Indianapolis Journal, Volume 51, Number 203, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 July 1901 — Page 3

THE INDIANAPOLIS JOURNAL, -MONDAY. JULY 22, 1901.

3

New York Store!

Established XS53 Sole Ajpnfa Euttericfc rattern Summer Needs Just received another 1X Trunks; special tr morrow at rricesfi!'! ZZf upward from kpu.JVJ Sprinkling Can?. 4 and el-quart G-ilvanized. wrre 25c ami iQr choice 1 1'ic Ice Picks, all meta'; Monday, each 2 Go Carts, were $15; now. toi;Q ff close, each T-UvP 10 C-burner Güne Stove. to0 JQ close at. each Screen Door?, plain 4-panel, 75c CSir kind; Monday, each Fancy Door, any siz In stock; we have all the bet t -Q sdzes. eich I.IV Damaged Doors, choice. Monday, QQC Pettis Dry Goods Co. If you knew the goodness of this CONCORD 9 GRAPE JUICE pure. unferme:itd juice of selected grapes, bottled and hermetically sealed. you'd have it always in the house. It is delicious, satisfying and refreshing-. Good for sick and well. Ever ready. The thing- for table, lunches or picnic baskets. The price is little 45c a quart, pints at 25c, xz pints at 15c. We have alo superior Ginger Ale, lU)t Beranl Vauk(hd Water. All better summer drinks than hydrant water. The N. A. MOORE CO, 162 and 164 North Illinois Street. PHONES 892. BOY'S PECULIAR EXCUSE. George Jennings Telia Why He Droke Into a Store. George Jennings, a fourteen-year-old boy, living at 92S Highland avenue, was arrested yesterday by Bicycle Follcemen Manning and Griffin and charged with entering the store of Charles Haslup. 112S Kast Tenth street, and stealing $2.12 from the money drawer. Young Jennings said he entered through the rear door, which was unlocked, and the reason he went in was because he had worked there for a week and tney had given him nothing for his labor. THE COURT RECORD. CRIMINAL. COURT. Fremont Alford. Judge. The State of Indiana vs. Robert Goldman; grand larceny and embezzlement. State filed general denial to defendant's specific plea of insanity. Tried by court. Finding of guilty of petit larceny. Fine l and sentenced to the workhouse for six months. The State of Indiana vs. Jennie Judd; profanity. Appeal from Smock, J. P. Tried by court. Finding of not guilty. Defendant dismissed. NEW. SUITS. Clara B. Fink vs. John F. Fink; petition for divorce. Circuit Court. John W. Trotter vs. Charles II. Thurston: foreclosure of chattel mortgage. Superior Court. Room 3. Anthony F. Klelnschraldt et al. vs. William Mahn et al.: foreclosure of mecchanics lien. Superior Court, Room 2. Joseph Kernel vs. Henry Relchenmeyer; uit on note. Superior Court, Room 1. HIGHER COURTS RECORD. SUPREME COURT. Minutes. 1S4S4. Thomas Stewart et al. vs. Adam Meldrum & Anderson Company. Huntington C. C. Additional copies appellants' brief (3). Additional copies appellants reply brief (2). 19004. Phebe Green et al. vs. John Starr t al Madison S. C. Appellees' additional authorities (S). APPELLATE COURT. Minutes. 24S4. Western Union Telegraph Company YS. Wlllard Maddux. Lawrence C. C. Appellant's supplemental brief (2). 3670. Isaac Russell vs. Margaret Bruce tt al. Marlon C. C. Appellant's reply brief (8). 31. Indiana. Decatur & Western Railway Company vs. Robert R. Ditto. Vermilion C. C. Appellant's reply brief (8). 3ttl. William 11. Maxwell vs. Henry "Wright et al. Steuben C. C Appellees' brief (8). 3S23. Cornelius M. Horner vs. Hugh Lowe. Cass C C. Appellant's petiUon for leave to tile reply brief. 4C80. George Cheeseman vs. Julia Knarp. VIco S. C. Praecipe. Notice. New Case. 4093. Henry Rohson et a I. vs. John E. Richey et al. Knox C. C. Record. Assignment of errors. Recent Lejnl Opinions. Wagering Contracts Validity. Wagering contracts on the future market price of grain, where it is shown that, notwithstanding their terms, no actual delivery of the grain was contemplated by the parties, are generally held to be Illegal and void In the United States, even In the absence of an express statute declaring them Invalid. (los Federal Kip. (Nebraska, Judge Thayer). 572. Trade Marks Descriptive Words. The words "steel shod." when applied to boots or she whose soles are studded with steel nails to render them more durable, are essentially descriptive and cannot be exclusively appropriated by one manufacturer as a trade mark. ICS Federal Rep.. 621. False Imprisonment Evidence. Where a passenger upon a railroad train has been arrested by the agent of the railroad cmpany for traveling "without having previously paid his fare and with intent to avoid payment thereof." he Is entitled, in his action to recover damages for the arrest, to rrove a custom of the company ünder which he reasonably might and honestly did believe that a ticket which he had purchased from the company, and which he tendered as his fare, was lawful payment for the trip he was making at the Hire of the arrest. f4J Atlantic Reporter New Jersey, Judge Dixon . 127. Negligence Da ma re. A woman seeing a car, which had been derailed while a flying drill was bring made, coining out or the limits of a freight yard Hiid across a public street at great rate of speed toward the place where she was standing, in fright ran for safety and fell, injuring herself. Held, that she was entitled to recover damages for such injury. ? Atlantic Reporter (New .rsey. Judge Vroom), 4o. Ileal-Est Hte Broker Commissions. Where broker, employed to s II real estate, brings about an introduction of a buyer and a negotiation resulting in a purchase endues on that foundation, the owner and buyer cannot by any arrangement disappoint tho claim of the agent for remuneration, ft Atlantic Reporter (New Jersey, Judg Fort). 4vj. j Excavations cn Lnd Duty to Trespassers. One who makes an excavation uron his land Is not bound t so guard it as to prevent Injury to chlMrtn wh funic upon It without his Invitation, express or implied, but who are induced to do so merely by the alluring attractiveness of th excavation in 1 its surroundings. 5. Southeastern Rep. (Georgia. Judge Fish. -'.J Dancing on Sunday. A section if the penal code of the State of New York prehihlu any theatrical r,v other performance on Sunday. Held, that dancing cn Sunday, to the üocompanlmert of a plapo and two violins, not for the purre of üii exhibition, but for enjoyment, is not a violation of such statute by the occuoant of the place where the dancing Is done. (70 ,NVw York Supplement (Judge Akdrew .

