niagara Bank. The assignment is ascribed to the failure of the Standard Brewing Companv, of Baltimore, which company owedJohn 11. Manning and Manning & Sons upwards of $100,000. Mr. Manning has been Mayor of Buffalo, and possesses large property intertsts in this city and vicinity, on which, during the recent period of depression, he has been unable to realize ready cash. He has been looked on as one of the solid financial men of Buffalo, and It is said the assets will exceed liabilities. Wedded in Haute, Etc. CHICAGO, March 11, Pauline CH daughter of Chief Justice Fuller, filed a bill for j divorce to-day from her husband, James M. ' Aubrey c Mrs. Aubrey had not lived with r her hrsband for some time. The divorce bill Is the sequel to an elopement. The complainant ran away to Milwaukee with Aubrey and was married to him six years 1 o, '

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

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STILL ANOTHER ROUT CHINESE ARMY OF 7.MM PIT TO FLIGHT BY JAPAXESE. Four Hundred Celetttlals Killed anil the City of Denahotal Burned , Fresh Oniraarea In Armenia. . LONDON. March 12. A Shanghai dispatch .to the Times, published this morning, says that a Chinese force of seven thousand men, supported by thirty guns, was attacked by the Japanese at Denshotal on Saturday last. General Katsura commanded the center division of the Japanese army, which fought bravely. General Oku was In command of the right -wing of the troops. The left wing was composed of Yamagi's soldiers from Kaiping. The attack was successful and in two hours the Chinese fled towards Chin Chow, losing four hundred. The Japanese loss was ten killed. After burning Denshotal for strategic reasons the Japanese recrossed the Leao Tung. J A dispatch to the Times from Peking says that the Chinese government, through the United States ministers (Denby and Edwin Dun) have already agreed on the points in the peace conference regarding the independence of Corea, the cession of territory and money indemnity, the amount to be agreed on by the envoys. The dispatch adds that no imperial edict relating to the war will be published for a month, and there will be no published reference to the peace mission, as the Foreign Office unwillingly yielded its policy to that of the War Department in order to bring about harmony. It is expected that the agreement will be signed at an early date. DISORDERS IX ARMENIA. Many Christian .Reported to Have Been Killed and Wounded. LONDON, March 11. Unconfirmed rumors are current In Constantinople of fresh disorders at Karahissar, in the vilayet of Slvas, Asiatic Turkey. Additional advices from the same source, say that many Armenans have been killed and wounded at Karahissar. ' Addreaa to Gladstone. LONDON, March 11. The special correspondent of the Associated Press in Armenia sends the following from Kars; An address to Mr. Gladstone, which is being circulated everywhere, is being widely signed. The address is. headed with the text, "Who is my neighbor?" and "Go thou and do likewise." It says: "Dear Sir We remembered this allegory of the heavenly Teacher after having read your powerful, speech at Hawarden in defense of the Armenian people, who lived under Turkish rule and who have suffered many hundreds of years ' In the name of Christianity from the barbarous tyranny of the Turks and Kurds. The Armenian people are like a helpless, abandoned and wounded man, to whom you, oh, truehearted Christian and great Englishman, extended from your distant country the hand of humanity. The hearts of all Armenians in every paxt of the world bless your name, and will bless it as long as they beat. We presume to present you, asa humble expression of our unlimited thankfulness, with a very ancient Armenian gospel, the eternal source of the active love and truth which fill your heart." A similar, address has been forwarded to Mr. F. S. Stevenson, one of the members of Parliament for Suffolk, and chairman of the Anglo-Armenian Association. Britannia and Dnkotah Won. MENTONE, France, March 11. Many people came here to-day from Cannes, Nice and other places in expectation of seeing the race between Allsa and Britannia. To the great disappointment of all Allsa did not! put In an appearance. The Ailsa may have to send to Marseilles for suitable repairs. There were many yachts, including Mr. Ogden Goelefs White Lady, assembled in the harbr in order to see the racers, start in the Mentone International regetta. The Britannia, ; Corsair and Valkyrie I . started. Britannia v-on in her class. - - . The greatest Interest was manifested In the little American built Dakotah as she emerged from the harbor with her main sail reefed, carrying no topsail and steered by her owner, young Mr." Henry Allen, who was clotned from head to foot In a suit of oil skins. Dakotah was no sooner outside the harbor than she plunged her bow Into the big waves, which immediately swept her decks .fore and aft. Dakotah's competitors were Rolla III and Bebelle, as under the measurements of the yacht club of France, which were enforced for the flst time to-day. The American yacht is rated at eleven tons. She won in her class with ease. Lord Rosebery Convalescing. LONDON. March 11. Lord Rosebcry has almost entirely recovered from the attack of influenza which has confined him to his house for nearly1 two weeks. He went to Windsor to-day In order to have an audience with the Queen. Her Majesty starts for Nice on Wednesday next. Three Hundred Peruvians Killed. BUENOS AYRES, March 11. Advices from Lima are to the effect that an engagement has been foug3 at Cabanillas, Peru, between the government troops and the insurgents. The government forces were defeated with a loss of three hundred killed.

