Indianapolis Journal, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 September 1896 — Page 2

THE INDIANAPOLIS JOURNAL, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1396.

and get the increase In the rise of the value of the dollar than to put that dollar to work employing labor and developing the resources of tnls great country. (Applause.) ALLEGED COERCION. "You ask why it is that anybody in this community can favor a gold standard. I will tell you why some people in some communities that I know of have favored a sold standard. I have known merchants who were notified that unless they supported the gold standard they could not

obtain an extension on their notes at the banks, and that is brought about by the fact that some bank3 are notified from New York that unless they use their in tluence in favor of a gold standard they cannot aiscount tneir noies in ;ew lorn and the New York banks are notified from London that if we do not have a financial policy run on the Eurooean plan English money lenders will not let us have money. (Applause.) Our opponents tell us that we must maintain the gold standard in order to borrow money. We reply that if we . maintain the gold standard we will never be able to do anything but borrow money and we will soon be at the end In that because our property wih not be fit to bor row on. (Tremendous applause.) "Do you tell me that we do not need any more money in this country? I point to the fact that the advocates of the gold standard rejoice whenever any money comes to this country. They point to it as evidence that there will be better times. If we have enough money in this country, why should we want any money to come from abroad'; If we have enough now, then any more would be too much,, and surely nobody wants too much money in this country. (Enthusiastic applause and yells and cheerine.) If it is desirable to have money come from abroad, then it is evident that we have not cnougn money nere now, ana u we have not enough money now it is better to let the money come out of our own mountains and be our own money than to borrow from abroad and have to pay it back with interest some time. (Applause.) "They tell us that the election of the Chicago ticket will drive gold from this country. I want you to remember that the mere nomination of the candidate for PresiHant rn a 1 rtt - i i cr nl j t f nr: n Vi u sa ripn bringing gold to this country for the past few weeks. (Great applause.) My friends, if a nomination will start such a flow of gold to the United States what will be the enormous flow when we actually have a President who is for free silver? (Applause.) My friends, our enemies tell us that if we have the free coinage of silver that foreign nations would get our gold. I want to say to you that the moment this Nation opens its mints to the free coinage of silver the creditor nations of Europe will have to Join us in the maintenance of the value of silver at a parity with gold instead of conspiring to force down that silver as they do now. (Applause.) You tell me that we must hyve a gold standard because England has. I reply to you that we will have bimetallism and then let England have bimetallism because we have bimetallism. (Applause.) "You say that it is un-American to brag about what we can do. I reply that it is English, you know, to doubt that we can do anything. (Applause, cheers and laughter.) But we are notified that we cannot maintain the parity because Mexico cannot. Every man who thinks that this Na'tion is no greater than Mexico ought to vote the Republican ticket. It is the only place he will feel at home. (Applause.) This Nation can do what Mexico cannot do. This Nation can create a demand for silver ten times as great as any demand that can be created by Mexico, and if there is a Republican who still doubts that this Nation is greater than Mexico let him remember that the United States and Mexico together may be able to do what Mexico cannot do alone. (Applause.) "WHAT IS A FINANCIER?" "Our opponents tell us that we are not financiers. What is a financier? My idea of a financier is not a man who is able to attend to somebody else's business, but the man who can attend to his own business. (Applause.)t And, friends, I want you to prove to the Eastern financier, who thinks that all wisdom will die with him, I wanl you to prove to him that you are a financier yourself. I want you to go to the ballot box and by attending to your own business to no longer give your business into his hands. (Applause.) "I want to call your attention to the difference between a bimetallist anrl aand a gold bug. (Laughter.) Now 1 want to explain to you that when I use the term gold bug I do not use it in any offensive sense. When I use the words gold bug I use it in the same kindly spirit that he uses the word lunatic, when he speaks of me. (Laughter and cheers.) I call your attention to this marked differ ence Deiween tne Dimetainst and tne gold bug. You ask a farmer why he wants bimetallism and he says he wants it because It is good for himself, he is not worrying about other people. He has troubles enough of his own. (Laughter.) You ask the laboring man why he wants bimetallism and he tells you he wants it because it is good for himself. He is not worrying about others, lie too, has troubles of his own. (Laughter.) You ask the business man why he wants bimetallism and he tells you that he makes his money, not from the men from whom he borrows money, but from the men to whom he sells goods and therefore he wants a financial policy that will enable people to buy more goods, so that he can make more -money and therefore he is for bimetallism because it is good for himself. But you ask an Eastern advocate of the gold standard why he wants a gold standard and does he tell you he,wa,ntH n because it is good for himself? ou . never heard one of them say that. (Applause.) 'These financiers want the gold standard because it is good for other people. He wants the gold standard, he says, because It is good for the farmer; he wants the gold standard because it is good for the laborers. Ho is for it because it is good for the business man. You tell him that those people are willing to risk bimetallism, and tntn what dos he say? Rising to the full height of his moral stature, ne tells you that he cannot, according to his conscience, allow other people to hurt themselves. (Applause, laughter and cheers.) If the Eastern financier is troubled with i nihility to sleep, his doctor does rot ask the cause; he simply tells him to quit worrying about the poor people of thts country and go to sleep. (Laughter and applause.) My friends, when you try to convince him that the great masses of the feople have a right to a voice in the legisation in the country in which they live he tells you that while he would profit by the free coinage of silver, that because he loved others better than he loved himself, he will run the gold standard down their throats whether they want it or not. (Applause.) Do you believe, then, that when they tell you that they are entirely disinterested. (Cries of 'No, no!') I do" not. "W hen I find a man who wants a certain financial policy because it would be good for him. I say he is a very natural sort of a man, and that I have seen men like htm before. But when I find a man who is always wanting to help me against my will, who is trying to do something for me that I don't want, who Is always feeling for me, I watch to see that he don't reach me when he feels for me. (Applause.) Whn these advocates pf the gold standard asserted that the free coinage of silver would bo good for them it took a great load off my mind. For twenty years these pec pie, according to their say so. have been sacrificing themselves for the rest of the people; I do not believe they ought to be allowed to simply wrong themselves for our good (applause aid laughter), and when these people insist that free ccinage would be good for them I thought, now our time has come. We will pay back this debt that has been accruing for twenty years and we will make them enjoy the benefits of free coinage all the rest of their natural lives and we will bear with fortitude whatever evils come ot it. (Applause and laughter.) "Now, my friends. I must close. (Cries of 'Go on! go on!') I have been proving my' loyalty to the ratio of 16 to 1 by working sixteen hours in one day; I can not go beyond that, mv friends. I want you to take this question and do what you think Is best and whatever is the result I shall be willing to abide by it. whether It be to elect or to defeat, conscious that victory must at last come to all those who fight for the cause of truth." (Applause and cheers.) Virginia was invaded by the Bryan party at Emporia, and there the nominee toll the people he was glad to meet the citizens of the State in which his father was -born. At Petersburg the public square was filled with an expectant, enthusiastic audience. Mr. Bryan spoke about five mm. utes. A committee got on the train at Petersburg from Richmond and acted as an escort to the nominee. Mr. Bryan, when asked as to whether he had received Chairman Allen's letter notifying him of his nomination by the People's party, said he had read the letter as published, but had not received the formal one written by Senator Allen. Mr. Bryan said he probably would send his acceptance early next week. A MOIiMXCJ SPEECH. BIr. Bryan Talks About the Attitude of Eastern Democrats. GOLDS BORO, N. C, Sept. lS.-William J. Bryan, the silver candidate for President, slept in his private car on a switch here last night. At 9 o'clock this morning he addressed a lare crowd, saying, in part: "la thin campaign we are fiffhtinff together, Instead of fighting among our