AT TABERNACLE CHURCH

IICV. J. ClMMINfi SMITH PHHACIIUS OM Tin: IIKAITY or C.UO." Ills Discourse Cover; a "Wide Itnnge of Thought Hitler Ilartlett Heard Other Service. At the Tabernacle Church yesterday morning the Rev. J. Camming Smith took for his text, "The beauty of God." Isaiah xlill, 1. He said In part: "There is a steady march In the Bible toward God at His best. He reaches the meridian point in the Christ. The Jews compared their Jehovah with the slimy, slippery deities of Nineveh or Egypt and had reason to exult. Everywhere God was held up as a magnet, a drawing power, because of His inherent superiorities, although a little tincture of cxclualveness marred their pride. Beauty of character means the possession of myriad powers and all in harmony. Consequently every form of artistic beauty w.ll catch the eye before the glory of a complete and architectural character will. "It is God greater than sun or rainbow or tropical meadow; It is God towering In His magnificent proportions and munificent in His generosities; it is God holy and loving, a world-winning and wcrld-llfting Being; sympathetic, equitable, pure, capable; such was od to the old prophets. Such was God to Paul. Such v. as Go J to the church in the days of persecution. If so, it seem a pity thej church was ever broken into wasps' nests, ail stinging and hurting one another. Sects were buiit up on texts handled by egotists more or less sincere. Philosophically denominations served a purpose. They articulated different breaths. They certainly suited small-sized human nature. But the points of distinction arc ridiculously petty to moderns. "Fancy agents sent out to sell the thun der-throated Krupp gun and found selling pocket pistols or even tire crackers and squibs! Fancy usents sent out to sell the most perfect many-voiced organ and discovered selling tin whistle: Not greater the incongruity when the church was founded to proclaim a matchless providence, a sea-deep love, . prodigality of unequaled wisdom, a haven of unlimited hospitality, a Calvary Wuose worth probably redeems many wonds besides ours and then the church stoops to technicalities and toy-like trivlaltles and inflames these flimsy points of differerice with venom and volumes of invective. Think of it! A LEGAL RIGHT. "Of course every mar. has a legal right to organize a little church as he has a legal right to open pawnshops. But a moral right is another question. When one remembers the wideness and cosmopolitanism of God's love; when one remembers that the genius of our age is the sighting of unity, and all loyal pulpits are uttering the same message, then it would appear that denominations ought to coalesce and that scores of meeting houses fleecing the people's purses are well night criminal. "Human interpretations of an orbal and opalescent Bible are partial. Children may hold mirrors up to the circling rainbow and each mlrrow will reflect some part of the mighty many-hucd bow, but only a part! Fancy each mirror condemning the others because of its insufficient representation! Such is sectarianism at its core. "If God Is radiant and many-colored as the rainbow it would follow that the Bible would have a large element of imagination. So ic has. The doctrine of inspiration is not a doctrine of imprisonment or suppression, but emancipation of our faculties. Great souls were moved and not mancled when they spoke for Infinite beauty. The grandeur of the opening chapter of Genesis; the sweet idyllic purity of Ruth; the submarine depths of the epic of Job; the thunder and lightning of the apocalypse; the unequaled parables of Jesus; these all are truth embowered in roses. They are facts set to oratorios. "To interpret these accounts so gorgeous and eagle-winged, requires the superb order of mind. Indeed, Dne cause of controversy between science and faith has been that theologians lacked Imagination or humor or artistic taste or literary sense, and construed as literal what the laws of language and literature and especially Oriental literature intended to bo but ornamental. Indeed, interpretation of God and God's word is the climax of human power and evolution. The authority for the world Is neither the Bible by itself nor human reason so often coarse and seamy, but a Christianized human intellectuality, looking into the Bible for the messages of infinite holiness. "There will come a time when a class of men of supreme power will rise and, with mellow, melodious wisdom, discover the great movements of God's mind as Augustine or Turretin or Calvin, in their defective ages and defective temperaments, never could. God looks forward to the perfect creed wnen our unreasonble conservatism looks superstltiously back. "The beauty of God. This allows another application. When grace lays hold of a man it moderates the desire for display. A SUBTLE TEMPTATION. "Beauty, or handsomeness, is a subtle temptation God was kind and few of us have this temptation! Still ugliness is not a means of ;race. A man has no right to flaunt his uncouthness or parade his awkwardness. Every youth ought to go through a military course to learn erectness of carriage; and every girl should take a few lessons in dancing. Diamonds are legitimate when they do not overshine the woman who wears them. Palaces and shining equipages are not wrong unless they really attract more attention than the possessors. The Quakers were a beautiful community. That they overstrained their doctrine!) is clear enough from the fact that their churches are being modernized with oratory and music. Still, we must applaud their artless simplicity. Loudness and godliness are scarcely compatible. Paul warned tho women of the early church to cultivate the inner ornaments of a quiet und sincere faith. "When our aristocracy veers away from the old probity and bonds; when our upspringing classes affect fashion to the exclusion of culture; when polite and sparkling manners are sought and worshiped at the expense of brains and power; when the trick of dodging debts and foisting before others dresses or tineries unpaid for for years; then an era of demoralization has set in. I cannot trust all I hear, but when at least I hear that at certain swell ciubs some ambitious queens love to appear with new and entrancing gowns on Sunday evenings, then beauty has lost its lustre and a cheap gingerbread style of culture leads the way. The gospel is not opposed to a measure of ornamentation; bi.t it favors at all cost a grave culture, a reverence and sincerity of feeling, an inflexible spirit of honor and virility. Let our city grow but oh! keep out the sluttish infamies of Paris! "The beauty of God! This means that a religious life is wh.it rounds out a man to his best form. Extravagance or sensationalism damage and demoralize Christion development. The modern lust for eccentricity has become a disease. Some people pay gladly a dollar to see an acrobat contort his frame. 1 would pay twice that sum to sc a man walk with perfect ;:race. The world offers prizes to bribe a man to twist his mind or act like a harlequin in religion. Better these excesses than tndlfftrence. but better far the ripenlag reason und rising well-drilled manhood coming under the influences of God's spirit and revealing a character musical and symmetrical. This sort of groth gives glory to our cause, it comes into the sphere ot beauty where God dwells clothed in a garment of light. Only a man of comprehensive character can see into anil simplify ou or His word." ELDER A. W. llAItTI. HIT'S M:UMO. lie et Out Ihr Vievw of the Seventh Day tl e ti 1 lt s. At the Central-avenue Seventh Day Adventist Church last nirht Klder A. W. Bartlett preached on the subject of last Sunday's dleourse, "The r.mrt of clod's Judgment Now In Session." in his remarks he said that a report appeared in an Indianapolis paper last Men. lay morning; in which he w.s ropre enu-.! as saving that "During the early years of the Seventh Imv AdventHts w find many cf the doctrine's abirrt teacilers '.Tedlctirg that th r!'l would i to .ui en1 at such a time, and that Christ would show His power bv d.-strnyirg th" world with ure." Th J el. It aU: 'This alleged rm.-.rK is entirely ir.cortec. Th s enguired in th reut AdeT.tist movement of 1M.M4, son'.et:in? f.lpparulv alluded to as th- 'Mill rite craze," b.cd their fallb upon Dar.lel vlil, 14: Tnto two thou?nnd three' hundred dy; then shall the sanctuary be cleansed.' which they mistakenly upjosed referred to Christ's second coming to the earth. The cleansing of the sanctuary Involves h work of !nvetiKktion a work of Judgment. 'I his work jiust be performed prior to the

