Indianapolis Journal, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 October 1895 — Page 2

THE INDIANAPOLIS JOURNAL, MONDAY,

OCTOBER ' 7, 1895.

the city, going to Xew York, where hp rpent- swine time. From there he traveled to New Orleans, where he remained until he left for this city, arriving here last Friday. Farden also sail that Barnett left Terre Haute on the same day he did. The former went South. Farden was traced to New York, thence to New Orleans and finally to this city. In every place he went the accused ts said to have been a high-roller, and to have spent money like water. Farden was formerly employed in the Treasury Department at Washington, and nfterwards wa an examiner In the Tension Department. He wan first emnloved hv the

vooniiEi:ss nw lectviib. It Will lie Drllrrrnl nt Dfl'anir Inlverwlty Oct. 1(S. Fpecial to the Indianapolis Journal. TUnRE HAUTE. Ind.. Oct. 6. Senator Voorheea has put the finishing touches on his new lecture, "The Holy Sepulcher," which he is to deliver at DePauw University on Oct. 15. The proceeds of the lecture ar to g-o to the fund of the alumni association. The Senator la a graduate In the class of 1S43. The lecture amounts to an argument In defense of Christianity from the .rtandpoint of one who has had large eiperlnct? in the study and practice of law. The Senator has had his doubts and misgiving cn the subject of religion. There have been time- when he wan ukeptlcal of the authenticity of the Scriptures, ana at other time. he has felt that the teachings of the Hible afforded the only adequate ource ot consolation In great bereavements. Senator Voorhees became a member of St. Stephen's Episcopal Church in this city a number of yetrs agx, he and the Hon. Bayless Hanna being confirmed the i.m day. His daughter, JIlw Hallie Voorhec. Is a recent convert to the Catholic Church, and It Is understood that while he wa making a thorough study of the church's doctrine the Senator grave much thought to religious rubjects and with her investigated the Scriptures. 1XOIAXA OHITl'AUY. Cdltor SfTRlm, of Illnffton Chronicle, wwm h w n m- wm fecial to the Indianapolis Journal. r.LUFFTOX, Ind.. Oct. C W T. T. Swaim, editor of the Chronicle and Evening Xews, died this morning at 11 o'clock from typhoid fever. He was taken 111 a week ago and has sunk gradually from that time until his death. Mr. Swaim had completed all preparations to accompany th- Republican editorial excursion to Atlanta, h-ad securest his bertlv an 1 looked forward In anticipation to a delightful trip through the South with the members cf Lis profession. The deceased was a graduate of Ann Arbor and for some years was engaged in the practice of law. Seven years ao he took charge of the Chronicle and. being a newspaper man of marked ability, made it one 'of the leading Republican organs In this part of the State. Mr. Swaim was thirty-four years old and leaves a wife. JOII.X BIIOWS'S IIAXDCl'FFS. Tlie Iron AVrUtleta "Which He Wore Found In AVnbnuh County. Cpecial to the Indianapolis Journal. WABASH. Ind.. Oct. 6. Daniel LIzer, living near Llncolnville, this county, has a relic of gTeat Interest and value and which he had forgotten that he owned. A day cr go ago, while rummaging arounl In hs Carret. he found an oil trunk that had remained unopened for years, and which contained the first pair of ha.v!cuffs ever worn by John Brown, whoe uprising at Harper's Frry made him famous.4 The cuffs are very heavy and are made to be held in rotation on the wrists by screws. Mr. Lizer;s brother. Asa Maysteller. had charge of the armory: where Brown was Imprisoned, end presented him with the handcuffs thirty-two years ago. Mr. Lizer lived at Harper's Ferry at. the time of the uprising. Esrllnston Dynamiters Sard. Ceclal to the Indianapolis Journal. - KOKOMO. Ind., Oct. 6. Damage suits are coming fast as a result of the destruction cf trie saloon at Burlington by a mob a few v.-ccks. azo. This time the plaintiff i3 Mrs. Jchn Graham, owner of theK .demolished Luildins. She asks $2,000 damages, naming cj defendants twenty-one of the most prominent residents of the village, including nearly all the business men,' active church workers and an ex-postmaster. Ed:zrd Taylor, the saloon keeper, will also cua for-damages. and the matter will be presented to tne grand Jury for criminal ccticn. The participants in the violence r-2Js no effort to conceal their identity. ifcouh this saloon has been destroyed by ("ynamite seven times In the past five years, t.-.ls is the first prosecution of the perpetrators. Thofe named In the complaint as (sf?ndants are: William Everman. John Yeater. John McCoy, William FulwUner, Jacob Fulwldner, Frank Bernard, Archibald Pattoo William Moore, Frederick Payne. Charles Gregory. Schuyler Brown. William Uernard. Obldah Bernard. Thomas Bernard. Jchn Carr, John I. Viney, William Bossom. C'.iude Viney. John Bowley, Lincoln Witter and 'Leonard Stockton. . Ontirittetl hy the Warden. rjtcizl to the Indianapolis JournaL JEFFERSON VI LLE. Ind.. Oct. 6.-It developed to-day that had it not been fcr tha diligence of Warden Hert, of the Prison Couth, who checkmated the game of Edward Evans and Isaac Smith, while planning an escape. from the penitentiary, the men would have required but one night xrre In which to finish and mm-v Vi i - , - , . j VU h ll V &A rlans. Fcr ?ome time the warden has known that the men were quietly planning nn escape by boring through an eight-Inch concrete floor, and yesterday he decided to let them know that he was informed r.i to their Intentions. He ordered the mn crcuht to his office and told them of that fict. To-day beinjr Sunday, they could have completed their work and probably got away. Both are desperate nVn. and are curving- terms fcr robbery. This is the third, time the new Ilepublican warden ha3 cu:ccafully outwitted convicts in attempts to escape, besides unearthing the counterfeiting scheme made public a week since. Orthodox Qankern In Sennlon. racial to the Indianapolis Journal. PLAINFI ELD, Ind.. Oct. 6. -The conrcrvatlve Friends are holding their Yearly Meeting at th Sugar Grove Church, two T.-AIZ2 south of here. These people separ-c-tsd from the Friends' Church proper about tvcnty years ago, on account of the progressive spirit manifested by a majority of their brethren. They declared the practice cf the progressive Friends an Innovation on the doctrine taught by their forefathers. Ti::? people still retain the straight coat r"J broad-crimmed hat. The young women v-r plain silk bonnets without ornaments. AH ere strict adherents to manners and customs practiced by the followers of William I'enn. They are scupulously honest. A Iir;; crowd convened at this little county r-pel this morning for public worehlp. me meeting will continue the remainder cf this week. Wednesday being tho next Cay for public worship. Cacsht n Itunawny Con pie. Cj:clal to the Indianapolis Journal. NEW ALBANY. Ind., Oct. 6.-Jo$enh Clavicle, brother of Fir Chief Slavlek. or nvnsvllle, came to this city ,'to-day in exarch of his wife. Ltllie Slavlck. who fcd eloped with Chester H. Brown last TI: err clay. Ho found them at a private tcrdinj. house living under a?sumed rrn'3 and claiming to have been married In ill. Louis. Warrants were issued for Vr.z'.r arrest cn a charge of adultery and thsy were placed in jail to await trial n?xt Thursday. John Brown gave bond for his brother and he was released, but the rcran will remain In Jail. She is thlrtythre years old. Slavlek is employed as htcd engineer In Hoen's furniture factory, in Eansville. As he is willing to forcive hii wife, who Is very penitent. It is probz.:j the case win not be prosecuteo. V. C. T. V. Member Trenched. rtclal to the Indianapolis Journal. VINCEXNES. Lid.. Oct. 6. Owing to the rtrence of bo many women of note at the Ctate convention of the Woman's Christian Temperance' Union in this city, services In the Protestant churches were conducted hv women to-day. Women filled the pulpits Loth morning and evening. Thts afternoon a mas . meeting was held at the c;;era houste. v.here able addrese were made by Zir. Barne. or .Nfw ork. Irs. Ccrncr and Miss Baker, of Chicago. TLie CanalnKhiioi Mrmurlnl 3IcetlnK. Cr.AVFORD5VlLJ.E, Ind., Oct. 6. The :t:r.orlil services rn connection with the C:z.ih cf Hev. It. J. Cunningham, paftor of Crr.ttr Church, wer held . this ..morning, C") rirrt Presbyterian Clrurch uniting in " j r:r.l::i Dr. Cunniagham died la Au