selves. I remsmber a few years ago a Populist in Congress said that down in South America there ran wild upon the prairies small burros that in time of danger, when attacked by wild animals, would got together, putting their Reads together and their feet on the outside: they formed a circle with their heels and kicked the enemy, but ho said it was often the case that the advocates of various reforms would put their heads on the outside and

nick each other. (Laughter.) It has been too often the case that those who were fighting for reform because they could not agree entirely would interfere with each other and each attempt to offset the other's worK. "In this campaign those who believe in the free coinage of silver have joined together regardless of difference of opinion upon other subjects. Democrats who be lieve in tariff reform and Republicans who believe in protection are able to get togetner when both recognize that the money question is superior to the tariff question. (Applause.) A Pspuiist ltader in this State well expressed the idea when he said that while he b-!ieved in Populist doctrines, yet he was willing to lay some of them aside until he could g?t others. For instance, he- said, while he believed in the government ownership of railroads, he did not want the government to own the railroads as long as the Rothschilds owned the government. (Great app'ause.) It i:; this willingness to lay aUlo minor differences in hours of danger that characterizes our peo ple ana gives tne surest proof that they are ab'o to rise to the requirements of any emergency. "Sometimes they accuse us of raising a' sectional Isu. One of the' best evidences that the platform adopted at Chicago does rot raise a sectional issue is found in the language of the platform adopted yesterday In New York. Let me read it to you. After unreservedly Indorsing the platform and the candidates of the Chicago convention, the New York platform declares as its deliberate judgment that never in the history of the Democratic party has a platform been ' written which embodies more completely the interests cf the whole people, as distinguished from those who seek legislation for private benefits, than that given to tb country by the national Democratic convention of 1SSH5. There, within the shadow of Wall ntreet: there, against the combined opposition of those or.ee leading Democrats cf New York, who have either gone over entirely to the Republicans or stopped for a moment at the half-way house, the Democracy of New York declares the platform adopted at Chicago is the most Democratic platform ever put before the country by a Democratic convention. (Applause.) THE INCOME TAX. "In the State of Connecticut they have also indorsed our platform and likewise in Pennsylvania and New Jersey. In these and other Eastern States, the Democracy is beginning t,o realize that the Chica50 platform presents to the American people these great issues around which the people must cluster if they are going to retain a government of, by and for the people. The Chicago platform contained a plank expressing a desire for an income tax. not saying that we are going to ignore the decision of the Supreme Court, but that an income tax should be retained and enforced so far as the decision of the court wou'd permit, and that we would abide by the principle. If a future court, exercising the same right to reverse the decision recently given that the present court exercised lh overthrowing the precedent of a hundred years, should go back to the-doctrine we used to have under the Constitution, it is possible to make those who have large incomes pay their share of the expense of government. (Applause.) In my judgment the income tax is just. It is not war upon property, but it is admitted that those who have property and which demand the protection of that property by federal laws should be willing to support the government to which they look for that protec.ion. and not seek to use the instrumentalities of government for their own benefit and then throw the burden of supporting 'hat government on the backs Of those not able to bepr it. "Not a day passes but I meet Republicans who tell me they voted for Abraham Lincoln and voted the Republican ticket ever since, but they found more of the Republicanism of early days in the Democratic platform than they can find in the Republican platform o this year. They say there is more there to give them hope of the maintenance of free institutions than they can find in the Republican platform. They are not willing to trust foreign nations to do for the American people what the Republican party refuses to do. If anything Is wrong with our laws we can correct them at the ballot, but If we transfer the legislative power from Washington to Lombard street our ballots cannot reach them and we can simply go upon bended knees and beg for sympathy and compassion from them who have never known sympathy or compassion. (Applause.) Those who are denominated as money changers have never in all the history of the human race listened to anything but force. They have no heart. They cannot feel. They know nothing but greed and avarice, which have no conscience to which you can appeal. (Applause.) A FISH OUT OF WATER. "Our opponents talk as if we could get along with less and less money as the years go by. Some of them have such confidence In the substitutes for money that they believe the time will soon come when we will need no money at all. They remind me of a man who thought a fish could be made to live without water. He took a herring and put it in a pail of salt water and gradually took out the salt water and put in fresh until the water was almost entirely fresh. But the change was made so gradually the fish did not notice it and kept on living and then he began to take out fresh water a little each day and did it so gradually that finally it was all gone. Yet the fish had not been able to detect the decrease. Then he took the fish out of the jar and put it in a bird cage and fed it like a bird, but one dav when he was gone his attendant thought the fish was not doing well and he put a saucer of water in the cage that the fish might moisten its food. When the man came back, behold the fish had got his head in the water and drowned, because it was not used to it. (Great applause.) "My opponents think you can gradually substitute somelhing else for money and do it so fcrradunlly that after a while people will not know what to do with money if they had :t: but. my friends, it won't work. Now. if population and business and prosperity increases, don't you suppose bank deposits will increase also? What are- you going to do If your money does not keep pace with the population, industry and prosperity? How are you going to have money to act as security for depositors? Yet our opponents in charge of the financial system in the last two years have decreased the circulating medium more than on hundred and fifty mil lion dollars, instead of giving us an increase we have a decrease of more than one hundred and fifty millions in two years. That means there must be less prosperity, less deposits, or else that reserve fund will not be sufficient to keep pace with the deposits. Are you going to furnish English money to make banking safe? How; are you going to decrease your circulation and make banking secure? Are you going to lessen the deposits of the people? These questions must be me;, and our opponents are not proposing any increase in the volume er money of this country. I bid you good morning." (Applause.) At Wilson. N. C, Mr. Bryan was introduced by Hon. F. A. Woodard. After a few pleasant references to Senator Daniel, Mr. Bryan said: "It matters little to you whether I or some other man may occupy the presidential chair, but it is a matter cf great importance what policies shall be pursued by the administration to follow the present one. I realize when the people come to meet and see me and hear me, it is not hecause they are Interested in me, but because they believe that through my election they will benefit themselves, their families, their children and posterity to the remotest generations. I have appealed to no man to vote for me as a personal favor. The officer is but the servant, and you should choose that servant who can best do vour work. If I do it better than any other then I am entitled to your votes.. If another can do it better than I. I have no claim on your suffraere. All I ask is that each citizen, recognizing the responsibility of citizenship, shall make his ballot register a free man's will." (Great applause.) Tlie Potter Hair. New York Evening Sun. Australian women are. metaphorically speaking, prostrating themselves before Mrs. Cora Urquhart Potter just now. The prostrations are inspired by gratitude, pure and simple. The society women of Melbourne have, it seems, been racking their brains for some time for a new mode of dressing the hair, but there was no one cf sufficient importance in the province to create a style which would be followed by everybody. At this opportune moment Mrs. Potter appeared upon the scene with her hair parted on one side. The effect was instantaneous. The evening of the second performance found full half the women seated in the orchestra chairs with their hair parted on one side, and by the third night the fashion had spread to the dress circle. A Melbourne journal takes pride in recording the names of those who discarded the fringe net and frizzes and w'ere colffured a la Pottrr. Evidently, the actress has succeeded in filling a long-felt hirsute want In Australia. .