coming of Christ to redeem His people, for when He comes His reward is with Hl:n to give to every man according to his works. The mistake had not been in the reckoning of the prophetic periods, but in the event to take place at the end of the 2.""o years. Thus those who followed in the lischt of the prophetic word saw that instead of comir.g to the earth at the termination of tho years in 1H4. Christ then entered the most holy place of the heavenly sinctuary to perform the closing work of atonement (or Judgment), prepazatory to His coming. "Some renounced their faith in their reckoning of the prophetic periods, after the passing of the time, while another class firmly hHd that the Lord had led them, and this class a little later developed into the Seventh Day Adventlsts. holding to the Sabbath of the Lord, the soon coming of Cnrlst and that all prophetic periods ended In 1-44 ; and also that there 4s nothing in the Bible to warrant the setting of a definite date for the momentous event yet in the future. "When the work of this great assize shall be ended, when the cases of thoe who In all ages have professed to be followers of Christ have been examined and decided, then probation will close, the seven last plagues will fall upon those who have rejected the offers of mercy, and Christ will appear in the clouds of heaven to tike His redeemed home. "Thug will th great work for the salvation of men be completed. The study of tho sanctuary not only revealed the judgment and Chr'st's second coming, but also showed that if the earthly sanctuary was a pattern of the heavenly, the law deposited in the ark on earth was an exact

copy of the law in the ark in heaven (Rev. xl. 1?k and that acceptance of the truth cone-erning the heavenly sanctuary involved an acknowledgement of the claims of God's law and the obligation of the Sabbath of the fourth commandment. This iz the secret of the Seventh Dav Adventlsts' devotion to the seventh-day Sabbath." Chlcngro Divine In the Pulpit. In the absence of Mr. Villers, the Rev. E. A. Hanley, of the University of Chicago, preached at the First Baptist Church yesterday morning and last night. His evening subject was "Jesus' Refusal to be Made King." Mr. Hanley pointed out that at the time of the great miracle of the loaves i:.d the fishes, Jesus' popularity was at its height, and immediately afterward it began to decline. He s;iid that when Jesus sent the great throng away when it was urging Him to let it crowji Him king, it was a great illustration of Christ's strength against temptation. He knew that His mission was not to be the political leader of the people, but to be their suffering redeemer, and He accepted their disfavor and went away alone, leaving behind Him earthly honor. HOT TOR SOLDIERS. (CONCLUDED FROM FIRST PAGE.) retired list of the guard, visited the camp yesterday and was given a cordial greeting wherever he appeared. When he entered General McKee's office In the administration building General McKee remarked as he grasped him by the hand. " colonel, you are just the Image of President McKinley." Colonel Gunder said that the sight of the camp made him "hungry" for another taste of military life. "What is the prospect of making a new regiment in the guard?" he asked of General McKee. "There Is a prospect of making a hole in what we have now," replied the latter with a smile. "Well. I would like to be with the 'boys' again," said Colonel Gunder. The examining boards from Vlncennes, South Bend and Indianapolis will hold sessions during the week of the encampment In order to pass upon the merits or candidates for promotion, of which there are a number. The Indianapolis board is made up of: President, Capt. Carroll B. Carr, inspector of small-arms practice on General McKee's staff, and Capt. Hoyt N. McClaln of Company D, Capt. W. H. Drapier of Company H, and Lieut. R. L. Moorehead, adujtant of the first battalion, all of tho Second Infantry Regiment. On the subject of rifle practice Captain Carr talked yesterday as follows: "The experience of last year on the rifle range." he said, "demonstrated that -both officers and men, as a rule, were not sufficiently grounded in the preliminary work of rifle practice, and it was accoi ingly determined this year to give them this preliminary Instruction in the camp. Under competent instructors they will begin at the beginning and study the fine points of rifle practice. They will be taught the position and plRhtlng drills, and will be given gallery practice. In this way they will be able to go to their home stations and take advantage of the new law permitting them three days on the range and go on the range prepared to shoot effectively. There has been an impression that we have been going backward in the matter of rifle prac-, tice. but we have only gone backward in order to g?t a fresh start." PREACHED TO SOLDIERS. The Rev. Vlrftll XV. Tevis at the Fnir Grounds Camp. Rev. Virgil W. Tevis, of Fletcher-place M. E. Church, preached to the soldiers at the fair grounds last night from John iii, 1-3. Dr. Tevis said. In short: "There is apparently not much connection between these verses. Nicodemus is speaking in complimentary tone of the miracles Jesus had performed. The Master emphasizes the necessity of the new birth. Really the subject between them was the kingdom of God. Christ teaches Nicodemus that his kingdom Is spiritual, and that a new birth is necessary to its apprehension. "Men do not comprehend the kingdom of God when they limit it to creeds. It Is broader than any creed. Greater than all combined. Now and then a man gets hold of an Idea and thinks h has It all, as one might think himself the master of the piano because he can play one tune. Subscription to a creed is no inference that the subscriber Is In the kingdom of God, any more than a subscriber to a library is necessarily a literary' man. "Men do not comprehend the kingdom of God when they view it from the standpoint of flesh and blood. How, then, are we able to apprehend these higher things? Only by a process of birth. After all, In a sense life Is a succession of births. Birth is an awakening to realities hitherto ,unl;nown. The flowers were here before our tiny fingers clutched them, but we hnd our first experience with them. At first a child Is satisfied with kite and marbles, but ambition Is born. Possibilities crowd upon him. He forsakes his marbles for the study table and his game for the realities of life. There comes a time when love is born. The world is transformed to him and he to the world. "No man can come to his highest nature without the aid of the Holy Spirit, and it requires the development of our highest nature to see the kingdom of God. We cannot find our h'ghest mental development without the aid of teachers. "We could not even talk until we were taught. "When we are born from above our horizon is broadened. Insignificant things apt. Spiritual meanings are wrapped tip in material things. Types and symbols fall away like the ugly shell of the sed when the flower first blushes at the sun. If religion Is good for anything, it must be good for two worlds. Materialism will not it the next. Spirituality fits both this l!fe and the life to come. Who of us apprehend.the kingdom of God? Behold its wondrous beauty, its symmetrical proportions? I preach to the man down. You may come up. I preach to the heart whore muio S hushed. You may have divine harmonies, but only by being born from above." AVill Serve JikIkp AilTc4nte. Lieut. Guy stall, was d nctlii'-r judge Instruction, tionui piKird bcrt until h A. Boyle, of General McKee's etailed yesterday to serve as advocate during the camp of This Is the position In the naheld by Capt. Newton W. Gilwas ooliged to resign on acnomination for the office of court of his Lieutenant t si: persists i camp. Jovernor. The judge advocate, ill trials that occur in the A I.Ittle Cfimp Gosilp. Major George W. Krk tnsteln. who was on Governor Mount's staff, did not claim as one of his fortes the ability to ride a horse with ?MU, yet he is the only member of tae late Governor's military staff who s portrayed on horseback in th history of the National Gurd compiled l,y Col. Wilson p.rA F. II. .Mc Elroy. A number of copi-s of the history are jj, camp and this picture of Major Kritentein is the subject of muc". amusing comment. Capt. Quiney E. McDowell, of the Fortyfust. I. S. V.. is expected to visit the oamp to-day. xxx l.ioutenmt James F. McCurdy. formerly flr?t lieutenant of Company C, One-hundred-aril :ifry-i.:i th Indiana Volunteer Infantry. wa mingling with his old friends in tij First yesterday. XXX One of the most attractive barber shc-ps la camp is located in the shaded pavilion to

