Indianapolis Journal, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 August 1895 — Page 2

1 to-day from Denver, Col., having covTt ! tho entire distance on their wl eels. They left Denver Juno 1, without a cent, --n a innzr of $700 that the woull reach rhlladelphT by Aug. 13 with iiOu. . With a wfek to spare they have accumulated by giving banjo and. mandolin concerts ca route. " 'o Pool Selling. GALESDURO, III.. Aug. IS. Horseman O. V.'. Williams decided to-day that no pool selling or other objectionable feature would be. allowed on the grounds during the meeting, Aug. 26 to Sept. 7. VICTIM. OF HYPNOTISM.

Experience of a Farmer Daughter at 'a Swoll Society Hnll. RICHFIELD SPRINGS. Aug. 18. At the f.rst grand ball of the season in the Earlington Hotel here last week Miss Abigail Spates, the daughter of a wealthy farmer of East Springfield township, had an experience which illustrates the folly of the hypnotic craze. Since Miss Jennie Louise Howard, daughter of Vice President Howard, of the Fourteenih-street Bank, of New York city, accidentally hypnotized In an amateur performance of 'Trilby,", the young people of the entire countryside and the hotel have talked of little else. Thursday night the Three Hundred of Richfield assembled at a ball in the Earlington Hotel, the first general entertainment of the season. Only guests of the hotels and well-known cottagers were Invited. Xofcody recognized the exceedingly beautiful girl who walked intov the ballroom soon after the music began on the arm c? Starr Keller, a handsome young Richfielder. James Gascolne, president of the People's Hank of Brooklyn; P. J. Kennedy, a New York publisher; George W. Smith, adopted son of George F. Glllman, a millionaire tea importer of New York: exJudge A. U. Woodward. Charles Morris Smith and Vice President L. Beer, of the People's Bank, who were members of the floor committee, a.sked the identity of this lady who- entered the main dining room and promenaded slowly around through the arcades of smllax and rose?, but received no, satisfaction. The wealth and fashion of half a dozen great American cities were represented, but matrons and debutantes were all eclipsed by the unknown gu?st, whose deep blue eyes wore a strange look of abstraction as she walked without speaking or turning to the right or left. Mr. Keller, who was smiling when he brought his beautiful companion into the hall, looked worried as they passed the orchestra. A3 they turned the band struck up "Ben Bolt" step to waltz time, and in the dance. In which two hundred couples Joined, the fair unknown was conspicuous for iter grace and abandon. The merriment was at Us height, when, as the music fell into a minor key, and the strains of "Au Claire de la Ijine" echoed plaintively down the hall, the unknown guest uttered a piercing shriek and fell at full leng.h upon the bal'room floor. In an instant all was confusion. Her apparently lifeless body was borne speedily out of the crowd. Dr. Borland, the postmaster, who Is also a physician, was hurriedly called In, and diagnosed the case as catalepsy. The girl's form was rigid and her pupil set. Inquiry developed the fact that the youn? girl was the victim of hypnotic suggestion, that she had never read "Trilby," had never waltzed before in her life; thai her father. Joshua Spates, is one of the richest farmers of East Springfield, and that she had been persuaded to come to the Earlington ball, although she hail not been out in evening dress In her life, by a man who went off fishing in that vicin ty and whose name is not now given. It was he who introduced the farmer's daughter, who turned out to be the belle of the Earlington ball, to Starr Keller, her escort, and who. having hypnotized the girl early in the evening, drove her to the hotel in a. closed carriage and borrowed the finery la which she was dressed. WEATHER BUREAU FIGURES. Temperature Records Yesterday Mornlnjr ami Last Mght. The local forecast official of tho Weather Bureau furnishes the following observations taken yesterday at the places and hours earned: n. . 7 a. m. 7 p. m. Bismarck. X. D 7 Rapid City, N. D ZQ 70 Pierre, S. D .. 74 Huron. S, L." 6 Yankton, S. D C2 Ct. Vincent, Minn 60 Moorhead. Minn . 63 Duluth, Minn , 61 St. Paul. Minn i 61 Norih Platte, Neb 62 ' 68 Valentine, Neb S f 'x 70 Omaha, Neb ': 72 Ies Moines, la 60 J 1 7J Davenport, la , 75 Concordia, Kan 70 ; Dodge City, Kan.... 6. ; , 85 Wichita, Kan 72 & Kansas City, Mo 71 82 St. Louis. Mo 74 : i 82 Cpringfleld. Mo 7S , 81 Chicago, 111 72 7 Cpringfleld, 111 70 1 ", 72 Cairo, 111 74 ; ; Marquette, Mich 63 Grand Haven. Mich . 63 ; , 63 Indianapolis. Ind i 8) Louisville. Ky ' i S3 Cincinnati,. O ' ' 8 Cleveland. O '. 76 Parkrsburg. W. Va , 8t Pittsburg. Pa l 82 Buffalo. N. Y i 6 New York. N. Y... 76 Washington. D. C 1 74 Charlotte, N. C ' . 84 Atlanta, Oa : 83 Jacksonville. Fla .. , 8 ) 7'ashvllle, Tenn 83 Memphis. Tenn 8J Vicksburff. Mi33 73 Ft. Smith. Ark , 8? Little Rock, Ark 83 Oklahoma. O. T 71 86. Atrarillo, Tex 8T Ablene. Tex 72 81 Palestine. Tex .' 78 San Antonio. Tex . Galveston, Tex 8 Shreveport. La 6 New Orleans. La .. i Helena, Mont Havre. Mont Thevenne. "V yo & Denver, Col Uinta Fe. X. M 4tt Salt Lake City. Utah 74 S4 Snndny's Local Observations. Bar. Ther. R H. Wind. W'ther. Tree. T a. m. .20.02 75 62 N'eart. Clear 0.00 7p.m. .23.90 W 40 West. Clear O.CO Maximum temperature, 91; minimum tern-"-pratiire. 70. -ifollowing Is a comparative statement or the temperature and precipitation oa Aug. IS: Temp. Free Normal J3. '11 Mean S2 .00 Departure from normal 9 .11 Departure since Aug. 1.... 61 l.t Departure since Jan. 1 2ns 16.71 Plus. W. W. DENT. Observer in Charge. Forertimt for Monday. WASHINGTON. Aug. IS. For Indiana and Oaio Fair; cooler; northwesterly winds. Settled hy President Frcscott. NASHVILLE, Tenn.. Aug. 13. President W. B Prescott, of the International Typo.Traph'.cal Union, has been here for several days, arranging a settlement of the scale of wages of book and job printers. A settlement was reached satisfactory to all on a -1 ding scale of from $12 to $13 per week. President Prescott left for Evansville, Ind., knight. - Ia (inKPonr nt Nrw York. NEW YORK. Aug. IS. Arrive J: La Gasrogne. from Havre. NATIONAL Tube Works Wronght-Iroa Pipe for Gas, Steam and W&te:. BolW Tiir?. Cat and Ualieatie Iron fitting (bUcx and galvanil). Vain. Stoi roka. Euglao Trimming, mmii. CauxtM, Plj Tonjra, I'M Cutters, Ms, Nrrtw Mat? and IV t, Wrtmhet, J-team Trsp. Vrjiuttt. liitrtjen Mnk. lioc. i;el:ing. liabbit JletuL .s!d?r. Wait an! CilorM Wiping Watj. and ail other TpU umJ la cvnnwtion with ;i!. Mara atui Wat4r. Natural ia .sui'pj'.f a sjicialty. Meambouliti AparatitJ for l"utUr IlaiUilij. Store-roOMM 3I1U. srw..j.- arforifv LunUr.ea. Luuibrr I)rx-House, etc Cut anl Tlireal to orJ"r any size Wrought-Iron flpe. fnnu 4 Incij to U tncijei d:atnetfr. KIGUT fl JILLSOII, 75 and 71