CONVICTED OF MURDER

FRAMv SHIELDS FOOD Gl'ILTY OF KILLI.XG JOHN WADE. Will Spend the Remainder of Hla Life in Prison Insane Man at La ri;e Jail Delivery. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. FRANKLIN, Ind., Sept.- IS. Frank Shields, who shot John Wade at Edinburgh last May, will, according to the verdict of the jury, expiate the crime by spending the remainder of his life in prison. The verdict was returned by the jury at 9 o'clock to-night. A new trial will probably not be asked, the prisoner being apparently content to accept the finding. He evinced no sign of surprise or agitation when " the verdict was read. Many had predicted that his punishment would be even severer than it was. Badse Presentation. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. WABASH. Ind.. Sept. 18. Judge Harvey B. Shively, past commander of the Department of Indiana, G. A. R., was this evening formally presented with the beautiful badge which, according to usage, is bestowed upon all retiring commanders. The ceremony took place at the court room, which was handsomely decorated for the occasion, in the presence of a large audience. Hon. Henry C. Pettit delivered an address of welcome to the visiting officers of the G. A. R.. to which Department Commander Caylor happily responded. Judare Marsh, of Winchester, ex-department commander, also made a brief and appropriate address, presenting the elegant badge to Judge Shively, who expressed his thanks in fitting words. Alvah Taylor presided at the meeting, which, in point of attendance and interest manifested, was a high compliment to Judge Shively, than whom no resident of Wabash county is more esteemed. Adjutant-general R. M. Smock, after the presentation speech, delivered a tine address, and the remainder of the evening was devoted to social amenities. DePanw's Football Team. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. GREENCASTLE, Ind., Sept. IS. Frank Roller, the celebrated football guard, over whom there has been some controversy as to whether he would play at DePauw or at Lafayette, arrived here this afternoon. Mr. Roller would not commit himself as to which college he would attend, but it is known that some flattering offers have been made him at PurdiTe and also at Chicago University. Local enthusiasts think, however, that they will be able to retain Roller here, where he will lit nicely in the greaj team DePauw is organizing for the fall series. DePauw already has coach Wade, of Harvard, cn the ground; Williams, the great Chicago player, is here, and Davis. Wolf. Walker. Drull and others are In daily training. White-omb. of Yale, is expected. Claude D. Hall, one of last year's best players, may return and go on the team. The local team will be the strongest the university ever had. Distilleries to Be Started. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. TERRE HAUTE, Ind., Sept. IS. Several directors of the American Distributing Company have been here this week arranging to start one or more of their mammoth distilleries. It is announced that the Indiana, which was in operation last winter, will start the first of next month at 6,000 bushels daily capacity. The cattle to be fed will be one bead for each bushel. It is also announced that possibly the new Majestic, the largest distillery in the world, will be started in November. The two belong to the Distributing company, and it is understood the company has a pooling agreement with the Whisky Trust by which the output in the several cities where they have distilleries 's limited. For this reason it is not expected that the Wabash distillery, owned by the trust, will be in operation this winter. Farmers Fair. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. FARMLAND, Ind., Sept. 18. The farmers of the several townships of the southern part of this county have just closed a successful three days' fair, which was held in a beautiful grove two miles south of town. The display in every department was of high order, showing a careful preparation for the event. Hundreds of visitors were attracted there each day to witness the fine showing of horses, cattle, hogs, sheep, poultry and a magnificent display of all kinds of agricultural and horticultural products. This is the third fair held by the farmers of those townships, and the results show that every branch of agriculture and of fine stock raising has been greatly stimulated since the introduction of these annual exhibits wherein the largest pumpkin and the fattest calf play but the smallest part. Alain Cave Miner Refuse to Quit. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. SHELBURN, Ind.. Sept. 18. Three hundred miners from camps surrounding this place went to Alum Cave last evening in an endeavor to induce the men at work there to quit. Ten or fifteen out of the 150 men employed at the Cave agreed to stop, but this morning they all showed up for work. The Alum Cave men claim that while they are on a different system, on the whole, they are receiving better pay than last year. It is reported that at a meeting at Jackson Hill the miners at that point decided to return to worK again since they could not get the Alum Cave men to quit. Will Wait for the Election. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. TIPTON, Ind., Sept. 18. N. S. Martz, pro prietor of the Martz canning factory, that was destroyed by fire last Tuesday night, is undecided about rebuilding. He says that if the country goes to free coinage of silver he is sure that he will not rebuild. Since the passage of the Wilson-Gorman tanrr law tne business nas been so unprofitable that many canning factories have quit the business, and unless better protec tion is given to agriculture there will be but few, if any, canning factories in this country in a few years. Chase After nn Insane Man. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. TERRE HAUTE, Ind., Sept. 18. Lewis Donham, a prominent farmer from near Cory, is Insane and roaming the country between that place and this city pursued by a number of his neighbors. One of the pursuers saw him last evening as he ran into a cornfield eight miles from here. He was barefooted and without coat or hat. Tuesday morning he suddenly left the breakfast table and ran to the woods. It is thought he has had no food since then. The cause of his insanity is supposed to be business affairs. Jail Delivery at Liberty. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. LIBERTY, Ind.. Sept. 18. Two men, L. L. Cully, incarcerated for larceny, and a mulatto, Erastua Warren, held on a charge of bastardy, in the Union county jail, last night sawed the bars in their cell and, escaping to the central corridor, dug their way through the outside wall. Both are voung in years and not known as har dened criminals. They have not been heard of as yet. but Sheriff Davis will institute search. He has advertised a liberal reward for their apprehension. Another Failure at LoRnnsport. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. LOGANSPORT. Ind.. Sept. 18. Kreis Brothers Manufacturing Company, one of the largest dealers in hardware, buggies and carriages, bicycles, etc., in this city. suspended business this afternoon, and a receiver was appointed to wind up their affairs. The assets are claimed to be over $60,000. with liabilities of but $17,C00. Ina bility to collect accounts owing them with which to meet mitured ard maturing ob ligations is assigned as the reason for the failure. Drakrmen Killed. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. COLUMBUS. Ind., Sept. lS.-David Hall, a brakeman in the Pennsylvania yards here, while coupling cars was thrown beneath a moving train and was horribly mangrled. The wheels ran over his right arm, his abdomen and r'ght leg. He died art hour later. He was forty-nine years old and leaves a wife and four children living at North Madison. HounebvraklaB In Lawrence County. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. MITCHELL. Ind.. Sept. , IS. So much -I housebreaking1 and larceny have been com