the right of Col. Harry B. Smith's log cabin headquarters. xxx Capt. C. J. Patmore, adjutant of the Third New York, a regiment that brigaded with the One-hundred-and-fifty-ninth Indiana Volunteer Infantry at Camp Mead, Pa., during the Spanish-American war. was visiting in camp yesterdav. He renewed his friendship with Colonel McCoy. Lieutenant Colonel Fee. Major Cloeman. Capt. Beigler and other officers of thj First. xxx The hot weather did not keep away the camera "fiend" yesterday. Pictures of nearly all the regimental officers and of General McKee and his staff were taken. When a photographer presented himself at artillery battalion headquarters he was informed that M-ijor Schanz would have to give his permission for a picture of his staff to be taken. xxx Harry Maxwell, a well-known singing evangelist, attended religious services in the First yesterday morning and added greatly to the pleasure of the occasion by sirrging several solos in his best style. One of these was "The Invisible Choir." Chaplarn George Knox talked eloquently of "The Largeness of the Christian Life," taking as his text Romans, xil, 1. xxx Chaplain Knox and Dr. George Guthrie, assistant surgeon, are caterers of the officers' mess in the First Infantry Regiment. They announce that they will get through the week on two dollars per man, but Colonel Fee said yesterday, "I am afraid the fare will be rather slender towards the end of the week." Mess costs anywhere from J2 to $3 per man. During the camp last year 53 was the average. xxx Lieutenant Colonel Fee, of the First, rides a beautiful mare that he calls "Lady Dewey." "I named her after Admiral George's first wife." he said yesterday, "and I don't think there is a better horse on the grounds." This is the same mount Colonel Fee had in the One-hunured-and-hlty-ninth during the Spanish-American war. xxx Dr. George Guthrie, assistant surgeon af the First, rides one of the blue-blooded horses of the camp. His steed is a genuine Messenger Wilkes, and is the cynosure of all eyes when it is in action. "1 don't know whether my wife misses me or the horse more," said Dr. Guthrie yesterday. XXX Letter boxes are scattered at convenient intervals through the camp, and each bears a label stating that mall is taken from it at 7 a. m. and 1 p. m. Many of the "boys" write their letters In the Y. M. C. A. tent, where there is plenty of free stationery and ink, to say nothing of cool shade and a tank of ice water. XXX Sergt. D. II. Oliver, of Battery A, says this is the best camp he ever saw. This battery has the "bulge" over the others, because most of the officers and men saw actual service In the Cuban, campaign. The battery has succeeded in securing the best horses It ever had in a camp of instruction. XXX The announcement that Capt. James B. Curtis, who commanded Battery A for eighteen years, Is coming to visit the camp this week has put the artillery "boys" on the qui vlve of expectation. Battery A still has the 3.2-inch breech-loading gun that it used in Cuba. XXX "From what I have seen of the Indiana National Guard," said Governor Durbin yesterday, "I am greatly pleased with it.