THE "CASTLE" BURKED

HOLMES'S QTL'EERLY CO.NSITUXTED lll ILDIXG GUTTED BY FIRE. Hatch, an Alleged Accomplice of tbe 3Iurdercr and Swindler, Living: in Providence, It. I. CHICAGO, Aug. 13. H. H. Holmes's "castle" at Sixty-third and Wallace streets, which i3 said to have been the ecene of numerous murders by the owner, was discovered to be on fire at 12:20 o'clock this morning. At 2 a. m. the fire was under control. It did not extend beyong the "castle." This famous building has for some time past been tenanted only on the ground floor by a drujr store and small restaurant, and it was in the latter that the fire originated. The interior the building was practically ruined. Tho loss will aggregate $13,000. HOLMES'S ACCOMPLICE. The 3Inch Wnnted "Hatch" Reported to lie Living iti Providence. PROVIDENCE, R. I., Xug. 13. Inspectors in the Providence police department have just made the discovery that llat'.'h, the much-wanted accomplice of the notorious H. H. Molmes, who formerly lived in this city, and who deserted his wife, Is living here at the present time. They have suspected for some time that "Hatch" and one Chas. Brace, formerly a photographer here, were one and the same person, but were' unable until a day or two ago to confirm their suspicions. Samuel L. Kirk, of this city, is a brother-in-law of llrace. Mr. Kirk willingly admitfed that his sister married Brace, alias Hatch, twelve years ago, at Moor's Forks, a small place In Clinton county. New York, near the Canadian frontier. He was considered a model young, marf. and school teacner. Twelve years ago he was studying for the ministry. Soon after a Dr. Mudgett came to board in the Brace family, and young Brace and the Doctor became fast friends. One day, however, the elder Brace and Dr. Mudgett quarreled and the latter moved. Young. Brace and his wife soon after this went to Boston, where Brace arranged to go into partnership in a grocery business In Cambridge. The firm was known as Brace & Wall. One day Brace was reported missing, and it was found that lie had taken with him all the firm's available cash. Soon afterwards ho appeared in this cty, having secured a position with a photographer named Rose. He subsequently took charge of Mr. Rose's Narragansett Pier office, and while thus engaged one day. after kissing his wife good-bye. as usual, he left the city and never returned. In this instance also he had collected as much money as possible beforo his departure. In Chicago Brace assumed the name of Charles Gilbert. Through a brother who lives in Chicago his identity was established and it was learned that he had married a nineteen-year-old girl and was employed in one of the offices of the Standard Oil Company. Mrs. Brace followed her husband to Chicago and laid the case before his employers. They called in Gilbert, and she recognized him, but he refused to give either his wife or his employers any satisfaction, and the next day, with his second wife he left Chicago. Mrs. Brace then came back here. Later, it was learned that the young woman whom Brace married in Chicago was not with him and Mrs. Brace advances the opinion that she became a victim of Holmes. THE CATHOLIC CHURCH. It Relation to the Stnte, n Viewed by Rev. J. S. lielfbrd. PLATTSBURG, N. Y., Aug. 18. The fourth annual session of the Catholic summer school closed this evening, when Rev. John S. Belford, of Brooklyn, delivered the last sermon, his subject being "The Church and the Republic." He said: "The true church must make its members good citizens. The Catholic Church is the friend of every legitimate government, but it is independent of any. No doubt the church, like man. finds one form of government more favorable to its interests and development, but she succeeds under all and sne helps all by teaching obedience to authority and by fostering every good gift with which God has blessed man. She recognizes no divine right to rule independent of justice or the will of the people, and she teaches that when rulers become unjust and cease to regard the rights of the people, they become tyrants, punishable by God and by the people. The church cannot Interfere with the state, but she can say that a law is unjust and that it may not be obeyed. In judging the church for things done In the middle ages, we must not separate her from the age or the state of society. Enemies of the church do not hesitate to say that she saved Europe that she was the only moral power in the world. The church looks upon the American republic as a legitimate government, she approves its Constitution, but she does not say that it is an ideal government. She believes that it is possible to conceive a government in which church and state will remain distinct, but In which the 'influence of religion will be more felt, and its rights more respected. This 13 the sense of the late encyclical of Leo XIII to the bishops of the United States. She cannot obey any law that makes marriage dissoluble, except by death. She cannot but protest against any system of education that teaches errors or fails to teacn religion: she holds that there Is no more right to spread the poison of error than the poison of disease, and she holds that the state should control the speaker and writer of evil, as well as the maniac and leper." Sntolll nnd the Recr-llrcvrlnpr Monk. WASHINGTON. Aug. IS. It Is understood here that Mgr. Satolll Is giving his attention raised by the petition to himself for the suppression of the brewery conducted by the Benedictine monks at Beatty. Pa., with a view to harmonizing the differences so as to placate the complainants and at the same time not deal harshly wl.th the monks who conduct the brewery. He Is giving his attention to the petition not onlv 'from the p'-i'it of view of the petitioners, but is also considering the fat that tha monks are native Germans, who canrot se the harm tn the drinking of be-r made after tbe manner pursued in the fatherland. The effort will be to settle the dispute without any formal decision. ' THE CHINESE RIOTS. Report of Rev. Dr. Endlcott. "Who Invontlsnted the OntrngrK. TACOMA. Wash., Aug. 18. The Ledger received to-day by mail from Shanghai the first copy to reach this country of the report of Rev. Dr. J. Endlcott, D. D., who was delegated by the American , and Canadian missionaries to investigate and report on he Cheng-Tu riots :n Sze-Chuan province. The report is lengthy and gives a detailed account of the troubles, corroborating the press reports. Dr. Endlcott went to China from Winnipeg two years ago, being sent by the Canadian-American Missionary Society. On May 27, the day before the outbreak in Cheng-Tu, he, together with his wife. Dr. Hart and Dr. Hare, left Cheng-Tu for Kia-Tung, 120 miles away. They did not learn of the trouble until June 1, when several boatloads of the Cheng-Tu mob went to Ida-Tung and began to Incite trouble. As the officials refused to afford any. protection, the party went down the river with numerous other missionaries, to Shanghai, where Dr. Endlcott's report was finished three weeks ago. Dr. Kiidicott's conclusions are briefly as follows: "The history of past riots does not encourage us to hope for much in the way of discovering the real origin of these. The officials had ample power in their hands to quell the riots at their very beginning, for there was an abundance of soldiers with arms and ammunition at Cheng-Fu, Had the officials been friendly, some of these forces would have been qulgkly utilized to quell the disturbances. The Viceroy Is directly responsible for the riots. He is known to be antiforeign." The report states that a crisis has been reached in mission operations, that ,foreign nations should change their policy and give the mandarins to understand that they must treat American. British and other nations with respect and afford them protection; that unless this Is done In the future, the outlook before the missionaries who labor in the interior of China will be dark Indeed. He concludes: "A money compensation for "dhe lo of properly is not sulcient to meet the dexronda of the case.