gust from typhoid fever, an! the remains were taken to New York for Interment by the slle of his wife, who died some years previous. Dr. Cunlnngham was the pastor of Wabash College, and was widely known among the students of that institution, having been an instructor In the college on year. Center Church was crowded this morning to listen to the remarks of Rev. W. P. Kane, of Bloomlngton, 111. Rev. E. B. Thompson, of the First Presbyterian Church, real the Scripture, and prayer was offered by President Burroughs, of Wabash College. Murder In Knox County. Special to the Indianapolis JournaL VINCEXNES, Ind., Oct. 6. A murder was committed last night in the lower end of this county. Ezra Feet, aged fifty, shot and killed Clark Isham, aged twenty-two. Both had been to this city and had been drinking. After reaching home they quarreled about a week's wages, which Isham claimed Feet owed him. Isham, it Is alleged, seized an ax and started into Feet's house. Feet met him at the door and shot him with a double-barrel shotgun. The load of shot plowed through Isham's thigh, severing an artery, and he bled to death. Doth. were loggers engaged at a nawmlll. Isham worked for and boarded with Feet. Th murderer made no attempt to escape and was arrested this morning by Sheriff Tuckles, brought to this city and committed to Jail. Early Heaslnn Fly Story. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. RICHMOND. Ind.. Oct. 6. The Hessian fly Is getting in Its-work on Wayne county's wheat fields, the stalks of wheat being now from three to four inches above the ground. A number cf. stalks examined were found without exception to be eaten by the little