I like the faces of the men; they are a good-looking lot of fellows. I was not in the camp at Falrview, but I have heard a great deal about It, and I get the impression that the fair grounds is much better adapted to camp purposes. I have heard expressions from the men to the effect that they like the fair grounds better than Fairview." XXX One of Frank Bird's transfer men created a great deal of amusement yesterday in front of Quartermaster General Foster's tent. He drove up with a box in his wagon, and when General Foster Inquired for whom the box was intended, replied: "It's for Governor Kal 1o." Col. Charles Kahlo, who is a member of Governor Durbln's staff, was quickly hunted up and required to do the thing that is customary when a joke is "on" a man. xxx Governor Durbin is highly pleased with his new military staff. "They are representative citizens of Indiana," he said, "and will do credit to the State wherever they appear. I expect them to make a fine impression at the Pan-American exposition this fall." XXX Col. Charles E. Wilson, the Governor's private secretary on ordinary occasions, but at present military secretary to Indiana's chief executive, Is a very resourceful man. Asked for a stamp yesterday, fie pulled out quite a bunch and then remarked: "I expect we had better have a smoke," accompanying the remark with a sleight-of-hand movement that brought from some mysterious hiding place a box of splendid perfectos. OBITUARY. Brlff. Gen. Snmnel T. Canhtn, of the I'nlted States Army, Retired. WASHINGTON. July 21.-Brlg. Gen. Samuel T. Cushlng, U. S. A., retired, formerly commissary general of subsistence, died here to-day. He was appointed to the Military Academy from Rhode Island in 1855, and served through the civil war, near the close of which he was brevetted major for faithful and meritorious services. He entered the commissary branch in 1S63 as a captain and rose to the rank of brigadier general and commissary general of subsistence Jan. 2S, 1S0S. He was retired on April 21 of the same year. Other Deaths. GRAND FORKS, N. D., July 21. Luther B. Richardson, ex-mayor of this city and formerly territorial secretary, died last evening. He had been prominently connected with the political history and progress of the State for the past twenty-flve years. CLEVELAND. O., July 21. Henry C. Kirby, a prominent and wealthy business man of Cleveland and a member of the (ioff-Klrby Coal Company, died to-day. aged forty-one years. He had been ill for a year. CHICAGO. July 21. Henry King Elklns. a pioneer lumber merchant of Chicago and one of tho first directors of the Board of Trade, died to-day after an illness of nearly a year. SCHENECTADY, N. Y., July 22.-Former Congressman Simon Schermerhorn, died tonight at his home In Rotterdam, from apoplexy. H was seventy-three years of age. UNUSUAL ACCIDENT. Woman Stepped on Mnteh, Her Dresn Ignited and She Burned to Denth. COVINGTON. Ky., July 21. While Carrie Dieterman, agvd twenty years, was walking along the sidewalk to-night she stepped on a match, which ignited. Her white summer dress 'Tlashcd into flames and she burned to death in great agony. Her mother was fco shocked when frar burned body was brought home that at a late hour to-night she was reported as d ing. PERSONAL AND SOCIETY. Mr. Clara Lo-an and daughter Lottie, of Mcrldiar. Ml.ss., fuimerly of this city, are isiting irienJs here. Miss Lillian McFariand. who has ben home for several weeks visiting her parents, has returned to Monticel'o. running: Not a Candidate. MILWAUKEE. Wis.. July 21. The Crand Lodge Benevolent and Protective Order of Elka. which convenes on Tues-dav next in this ciiy. will probably elect Charles K. Pckctt. of Waterloo, la., grand exalted ruler. Judge John C. Nethawav. of Stillwater. Minn.. Is the only other active candidate. Joseph T. Fanning, of Indianapolis, denies that he Is a candidate. The present secretary snd treasurer will be reelected. About accredited delegates will attend the .-es.-ions o' the grand lodge, which will be secret. Would you m.?t to luck and rot Insure your home against fire'.' Of course not. Why trust to luck in regard to the title to your real ete- I?--ur? to- INDIANA TITLE GUARANTY AND LOAN COM. FANY, 1TJ East Market street. Tl. aJ5w

ROLL OF HONOR OF BANKS

THOSE HAVING SURPLUS AXD PROFITS IX EXCESS OF CAPITAL. There Are Xine Sueh Inntitntions in Indiana nnd One in Indianapolis Interesting; Facts. The Financier of New York in its Issue to-day will publish its eleventh annual roll of honor of the national banks of the United States. This year Indiana has nine banks represented. Altogether there are 4Ji national banks included in the roll of honor. The Financier says: "We print this week in supplement form our eleventh annual roll of honor of the national banks of the United States, covering the year 1300. The roll, it is perhaps unnecessary to say, is a compilation showing the number of national banks having surplus and profits in excess of capital. The current exhibit is noteworthy in several respects. The period included was marked by a rather rapid rise in the number of national banks, the gain of 276 institutions contrasting with a continued decrease in previous years. But while the percentage of increase in the total number of banks in the last official year was 7.7 per cent., the percentage of gain in the roll of honor banks was 14, or nearly twice the Increase noted in the establishment of new institutions. This may be interpreted in various ways. Broadly, it reveals the prosperity of the older established Institutions, and the conditions which made this prosperity also induced the establishment of new banks, although the new currency law, of course, led to the organization of not a few of the 276 new banks in the six months from March to September, 1W0. Numerically there are fifty-four more banks on the roll this year than last. This is the largest gain recorded in recent years. A fair average of roll of honor banks for a series of years is 10 per cent, of the total number of existing institutions, but the percentage for the last year rises to 11.2, which means that one out of every S.9 national institutions In the United States possess surplus and profits In excess of capital a very creditable showing, indeed. The following table Is interesting, as showing the changes from year to year: 1900. 1893. 1S98. 1S97. lS3ß. No. nafl banks... 3.S71 3.535 3,538 3,617 3,715 No. on roll AM 380 3C1 346 315 Per cent, banks on roll 11.2 10.5 9.79 10.45 10.05 Yearly change No. nafl banks, p. c. 7.7 .... M9 .59 .39 Yearly increase in No on roll 54 19 15 1 2 Decrease. "Geographically the roll covers a wide range, no less than forty-four States and Territories having representation, but of the total number 23S, or 55 per cent., are located in the States of Pensyivanla, New York, Illinois and New Jersey. Pennsylvania leads the list with ninety-nine banks. New York follows with sixty-six and Illinois and New Jersey have thirty-seven and thirtysix, respectively. Conditions in Pennsylvania during the year seem to have been unusually prosperous, no less than fifteen new banks having secured representation. This is a gain of 17.8 per cent, as compared with 1839. The representation by States may be summarized as follows: Total b'ks. 1900. '99. 'S. '97. T'6. f95. Pennsylvania ...58 99 84 78 72 66 65 New York 402 66 61 62 62 63 65 Illinois 317 37 35 34 31 32 31 New Jersey 151 3S 31 28 2S 24 25 Massachusetts ..356 19 15 15 10 13 11 Texas 2U 18 14 13 12 11 10 Ohio 289 13 11 10 10 11 11 Maryland 83 11 11 10 10 10 10 Iowa 206 10 9 9 10 10 8 Michigan 92 9 10 8 8 9 8 Indiana 132 9 7 7 7 8 8 Virginia 52 9 7 7 6 5 6 Louisiana 28 7 6 6 5 5 4 Wisconsin 94 6 4 3 5 5 7 West Virginia... 45 5 4 3 2 2 2 Missouri 72 5 5 5 3 2 2 Maine 87 5 5 " 4 4 A 4 Delaware 24 5 4 4 4 4 4 Nebraska 114 4 4 5 4 4 5 Georgia 33 4 4 4 4 4 4 Tennessee 54 4 4 4 '4 4 4 Kansas 114 4 3 2 4 3 4 Connecticut SS 4 3 1 Oregon 31 4 2 2 3 3 3 North Dakota.... 30 3 3 3 3 2 2 Rhode Island.... 48 3 3 2 2 2 1 Vermont 51 3 2 2 2 2 2 Montana 24 3 3 2 2 2 2 Colorado 42 3 2 2 3 4 6 Dist. Columbia.. 15 3 2 2 3 4 4 Florida 19 3 2 2 2 2 2 South Carolina. .119 2 3 2 3 3 2 Alabama 30 2 2 2 2 2 2 California 40 2 2 2 2 3 3 Idaho 11 2 2 2 2 2 2 North Carolina.. 33 2 2 2 2 2 1 New Hampshire. 57 2 1 1 1 1 1 Washington 33 2 1 1 1 1 1 South Dakota 29 1 2 2 1 1 2 Kentucky 82 1 1 2 1 1 1 Minnesota 84 1 1 3 3 4 3 Indian Territory 81 1 1 1 Mississippi 13 1 1 1 1 1 1 Utah 11 1 1 1 . 1 1 1 "The reserve centers, as might be expected, are prominent on the roll, and the tctal number of banks in each city, together with the roll of honor banks, compare as follows: No. Bks. '00. '99. 9S. '97. '96. '95. New York 44 20 IS IS 19 19 19 Philadelphia 36 13 15 15 13 11 10 Pittsburg 31 10 9 9 10 10 10 Chicago 14 4 5 5 5 4 4 Brooklyn 5 5 5 5 5 5 4 Boston 3S 4 4 4 4 4 4 New Orleans 7 3 3 3 3 3 3 Albany 6 3 3 3 3 3 3 Baltimore 19 3 3 3 2 2 2 Washington 11 3 2 2 2 3 4 Kansas City 6 1 1 1 1 .. .. St. Joseph 2 111111 Cincinnati 13 2 1 1 1 1 2 Cleveland 15 111111 Houston 5 111111 Indianapolis 4 111111 Portland 4 111111 Denver 4 111111 "St. Louis is still absent from the above list. Brooklyn, counted as a separate city, has 10" per cent., or all of her national banks in the list, while Philadelphia has a percentage of 50. "With reference to capitalization, it Is worthy of mention that of the total of 434 banks, 19 have capital In excess of $l,00u,000, 21 in excess of $500.000. and less than ll.000.noo, and 219 between $100,000 and $500.000. This leaves only 175 banks with capital of less than $100,0o on the roll. "The gains made by the banks are in some instances extraordinary, and almost without exception highly satisfactory. Of the total of 434 institutions only 41 show losses, as compared with last year, and in not a few instances, these losses are merely nominal, and due to changes in capitalization, etc. One bank gained 270 per cent, of capital in surplus and profits during the year; another 83.5 per cent, and 315 show earnings of 25 per cent, and over of capital." The Indiana banks included in the roll of honor are: First National, of Crown Point; Hamilton National, of Port Wavne; Indiana National, of Indianapolis; First National, of Knlghtstown; Fowler National and Merchants' National, of Lafayette; National Bank, of Madison; First National, of Peru, and Washington National, of Washington. Of these banks the Indiana National ranks first. OBLEHI AK'S SECH ET. At Night, in the Esqnlmaax Village, He Carves an ImnKe. Buffalo Courier. Obleriak peeked out of his whalebone igloo. His kayak was floating on the water. In the shadow of the next topek was his komatik close by his oomiak. The lights in the tower were beginning to fade. The last of the sightseers were leaving the Midway as the lights went out. Obleriak coughed softly and Pawiak, his bristly dog, sniffed In answer. All was cjuiet for five minutes, ten minutes, fifteen minutes. 'Ihen the furry little figure of Obleilak crept softly out of the igloo, dragging a white bearskin with it. Pawiak was released an i he whin nl and licked his master's face, tangling his gleaming teeth in the scrawny beard. Then together they crept to a remote corner of the Esquimaux village nnd sat together, on their haunches on the white-bear rug. Obleriak spoke first in a low guttural. Pawiak answered in an eager whine. Mn and dog seemed to talk together uatil at last Obleriak rose and drew from a hic'lng place a small fur bag, from which he took (small saws nwi files and t-harp knives and pieces of walrus tusk that shone like ivory In the moonlight. Paw'ik stretched out about live feet away, where he could watch the entire village. Then he cocked his ears and lay with eyes wide open watching the night. Obleriak bent over the fur bag. selected a piece of white and began to carve and saw and scrape and polish. At times he rose and salaamed to hU handiwork, then suaUtd again and resumed his labors. A voice sounded faintly in a topek. Puwlak gave a low, warning whine. Instantly, the white in.age on which Obleriak was working was whisked out of sight beneath the white fur snd Obleriak was idly scraping the likeness of a little