The condemnation of the Viceroy is worth infinitely more at this juncture than millions of money." Will' Prove Futile. . LONDON, Aug. IS. Tho Shanhal correspondent of the Times telegraphs as follows: "The consular expedition to KuCheng will probably prove futile. China's attitude In trifling with this serious question is likely to lead to further trouble." STORM IN PENNSYLVANIA.

Doats Sank and Other Damage Doni Bit? Hnllntones Reported. PITTSBURG. Aug. 13. This city was swept by a heavy rainstorm to-night that did considerable damage. Several buildings were blown down and telecraph and telephone wires seriously interfered with. The rainfall was remarkable, forty-five hundredths of an inch falling In twenty minutes. Street-car travel was interrupted 'for a time, and the many small losses throughout the city will aggregate a large amount. A Fpecial from Bedford, Pa., says: An electric storm, accompanied by hail, passed over this section at V o'clock this evening. At Custer City hailstones fell measuring six inches in circumference. Considerable damage was done. Later reports rhow that the storm did more damage than was supposed. The towboat Lud Keefer was sunk and the cook, Millie Colbaugh, was drowned. Her body has net been recovered. This was the only fatality reported. The boat is a total loea and is valued at J15.UC0. The Dacotah, an excursion barge, was also sunk but can be raised without much damage- The J-.it tie Bill, the tew boat of Homestead fame, whih tewed the Pinkerton guards to take possession of the Homestead steel works on the morning of the battle with the strikers in 1S92, was badly damaged and other craft suffered injury from the wind. The loaded coal now in the harbor waiting for the stage of water that will float it to the Southern ports, amounts to W.000,000 bushels, and it is thought that a large amount of this has been lost. 'Fleets of loaded barges were broken up by the force of the gale and tho extent of .the loss will not be known until to-morrow. SERIOUS' FOREST FIRES. Valuable Timber Destroyed and Homes of Miner Burned. SPOKANE, Wash., Aug. IS. Forest fires continue to spread with fearful rapidity throughout Stevens county, in this State, Kotaenal and Shoshone counties, Idaho, and In the mining di3tricts across the line in British Columbia. For two days Rossland, B. C, the booming Camp Trail creek mining town, Jias been threatened on all sides by fires. Every able-bodied citizen in the town and mines surrounding are fighting day and night to savu it from destruction. The flames are now many miles away, licking up everything in their path. Not only are the nres destroying grand forests of timber, but have wiped out the cabin homes and supplies of many a miner, and in numerous instances they have had to flee for their lives. Three Forks, a small mining town in Slocan county, was burned out and the inhabitants narrowly escaped. The families are coming into Kaslo and Slocan, footsore and destitute. Many, hundreds of prospectors are in the burning districts, ana fears are entertained that many will not be heard of again. In the Coeur d'Alene country the flies continue with unabated fury. Miners and prospectors are deserting their cabins In the path of the flames, and are seeking refuge in places of safety. Nothing has been heard from the little village of Saltez, which was reported threatened with destruction yesterday. It is isolated from communication by wire, and several days may elapse beforo definite news can be heard from there. The season has been a dry one, and this accounts for the terrible havoc now being done by the flames. NEBRASKA MAN IN LUCK. Won IN Title to Estate In England Worth Over $2,000,000. PLATTSMOUTH. Neb.. Aug. 18. Many of the residents of this city are more than interested in the announcement that William Foxwell, whose family resides here, had won his title to the estates of the famous Harris Hartley, in Cornwall, England. Mr. Foxwell went to England last November to look after the Foxwell interests. He "has just forwarded the following cable' to his family: "We have, won." The estate ia valued at over ?2,000,00O and Mr. Foxwell' s income from rents will amount to fully $30,000 per year. The estates include Rosewarne House, Conborne and Rosetague House, Crosswell, and a large number of leaser estates. The first two are the original states, Rosewarne House being the home of William Harris and Rosetague the home of Henry Harris, his brother, OHIO'S POLITICAL FIGHT. Gosnlp, About the Coming: Democratic Stnte Convention. SPRINGFIELD, O., Aug. 18. Although none of tbe leaders has arrived for the Democratic State convention on Tuesday and Wednesday of this week, the advance guard of workers and correspondents constitute quite a crowd. Since the selection of delegates yesterday In the different counties it is evident that thpre will be a close fight between the free-silver men and their opponents on the organization of the convention and the platform. The free-silver men control the State executive committee, of which Allen W. Thurman is chairman, and the Brice men control the State central committee, of which M. A. Smalley is chairman. The free-silver men claim that the returns from yesterday's county conventions show that they have a majority of the delegates, but this is not conceded by the Brice men, who certainly have the better organization. Senator Brice, ex-Governor Campbell and the candidates are expected to-morrow. It Is conceded that there will be a hot fight for members of the committee on resolutions and for places on other committees Tuesday afternoon. At the district meetings, at 5 p. m., Tuesday, it will be determined who will control the convention on Wednesday. If the free-silver men secure the organization It is believed they will nominate Col. James Kllbourne, of Columbus, Thurman's candidate, for Governor. Short Cnmpniffii Favored. CHICAGO, Aug. 18. Concerning the view of the national commiteemen on the question of a long or short campaign, the Times-Herald will to-morrow say: "Thirtyeight national committee, twenty Democratic and eighteen Republican, have responded to questions asked by the TimesHerald concerning the policy , of holding a short presidential campaign. .The vote is now full enough to clearly indicate the probable results of the meetings, which will shortly be held by the two national committees of the dominant parties. The Republican national committee will declare in favor of a short presidential campaign. The Democratic national committee will decide in favor of a short presidential campaign unless the free-silver element predominates In the councils of the committee. The vote so far as it has been received and recorded Is as follows: Republican national committee For a short campaign, 14; against a short campaign, 3: non-committal, 1. Total vote, IS. Democratic national committee For a short campaign, 10; against a short campaign, 6; non-committal, 4. Total vote, 20. Knights Templars Bound for Boston. PARSONS. Kan., Aug. 18. The Knights Templars of southeastern Kansas and the Indian Territory, embracing eight ccmmanderies, leave to-morrow on a special train, over the Missouri, Kansas & Texas railway, bound for the twenty-sixth triennial conclave at Boston. The train will consist of seven sleeping cars, one coach and baggage car, and it. will be one of tna most handsomely decorated trains that ever left this section of the country. KANSAS CITY. Mo., Aug. IS. The first delegation of Knights Templars on their way to the Boston conclave passed through Kansas. City to-night In four Pullman coaches attached to the regular Santa Fe train. They are from the Pacific coast. The Kansas City Sir Xnlrnts will leave next Friday. The rush of travel to the conclave will not begin till auesday morning. Drank a Poisonous Mixture. CHICAGO, Aug. IS. William S. Eernhelm, said to be a well-known resident of Fort Collins, Col. committed suicide in this city, at an early hour this morning, by drinking a mixture composed of laudanum, rat poison and whisky. In a note which he left he said that his health had failed and that he was tired of life. He aiso said that his life was Insured for $11,000. and directed that the money be turned over to his children. He was found sitting in a chair in. his room at a hotel, and had, apparently, been lul for come time. -