pests. How serious the devastation win prove" is yet to be seen, but it may be that It will necessitate the fields being plowed up. Cooper Jury Conlit Xot Acree. Special to the Indianapolis JournaL GREEXSBURG,' Ind.. Oct. 6.-The Jury In the Cooper will case failed to agree as to a verdict and were discharged this morning, after being out twenty-one hours. They stood 6 to 6, although on one ballot ths votes were four for the piamtirt ana eignt for the will. It has not believed that this will end the litigation, but that another trial will be had at the next term. Xelther Got n. Tonch-Down. Special to the IndUnapolls Journal. LIMA, Ind., Oct. 6. The Howe Military School eleven played Its first game with the Lima High School eleven last Friday, neither team securing a touchdown. The game was very exciting and full of many nne plays. Death of Mm. Ella Mount. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. - CONNERSVILLE, Ind., Oct. 6.-EUa, wife of Charles Mount, president of the First National Bank, died last nlpht, aged fiftyfour, cf cancer of the breast. She was a prominent member of the Presbyterian Churcii. FOUR DAYS OF RACING good rnoGHAM3in for Cambridge CITY MEETIXG THIS WEEK. The .Terre Haute Trotting: Asuoclatiott 3Inde n Little 3Ioney on It Ilaces. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. CAMBRIDGE CITY, Inl, Oct. 6.-The "Red Letter Meeting" of the Cambridge City Trotting' Park Association is to be held in this city Oct. 8 to 11. inclusive. A!l the classes have filled and there is a good string of horses In training. One of the cards is the 2:50 pace for two-year-olds with fifteen entries The 2:12 paces Includes Pinewood, Quaker Boy, Alfondly, .Harry Wood. Robert B. and five others. Gee Grimes is here with Guy, and will drive him an exhibition ra..e each day. wtfh the probability of reducing his record Three races will be given each day, consisting of trotting, pacing and running. The.raek is in pnaie condition and everything points to a large attendance. Will Make $2,000 on the Races. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. TERRE HAUTE. Ind., Oct. 6.-The Terre Haute Trotting Association will make $2,000 on the meeting last week, and perhaps more if they meet with good success in the collections of suspended entrance fees. The list of these is a long one and the total amount will be nearly 110,000. Mr. Hamlin was the largest winner of the meeting, the total of .his share of the pursea being $3, (XX), but he had to pay a large amount of entrance fees, which diminished his total receipts considerably. Mr. Salisbury's winnings! amounted to $8;0. but his entrance fees cut this down to $100. nieycle Race at Andernon. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. ANDERSON. Ind., Oct. 6. The bicycle races that were given here yesterlay under the direction of the local branch, L. 'A. V were a disappointment. The crowd was small, and but four hundred paid to see the events, which, in most cases, were exciting. . There were seventy-two entries, and all the races were well filled. Dr. C. N. Branch was umpire, and A. M. Wellington, H. Rogers and. John Wilson judges. The following i3 the summary: First Race, One-mile Novice A. A. Lansberry first, .W. Jones second, Itob Wolfe third. Time, 350. Second Race, Quarter-mile Open Earl Forrer first, Lee Heller second, Charles Nobb third. Time. :32H. Third Race Two-mile Open Earl Forrer first. B. Lukens second, Lee Heller third. Time. 5:33. Fourth Race, County Championship B.. Lukens first. George Risinger second, Clint Lansberry third. Time, 2:30. 'Fifth Race, Mile Open Lee Heller first. Earl Forrer second, Charles Knobb third, B. Lukens fourth. Time, 2:29V Sixth Race, Special Five-mile HandicapClint Lansberry first, George Rlsinger second, Jerome Hlnkle third, Lee Heller fourth. Time, 12:37. The prizes amounted to nearly $000, and were claimed last night. . ' A DVCHESS, BIT A SHOPLIFTER. It Coat f 10,000 to Get Her Oat of the Clutches of the Pnris Police. New York World. Speculation is rife In London as to the identity of the English duchess who, according to the annual police reports of the French government just published, has been arrested during the past twelve months In one of the greatest Parisian emporiums for shoplifting, quantities of stolen articles being discovered about her person. Her Grace was subjected to the indignity of arrest and search by the police and to the even still more intolerable Ig nominy of detention for forty-eight hours at the depot or central police station among female criminals of every description. She was extricated from this disagreeable situation with groat difficulty through the intervention of Lord Dufi'erin, the British embassador, and only after the payment of tine of J10.X. which has been devoted to the relief of the Paris poor. The Paris police, with the gallantry that belongs to their race, have had the commendable consideration to abstain from mentioning her Grace's name in their published report. But the number of English duchesses is small. There are not more than twenty, and they are such important personages that their migrations are considered worthy of mention In the newspapers. Only a few of the strawberry leaf coroneted ladies crossed the channel to Paris last year, hence there are about three among whom the ttfled shoplifter must be. People are Inclined to think the kleptomaniac Duchess is a dame twice widowed, a commoner by birth. It is well known that last year something happened which suddenly caused this until then frivolous lady to change her mode of life and become fanatical on the subject of religion, her days now being spent in fasting, prayer and In the endeavor to do good to the poor. Moreover, she has abandoned Paris, one hr favorite residence. Her tirace may console nersclf with the knowlege that she is by no means the only woman of her rank afflicted with kleptomania, or who has been arrested while shoplifting. The daughter of a reigning prince, in Germany and somo Russian princesses were detected some right months ago purloining small articles in a Paris shop and were only let go after paying heavy fines. Kleptomania is far commoner among the hign born, delicately nurtured cla.ssea than people realize, and as Paris Is the headquarters of everything calculated to tempt the purse of the fair one. It Is only natural that those afflicted with this moral ailment should find it impossible to Mippres It on the banks of the Seine. The foreign embassies at Paris are put to a ood deal of trouble in extricating their countrywomen from scrapes of this Kind. -