seal. No eye should see cr Intruder disturb hi silent, secret work on tho mysterious object. After a long wait. In which Pauiak gave no second alarm Ubleriak drew forth the image afaln ar.d carved and carved and carved. As he carved he muttered. He seemed to be chanting or reciting and Incantlr. Twice he arose and walked solemnly ainu,; the bearskin in a half-hopping, halfstumbling manner, making weird passes with his hands and uttering strange sounds. Then he knelt and worked as if his life depended on it. All the while. Pawlak kept watch. The hours of the night passed. Gray dawn was spreading an ash pallor In the East. Obleriak s?w the first streaks of coming day, hastily hid the little fur bag. led Pawiak back to his cage, crept into the whalebone iloo and when the village was aroused at f a. m., for the day's doings, Obleriak emerged chipper and fresh as if he had slept soundly and restfully all night. To make the deception all the more real, Pawiak made a great hullabaloo of the morning greeting, as if he had not left his master a few hours before in the early merging of dark and dawn. Night after night has that performance on the part of the mysterious little Esquimau end his dog gene on.- Regularly, Obleriak has crept out with the bearskin, released Pawiak, uncovered the bag and toiled the night away. The object of his toil is grotesque. It is a god or image of figure over six inches long. Its tip or crown is a queer outline of the tower. Graven all over its funny body are spires and peaks and other striking points of the exposition architecture. All these are dotted with speckles, from which radiate lines, as if they were miniature child-drawings of the sun or of light. There are unintelligible hieroglyphics as it a Chinaman had worked for several nights on the Image. Al50, there are unrecognizable figures or drawings. They all mean something. ' Obleriak is devout. When he came to the exposition ar.d saw all the glory and splendor and loveliness he was moved deeply and as ho thought it over he came to believe that the god of light had made it his dwelling place. The god of light shuns the far north at times for many weary weeks. Obleriak pondered it all and came to know that the god of light fled from his palace at midnight, but hovered concealed to see