FISH FHY AND DEATH

OUTING AXD TICXIC OF DELAWARE PAllMERS HAS A SAD irDIXG. Alne I'eoyle Go Oat for a Sail in a Small Boat, the Cratt Cupsitc'a and Seven Drown. s.V, ) ,' OCEAN CITY, Md., Aug. 18. By the overloading of a small pleasure boat an entire family was drowned and two other families are in mourning. A party of farmers from the neighborhood of Frankford and Shelbyville, Del.;' had a lisa fry, on Grey's creek, a branch of the Isle of Wight bay, with bathing, fishing and amusements. William Hudson carried a party ,of nine out sailing, and as the boat was about to come tpk the women of the party Jumped screaming on. the high 6ide, capsizing the little craft, which waa hardly large enough to carry five persons. The following seven were drowned: WIllapa . Storr, forty-five years of ag',' Philadelphia; Laura Storr, his wife, aged thirty-five, and his daughters, Ida May, aged sixteen, and Eva, aged fourteen; Myrtle Stevens, aged sixteen, a daughter of Joshua Stevens, of Shelby ville; Lina Hall, aged nineteen, and her sister. Lulu Hall, aged fourteen, daughters of Elisha Hall, of near Frankford. The capsizing occurred within two hundred yards of the shore and in water eeven feet deep. Mr. Storr had only one hand and was blind tn one eye, but was an expert swimmer. He succeeded in getting his two daughters on the bottom of the boat, and was getting his wife, when the two girls became scared and slipped off the boat and went to their parents and together the four perished. Hudson, who was sailing the boat, got the two Hall girls on the bottom of the boat and was trying to save Miss Stevens, when they slipped off and were dTOwned before he could get them. Two other young ladies who were in the boat were rescued by a fisherman, who put off from the shore as the boat capsized. Mr. Storr was found shortly after. His family and Miss Stevens's body were found to-day by hauling a seine. Large parties are searching for the bodies of the other two. The -Storr family resided at No. 419 Lancaster avenue, Philadelphia. Mr. Storr was married in this . neighborhood, and yearly he brought his family down for a two weeks outing. They were very fond of aquatic sports, and spent most of their time boating and fishing. Hudson, the skipper, protested to Mr. Storrs against'the party crowding into his small boat, which would only carry comfortably four persons. Storrs answered: "Oh, there is no danger; the water is shallow; we are too close and the wind Is light." The bodies, when recovered to-day by the searching party, presented a horrible sight, particularly that of Mrs. Storrs. Crabs had eaten the flesh from her face, exposing her teeth and even the roots of her tongue. The ends of the fingers of all had been eaten away and their eyes had disappeared. Beforo entering the boat Mrs. Storrs took her husband's gold watch, over 5100 in money and the rings and other valuables ami tied them in her apron. She was tightly clutching the bundle in death. Father and Child llurned. ELGIN, 111., Aug. 18. Frank Kazar and his fo i r-y ear-old daughter Sylvia were burned to death in a fire which destroyed their residence and several other buildings at Algonquin, a small village near here, early this morning. The lire started in Kazar's store. When aroused Kazar managed to ret his wife and two of his children ouc "safely, but before he could reach Sylvia a portion of tho floor fell in, carrying the child down. Kazar was crazed with grief, and resisted the efforts of neighbors to drag him from the burning structure, clinging to the door frame until the roof fell in, burying him in the blazing mass. The pecuniary, loss aggregates a few thousand dollars. Firemen Injured. SPRINGFIELD, O., Aug. 18. Fire started in the engine room of the Patent Steel Whip Company this afternoon, and destroyed stock and machinery and the three-story brick and frame building, entailing a los of $20,000 on stock and machinery and $10,000 on the building. A brisk wind blew sparks two blocks off and burned, three one-story, frame dwellings and set fire to other houses. I A brick wall fell on twelve men who were standing on a roof that caved In. Ex-Fire Chief It. Q. King had three ribs broken, also internal' injuries. Firemen Charles Thorp, John Weir, and Harry Todd were burned and bruised but not seriously. , Fireman Killed nnd Others Hurt. MIDDLETOWN. N. Y., Aug. 18.-At an early hour this morning Ontario & Western train No. 29, west-bound, crashed into two box cars which projected from a siding over the main tracks at Bernhart's Bay, near Oneida. Fireman J. Cooper' was instantly killed. Engineer Kinney and head brakeman J. Breed were, badly injured. The responsibility of the accident has not been ' fixed. ' Express Messenger Killed. WrNSTON, N. C, Aug. 18. The northbound passenger train, No. 36, on the Southern railway, jumped the track near Blacksburg, S. C, this morning, causing a bad wreck. Express messenger Greer was killed. GERMAN'S CELEBRATE. (Concluded from First Pnprc.) l'ef of General Gordon. This was the only failure in his career, and even for this only his enemies hold him accountable. Through a combination of circumstances his steamer arrived at Khartoum fortyeight hours too late, rendering the exped'tion abortive. To console him for his disappointment, the popular hero was thanked for his services by both houses of Parliament, and was made Viscount Wolseley. In 1S30. he retired from being adjutant-general to the forces and became commander-in-chief of the forces in Ire-hn-3, which pcsltlon he has since held, his conduct winning the approval of the English Tories and the hatred of the Irish, who would almost as soon see further honors heaped upon the old Duke of Cambridge himself a uron their enemy. This, Of course, is another thing which gives the Conservatives great satisfaction. Wounds as well as honors have been Lord Wolseley's lot since he first donned a red uniform. In leading a storming party while ensign during England's war with Burmah in 1S54 both he and his brother officer were , shot down as they , entered the enemy's Y 1 . 