Cable Xoles. ' The German Emperor has chartered the North German Lloyd steamer Kaiser Wilhelm II, now in the Mediterranean service of the company, to attend the opening Kot the North sea and Baltic canal on July 19. A violent storm prevailed at Tangier, Morocco, Sunday nght. Thirty fishing boats and other crart were wrecked and the pier was partly distroyed. In addition snow fell for the lust time In many years. ; The Russian imperial yacht C:.ar:n3. with Minister M. K. Onou on board, concerning whose safety some anxiety has been expressed, is ashore on a Grecian sandbank. The yacht, however, has not sustained any damage. . - The Duke of York held a levee at London yesterday. All the members of tho United States embassy, with the exception of Lieutenant Commander W. S. Cowies, the naval attache, who Is suffering from Influenza, were present. i The Grand Duchess of Hes3e, formerly Princess Victoria Melita, of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, daughter of the Duke of Edinburgh, has been safely accouched of a daughter at Coburg. The Princess was married to Grand Duke Ernest of Hesse, at Coburg, in April lar.t, in the presence of Queen Victoria, Emperor William, of Germany, and other distinguished people. Mustapha, the Turkish soldier who. while intoxicated, ran recently amuck through the streets of Constantinople, kiHing Mr. Stupe, an American director of the Metropolitan railroad of that city, and also killing a Turkish official and a railroad employe, as well as wounding ten other persons, has been sentenced to death. The widow of Mr. Stupe was recently granted a life pension by the Turkish government. Another Endless Chain. Philadelphia Record. The latest device for colleciins small change from gullible people by the aid of the mails Is an Ohio Idea known as the "penny chain" scheme. A young woman of Oberlin, in that State, is sending out letters broadcast asking that the recipients shall send her just one cent to educate a young sister and transmit the letter to heir friends. There me millions in It so long as people continue 1 o be impressionable, unless the postal authcrities shall find a way to stop such mendicancy. Dead Letters ut Xew York. , ; NEW YORK, March 11. Assistant Postmaster Gaylor haa collected some statistics with regard to dead letters m the New York postofflce. He finds that in a quarter an average of 57,000 dead letters sent by correspondentu In th United States acctimulnte in the New York postofflce. Of the foreign vorreaponCents who contribute y

the dead letter mail Ihe Italians nrc the worst. The addresses of Italian letter are rarely explicit and often undecipherable. The largest number of dead letters in th foreign mall come from Germany. This is due not to neglect or ignorance, but to the large German mails. HAY W ARD SENTENCED. - Catherine tilna's Murderer to Be Hana-ed Three Months from Now. MINNEAPOLIS, March ll.-Harry T. Hay ward, convicted of the murder of Catherine Glng, has three months to live. Sentence was passed on him by Judge Seagrave Smith to-dayr after a. motion for an arrest of sentence by Mr. Er win had been denied. Harry came into the court in the same leisurely, calm manner that has characterized his demeanor all through the trial and surveyed the crowd coldly while the rhandcuffs were being removed.' Judge Smith agreed to examine the grounds urged for a new trial, on March 28, and then passed sentence. He said he had no doubt whatever that the verdict was a just and righteous one, and while he did not believe In capital punishment it was his painful duty to pass sentence in accordance with the law. "The sentence of this court." he continued, "is that you be taken to the Hennepin county Jail and there confined for a period of three months, and then at a time to be fixed by the Governor of this State, you be taken to the place of execution and hanged by the neck until you are dead." Harry listened calmly and sat down without the slightest show of feeling. Minneapolis has two more murder cases. Max Pelgert, who was stabbed by . Paul Kleinschmidt. last Friday night, at a party given by their landlady, died this mornlns. Kleinschmidt Is under arrest and will be tried for murder. He claims to have acted In self-defense. The second murder occurre i in northeast Minneapolis to-day. As a result of a long series of tamlly quarrels Nicholas Bodvln, a boy of seventeen, shot his father, Peter Bodvln. twice through the head. The boy claims that his father attacked him, but circumstantial evidence seems to show that the boy approached from behind, struckhis father with some blunt Instrument and then shot him. After committing . the deed