mitted here recently that the horse-thief association has been reorganized, with quite a large number of new members, and is prepared to do active service whenever the occasion presents itself. The association did some excellent work here a lew years ago. Four Alleged Counterfeiters. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. VINCENNES, Ind., Sept. 18. Four alleged counterfeiters were captured to-day In this city by United States Deputy Marshal Graves, of Evansvllle. The names of those arrested are John Johnson, Henry Holman, Edward Froelke and Claude Bouchie. They were taken to Evansville, where they will be tried in the federal court. ...

Hartford City Shoot. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. HARTFORD CITY. Ind., Sept. IS. The gun club shoot yesterday afternoon for the Bell medal was one of the most exciting of the year. Following is the score out of thirty targets of unknown angles: William Rosenbaum. El; Milt Forbis. 19; Ed Cooley, 23; James Lechery, 16; Harry Heiny, 2tJ; Bryan Snell,.2; Adolph Wuchner, 22. Farmer Makes an ANslffnment. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. GREENCASTLE. Ind.. Sept. 18. Joseph B. Bowen,, a farmer, ; residing near New Maysville, this county, made an assignment to-day for benefit of his creditors, naming John L. Jones as assignee. Five hundred acres of land and personal effects to a total of $18,000 are involved. It is thought the assets will cover the liabilities. Fatally Hnrt by a Train. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. MARION, Ind.. Sept. 18. Samuel Havens, a plasterer cf this city, was struck by a Clever-leaf train this morning and received injuries from which it is impossible for him to recover. Havens is blind in one eye and did not hear or see the train approaching. State Death Record. UNION CITY. Ind.. Sept. 18. Jacob Siple dropped dead from heart failure in front of the Commercial Bank, of this city, at 3 o'clcck this afternoon. He had just descended the stairway leading from Dr. Ruby's office, where he had been in consultation with the doctor, when he was seen to sink to the sidewalk and was dead before assistance could reach him. He was a well-to-do farmer, living one mile south of this city, about seventy years of age and highly respected. He leaves a widow and family of grown children to mourn his loss. LIGONIER. Ind., Sept. 18. Judge Harrison Wood, of this city, died here to-day. He was one of the pioneers of northern Indiana, also one of Its wealthiest citizens. He served two terms as sheriff from 1S44 and served as circuit judge for many years. He was eighty years old. Irdiana Kotes. The Thirty-fourth Indiana Regiment held its reunion at Montpelier on Thursday. Ninety per cent, of the veterans declared openly for McKInley. The seventeenth annual reunion of the Fifty-seventh Indiana Regiment will occur at Daleville Oct. - 7 and 8, and extensive preparations are already being made. Cambridge City, Wayne county, has been chosen as the place for holding the next session of the Eleventh district Knight of Pytnias convention. It will occur in March. It was the intention to hold, at Richmond, in November, a convention of the Societies of Christian Endeavor included in the Indiana Yearly Meeting of Friends, but it has been postponed until February. Judge Koons. of Muncie, has named the date for the second trial of Francis Gallagher for Nov. 9. Gallagher was convicted of manslaughter, for the killing of Joseph Reed and James Dugan last April and sentenced to twenty-one years in the State prison, but secured a new trial. Prof. Wm. H. Bowers has been appointed superintendent of the Union City public schools, to fill the vacancy occasioned by the death of the late Mrs. Susan G. Pattereon. Miss Nellie Deem, who has been the assistant principal of the high schools at St. Paul, Minn.j.for several years, has been appointed to fill the vacancy occurring by the promotion of Professor Bowers. The annual reunion of the Seventy-fifth and One-hundred-and-first Indiana Volunteer Infantry will be held in Elwood on Oct. 1 and 2 and a full attendance of all the members of these regiments is earnestly requested. The railroads will give reduced rates. J. M. Overshiner is president of the association, and H. C. Lyst is secretary, both of Elwood. and they are hard at work preparing for the occasion. TELEGRAPHIC BREVITIES ; Joseph Williams, of Motley, Minn., is under arrest at St. Paul for shooting his brother-in-law. John Cole, in Irvin county, Kentucky, four years ago. The Pope, in an apostolic letter, proclaims that the Anglican ordinations are absolutely invalid, and his Holiness invites the Anglicans to return to Catholic unity. Alfred G. Whitehead, recently liberated from Portland prison, to which he had been sentenced for life for alleged com plicity in an Irish dynamite plot, has arrived at New York. Near Belvidere. 111., yesterday. Edward Shannon shot and killed his wife in a coach on the Chicago & Northwestern railroad. The murder was the result of divorce proceedings instituted by the woman. The executive committee of the goldstandard Democratic organization in Kansas held a meeting yesterday at Topeka and placed a ticket of presidential electors in nomination in behalf of Palmer and Buckner. ' . At St. Louis yesterday Mrs. Zora Grawe. a widow, was shot and almost instantly killed in her own house by Charles Weisler. a young man who has been boarding with her. Weisler declared that the shooting was entirely accidental. At Tahlequah. I. T.. yesterday, James Swimmer, a full-blooded Cherokee Indian, and Harry Williams, colored, a youth of eighteen, were hanged for murder. Swimmer killed Edward F. Aldridge. also a Cherokee. Williams's crime was the murder of Crockett Mackay. a colored boy. Movements of Steamers. NEW YORK, Sept. IS. Arrived: California, from Leghorn; Columbia and Prussia, from Hamburg; Lucania. from Liverpool; St. Louis, from Southampton. Sailed: Karlsruhe, for Bremen; State of Nebraska, for Glasgow. CHERBOURG. Sept. 18. Sailed: Normannia, from Hamburg and Southampton, for New York. QUEENSTOWN. Sept. 18. Arrived: Campania, from New York, for Liverpool. MOVILLE, Sept. 18. Sailed: CIrcassia, from Glasgow, for New York. QUEENSTOWN, Sept. 18. Sailed: Catalonia, for Boston. LIVERPOOL, Sept. 18. Sailed: Bovic, for New York. BREMERHAVEN, S-pt. 1. Sailed: Bonn, for New York. NAPLES. Sept. 18. Sailed: Ems, for New York. Business Embarrassments. HOLLIDAYSBURG, Pa.. Sept. IS. The private banking house of Gardiner, Morrow & Co., the oldest bank in central Pennsylvania, closed its doors to-day, owing to a general depression of business. An as?ignment has been made to John Cree. The firm says' Mutt it expects to pay every dollar of indebtedness. Thomas H. Suckling, cloth'er; Henry L. Bunker, meat market, and Charles E. Reed, grocer, three prominent merchants who are debtors to the bank, have failed. The three stores were closed on executions of $25,000. VINTON. Ia.. Sept. 18. The banking house of Watson & Sons, established forty years ago, made a general assignment this afternoon to Matt Gassch for the benefit of all creditors. The liabilities are estimated at $250,000 and assets at $350,000. . All depositors and other creditors will be paid in full. The assignment eaused considerable excitement, but will not affect other banks in town. ST. LOUIS. Mo.. Sept. IS. N. P. Simmons & Krausnick. wholesale milliners of this city, made an assigment to-dav in favor of the Mississippi Valley Trust Company. Liabilities, $130,000; nominal assets, $200,000. Silver Vs.' Love. Cleveland Leader. Helen I'm surprised to hear that you and Mr. Mabie have broken off. I thought you regarded him as such an excellent gentleman. Clara I did until he and papa got to discussing the silver question. The man who thinks that a dollar will buy too much is not the kind of person I want to pick out an engagement ring for me. Bound for Canton. CHICAGO, Sept. 18. Eleven trains, carrying about five thousand employes of the different railroads in Chicago, left the city to-night for Canton. O. A parade through the down-town streets preceded the departure of the trains. Obitnary. CHICAGO. Sept. 18. Lieutenant C. F. Norton. LV S. N.. died here to-day of Brisht's disease, after a brief illness.