1 . 1 . . A ATI 1 svorns. ine oiner Diea xo aeam iu live minutes, and it was only as if by a miracle and after intense suffering that the life of the future commande-in-chief of- the British army was saved. During the siege of Sebastopol he was wounded three times and on one occasion, while working in the trenches, he was bowled over by a solid shot striking him. He was picked up for dead, hardly recognizable from the number of wounds on his face. The surgeons declared that there was no possibility of his recovery, but he took a different view of the matter and lived to see all of them In their graves, although for a long time he was compelled to live in a dark room, total -blindness being threatened. While not engaed in fighting with the sword. Lord. Wolseley has been wielding the pen with almost as good effect. In his essays he has not hesitated to criticise almost every great general of ancient and modern times. To complete the picture of the English hero, there is need only to add that he is a confirmed prohibitionist and an inveterate smoker. He has an only daughter of marriageable age, who will inherit his viscountcy. - -i 't.1'- - . A Correspondent's Criticisms. LONDON, Aug. 18. A dispatch to the Times from Berlin dwells on the delays and difficulties In the history of the memorial to Emperor William I, and says that it does not appear to be known what alterations have been or will be made In the design in order to keep the expense within the limit the Reichstag has prescribed. "It is sincerely to be hoped," the dispatch continues, "that it will be unnecessary to apply to Parliament for a fresh grant, which might easily lead to a repetition of the unpleasant discussions whicn unfortunately characterized the history of -the memorial. To-day's ceremony bore little resemblance to a national festivity, ts military character was Its -most prominent feature. The general , public was excluded, and the regulation's of the police force closing thoroughfares in the neighborhood of the Schloss Frelheit were extensive even for Berlin. It is not surprising, therefore, that complaints were raised similar to those heard at the opening of the new Reichstag. It was especially remarked that whereas at the laying of tne keystone of .the Baltic vcanal ,:tue presidents of the Reichstag, as the representatives of the people, followed the Chancellor In tapping the stone, they were to-day relegated to the last 7lace." HollvLi nnd Pern Xlendy for Vnr. NEW YORK. Aug. IS. A World dispatch from Lima, Peru, says: Tbe dispute with Bolivia hes assumed a eerlous csct. it li

feared that trar is Inevltabls. 1 Do'lvla put off Indefinitely the receiving of the Peruvian -minister at La Pax. The government of Peru has ordered the minister to return if he is not received within a specified r time. A squadron has been ordered south, while troops have been rent to different points on the Bolivian frontier. A band of guerillas has captured Payta and seized the prefect. A censorship of telegraphic messages having been established, the details of the affair received here are very meagre. . .Harry De Wyndfs Under taking:. LONDON, Aug. 18. Harry De Wyndt. the well-known traveler and explorer, in an interview to-day, said: "After a winter lecture tour in America, I intend to start in April from Vancouver via Sitka, to Mount St.-Ellas, whence I will attempt to cross a hitherto unexplored part of Alaska to Prince of Wales cape, and thence across to East cape and proceed to Ghiiija, Okhotsk, Yakutsk, Irkutsk, Tomsk and home through Russia. The expedition will carry light rubber boats, dogs and sledges. The objects of the jaurney are to explore Alaska and to' study the conditions of the political exiles of Siberia. The Pope Congratulated. ROME, Aug. 18. To-day, . which Is the fete day of his patron saint, Joachim, the Pope received the congratulations of the cardinal and of the nobility, etc. He invited his visitors into his library and discoursed for an hour on the revival of religion in Italy and upon Catholic questions. He appeared to be in good health. A Pilffrimnffe to Lonrdes. LONDON, Aug- 18. A dispatch to the Chronicle from Paris says that a great pilgrimage started for Lourdes to-day. It presented a thorough production of Zoias word picture In his novel of that name. The number of sick and paralyzed was far greater than in 1891. Guarding the Canal. ' COLON, Columbia, Aug. 18. Military guards consisting of Columbian soldiers are being stationed along the line of the Panama canal. . r THE LARGEST GIRDER.