CORBETT IS LN TEXAS

THE CIIAMPIOX MEETS SEVERAL-OF THE STATE LEGISLATORS. The Champion Want a Referee nt Once So n to Force Fltzulnimons to a 3IeetInK Places for the Fight. SAN ANTONIO, Tex., Oct. 6.-James J. Corbett and party arrived here this morning at 7:30 o'clock from New Orleans. During the afternoon he met five members of the Legislature, who were returning from Austin. All of them sought introductions. Corbett greeted them pleasantly and twitted them Jocosely regarding the recent legislation. To a reporter Corbett said he felt exceedingly good. His appearance was corroborative testimony, for he was very cheerful and his eyes bright. His face is full and there is to it a glow of health. Corbett complains that the papers in New Orleans did him an Injustice in an interview regarding Fitzslmmons's stake money. "A few days before I left New York," the champion said, "Phil Dwyer, the stakeholder, came down to Asbury Park and told me that $S,500 of Fitzsimmons's stake money had been attached. He said also that he understood the remaining $1,500 would also be attached. He told me that in the event of my winning I should get no stake money whatever. Now, my friends have put up 510,000 for me and they are betting.lt against nothing. I submit that I would not be acting fairly with my friends to permit this without at least a word of remonstrance. It seems to me that Fitzslmmons simply wants a loser's end of the bet. He loses no reputation if I defeat him, and he has a chance, of course, to win big money. "I hope and believe," continued Corbett, "that Dan Stuart will be able to pull the fig'ht off; but it is an assured fact that it will not be In Dallas. Fitzslmmons will appear there Oct. 31, and he will get his $2,500 half of the forfeit money that has been promised. Now, after Fitzslmmons gets that money, what then? He can pocket it and go traveling over the country gathering in shekels on the advertising he has got out of it. He is a big winner right there. "What I want is to have the referee appointed now and have him given authority in writing to name the battleground should Stuart be unable to puM the fight off. Let that referee have the authority to say to us the moment Stuart says he has failed: 'Meet me to-morrow at such and such a place and fight for your stakes and the championship.1 "If Fitzslmmons Is so very eager to meet me. as he pretends is not that an excellent way of assuring a meeting? It seems to me that It is fair. I do not want to name the referee. I am perfectly willing that Fitzslmons shall name six men, and. if these be men of known ability and honesty, I ' will select the man. George Siler and 'Yank Sullivan barred. I want to Cght Fitzslmmons, and I don't want him to get out of the State without a meetina." Brady will leave to-morrow for Dallas to confer with Stuart, Vend'.g and Julian regarding a place for the meeting. He says he will agree to any modification of the articles of agreement that Stuart may suggest ' Fits Anxlon to Meet Corbett. CORPUS C1IRISTI, Tex.. Oct. 6. Bob Fitzslmmons returned late this evening from a very successful day's hunting. He brought back with him a large number of ducks and other game. He says he is enjoying his ttay on the coast very much, and . when he wins the big fight with Corbett he will probably return to Corpus Chrlsti and Invest in some pretty cottage property on the seashore, Fitzslmmons says that, all the blow Corbett is making about his attached stake money is another sure indication that the "pompadour gent" does not want to meet him. But Fltz insists that he will have to, as Stuart and Julian will see that a place is provided where they can fight. Julian is now on his . way to Dallas to make arrangements with Stuart and Brady for pulling oft the contest. Illinois Site for the 31111. HEN&Y, 111., Oct 6. There has been organized In this city a stock company guaranteeing X),000 for the Corbett-Fitzsim-mons fight. l4ie company has selected the Henry islands, located in the Illinois river, two miles south of this city, belonging to the United States government. The company claims to be able to guarantee protection and no interference from the officials if the fight is secured for tills place. Another Plnce for the Flight. . ST. JOSEPH, Mo., Oct. 6. An association is being formed here looking toward bringing off the Corbett-Fltzsimmons fight at this place, In the middle of the Missouri river. Opposite the city is an island, which covers about three acres, which has been formed by the river in the past two years. CITY OF PARIS ARRIVES. Atlnntle Steamer. Reached Xevr York Thirty-Six Hoars Late. NEW YORK, Oct. 6. The steamer City of Paris, about thirty-six hours overdue, was docked at 11 o'clock to-night. The officials at quarantine made an exception In favor of the Paris, allowing her to pass in to-night cn account of her being belated. The delay was due to trouble, lately developed, of "priming" or foaming of the boilers. Repairs were made during her stay In Southampton which were expected to remedy the difficulty, but as aoon as she was well started the "priming" again started and continued all the way across. There was no breakdown and no stormy weather was encountered, the lack of dry steam being the only difficulty. . Movements of Steamers. NEW YORK. Oct. 6. Arrived: Paris, from Southampton; Britannia, from Marseilles and Naples. DELAWARE BREAKWATER. Oct. 6.Arrived: Belgenland, from Liverpool, for Philadelphia. .GLASGOW. Oct. 6. Arrived: Scandinavian, from Boston; Pomeranian, from Montreal. HAVRE, Oct. f. Arrived: La Champagne, from New York. BOSTON, Oct. 6. Arrived: Ccphalonia, from LlverptoolTIIE SOUTH AFRICAN IU II 11 LI'. A Speculative Heimlich Which Is Certain to Knl In Disnater. Cincinnati Tribune. The capitals of, England, Franc? and Germany have entered on a wild debauch of speculation in the gold mining stocks of b'outh Africa, and the feverish speculators are tumbflnj over one another in their haste to buy shares. The excitement has become infectious, and is now spreadICR even to lnd'a and Australia. The only country that has not been drawn into this monetary maelstrom Is the I'nited States This speculative crare In the three wealthiest capitals of Europe is prompted by the same motive that has governed a larjre portion of mankind since the world began that Is, to pet something for nothing, or to reap a fortune without labor. Such a craze is nothing more nor le.-s than a prodigious Ramble. Persons become wild with this fever of speculation, and their motive is the same as that of a man wro plays the faro bank, or tries to picc th winner at a race track. They simply try to get something for nothing. This wild and delirious mania fcr speculation is based on a newly conquered tract of country, 6.009 feet in altitude, and ?.00 miles from the tea coast, in South Africa. The tract is unsettled and undeveloped, and it has no railway connection with th outside world. There are rich gold mines in this region, for in 18J4 it produced $5,000.0'x) of gold, and, it is said, will produce much more this year. The country being high and healthful, it Is argued that white settlers can live and flourish there. But as yet the region 1j wild and unsettled. Yet the men who are back of this mammoth gambling scheme have organized mining, land, banking and other company, with a tofai capital of r30.775,X)i and their market value on the Indon stock exchange has ben pushed up to the enormous total of $1,(71,K0.I0O. It Ls the moFt stupendous land and mlnincr boom the world has ever known. Cablegrams from London bear the Information that reveals in a startling wa th? fictitious value cf thee stocks. Here is a sneclmen of the new.: "The dealings in mining shares on the London Stock Exchange now far exceed In amount all other transactions dally. Ten representative South African companies, with a nominal capital value of f25,W.io, have risen In market value during the last thirty days more than $30,(X,(H Tho increase of the total south African shares la the market quotations during

the same -period exceeds EO.CO.OOO. It is true that there has been a substantial advance in all classes of securities, but speculation Is stU! confined to mins. It Is Impossible to keep track of all the new ventures publicly and privately put upon the market daily. The popular appetite fcr these things is simply insatiable." The twenty-six companies which have paid dividends have a history that Is still more remarkable. Three years ago this south African geld tract was a howling wilderness, and it Is almost In the same condition now. But in the last two years the twenty-six mining companies have seen their nominal capital rise from $32,770,000 to Jl92,0oo,ono: This is more than sixfold In these two years. Rut the story is not yet completed. There are 133 mining companies which have never paid a .cent, but in the last eighteen months "their nominal capital has jumped from I128.643.O0O to i56.14.0W. Their value has Increased threefold in a year, not on dividends, for none have been paid, but simply on expectations. This portion of the craze Is certainly only a bubble hovering over holes In the ground. Hesldes these mining companies there are twenty-seven miscellaneous companies, organized since the boom reached its present proportions, and while none of them has paid one cent of dividends, yet their nominal capital has jumped from J79.30.003 to $318,895,000 1n a few months. This Is speculation and gold mining , "on paper" with a vengeance. Bernato is a king who has bobbed up on the crest of the wave. He was interested In a bank that obtained subscriptions to the amount of $7,500,00 to finance this South African bubble. but in one month this bank, stock has risen to a quoted value of $13,750,000, and still going It Is only a matter of time until this golden bubble will burst, and thousands of men will suddenly learn that they have been swallowed up la the vortex of speculation. Nothing has equaled this South African mining craze in European history save the Panama canal -fiasco. It may be predicted with safety that when this drunken dream of touth African speculation shall have been broker, and European capitalists shall have returned to their sober senses foreism money will come pouring back to safe and legitimate enterprises in America " GOT NOTHING TO SAY