I that all went well. To those who, in the silent watches of the night, toiled to Iiis glory and gave him the praise. Obleriak believed the god of light would come and linger and live in his work. Best of all. if one who was devout would fashion an image after his likeness the god of light would shine in it. and when the image went away and the palace of radiance had fallen and become of the bygone, light would beam from It and It would be as a pillar of fire through the long northern nights. Obleriak dreams, as he toils, of the long darkness to come when he is home again in the far nrrth, where the seals sleep cn the snow fields and the icebergs gleam like colossal diamonds. In his Imagination, he seems to see himself step forth in the night, take the image from his breast, incant to it the mystic echo of the sounds now swelling in the City of the Beautiful, and. lo! it will beam brightly and light Obleriak wheresoever he may go. It seems a pity that some day he must awaken. The awakening will be the cruel part. He may not grudge the lost iabor, but he will mourn the shattered faith. "THE LEARNED PROFESSIONS." The Term Hardly Delongi to Any Profession Now. Philadelphia Record. Because a deputy recently spoke of journalism as a trade a French Journalist, who maintains that Journalism is one of the modern learned professions, displayed great indignation, and proposed to prove the erudition of his calling by running his sword through the deputy's midriff. This warrants an inquiry as to what are the learned professions. When the phrase "the learned professions" was invented it was medicine, which, with pedagogy, really constituted the pursuits in which learning was regarded as essential. It will hardly be contended that the most successful preachers, lawyers and doctors of to-day are learned men. The highest qualifications of the preacher In this age are earnestness, clearness, courage and an intimate knowledge of life rather than of Latin tomes. The medical practitioner is no lonser expected to have a classical training or to be familiar with all systems of philosophy. The little Latin of which he may boast is incidental, and his prescription forms are delusive. He is not even pclenllfic, although In his empirical work the metheds of science may be applied with advantage. The great advances in pathology have made it necessary that there should be many branches of the healing art, each demanding all the powers of a specialist. If any physician be learned in the ordinary meaning of the term it is in some measure at the expense of his professional work. In the law the tendency is toward the production of case lawyers of lawyers who are not well grounded in principles, who have never studied the law as a science, but who achieve success by their vast familiarity with court decisions or their ability to place a finger on cases which have a bearing on the cause In hand. The law probably gives more opportunity for learning than does any other profession, except that of pedagogy (and, perhaps, of journalism.) By learning in this sense is meant the culture which was defined by Matthew Arnold as knowing the best that has been said In the world. Yet in the law. too. the tendency toward specialization is marked. The journalist ought to be one of the learned men of modern life; but here again the specialization of work withdraws the incentive to acquire a comprehensive culture. There is too much of politics, at any rate, in the newspapers; but even those newspaper writers who are not absorbed In politics limit themselves to particular divisions of the work. The pedagogue, too. finds ample material for his energies in special studies. How lacking In any sort of training "the successful statesman may be is a matter of common observation. It appears that while there is a vast amount of learning In the possession of mankind ("greater than at any time in history), no Individual has it. This man has this part of it and that man has that part; but Admiral Crichtons have vanished. CROWDED MILLIONAIRES. The Poor Things Have No Chance for PrivHcy. New York Evening Post. Whatever benefits come from the possession of millions, privacy, which is after all one of the most desirable possessions, is almost completely denied to thu millionaire. It may readily be imagined that the greatest financiers who had the bad luck to return yesterday from Europe by the same steamer would have given some of their surplus millions for the privilege of traveling quietly, free from the prying curiosity of vulgarians of all degrees. But this privilege of privacy it is almost Impossible for large wealth to buy. Solitude may be had only In a great country place, or camp, or steam yacht, and even then only a solitude qualified by a host of servants, and with the lurking reporter never far distnat. By a strange principle of compensation, which would have delighted Emerson, the condition of the very poor and of the very rich is, in this respect, closely approximated. Perhaps the most grinding condition of poverty is physical crowding the impossibility of escaping for a moment the contact of one's fellows. To a really sensitive mind, the moral crowding under which the overwealthy suffer is almost as pitiable a spectacle. To be in .the public eye is not in itself n misfortune. The sort of public curiosity that follows a great statesman, a famous artist, a noted philanthropist, or a successful commander has too much of affection in it to be quite distasteful to its objeet. it is doubtful If the boundless admiration which the very wealthy receive Is humanized by any such worthy emotion, and it is certain that the more disci iminatlng among them would much preler the obscurity of the merely wpII-to-do. No really practical measure of relief has been suggested. To travel Incognito would appear an unwarranted assumption of the habits of royalty; but it is conceivable that the very neaitliy m-iy yet be driven to such a shift. If there js no abatement of the inqulsltheness of the public, the multimillionaire probably would do well to arm themselves v.ith th triple brass of indifference er callousness"". Meanwhile those In obscure state who . the fiamlnt headlines that follow Mr. Morgan and his traveling companions will jonder the blesdnesjs of the Ftate which lus b'tween poverty and ilchc-s. Onr Shipping Affairs. Philadelphia Record. It would be extrerne!y difficult for the New York Evening Pott to im;ke u fair criticism on any report o.i shlppirg affairs, no matter how much it might try. Its confirmed habit of misrepresenting Mich things in the interest of foreign steams-hip lines cannot be easily overcome. Hence, when the Post ir the figures of the commissioner of naviratlon as to the number of ships built in the United States in the last fiscal year and their tonnage to try and show that they come "very near giving Hanna the lie direct," it is. as usual, at its old tricks. There was a large tonnage built last year, but It wss nlmost wholly for the protected coastwise trade, and not

a ship for the foreign trad-, excepting a few that come tinder the existing p.tal subsidy act. When the P;t seeks to make it apptar that Senator? I 'rye. Hanna and ethr have declared thit ships could not t nuilt la this country without subsidies it is guilty of fKiri.-.ition. All of th friends of the subsidy bill h.ie pointed to th wonderful prosperity of our domestic shipping as an example .f what will tike place in our shtppi:i in the Ionian trade whenever the protective principle it extended to th:it shipping. The cistvl'P shipping is abluttiy protected fmm any fur-lcn comietiHon whatever, hence its great prosperity.