Triumph In Transportation Followed by One in Engineering. PHILADELPHIA, Aug. 18. The largest plate girder in the United States was placed in position on the new city "bridge at Sixth street and Allegheny avenue last week in less than ten minutes", without a Jar or accident. Chief Webster, of the Bureau of Surveys, had a number of photographs taken and will preserve them among, the records of his office. The bridge crosses diagonally the Richmond branch of the Reading Railroad, and Is designed to carry both Sixth street and Allegheny avenue over the deep cutting. Necessarily it had to bo of peculiar formation almost triangular in shape. The bridge, when completed, will cost $73,000. The 6teel girders are similar to those that carry Broad and Lehigh avenues over the Reading's main line. The big girder weighs more than 100,000 pounds. It is 122 feet, ten and one-quarter inches long, and ten and one-half feet deep. It is just seven feet longer than the one at Broad street and Lehigh avenue, which is the next largest girder known. A circuitous route had to be selected in bringing the girder to this city, owing to its height. Most bridges and tunnels were not high enough to let it pass. It was carried on the two steel cars that were built especially to carry the monster Krupp guns to the Chicago -Exposition. There were three empty flat cars one between the two steel cars and on at each end to protect the big girdr. The cars came over the Pennsylvania Railroad to Harrisburg and over the Reading railroad to this city. The girder is the largest one ever transported anywhere in the world. It was hoisted Into place by two locomotives attached to the gearing. It took some time, of course, to get the machinery in place, but after the preliminaries were all in shape the girder was lifted into position In less than ten minutes. This feat was as much a triumph In engineering as the shipping wa3 a triumph in transportation. The deck of the bridge will be paved with granite blocks. Hospital. for Ilieyvle Riders. San Francisco Argonaut. There is an emergency hospital in San Francisco for the benefit of bicycle riders who are reckless or merely unfortunate, and come to grief through the tricklness of their steel horses. The physician in charge is of a scientific turn of mind, and has collected all sorts of interesting statistics. Ninety per cent, of the men who are injured succeed in saving their faces; almost without exception they bear the marks of their falls upon the palms of the hands, the knees and the legs below the knees. Women, on the contrary, possess a fondness for bruising their faces, and prefer their noses as a part to be smashed. When they do bear marks of mishap on their hands it Is invariably on the backs of the hands rather than the insides. This is queer, as a woman naturally would think of her face. It shows that the man when falling instinctively throws out his hands to break tne force of the blow and draws up the legs under the body so the brunt of the blow comes on the knees. Women, on the contrary, make little or no effort to save themselves. In roller skating the facts are exactly opposite. Women struggle when they fall and men do not. The South on Deck. New York Press. Who is a bigger man than the Secretary of the Navy, with a fleet of the finest war ships in the world to follow him wherever he wants to go? Has Emperor William a better escort? Has he more power as director of the fleet of Germany than Herbert has as dictator of the United States Navy? Not a bit. Herbert is actual master of the fleet. He is the great muckamuck. I see that he has tagging along behind him, enjoying all the pleasures of a sea dog's life in the heart of the American navy, with ensigns for footstools and lieutenants for crutches, our veteran Christofo Colombo Baldwin, naval officer, of the port of New York, salary $8,000 a year. The fun Baldwin had as president of the Louisville & Nashville was not a patch on the rare old times he and Herbert are having with the fleet. Who but Herbert ever sailed into Newport with a fleet at his heels? Who but Herbert and Christofo Colombo ever sailed into Bar Harbor with a fleet at their heels? Talk about the South being in the saddle! Shuh! Look at it on deck! A New Sen Serpent. NEW YORK. Aug. 18. Captain Burns, of the fishing steambot Montauk. ran into City island. Friday morning, and told the latest F.ea serpent story. He said that while the Montauk was oe. a cruise bound west, when three miles east of Eaton's Neck, the boat ran into a big sea serpent. Captain Bums said that the force of the collision broke the flange from the paddle wheel. He said the head of the monsterwas the shaoe of a hog, and that it had large eyes, and" that when it turned over in the water he noticed it had small legs. Captain Burns estimated this latest sea monster to be nearly one hundred feet in length. Captain Burns added that the members of. his crew were all sober men. and that they would all confirm his statement. Five Women Assaulted. GUTHRIE. O. T.. Aug. 18.-Daniel R. Brown, a merchant from the Seminole reservation, brings information of a dastardly crime committed near Arbeca. A gang of Creek Indians and negroes with several white oiftlaws, raided Samuel Norford's store and. after gutting the place, assaulted and otherwise mistreated five women in the neighborhood, two of whom will die. Kx-Justlce Strong Very Weak. LAKE MINNEWASKA. N. Y., Aug. 18.-Ex-Justice Strong has had a stroke of paralysis, which affects the left side of his body. He has also had a relapse of the catarrhal fever. He Is very weak and at present unconscious. Shot Her Hnsband. DAYTON. Tenn.. Aug. 18. Furious with jealousy, Mrs. Thomas Holman shot her husband through the heart this afternoon. He fell dead without speaking a word. The woman was arrested and is now in jail. Is Wot Talking Xow. Terre Haute Tribune. Senator Turple is now engaged In keeping still on the silver question in English, German. French. Spanish. Italian, Greek, Latin. Sanskrit, etc Sneeessful Diplomacy. Washington Post. By the most diplomatic manipulation the New York Morning Journal has induced CoL Gil Shanklln to oppose a third term. Pefler'a Dancer. Philadelphia Press. If Peffer keeps on shouting out for land dollars and doesn't keep out of the political wet his name will be mud sure enough. Sfctv to Them. Kansas City Star. Dr. Cr-nccy M. "Dz-z:; to t-!:ir