LOXDOV COMMENT OV YALE VICTORY OVER CA3IBRIDGE 3IEX. United States War Ship on the Way to South China Snub for the ' British Representative. LOXPON, Oct. 7.-The Graphic says this morning of the Yale-Cambridge contest at Jsew York on Saturday: "America has taken the conceit out' of us in a way unequaled since Australia beat England at the Oval in 12, and It may perhaps be a longer time before we recover from the shock.. As a first step towards accepting, defeat gracefully we might, perhaps, cease to talk quite so much about the differences of climate as a contributory cause of our defeat. When the Yale team came over and were beaten by Oxford it had to compete under conditions of cold and damp quite as foreign to their experience as the heat of New York has been to Englishmen- We did not urge the disadvantages In diminution of our triumph, and It is not quite game to enlarge on similar causes in mitigation of our defeat!" The Standard says:, 'The victory was most decisive, and ,'ln view of the fact that, except , Fitzherbert, the Cantab9 performed aa well as they have generally done at home, one is driven to the conclusion that Oxford was somewhat lucky to beat Yale, or decidedly unlucky in subsequently losing to Cambridge. It is Impossible to shut one's eyes to the fact that at the present time America is peculiarly rich in capable athletes of all kinds, and though we may hope that at the next important meeting the Englishmen will assert their supremacy of their rivals, or at. all events, come out on an equality, it would be churlish to refuse the frank and cordial acknowledgement which the recent achievements of their American, opponents deserve." ' The Sportsman says of: the contest: "If the result is not .sqi utterly disastrous as the London Athletic . Club defeat, it does not leave us much to boast about. It is quite evident that the Cantabs have not done i well at their "training, owing to the great heat. Cambridge missed a capital chance of snatching an altogether unexpected success in the blgh Jump, in which here was only a poor show all around. The long Jump was quite as disappointing, and Cambridge would appear again to have lost a capital chance. .Sheldon was allowed to win with a schoolboy Jump." The Queen Will Die Game. LONDON, Oct. 7. A correspondent of the Times at Antananarivo, writing under date of Sept. 23, says: Vibe French are thirty miles off and . are advancing fast. The British cemetery arid the French observatory here have been wrecked. The Queen in a speech j yesterday said: 'The French are close on you. k.You said you would fight' for me, but you have not fought. I will not yield. I shall die at the palace.' "The Hovas are preparing to make the last stand at Ambohmanga." F0UK-ST0RY BLOCK BURNED. Fire Wipes Ont & Building: on Lnwre nee Street, Denver. DENVER, Ool., Oct. 6. The four-story brick block at No. 1S36 to 1644 Lawrence street burned tbls evening. Losses: Leonard & Montgomery, building, $3T,0C0; Coop-er-Hagues Furniture Company, goods stored on third and fourth floors, $13,000; Ilrunswick-Balke-Collender Company, billiard and bar fixtures, $20,000; Trexel Brothers & Clark, bicycles and riding academy, $3.00o; Illinois Glass Company, wholesale ware rooms, $10,000; total, $78,000. FEEDIXCr VALUE OF OATS. At Present Trices It Is More Profitable to Feed than to Sell. C. S. Plumb. Director of Purdue Agricultural Station. The price paid farmers for oats at the prtiJent -time is lower than for many year?, perhaps the lowest In the history of the United States. From 1870 to 1893 the lowest average value for oats in any one year was !. for 1889. The quotations on oats In Chicago markets to-day are 10 to 12 cents, less per bushel than for a year aro at this time. At Lafayette, Ind., farmers are -paid 16 cents per bushel tor No. 2 white oats, and extra choice old oats can be bought of commission men for 0 cents. One hundred pounds of average oats and corn are each supposed to contain the following amounts of food nutrients that are digested by the animal body: Protein. Carbohydrates. Fat. Oats 9.2 43.34 4.1S Corn 6U3 4.28 Protein Is the flesh or muscle-forming material, while carbohydrates and fat are Important fat-formins; foods. Of the. two foods crotcin is the moet expensive to pro- ' duce. The so-called "rich" foods are so designated on account of having a larger percentage of protein than the others, and they are usually the hlgnest-pricei foods in tho market. Oil meal is a good, example of this class of foods, containing a large per cent, of protein. From the above it can be seen that one hundred pounds of oats contain decidedly more flesh or mucle-formtng food than one hundred pounds of corn. On the basis ot Lafayette quotations, 100 pounds of oaU would fetch T0 cents and 100 pounds of corn 4S cents. In view of these, extremely low prices, the writer believes feeders will do well to feed oats rather than sell them and buy bran, which la now 70 cents per 100 pounds. No other grain is superior if equal to oats as a food for working horses. For growing cattle or fheep or milch cowa It Is most desirable, and should be much more generally fed than it is. Instead of feeding corn as the only grain, a decided improvement would be a mixture of two parts ground corn and one part oats. While oats are less referred to than other common grains, in recommending feeding rations, it is not because t inferior value, but rather from the cost of this food. At the present time, however, the low price will warrant its more extensive use. In a list of one hundred rations used by prominent dairy cattle feeders In the United States and Canada, published by the Wisconsin experiment station, oats are fed thirty-live times. Of nine Canadian feeders, eight added ground oats to the rations. It is not the purpose of this communication to reflect, upon the fee ng value of other food stuffs, but rather to urge a more extensive use of oats, especially during the present -depression in prices.