LOOKS MORE WARLIKE

TURKEY'S SULTAN PARADING HIS ALLIANCE WITH n't SSI A. The Casnr's Officers Permitted to Inspect Dardanelle Forts Italian Fleet in thss Levant. LONDON. Sept. IS. While there is no outward change in the situation at Constantinople, the Turkish question is still the uppermost one here. The Neu Frie Presse, of Vienna, says that the inspection of the forts of the Dardanelles by the Russian generals is the Sultan's reply to England's effort to force him to abdicate, and that it is also the response of Russia, which has taken the Sultan under its protection to England's menace. The British Mediterranean squadron is expected to arrive at the island of Lemnos (island of St. Alamini) to-day. Active preparations for sea duty are proceeding among the vessels composing the Russian Black sea squadron. An official communique prohibits meetings of foreigners in Constantinople, and says that all foreigners who do not enjoy the confidence of the government will be expelled. A special dispatch received here from Rome says that Vice Admiral Canevaro, with the flying squadron, leaves for the Levant at the earliest moment possible. THREATS OF ANARCHISTS. Unless Tynan Is Released They Will Kill a French Prosecutor. LONDON, Sept. 18. French Anarchists have taken up the cause of P. J. P. Tynan, the alleged Irish dynamiter. M. Bossau, the deputy police prosecutor at Boulougne-sur-Mer, in charge of the case against Tynan, received a violent letter to-day informing him, in the name of a committee of Invincibles and the Anarchist Brotherhood, that unless Tynan is released within twenty-four hours M. Bossau will be blown up with dynamite. The letter is written with a red fluid, believed to be blood, is dated Thursday, Sept. 17, and was posted at Leon, capital of the department of Aisne, about eighty-six miles from Paris. As a result of the alleged disclosures said to have been made by the finding of documents upon the person of Edward J. Ivory, alias Edward Bell, of New York, who has been brought to London from Glasgow on the charge of being implicated in the dynamite conspiracy, the number of policemen ow duty in plain clothes at the House of Parliament, the Mansion House, the Royal Exchange, the National Gallery, the British Museum, St. Paul's Cathedral, Westminster Abbey and other public buildings have been doubled. The War Office .has also taken additional precautions here, besides doubling the force of police and sentinels who are guarding the powder magazines at Woolwich. A dispatch from Paris says: It is now said that it is impossible to extradite Tynan on the charge of having been connected with the Phoenix Park murders, as the French statute of limitations intervenes. The Frlnce Was Not Injured. LONDON, Sept. 18. The sensational story circulated in the United TStates to the effect that the Prince of Wales had been injured while out shooting at Tulchan Lodge, Sassoon Place, in the Highlands of Scotland, is a canard. The incident used to create the sensation occured last week, while the Prince of Wales was the guest of Earl Crew, during the Doncaster racing. At that time, while the Prince was out shooting, some pellets from his gun struck an iron railing, rebounded and hit a beater. Nobody was injured, however, and the Prince of Wales was not touched by a single pellet. IT BRINGS COURAGE. To a Weak Nature the Wheel Acts as .. n. Moral Braee. San Francisco Call. From its incipiency wheeling has not been a Question of sex. Drop frames were invented almost at the same time as safeties themselves, and since the advent of pneumatic tires women have been walking upon air as easily and fearlessly as the sterner sex. To be sure, there always have been and perhaps though the saints forfend always will be those who aver that it is forward in the extreme for woman to attempt anything man does, for nine cases out of ten these conservatives are women; men. realizing that imitation is the sincerest flattery, are urbanely indifferent. These back-pedalers have from time immemorial insisted that women should clothe their feet in such manner as to entirely preclude the firm, free tread of a man; that their tender brains were capable of assimilating only such delicate food as music, drawing and a little French, and that to breathe from the abdomen was a highly improper and unladylike proceeding, the correct form being a little gasp emanating about four inches down the trachea. Mother Eve was in luck. Dame Fashion was as yet unborn, and she did not have to wear her first primitive summer costume one way because Adam saw fit to wear his the other. The end of the century and the wheel are to be praised for some things. Cycling fosters the spirit of independence so dear to every true American. What can typify liberty and self-reliance like an American girl' on her wheel? Her cheeks flush under the wind's soft kisses, her eyes glow, her whole personality raidiatos health and strength. She is a veritable electric current to the jaded sisterhood on foot. One waxes enthusiastic over the picture thus conjured up. But this is after she learns to ride. Before this well, we can fancy a braver and more imposing spectacle than a girl learning to ride. We all remember the time. It looks so easy that we climb on the saddle, feeiin.fr, oh, so brave! And then, some way, we begin to wish we had put it off for a day or so. We are not feeiing quit well to-day, and we grasp the unlucky man who is trotting valiantly around the block with us. and we sit up very risid and very crooked, and we squeal, oh, how we squeal! How it all comes back to one! Frank Stockton has written a story, entitled "The Discourager of Hesitancy," in which a certain barbaric king offers a reward to any wise man in his realm who shall solve for him the mystery of "The Lady or the Tiger." A sable block, a masked headsman and a Damascus biadu were within easy reach to stimulate theirminds and prevent hesitation or prevarication. Now. had that barbaric king been a modern and not a barbarian, he would have doomed these unfortunates to ride a wheel. As a "discourager of hesitancy" it is an unparalleled success. When you are riding through town on a busy afternoon, trying to decide whether being run down by a trolley car is preferable to being flattened out by a fire engine with wheels "to the right" of you. wheels "to the left" of you, wheels behind you there isn't much surplus time to "reason why." It is odd. and furnishes pabulum for reflection, to see delicate, nervous girl, whom a spider could throw into convulsions, treading her way fearlessly through the close-moving masses of a city's thoroughfares. To a weak, vacillating nature the wheel is a moral 'bracer. To the timid it brings courage; to the reckless it brings caution. MR. MARTIN'S OBSTACLE. Matrimony Will Continue to Be Popular in Spite of It. Kansas City Journal. , Mr. E. S. Martin has written a paper for the Cosmopolitan on "The New Obstacle in Love Affairs," which would seem to be the ringing of another change on the theme of lack of wealth as an obstacle to or preventive of marriage. Why this lack should be spoken of as a new obstacle is not easy to understand. Discrepancy of fortune between the hero and the heroine must have figured in the first novel ever written. The lack of money on one side and swollen wealth on the other has been the novelist's theme always, dividing the time with the trouble arising from exalted birth on one side and only fair to medium on the other. The poor young man and the millionaire's daughter and the earl's son and the miller's or farmer's daughter, have had their anxieties and vicissitudes ever since the first romancist took his pen and ink horn and wrote: "Once upon a time." And then, the "new obstacle." beside not being new at all. is not so very much of an "obstacle." If anybody took notice and kept count it would appear that wealth or the lack of it cuts no figure at all in the matter of falling in love and staying there, and not much in the matter of marriage. Of course the talk to the contrary is as old as the oldest hill In the business. Writers have keen insisting ever since anybody can remember and for a long time before, that marriage was becoming more ana more expensive and that, consequently, matrimony was geing more and more out of fashion, but there has never been sound sense in that sort of talk and there ia not now. The habit of blaming the age aa the most expensive and extravagant ever known is

very old. It is probable that when the first man thought of making his dress coat out of two coon rkins instead of one. there was an outcry against sumptuous and extravagant apparel, and when the first woman discovered that urticles of food might be boiled in a kltle as well as roasted In the ash"s. there first arose this alleged "obstacle," the objection that the expenses of housekeeping, including kettles, were far beyond the means of the ordinary man, and that marriage was becoming an impossible institution. In fact, the supposed extravagance of women with their "broidered hair and jewels" is the subject of denunciation by the oldest of prophets and moral and religious teachers. The "obstacle." be it old or new. has always been there, but it is a sincere pleas