T0WNSHIP TRUSTEES

THEY TIAVn MA.N Y DtTIES OF WHICH THE PLULIC KNOWS L1TTL.K. Illustrations In Point Confusion Caused by Varying: Constructions of a Lnvr Lately Enacted. To the Editor of the Indianapolis Journal: The duties and scope of the office cf township trustee and the multiplicity of details under his jurisdiction are less understood by the people and by lawyers than those of any other ofllce In the State. There is so much of it that but few people grasp it all and it is so near the people that it affords too little litigation for a lawyer to be posted In all its details. The duties of r.o other office so directly concern the people as the people deal dlrt-ctly with the trustee, and he acts at once in the capacity of trustee of a civil township, transacting all cf Its business in the matter of . roads, bridges, ditches, elections, enumerations and overseeing tho poor, must sec that the fish laws are not violated, and must act as arbitrator In differences regarding division fences: he is ex-offlcio school trustee, and must buy ground and build and repair school houses, though there are few being built nowadays, as most districts were divided and settled long ago. He must visit his schools and provide fuel and appliances, and he is a member of the County Board of Education, which elects a county superintendent. His term of office is four years, and it should be eight, as 'no man can be posted in all of the details and duties of this office and have any experience within two years. It is the most extensive in its ramifications of any subject the writer ever attempted to grasp, yet the occasional sensations the office has afforded in the past ten years have led to a very exhaustive and exhausting investigation into the charges of corruption, that people thought generally existed. In the first place, one must bo prepared to find that a fruitful source of sensational stories is where a trustee elected by one party succeeds one of the opposite party. A source of surprise Is the number of able men of good reputation who really seek election to this office, though It pays but $2 per day, for time actually employed, with more duties than days in the year, and enough petty annoyances from the gossip of a business Confined to a neighborhood to set a man crazy, unless he had grown up in It. An officer so near the people, with so many lines to see after, must necessarily be clothed with large discretionary power and to limit that power, and at the same time provide the township with an agency through which the people's business could be transacted without bemg hampered and crippled, has been the subject of much thought and some recent legislation. The recent legislation which has been construed to mean that the public records of this office should be printed In a newspaper seems to have caused widespread and universal excitement in the State, and It was naturally thought at first that this was because of extensive fraud and corruption but an Investigation shows that it was because such a proceeding was very exnensive. If all of the 1,018 trustees In the State had printed their records, or reports, which are exactly, word for word, the same thing, the cost, based on the hundred, actually inquired into, would have exceeded the enormous sum of $100,000. It must be borne in mind that this report is on the records of the office, which, the law creating the office says, must be open for public inspection at all times, and the same law provides that these officers must make annual reports to the county commissioners, who have an administrative and advisory authority over them. Senate bill 180, which caused this expense, is well spoken of and indorsed by the trustees generally as far as it relates to the posting up and publishing all outstanding indebtedness, as the ma S3 of trustees do not desire to rest under any suspicion that might be cast on them by the dishonest actions of a dozen or less men among them. OPINIONS OF THE NEW LAW. It Is difficult to trace the responsibility of the amendment which the bill received in the House. The discussion of this part of it evidently Intended that the publication should be confined to the report of outstanding indebtedness alone. A gentleman who heard the discussion says that the opinion of a Representative who is engaged in tho newspaper business was asked as to the probable expense, and he said that it would not exceed ten or fifteen dollars In any township. Many people are under the impression that the bill was tampered with after its passage,, but this could not be traced to any definite conclusion. It is the judgment of many of the bes-t business men that It was unwise to Incur this great expense In a matter as Indefinite as this bill, and cite the fact that, as the publication must be done within ten days after the report was made, and as the outgoing trustee would cease to be trustee the moment his report was accepted, he was manifestly Incapacitated from printing "the same. It Is also claimed that only the unfinished business of the office is continuous, and that, the new incoming trustee was Incapacitated from printing the report, as he has no authority to open up completed business. It is also claimed by many that as the bill failed to designate from what fund the expense was to be paid, people who had the printing done are liable for the personal payment of the debt on suit of any citizen of the township who chooses to enter It. Quite a number of trustees were found who will refuse to pay for the publication, on the ground that they have no funds available, or that they were levied for, or can be used for any such bill was a failure, but an act additional to what exists governing indebtedness has been spoken of. Quite a number of persons were found who believe that a showing of indebtedness should be made, and commended that part of the bill, though It was thought that a bill that would make all notes or warrants void, unless they were registered in the auditor's office within ten days of the date of issue, would be better, as no trustee could issue an obligation without going upon record in full and at once. Several newspaper men said that they regretted that such a construction was placed on the new law on account of the great expense attached. Quite a number of county attorneys construed .the law as meaning that the report of warrants and indebtedness was the only printing required, one of them remarking that it could be given either construction, and he desired to save the people's money for what it was levied for. Another said that the bill failed to designate what fund it should be paid out of was sufficient excuse to not act Hinder it. An opinion sent out by a business house of Indianapolis, that has had many years of experience, was taken as the correct view by many trustees. None of tbe trustees in the home county of the author of the bill, and none in Marion county printed the full report. These people based their opinion on a Supreme Court decision in the case of Hunt vs. L S. & M. S. railroad Company, 112 Ind., page 69, which says: "A rule of construction In reference to statutes, is that the intention of the Legislature must govern, and In ascertaining what the intention of the Legislature was, the courts will look to the letter of the statute, to the statute as a whole, to the circumstances under which it was enacted, to the old law. if any. to the mischief intended to be remedied and all like matters, and will, as far as- applicable, make such application of the statutes as will best promote the object of its enactment.." HOW WARRANTS ORIGINATE. It is found that warrants originate from three causes: First, from the townships having an unexpected or unusual debt to meet, which could not be foreseen at time of. making levy, such as the burning of a srhoolhouse or the washing away of a bridge, etc.; second, warrants are issued by a trustee whose judgment or calculation was bad or he was too timid to make a levy large enough to meet expenses; third. Warrants may be issued fraudulently. Of the first there Is nothing to say. Of the second much mlsht be said, among other things, a trustee is supposed tj have sjch gocd judgrr.eat. and be so far sighted fcs to be able to make at levy just large enough to pay fcr all expenses and improvements In that particular fund and yet carry over no idle money from year to year. It is tcld that In the old days, which by the way, Is only a few years ago, when the trustee had no limit as to term, but could be trustees as long as he could get people to elect him, that a method of campaigning was to go quietly among the p.op e and tell them that "Smith is too extravagant; last year he spnt almost every dollar in the treasury." Thus, he was done to death by duty. The trustee who falls to make a large enough levy always gets into trouble, as the other party raises the cry that the township is in debt the moment he issue due bills in payment g debts, which he is bound to Incur. Tns third, cr fraudulent vrnrrant business, which vrt hve heard cd muca about, $3 the most ctrurd thins ever run to cover. It la r'2 tD r-v t-t i.i v cr; cr H-":: C: :t