WIRES UNDERGROUND

THE SLIlSntPACE TROLLEY SYSTEM A SUCCESS IX AYASHIXCiTOX. No Unsightly Pole or Wires, No oiir, and the Chance of Fatalities Almost Done Awny With. Washington Correspondence Chicago Post. The success of the underground trolley road put in by the Metropolitan Street-car Company of this city on its Ninth-street line, with its four miles of double track, has encouraged that company to contract fcr the construction of thirteen miles more of the same system on its F-street line, running from Georgetown on the northwest to Lincoln Park on Capitol Hill on the southeast. The new system is pronounced in every way satisfactory, and although it has yet to undergo the test of winter the officers and stockholders of the company and the engineering forces of the mass placed at his disposal he was able General Electric Company, have no doubt whatever that they have hit upon a system which is destined to revolutionize ur-' ban transportation, and possibly steam as well. The Ninth-street cars run as smooth as glass. There is none of the noise and roar attaching to the overhead trolley, and the movements of the cars are attended with less commotion than the ordinary horse car. The wheels slip along as quietly as though on rubber tires, and the trains are under perfect control. They go slow or fast, at the pleasure of . the motorman, and in shopping and starting- there is none of the Je'rkiness which Is such an unpleasant feature of cable' travel. - They start off gently, and those who are obliged to hang on the straps during the crowded hours experience none of the Inconveniences which made cable-car travel under similar circumstances dangerous to life and limb. So far as the public is concerned the underground trolley system, as illustrated on the Ninth-street line in Washington, is nearly ideal. The dangers of the overhead trolley have been done away with; there is nothing to offend the eye or invite attention to the ever-present possibility of "live wires" falling upon the streets and burning up helpless victims: and, best of all. the element of elasticity in motion has been obtained. With the cable there can be only one standard of speed, while here the motorman can regulate the motion to suit. In crowded localities the cars crawl along, and whenever open space and opportunity present a greater rate' is made. The Ninth-street line has been in operation now about two months, and In that time only one accident, has occurred, and that was the result of carelessness. The system adopted by the Metropolitan Street-car Company involves an entire abandonment of wires, except where cables are employed to "feed" the "conductor rails" with new power at stated intervals. The early experimentation in underground systems was along the principles of the overhead trolley. The Love system, which was tried in Chicago three or four years Ago by Mr. Yerkes and abandoned as insufficient, was nothing more nor less than a little trolley on poles built In a conduit. This was found to be easily thrown out of gear and hard to repair. EXPERIMENTS MADE. Consequently breaks were frequent, with all the annoyances attendant upon such accidents. The Love system was tried in Washington along a stretch on U street about a mile and a half in length. Under favorable conditions ' everything runs smoothly on this line, but during the rough weather of last winter it broke down for an almost continuous period of two or three days. The snow sifted in through the slot and clogged the underground apparatus hopelessly. The U street underground trolley has a great many improvements upon the original Love system as tried in Chicago, but it did not work entirely to the satisfaction of either the car company or the public, as before stated, and the street car people for the time being abandoned further construction which was in contemplation at one time. Now Mr. Wheeler, of Chicago, who is the prime mover in the Love concern, is about to put in several miles of line In. New York with still further improvements, but inasmuch as it Involves the use of wires the more advanced thought In the 'electrical field has turned away from that idea as not carrying the correct principle. The power that moves the electrical trains along the Ninth-street lines in Washington is conveyed through 'T" rails, fixed immovably in a framework. These T" rails are eight inches apart, and present the flat part to each other. They are supported upon porcelain insulators 132 feet apart. The device which is attached to the bottom of the cars and extends down through the slot to the space between the "conductor rails" is called a "plow," and the parts which come in contact with the rails are designated as "shoes." These "shoes." under the clever manipulation of the motorman, are thrown out until they rub against the rails. Thi3 is the way the power is communicated and although the framework is constructed to stand a pressure of many thousand volts. It has never been found necessary to apply more than 2.7) or 300 volts. This pressure is so gentle as to produce hardly a perceptible friction, and the rust has not been worn off shoes than have been in constant use for nearly sixty days, while the inner . sides of the "conductor rails" show very little effect from usage, being hardly worn smooth. - The test so far has been so entirely to the satisfaction of the street-car company that its management, may be said to be In a perpetual smile xif contentment. The svstem in use is very largely the product of the inventive genius and engineering skill of A. N. Connett, chief engineer of the company, who, however, was fortunate to be in a position to take advantage of all the improvements and. inventions that had gone, before. MOST INVENTIONS USELESS. , The General Electrio Company, which is the owner of over four hundred patents directed to this branch of electrical invention, turned its engineering office over to Mr. Connett and his assistants, with carte blanche to go in and help themselves to anything they could find. Mr. Connett found that the great majority of the inventions were useless or trivial, but out of the mass placed at his disposal he was able to find enough to give him the right lead, and after months of patient research and experiment the "conductor rail" in, use on the North Ninth-street line was tho result. This rail, with many Incidental appliances, has been patented by the Metropolitan company, but a friendly arrangement has been entered ino with the General Electric allowing that concern to manufacture for the trade, the car company In turn being guaranteed against infringement of patent. The exact terms of the agreement between the two companies, ia unknown, but that Is a matter for which the public cares little. It is results the public wants. The cost of converting the horse car line Into an underground electric system was $33,0CO a mile In the case of the Ninth-street line of Washington. That amount included between 8,00 and $9,OW a mile for repaying the street with asphalt where torn up in putting in the conduits. Mr. Connett estimates that where the Belgian pavement Is used the cost per mile would not be over 3,000. and it might be considerably under that figure. The conduits put In on this line. Mr. Ccnnett says, are the best that have yet been built. They are not so deep or so large as those necessary in the construction of a cable line, and very much le?s expensive. A large amount of money is saved in excavation, while the great expense attaching to thf construction of the vast caverns for cable drums anJ other power machinery is avoided. There are manhoies at intervals of thirteen and one-half feet, or over each insulator. By this means any break or accident to the underground equipmentcan be located and repaired at the least expense of time. It is possible for repairers and experts to keep the subterranean equipment unJer constant inspection. Cables running from the. great dynamos at the power house "feed" in fresh power at Intervals of eight hundred feet. This is the only way in which wires are used, and they are fo packed that there is no possibility of danger to life therefrom. The conductor rails are elevated ten Inches above the bottom of the conduit. Along this particular line, however, drainage conditions are exceptionally favorable. Where streets are flat, as in Chicago, it would be advisable to have the conduits to a greater depth.-although the rails can be entirely submerged in water without Interfering with the operation of the cars. TEST OF S2.000 VOLTS. Extensive tests made at the works of the General Electric Company have demonstrated this fact beyond any doubt. Trial has alto shown that the porcelain initiators in use, on this system stand a

"break-down" test of 32,000 volts In dry atmosphere and 2S,0oO volts through thirteen and one-half hours of submersion in water. The machinery In use cn the cars of the Ninth-street line have a capacity of . 2.000 vo'ts. and. as before said, it has only been necessary so far In hauling trains of three loaded cars to apply a pressure of SCO volts. It will be seen that there is plenty of leeway for all the power that might be necessary. The amazing pressure that these insulators will stand opens up a great prospect for the introduction of electricity as a substitute for steam on steam railroads, and the General Electric, people, for the first time, believe that they can very soon offer a system that will rovolutJon'.ie transportation for long as well as short distances. They are suffused with a grow of pleasurable anticipation at the great things they believe to be in store for the public, the railroad world and themselves in the.rrear future. If their expectations are anywhere near realized great events In transportation are at hand, and the next few years will witness wonderful happenings in this field. Mr. Connett. who. by the way, appears to be an intensely practical man. figures an important saving in the cost of maintaining his underground electric system as compared with cable, lie says also that It can be run considerably cheaper than the overhead trolley and at infinitely less risk to the public, to say nothing of the effacement of the horrible overhead disfigurement. The original cost of track and equipments for an overhead trolley line is about $20,000 per mile; the underground will ccst anywhere from $28,000 to $33,000. depending upon the character of pavement that has to be replaced in the streets. Underground electric roads can be built for about 60 per cent, of the cost of cable, and is subject to vastly less strain and wear and tear in maintenance. Mr. Connett Is not prepared to say that the underground system that he is putting in would serve as well as cable for the heavy business on the principal cable lines in -Chicago. In fact, he hardly believed it would, although upon that point he did not pretend to pass judgment. He has given the Chicago situation considerable study and is fully acquainted with the practical difficulties confronting the engineering departments of the three great Chicago surface systems. That makes him hesitate to Indulge in free comment as to what may or may not be best for Chicago further than to say that off the lines of specially heavy traffic the system in' use on the North Ninth street, Washington, line cannot fall to be an unqualified success. He has no fears of serious interference on account of the snow of winter, although his opinion on that score is verv far from