ure to announce that it has never been un- i conquerable. Perhaps it has prevented the j course of true love from running smooth, i but it has never stepped its flow. The world ; has never yet become too poor for love or j marriage, and wedded happiness has yet j been quoted as "out cf sight." i Mr. Martin, in his survey of the obstacle" says that "statisticians have reckoned that it costs $?.W0 for a small family to live a year in New York in decorous semicomfort." To two young people who are looking forward to life together, with a small family as an incident, statisticians do not tmoun! to much, even when they j tell the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth, and the truth' Is that there are many more families living in New York and in sufficient comfort, according to their ideas, who pay less than $8,(h0 a year than who pay that sum or more. and. taking the country over, $?.0CO a year is not considered a prerequisite to marriage and a small family by any manner of means. Love affairs, such as are generally intended to terminate in marriage, will be continued frcm this date to the end of the world without reference to the financial question. The currency supply, the prevailing rate of interest, and the condition of the money market, may have slightly delayed, but never yet prevented the union of two hearts that beat as one. And when two souls have determined on a single thought they will keep on thinking, no matter what it costs to keep house. And it is singular that all the statisticians have, not yet settled what it does cost to keep house in this country. Mr. Martin's statisticians figure SS.00O as the cost of domestic felicity. But plenty of ether statisticians might be found who would make the price 5300. There was once a learned man in Massachusetts who lived a year for $W. He lived and died a bachelor, but probably he would have estimated the annual expenses of a small family at $100 per annum. There are no new obstacles, no more reasons and arguments against the promptings of the human heart than there have been before, and in this country at this time those who are in the midst cf love affairs, their plans and expectations, mav have the consolation of knowing that what money they chance to possess, be the amount ever so small, will go further in buying what they need than ever before. If they have nothing, they do not belong to the poor, who are said to be growing poorer. If they have anything they are richer than people who had the same amount fifty years ago. The lack of a great deal cf money is less an obstacle now than at any time in the past. The talk of the extravagenee of modern housekeeping is largely twaddle. People buy more because there is more to buy and increasing cheapness has made it accessible. If "love in a cottage" was ever a reality it still remains so. with a good deal better ccttage for the same money. Let us her no more of "obstacles." DESTRUCTIVE STORM. . Buildiners Dniuiised and Late Crops Destroyed in Pennsylvania. PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 1S.-A storm of wind, hail and rain swept over the eastern part of Pennsylvania last night. Scores of buildings were unroofed, some of them utterly ruined; thousands of panes of window glass and many skylights were shattered, while the apple and other late crops were almost destroyed. The storm was the most severe in Chester, Montgomery, Berks, Bucks, Lehigh and Lycoming counties. In the vicinity of Hatfield, Montgomery county, about thirty houses and barns were unroofed. Two grist mills owned by George Snyder were wrecked, together with his dwelling. Reports received from Shenandoah state that all the apple orchards in the Catawissa valley have been stripped of their fruit. Three thousand panes of glass were broken. The large greenhouses of J. L. Dalton, at Bloomsburg, were damaged to the extent of $3,00'', and several houses were unroofed, in Williamsport and vicinity great damage was done. George Wickel. a farmer, was killed by lightning while working in his corn field. A portion of the Williamsport rolling mill was blown down and every window on the north and west sides of the big Central-avenue school building was broken. Fruit trees in the Blake Hole valley were stripped of fruit. The country surrounding Reading suffered considerably. Many houses and barns were badly damaged. Fruit trees and windows near Westchester suffered severely from the large hailstones and the heavy winds. NAVIGATION IMPEDED BY PLANTS. Florida's Great Waterway Almost Blocked Ip by Floating; Hyucinths. Florida Times-Union. A trip on the St. John's river in midsummer is quite different from a trip made during the height of the tourist season, but it is a trip well worth taking. From Jacksonville, which was left at 5 p. m., tho steamer ploughed its way along the broad St. John's, stopping at PIcolata, and reaching Palatka at midnight. The river is so wide for this part of the trip that nothing