: :i '

r. v - -

k WITH THlJW

tmm 1 51, as veil as matronly wca:n, will find an a2c hair and cure far dan Jntff in siiyk'tiiWiiii soap It fss non-polAonotu antUeptte op fyr th relief and tnn of all diseases of the kin hnd teal p. For Uilt uw it is twice rxxi a x-1 i a poitp far th m pricw. A prff t wn (rr th. bbjr. For nale H dtnrciM i.V. Nr,k If Ef ICJIL Co.. 10 12 anderitf r M., . . Athletes. Cyclists. Bsscbatl and Foof Sail Players. Boxcrs. Oarsmen aaJ fio!f Players SHOULD USC IT Strengthens ; the Muscles ?rrent aomien au d . WiRneas- Knb wrll IQ to tUf mri!u,lrj.aiil 1 0 a kL art t J .n r voa n il I f. I'lV l'Tli.u tac. be xnvtxrct 1t .. i stimulating f- Jk iXX. -miners Sold by til Dmeplsta and dealera tn Sportire O'wli. E. l Ol GERA A CO. SO N. William St.. N. V. sued and collected from th townships, and people who buy rarer ct this kind are greater "chumps" than th buyers of gold bricks. .The statute provides that an obligation without consid ration is vo!d,and the court has hell that the goods lor which a warrant is given must have been actually received by ths townships, and must have ten suitabla for the purpose, reasonably necessary, ant of reasonable price. In view of the fact that a trustee cannot toe compelled by mandate to pay a debt not ascertained by Ju lament, and in view of the fact that a jury may be found in almost any neighborhoo! who are ready to decide that no: much of anything is actually necessary to conduct a school, the buyer of township warrants is in a very precarious, hazardous and uncertain business. A thorough investigation of this subject will show that in -the cry of fraud and extravagance in township affairs, "the point of view is everything." For instance, then are still some log school houses in th State and the trustee who if sufficiently up to the times to build a brick house, or even a decent and comfortable frame hous to take theiplace of one of those old lo houses, must face the cry of extravagance. One township was found where the trustee was criticised for buying crayon for Ins schools on the pica that "black chalk was good enough, and in their day the teacher bought it himself." This crayon can M bought for 3 cents per gross, box and all. Of course 3 cent crayon is a trashy, dusty crayon, but it is the kind purchased by the city of Indianapolis a few weeks anu for use in the city schools the coining year. Securing the services of an expert, over two hundred of these reports, as printed, were examined, and it was found that th only way to know anything dertnitely was to ko to the trustee who made the expenditure and have him explain what It meant, which he did. in every case, to the satisfaction of the expert. In quite a number of cases it was found that the trustee purchased wood on one sde of his township for $1.50 per cord, and paid in one case as high as 12.23 per cord for the Fame kind o. wood on the other side. In the one casa the wood was hauled a fourth of h mile, and on the other side about four miles. A thing that is considered hlKhlv extravagant in one township was considered the barest necessity in another, just as the Fame thing would be looked upon in the expenditures cf families of different education and culturo or environment. In one township not even . tpn-cent flasr had ever decked a schpoiin nnnth.r iha tnit4 had rail t ' Totaiiir. Flat Staff Comnanv almost $ax) for flags and staffs. This township is quite remote from the State's capital, and it was not ascertained whether the Monument Regents got their gas-pipe flag pole idea from this trustee or not. He was the first one to put them up. anyway. THINGS THAT WERE FOUND. It was found conclusively that unreasonable prices cannot be collected from a township by law, but it was also found that a tTuste might pay irreiw aMe prices where he paid the bills of his own making, but ho is limited very much even In thU, as ho cannot create a debt In any fund excelling the amount on hand and the levy then made for the next year. He Is limited to the amount of his levy, and as the demands are numerous for small expenditures, he cannot go very far without running ashore.' The Supreme Court has decided many times that the trustee ha power to purchase all articles or material and supplies for "his schools that are not required by each-individual pupil, but one of each would be sufficient in most instances for the whole school. No prso:i being required to furnish such comnrm property for the benefit of the whc school, 'they could only be supplied by tn trustee. It was found that whre th teachers had experience or normal training, they demanded all the aids they couli get, while other young and inexperience I teachers, who did not know how to un material, did not ask for or get such ails or material. In wme case the trust-s supplied all alike in some township?, ar.l in some he did not. In several townships examined it was found, on Investigation of a charge of extravagance, that the trustee's odicc ha 1 passed from the hands of a conitrnt to an incompetent man. In another the outgoing truFtee had purchatel enough road machinery to cx-a-st all the road fund for two or thre years to cone; putting a four-wJ-ekd machine in each district. Of course, amene so many, men thefe is a great diversity of opinion. While one man run3 affairs with great sagacity, another may be extra. agant, and still another maj' 6tarve his township to death. Now as to individual cases, which wr reported In the dispatches. It was fond in one case that the trustee. aftr- four years of a fairly good a Iminlstration in which lie failed to provide orr.o things that were needed, bought a quantlt f stuff, just before going out of office, as a good joke on his successor, presume because he was of opposite politics. It i safe to say that all that he bought on credit or gave warrants for, that :s n t suitable, or where the price was grraur than the market price, the trustee now occupying the office will positively reluse o settle for. It was found in the case reported from Madison county that tb trutee was recklessly extravaeant in h'n purchases, and that he was tlecfel h .last time, the people knowing just what he was. In the Bartholomew county ras the trustee was found to be a poor man with a large family and an Invalid w'.fe. and t had been living out of the township funis for three or four years, and until rthr misfortune overtaking Mm. he coul 1 rot replace the amount, and. of course, exposure came with th flrMl sttlc-rr.-n:. It was found hat in the trst Ave vears there had been fr or r five suicides of trustees who tried to avoid exposure. On the case of an old man In Martin count . who was sick for a long time, and ue I th funds for a living, and wh commi.ud uicldo the moment he was found out. At! of the other cases were the victims f sh..ri"ers, who persuaded th?-m to isue W3 rra.it in excess of the levy mad?. In sevrn! 'f these cases It has been Intimated that a.i agent, now In tho State, whose r p.'tJtti.t is not of the best. Involved the t:u-t"' in some minor transaction, and. fffr geiti"? him In his power. ddiberjt ly rplsed a warrant from $ to JSOrt. and df.rd him resist payment: th humiliation and su.anva w-as too much, and he died by his owb bar. I. Much wa found out tbat wrnt to fh"1 that the old Pollard swindles of ten year ago. 'n which rome fourteen men were r.gaged. was a censoiracv to be ",,'" greedy capitalists of Indlarflpo': ?nl fM; cagn. a warrant Tok having ben fun-t with the stubs, showing to w-'iom they made out. and to whir. sold. Tr.t of firms represented bein fictitious. Or party to the transaction, then a young man. aim tne prinripal one In the cousriraev. new llvinrr in the countv-srsf f"vr.s MTV whor h then trustee. Tt wi!l nvr be Vnovrn bow much of the pftier he Ttdfd ln,r?Hing. ut bo luM"evrr ttven-tv-tfve thousand dollars worth, f I Mid. As his toryrrhlp. lost nothdnr bv the tr?"' ft:7i. V- b rrr-Triittrd to l!ve rciNr' r-rt i I-k Chi-n-j icvcr trd tVre

SAIR

'V-M

- j a"N.

L I S V N V H

it.

A. J.