being conclusive. He will be able to form J better Judgment next spring cn that point and will also have the benefit of the experience of a New York company which has put In several miles of experimental line with an eo.ulpmeTrt something like his own, although differing in many essential details. In several Important particulars the construction of the Washington line differs from anything that might be attempted in Chicago. Here there are no Inside "construction" companies to swell the ccst of the work and despoil the stockholders. This insures first -class construction at a minimum cost, which is a guarantee of endurance. In Chicago well, everybody knows about the way street-railway construction v contracts are farmed out there to the terrific and uncalled-for ultimate enlargement of the capitalization. But that is another. rtory. RECOLLECTIONS OF MAIIOXE. Ills Methods When In Control of Vlrjrinttt Politics A Uoss. Washington Correspondence New York Post. The sudden illness of ex-Senator Mahone, of Virginia, has set many persons reflecting upon the ups and downs in American public life, as illustrated by the fortunes of a man who a dozen years ago held the political destiny of the great State of Virginia in the hollow of his hand, but whose chief occupation for the last half-decade has been to struugle with Congress to Induce it to buy a piece of land of him . for a printing office. Recollections of his methods as a political boss are recounted at every gathering of politicians in this city. He used to swing party patronage with a long arm In the early eighties. He used to leave lying on his table, as a means of Impressing the casual visitor of the sense of his power, in his palmy days, a printed blank reading in this way: (Form To. o.) ; Washington. D. C, -General Please appoint ter at . in the county, of . 1SS-. postmas- -. Virginia. This is at the resquest of those interested in the office, and for the good of the service, as I am advised and believe. Yours, truly, WILLIAM MAHONE? To the First Assistant Postmaster-general.-Postofflce Department. This document was indorsed, also In print, in this way: Senator Mahone. , 1SS , recommends the appointment of for postmaster at . in county, Virginia. Mahone worked diligently tn conjunction with Jay Hubbell, assessing all the federal office holdens within reach. Once in awhile his mechanical methods brought him to grief. The story is told of a Democrat who had deserted his party, and done a iceat deal of work for General Mahone in one of the southwestern counties of Virginia, and had received a country postofflce in return. The neighborhood was not very thickly settled cr the people very much given to letter writing; and the result was that during the first month of his office holding the postmaster took in only 4 cents In cash the price of one threecent postage stamp and one postal card. A campaign was Just coming on, and . the postmaster had hardly time to -figure up his profits from his office when a circular, arrived 'from Hubbell demanding 5 per cent, of his official Income for campaign purposes. This was quickly followed by one from Mahone calling on him for 10 per cent, of the same income.. Tho postmaster concluded that after handing over 5 per cent, and then 10, the remainder of the 4 cents was not likely to lay the foundations of a , fortune', so he threw up the postofnee and his membership in the Iteadjuster party at the same time and went back to his old love among the Democrats. ' Mahone could be very small in certain ways when he had vengeance to gratify. An old negro, who had been a servant in President Madison's family, had received an appointment as an employe of the United States "Senate at the instance of Ben Hill, of Georgia. The place was worth only a few hundred dollars a year, and the old man was abundantly able to perform its duties in spite of his advanced age. He was a favorite with all the Senators who came in contact with him. Mahone wanted a place for one of his 'bankrupt heelers, and, learning that the negro fcad been appointed through the influence of Hill, who had recently given him a terrible drubbing in a speech in the Senate, he went to the Sergeant-at-arms and said; "I want that nigger's place." "Why." remonstrated the Sergeant-at-Arms, "that Is Robert Stewart. He was one of President Madison's servants. He has been here" "Yes. yes, I know; but you might as well make him out one of Washington's servants while you are about it. Perhaps that would help him get another position. I want his place." ' As the Senator Insisted, the Sergeant-at-Arnis complied, for 'that was the period when the Readjuster chief held the balance of power In the Senate. In 1SS1 a commander who had beert in the navy twenty-three years was superintendent of the fifth lighthouse district. He dismissed a notoriously incompetent negro who had been appointed by order of Mahone. The Senator ordered his henchman back again. The commander refused to obey. The Senator went to Washington and demanded that the commander be disciplined, it took the Secretary of the Navy four weeks to bring himself around to the point of carrying out this behest, and then the officer was put en waiting orders with the reduced pay incidental to that condition. It is not difficult to appreciate the indignation which inspired cx-Attorney-general MacVeagh, as early as 1S82, to exclaim: "Look at the awful humiliation through which Mahone and his associates are dragging the State of Virginia. Every citizen must be ashamed of the rpectacle. The administration is prostituting the national treasury to enable a certain portion of the people of Virginia to force another portion to repudiate her debt." There was one man in Washington dur ing General Mahone'a supremacy wha.tock great satisfaction in showing, that he was the Senator's equal in a game of political bluff. This was Mr. Hounds, f.hen Public Printer. Mahone went one day to th government printing office to demand the dismissal of a certain compositor, a Virginian, who had worked against him in a receivt campaign. Mr. Hounds objected to dismissing the man. "Mr. Illank is a good printer," said he. "He Is faithful and indutr?ous, and besides- he was appointed at the request of Representative Dezendorf, to whom I am under obligations." "Hut I don't care about that," persisted Mahone. "I demand his removal. If you ilon't remove him at once I shall appeal to the President and fin! out whether I have anything to say about appointments from my Stae." Mr. Rounds was In a quandary. He dll not care to be crushed between the ipier millstone cf the White House and the lower millstone of the- Senate. He was an Illinois man hlm3elf, and was not used to this sort of bully politics. After thinking the matter over he Fnt for the ccm-m-dtcr. and. in the presence of Senator Mahone, informed him that be. was dismiwJ. Mahcnes eyes gleamed with satisfaction. vj suppose, Senator," cald Mr. Hounds,