C.HAYIIO.V TlltlllM: ENGINE. Xfw Power Which Promises to Work n Mechanical It et olntlon. Lonüon Star. The wheel of fortune has turned again for Lieutenant Graydon. tho inventor cf the great wheel. To-day a Stai representative saw the lieutenant in an t nginecr's workshop standing in front of a little engine which even other experts expect will cfTett a wide -reaching revolution In motie power. This is the Graydon turbine. Mr. W. R. Fethcr. a well-known er.g'ner, having fully inspected the drawings, considers the invention "a very grtat improvement on tie Parsons turbine." Another engineer, Mr. C. Nigel Stewart, who has had some experience of the Parson'' turbine, says Graydoa's is "a very great improvement." "arsons has got up to a speed of thirtyfive knots. Graydon calculates on a spetd of fifty knots, and applying his invention to submarine war vessels expects to produce something "absolutely ueadly to anything that floats." "We shall use only a fourth of the fuel." he says, "and the new submarine will be abl to cross tho Atlantic. Their high rat of speed will enable them to take and destroy the fastest warships that exist at present." The Graydon turbine Is not only for war vessels. The less harmful and more necessary liner Is ty its powerful aid to do the Atlantic Jourmy In three days. It is to b applied to locomotives, and the lieutenant and his friends prophesy a speed of "one hundred miles an hour without vibration and with perfect eate and quiet." It is even capable of application to the motor, and Lieutenant Graydon confidently promises "that motor everybody has been, looking for which will be noiseless and will not vibrate." His patent has been protected the whole world over. So it may briefly be explained. In the Parsons turbine the steam which acti on the "fins" is passed straight through a tube, a good deal of it being wastetl; in the Graydon turbine it is passed round and round spirally, acting on "fins" all the time, and using the steam for all it Is worth. The result, in the words cf Mr. Nigel Stewart, is "an Immense reduction in the volume of steam necessary to operate the turbine continuously; for the reason that Fteam Is continuously employed for such a long distance round and round the shaft to be actuated, thereby causing a great economy in fuel," beside a great saving in the weight cf machines. The pioneer engine, built by Mr. A. E. Shiner, and presently to be put to an actual test, is only about eighteen Inches long, and yet is expected to yield twenty horse iower. Some very big people have their eye on it Carnegie and Pierpont Morgan are name that may only be whispered. With its success absolutely demonstrated, we shall ree the Graydon turbine put into motion by millions of capital. Is this to be the first great revolution ot the new century? MOST EXALTED 3IASON. Tennessee Congressman the Very Highest MncL-n-Muck of All. Leslie's Weekly. Hon. James D. Richardson, member of Congress from Tennessee, has the honor of holding the highest ofilce in the gift of Masonry in the world. By the death of Thomas H. Caswell, of San Francisco, he becomes sovereign grand commander cf the Southern Jurisidlction of the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite. He Alls this position for life, and is practically a monarch in Masonry. In the "Holy House of the Temple," in Washington, are his apartments, which contain a throne elevated upon a dais. At the right nnd left are subthrones for the grand chancellor and grand minister, who occupy these seats at meetings of the order. Mr. Richardson occupies his elevated position in the fraternity by reason of the fact that the Scottish Rite, of which he is at the head, confers the highest Masonic degre-es, while he presides over the Supreme Council of the order, which is the highest in th world. Consequently, he is even above King Edward and President Diaz, of Mexico, who are respectively grand patron nnd grand commander of Masonry in their countries. The I'neful Illrycle. New York Evening Sun. The dcercriF In fashionable favor toward the bicycle is more than made up by the increase in utilitarian appreciation. Mary has been wont to call the cattle liome for some time upon her wheel Mary In many cases belli ragged and barefoot, but her wheel pretty sure to Im hich-grade and with all th latest Improvements. It stands to reason that th cattle travel much more slowly than Mary' wheel can possibly go. so she obviates that difficulty by gyrating along the road in huge overlapping circles Instead of forging ahead in a straight line. In this way she is able to retard her gait to the procrastinating pace of the cows. Country laundresses have lately prespel the bicycle into service. "I'm afraid you'll find some of your clothes missing," suavely announceel the fourteen-year-old daughter of a country laundress to a patron not long ago (your present-day laundress's daughter has been to school and uses good English). "You see, I brought the bundle, as I always do. upon my bicycle, and the string came undone while I was riding along, and Pin almost certain some things dropped out. If you'll look over them and let me know, I'll keen a sharp lookout along the road as I ride back. Three handkerchiefs, two collars and a pair of stockings, you say? Well, I'll look out for them; unless somebody has picked them up. they're sure to be along th road. Of nurse, they may be soiled, but Jn that case" (magnanimously) "I'm sure my mother will do them up again without extra charge." The Morgan Influence. New York Tress. London is Justly proud of its Royal Exchange, the "Temple of British Commerce," and Jokes about it are not appreciated. But the gilt grosshoppe-r of the Gresham family Invariably provokes a smile from the American In tho metropolis, and recently the Inscription on the architrave set th Yankee invaders laughing broadly. It read: "Th Earth Is tho Enid's, and -the Fullness Thereof." A Hudson river commuter doin business in Pine street remarked to a small crlcle of British acquaintances, as the teautles of the building were being pointe l out to him: "Gentlemen, that expression . not grammatical; it should read: The Earth "was" the Lord's, and the Fullness Thereof!' " The Britishers flew into argument at once, some getting exceedingly warm on the subject. "Why Hhould you use the past tense?" demanded a Seriems Fpceimcnt of Mr. John Bull. "Isn't the earth qu'te as much the Lord's to-day rs it ever was?" "No. indeed!" the Ysnke-e replied. "Then, whore is It?" said Beef, triumphantly, and the unruffled invader answered, "Morgan's." De ni o r a 1 1 cn 1 1 o it Co m p 1 e t e. Nebraska State Journal. Gen. Adoniram Judson Warner, one of the last of the Ocala and Omaha platform markers to hold out. has migrated to Georgia and transforming himself into an octopus, i promoting an electric railroad monopoly. He has money and proposes to make much more. James Hamilton Lewis. who?e pink whiskers used to wive like an orifiame in the bear garden at Washington when a bill fir th r ilef of the common people was to the fore. 1 the leading man in the Tacoma mwtch trust, capitalized or watend to the extent of a million anil a quarter round dollars. Colonel Bryan is apparently the orly statesman of the r.UI outUt that Is still crying eo;t against the "ba.-e eonn.ie rc iall-m" e.f the d y. bjt he posts a t K k t t puncher at the eloor of the h.ill where he l.clutf s. ar.d you pay ce nts it r a ticket er you d .i t p x irrigated v.ith the truth. Prosperity, e.ld General Prosperity, luis demur.. Uz.i the bunch. The Kind That Count. Boston Journal. Because tin- Sons "f Ternporar.ee of North AmeMea 1 eve l.e'::,i in numbers from jnnm) to TVöo within seventeen ye-ur, it must not be taken I r granted "that the cau.e of tempe rance' h is sufft ieJ. There are more sons e.f tent; . rat:Ce. une'npl'.allrdj anil unorganized, in North America to day than ever before. Mr. (ionusn's BiMiicrrnns;. Boston Journal. It is reported that at the lat t trl.nl of the Miry Und billd law in the municipal election at Ar.napedl mst e.f the i -jectc l billuts weru those of intending Democratic voters. There never was a Mner example of a iK.litical boomerang than this Mar) land law.