could be seen of any interest. Occasionally small "floating islands" were seen in" the river, which the captain said were formed of water hyacinths. The reporter had heard of the river being blocked bv this p!ant. but seeing only the small patches floating by. could form no idea of the manner in which such plants could block navigation or keep a boat from making a landing. At Palatka the steamer lands first at the railroad dock just below the bridge, and then at the city dock at the foot of Lemon street above the bridge. In passing through the draw and approaching ihe city dock an idea can be obtained of the obstruction caused by the hyacinths. Banfced against the piers of the bridge and the piling of the .wharves along the city front. are acres and acres of the innocent-looking plant, and it was with difficulty that the steamer forced her way to the dook and made a landing. Leaving Palatki. the channel was nearly clear of the hyacinths until San Mateo was reached, but from there nearly- up to the railroad bridge at Buffalo Bluff, from bank to bank, the surface of the water was literally covered with the floating plants. Hardly a square foot of water could be seen. Captain Shaw and the pilot kept a close lookout for logs and snags. The speed of the steamer was reduced at least one-half in pushing its way through this marss of vegetation and when open water was at last reached, all on board were relieved, for a floating log struck in mid stream might knock in the hull and cause 4 the steamer to rapidly fill and sink. Several times a slight jar was felt as the boat raked against a log or snag, but no damage was done. "The first wind from the south will move this entire field of hyacinths down to Palatka and back them against the bridge." said Captain Shaw. "When they reach the bridge they will begin to roll under and undr each other until they form five or six feet deep: then no vessel (-an push them and navigation has to stop." "What can be done to get rid of the hyacinths?" asked the reporter. "There is only one.tldng to be done, and that is remove them, or the river will soon have to be abandoned. The problem is one that has racked the brains of river men for a couple of years, but it has not yet been solved. Several years ago there was some talk of the water lettuce blocking navigation of the river. Now not a leaf of water lettuce can be found. What has become of it? 'Why. it has been killed out by the water hyacinth. The government must act. and that promptly." Continuing up the river, both banks wer seen to be lined with the hyacinths, and every steamer runnine into the river was completely blocked with the growth. At several landings men were seen loafing around doin? nothing but cursing the water hyacinth. When asked how they were affected by the piant. they explained by raying that they were loggers and raftsman, who formerly nude their living by cuttin? and rafting logs down the creeks and rivers to the St. Johns. Now their occupation Is gone, for nothing can be rafted, rowed or pulled on these streams. The hyacinths have taken possession, and penetrated far into the heart of the swamps. Lake George, the largest bodv of water between Jacksonville and Iake Monroe. Is rapidly being covered with the same growth, which floats from one side of the lake to the other. At Volusia bar. where the river runs into the lake, there is great danger of the total obstruction of the river. At this point the river is very shallow, for it has been some time since the bar received any attention from the government. From Volusia bar to Lake Baresford the sains conditions exist aa below Lake George. In Lake Bcresford nearly the entire surface of the water is covered with iiyaeinths. and so on up to Lake Monroe. It Was Really Tea. Buffalo Courier. A fakir of a new variety was seen at the pioneers' picnic at Oicott yesterday.

He was literally selling cold tea. It had been decreed that no beer or intoxicant of any kind should be sold, and so thl particular individual lit upon an Ingenious plan. He soid matches at 00 cents cacti and threw in a bottle of cold ten. The tea bottle was tightly corked, and "the vender made the transfer under the condition that it was not to tie opened in the crowd. "When you get off one side you can open the bott'o and drink your cold tea." he said to buyers, with emphasis upon the term "cold tea." Of course, they thought the bottles contained whisky, and twenty of them walked ur and planked down bO cents each before Sheriff Twohey got wind of what wa going on and blocked the game. The fakir easily drew a crowd, aa he stcod about fifteen feet high on sttlts. and was in woman's attire, with black gown, long hair and plenty of paint upon the mask. He took in $10 and was probably well nieased. Sheriff Twohey said to-day that if people were fools enough to run up against such a game as that they ought to nay for it, and he did not arrest the fakir. IN A CONSTANTINOPLE MOB. ,