Ko Drugs co w-iilV Wo Gtcmc to SuJOLlE

V, u TOBACCO No Nerves Quaking i No Heart Palpitating No Dyspeptic Aching "that the removal of this Virginian Is all that you desire?" "That is all I have to ask," answer & Mahone. "Then." said Mr. Hounds. "Mr. Wank, go up Ftalrs and take your case acaln. I reappoint you from the State of Illinois." Mahone never forgave Hounds for thu turning the tables on him. TIIK OFPICK OP niSIIOP. What the Title Signifies In the Metli oIIt I'plaoopnl Church. New York Advocate. From time to time correspondents srnl letters written on paper stamped wiih tit.e and officers of organizations, in whl h. Methodist bishops aie entitled "Hight Heverend," and a tendency appear. In the pccular press to refer them by these crmf. One of our bishops Informs us that he recently received a letter addressing him as. "Lord Hlshop." It is to be hoped that nothing of the kind will be encouraged by the Mcthodi$ts. Right Reverend is a title whlrh has Its primary origin In the arbitrary distinction of Home, a part 'of the cener?.l rollcy of developing subordination and ie,rr:nre lor Kuccespive orders, culminat.ng in prosrtation before the Tope. It rers'st also, i" the partly reformed Church cf K.igland and the communions allied to it. If it has any meaning:, it is a ?l?n cl prelacy and the claims that underlie it. Methodism piovldes for the cons"ca iorf of bishops by bishops and elders; out there is a special provision that, if from any cause there should be no bishops, ciders shall consecrate a bishop. Method!, m knows nothing of the order of bifhops a the sense In which those tficers cal el light reverend, or lt equivalent, bv Roman Catholic and their Protestant 'iml.ators, are bishops. Mr. Wesley deciJtr-oT himself to be as scriptural an eplscopos as. any man in 'Kngland; and every elder in the Methodist Episcopal Church Is as scriptural an episcopos as any bishop- in that church, having all the inherent rights if the said bishop, except tho?e established and conferred upon certain pre?byters by the Methodist Episcopal Church. . whose functions are fully defined, who have tho power to resign at any . moment, and may be deposed for ceasing to exercise thetr functions, for ineflfclency, heresy, or disobedience to the rules and regulations of the General Conference duly enacted, when the same are not contrary to the constltuticri. Were we to' pause here doubtless certain Roman Catholics and High Church Episcopalians would seize upon .what Is written for ths difparagement of the Methodist episcopacy. Probably they will do so without regard to what may follow. The doctrine of Methodism concerning the episcopacy, therefore. may well be stated, at this point. It Is that- a government by bishops is agreeable to the Scripture, though not enjoined tlereln: that any church. In the .exercise- of Its Inherent power to make rules and regulations for itself, subject -to the word of God. may erect an office, or, in that sense of th word, an order, not Inherently distinguished from that of elder or presbyter as to the power to -preach or administer the holy sacraments, or even to ordain; but that such an office is oi the highest dignity and of life estate, unless the Incumbent be deprived by due process or voluntarily resigns. Bishops in the Methodist Kpiscopal Church are primus inter pares first amons: equals. John Wesley, a presbyter, ordained Thomas Coke, wha was already a presbyter, superintendent; Thomas Coke, with the aid of others, ordained Francis Asbury a deacon and a a elder, and also a superintendent: Asbury and Coke ordained Whatcoat a bishop, or superintendent. The title of a Methodist bishop is nothing more nor less than bishop. We should be the first to resent any disparagement of the office of bishop in the Methodist Episcopal Church. It is th most responsible position which can ba given by a supreme act of confidence, elevating those who fill it by the nature of the duties Imposed, the confidence reposed and the powers exercised. It possesses a prerogative greater than any exercised over ministers and churches by bishops in the Protestant Episcopal Church: that of fixing the appointments of all the ministers, and thus imposins whom they will upon the churches. From the Methodist Kpiscopal point of view, the claims of Trotestant Episcopal bishops to the exclusive power of crdlnatioi to the episcopacy are without foundation; their assumption that only those who have been ordained by bishops in their sense cf the word are rightful ministers of Christ's gospel or administrators of His sacraments, and that such ordination is essential to the validity of the church, we believe to be "a figment of the imagination," which "no man ever did prove or can prove." They are, however, consistent with their own claims in calling their bishops Right Reverend to distinguish them from presbyters, whom they believe to belong to a radically distinct and inferior order. The ground on which our church rests its claims to publ'.c consideration is not that it is allied to or descended from the Roman Catholic Church or the Church of Englani; but for general recognition as a Christian body we rest . upon .our doctrines, spirit, history and works, and recognize all evangelical Protestant denominations a branches of the visible Church of Christ in the world. Under these circumstances It would not be compatible either with honadopting any . of the titles . of prelatlcat bodies in the absence of that which thoso titles signify. To our own members our bishops aro apostles. , Anti-Women SafTracclsts. ALBANY. N Y.. Oct. 6. The special State committee of anti-women puff ra gists, headed by Mrs. John V. L. Purin. of this city, has issued the following address to the electors of the i?tate of New York: "The committee of women organired Ir the State of New York to oppose th amendment to the Constitution striking out the word 'male in the qualification of voters, addresses this appeal to the elector of the State. The members of the committee are perfectly aware that it is unconstitutional and wrong to ask of any person seeking nomination or election to the Legislature any pledge as to his discharge of the rcpponribllity of his position. They ar anxious, therefore, to urK on the voters of the State that they ehould take pains to secure the nomination and election to the Legislature of m-n known to be opposed to the women In favor of tho ballot. It is not thought wife or necessary to enter into any argument in this appeal against ro radical and fundamental a revolution in the system in the elections." NATIONAL TubeWorks Stun ui Uifcr. Hollar Tube, fart st4 IIaIIsable Iron Mtt tn black ul gaTni2d). ValTr. Mof Corki. IngiM Trimmtnc, Mair iujtea, Fl Ton, 11 Cnttrr. Vi. tsrre Plates and DK WretuLf, Mram Trap, rnu'r. KIt4b n Ntn". How. ltitit. lit t:t Menu, scolder. Wluu sl Olored wiptna Wat. ana ail ctur sun u uri : M-niiMlon with i. Stsm nl Watr. Natural r.ii S-upvlle a spec la'tjr. Mamhcatinc Apparatus for lullic Hui 14 id;. More-moinv IllLsho).l'atnorteM, laundries. I.umbr Dry-ltou, etc. Cut and Tbrrad to orW anr hire Wnmrkt-lron Ml, front if liuu to It lnbe diameter. EIGHT ft JILLSCn, ::an,i