he gave himself up. . THE i EL WV A UK. CONTEST. Joseph Stanley Thinks lll.lun and .. Addloks Shoutd Be, Dropped. AUGUSTA, Me., March 11. An interview with, Joseph II. Manley regarding the senatorial deadlock ' In Delaware Is published here. In it, after reciting that the election of a Republican "is of the utmost Importance to the prosperity of this country and to the future standing and success of the Republican party," Mr Manley. says: "I believe that Uhe members of the Delaware Legislature will rise above the ends ant alms of candidates. They have done their full duty to the gentlemen who have been candidates, and now they should ner to it that the matter Is ended, and that a. Republican is selected who will do credit to their State and bring honor to the party." The universal voice of the Republican-party i that they should act and act at once, and should recognize that the Republicans of this country have the right to demand from their hands the quick and right solution of this vital question." V STRANGE KENTUCKY MALADY It Attacks Hie Stomach nud "Tbtn Choke Its Victims to Death. ASHLAND, Ky., March 11, Latest reports from Floyd county, brought, by local traveling salesmen Just returnedi,; are not at all encouraging for the early suppression of the strange malady that Is rag-' ing in the Mud river country. It has become so violent that oven the physicians of the surrounding towns refuse to visit the victims. In all. the death roll has exceeded fifty already and the plague is on the Increase. The disease, instead of small.pox, resembles cholera, except that it chokes the victim to death, beginning in the stomach and rising to the throat. In almost every case it has been fatal, the victims seldom living three days from the attack. - - . HEROISM ItKWAHDKD. - Watches and Jlednla Presented to Sailors by the President. WASHINGTON, March ll.-The President has bestowed a number of rewards on officers and vessels for rescuing distressed mariners. He has given a gold watch and chain to Capt. H. E. Thuestad, of the Norwegian bark Chrysolite In recognition of his heroic services in rescuing the officers and Crew of the American ship Titan, Oct. 9, UM'r a gold watch and chain to Capt. George I. Keller, of the German steamship Brilliant, for heroic services In effecting the rescua of the officers and creV of the schooner Williamlne, Nov. 26, 1894; gold medals to J. Siedenburg, second officer, M. Strathman, boatswain, H. Cohrs, H. Braun iid H. Marshall, of the Hame vessel. Gold medals have been awarded to J.i H. Orton, fourth otneer, W. Fltzpatrlck, quartermaster, and silver medals to 1. Seed, boatswain's mate, D. Jones, L. McLaughlin and Albert Hawley, all of the British steamsnlp Teutonic, for gallant and heroic ffforts to rescue the master and crew of the American scnoor.er Josie Reeves, Feb. 8 last. Marine g asses hrve been awarded to Capt. W. Thompson, of the British steamship Dunhar.i City, for humane cervices In rescuing the officers aid crew of the American Schooner Al ee T. Boardman, Oct. 6, lv4. and to Capt Thomas Casperson. of the Norwegian barn Johanne, for his humane-services in effecting the rescue of two seamen of the American schooner Henry M. Stanley, July 6, 1S94. . Inknown Steamers In Collision. LONDON. March 12. Two unknown steamers were In collision -to-night off Beachj Head. One of the vesseUC that was believed to 'be sinking, signalled Tor ass'stance. " . ,v :- ';;, " ."Movements of Steamers. NEW- YORK, -March ll.--'Arrivedt.Fersl.t. from Hamburg; La Normandle. from Havre. MOVILLE, March 11. Arrived.- Iaurentian,. from Portland, for -Liverpool.. BRISTOL. March 11. Arrived: Wcehawken, from Philadelphia. LIVERPOOL. March 11. Arrived: India, from New York. GIBRALTAR. March 1L Arrived: Neekar, from New York. HULL, March 11. Arrived: Galileo, from Naw York. . ; " . The sixty-ninth ballot for a United States Senator at Dover. Del., yesterday, resulted: Higgins. 6; Addicks. 6; Master, 4; Wolcott, 6; Tunnell. a. Dr. Price's Cream Baking Powder . Most Perfect Made. ' Tube Works. WROUGHT-IROfi PIPE Gas, Steam and Water Boiler Tube, .fcmrt . o4 MMt!ifis trim iitnuxt k. I W . .1 i . . . . VV- alvaa. 8tu i lt. Kstbi ; J runinl'ijtfH. H m t.au.'t. j y l'i Toinf- i'tim -CH.' to: . !. Niew i', met situ i 1 "1IUJIOB, r U'illll i' r . Jl , fiinipn. nilrb-n Mivk. Iloxv, bi-il.ni. Ua-.Mt iter, W'liil anil iil,u, W jp. ii.g Wanlo. ami sll otl ur hofh y:us iimhI In P4ii wiU.ii wi ti hteum Mini Nil, oral tint. ut, a jirt-i..;i. Htam lioiilmj Altp.iT:,ui hit Mill. hol. ! ic toil LuB. etc nut ami firm.! u id. . . w ut,A Itr ... ..... t. . , ... rr'j men i i j inciicn titan . a. I. ir .-ii. 7.1 tad 77 )