The Wife of Consul-Genernl Short Has an Exciting Experience. A letter was received in this city yesterday by relatives of. Luther Short, the Franklin (Ind.) editor who is now consulger.eral at Constantinople, in which Is related the exciting experiences of Mrs. Short during the recent reign of terror In the Turkish metropolis. On the day the Armenians broke into tha Ottoman Bank. Mrs. Short was shopping in the neighborhood. Suddenly there was a great din and excitement on the streets, which filled rapidly with a mob. The keeper of the store in which Mrs. Short was making her purchases called his ussistant and in a Jiffy they had the doors and windows barred and the shutters locked. Mrs. Short could hear the cries of the mob cutside and grew very much alarmed. She, begged the storekeeper to let her get out. as she was afraid the mob would soon begin to sack the bazaars. She made her way through the shouting people in tha street and fortunately fell in with the people who were flocking to the various consulates for protection. Before she had gone very far, Mr, Short, who had started out to search for her, met her and they both reached the consulate In safety. After the riots they, with the families of most of the other consular officers at Constantinople, took up their residence at a summer villa on the Bosphtjtus. The Turkish government has furnished each of the consuls with a bodyguard of one, and Mr. Snort says he believes his guard -would lay down his life for him at any time, so faithful does the soldier seem. CITY NEWS NOTES. Mr. Henry Knipponburg, formerly of thin city and now of Montana, has been chosen Republican candidate for elector in that State. Among the recent Indianapolis arrivals at the St. Denis. N. Y.. were J. V. Banks. N. C. Butler. Miss Anna Butler, Miss Alica Butler and P. B. Raymond. In the Edwin Ray Methodist Church tomorrow morning at 10:30 o'clock an address will be delivered by S. C. Oilman on "Lessons from the Lives and Works of Christian Authors." Miss Ethel Curryer will conduct the sonjf service at the Young Women s Christi-iu Association to-morrow. "Rivers of LivingWater" will be the subject. Every young woman in the city is Invited. There is general complaint about tha water at school No. 35 on Madison avenue. The teachers refuse to drink it and will not allow the pupils to use it on account of its foul taste. There Is no other water near enough the building to be used. Horace Haynes, who has a restaurant at No. 72 North Delaware street, opposite Tomlinson Hall, has purchased Kerschner Bros." North Pennsylvania-street restaurant. Mr. Haynes formerly had charge of Mr. Taggart's restaurant in the L nion Station. In Police Court, yesterday afternoon. Mason McFarren, a colored man, was fined $29 and sentenced to fifty days in the workhouse on the double charge of assault and unlawful cohabitation. A large number of the members of McFarren's church were present as witnesses. Robert Simms. colored, of 2fi3 Lafayette street, was arrested yesterday afternoon, charged with an attempted assault upon a young woman Wednesday evening. When arrested Simms had several bottles of whisky, supposed to have been taken from Hurty's drug store, where he is employed as porter. ; ; There Will be a special service at tho Seventh PresbyterUn Church to-morrow morning. The First and Second Regiments of the "Boys' Brigade" of Indiana will attend the service in a body. Tho services will be in charge of Rev. R. V. Hunter, who was formerly pastor of the church, for eight years. A driving matinee will be given by the Business Men's Driving Club next Wednesday. The programme will include a 2:30 pace, a three-minute pace and a fuee-for-all. There will be small purses for the winners. Visitors will be admitted free. Nyne but members of the club will be permitted to enter the races. Young: Woman Chnrsed vHth Larceny, two, who has for several days been stopping at the Enterprise Hotel, was arrested last night on the charge of petit larceny. For several days roomers In the hotel have been missing small sums of money from their rooms, and suspicion fell upon the Riffner woman. She denied the charge when accused, but said she would pay the amount missing rather than have further trouble. She paid back $6. but her arrest followed, nevertheless. She was very calm and collected when she was slated at tha police station. An Expensive- Post. Harper's Weekly. It was recently reported that the post ol military attache to the American embassy to London was vacant, and had been offered to three officers., all of whom hav declined it on the ground that their, salaries could not support the dignity of. the job. It is a very pretty place, and one that has not been used to go begging.' 14 calls for an officer of the rank of major, and gives him little to do except to look handsome and to adorn London society with his presence. Me is entitled to weai th3 most decorative clothes of any one connected with the emhassy.. When he rides out with the embassador h goes or. th front seat inside, and not on the box seal with the coachman, as ill-informed person! have erroneously supposed. OoDcrtunitiei to meet folks that really are folks come tq him daily. He dines out nearly every night, and seldom is at less for a hearty meal ol nourishing food. His chief expenses art for, lodgings and cab hire, hut the hesitation cf worthy officers to accept tho placfl indicates that even those expenses may b too considerable. The' real trouble musl be that the majors in Uncle Sam's arms are middle-aged men with families, and a salary that might maintain the attacht himself well enough in London will nol his" absence or with him abroad, ir lieutenants had rank enough for the place' 11 would probably be easy to keep it filled with young unmarried officers of the requisite stature and comeliness. Their Similarity. Pittsburg Chronicle-Telegraph. "A postage stamp Is like a boy." re. marked Mr. Snaggs to his son. "Because it sticks to Its work till it rcu there. I suppose," replied Sammy Snaggs. who is a smart boy. "No," corrected his papa. "That Is ho it. A bov and a postage stamp are much alike because neither is of much use until well licked." NATIONAL Tube Works Wrougut-lron Pipe for Gas, Stem and Water. IJoUcrTutx.Cast n! Mal! able Iron Ktuliiurs(t!aci :n4 Btt.vanizpit). alT'. S!n Cork. Knclli Trlininlbjc strain (iniigcul, I'll Tonic I'tpe Cutter. VInm. Scrr Platr ;i l DIM, Wrm he Menm Traini. Pumps. Kin h. rn Mnkt. ilo. ilcltin. :abllt Mutal. MoMrr. Vbu ua Colored Wiping Wast-, ani ail oilier tipi!l4 uhi ii .-onur'(Kn with Oaa, steam anil Wtr. Natural (i&i Kupplirf a ipwi-lalty. Strxm. heatini Apparatus for Public HullUlnir, More-mom, Mills, fiaopn.i actorie. Laun dries, I.umlir I)rv-Hoiuta, etc. Cut and Thread t or1er anr ti Wroii!;hi-lroi ' Fir, from i; IncU Ut l: li.i (1U meter. , KHIGHT & JILLSOX Wand H , 8. rJOiNSYlYAXIA .'

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