Indianapolis Journal, Volume 51, Number 313, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 November 1901 — Page 2
Tili: IM)IA?'ArüLIS JUUKXAL, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 9, 1901.
defended Chinese interests In that troubled country. As Governor of Shan-Tur.g he showed surprising abl.ity in tranpuilizing that dnr.-rinH provln.'-, while his gift for ilip'.om.iry was exercise il fully In preventin;; frh ;:on between the tuibulent population of the peninsula and the Germans when the latter w re steadily encroaching from their original holdings at Kl.io-Cnou, ti the north roast. As a military man Yuan howd his ability by the oiganlzation of what Is undoubtedly the best military force in China, anl they were his troops that oee-upied IV kirn? last September when the foreign Iorca were withdrawn. They are thoroughly di.-icipUr.'d and weil orheered. and. considering Chinese conservatism, th- y form a magniacent display of Yuan's abi.ity. Wang Wen mi.k. who is made deputy viceroy or Chi-LI. 1m al.-o a man of marked ab'i.ty. Fortunately he always has been fricriuiy to fox t i:i ideas and is not a reactiorii.it. He was one of the grand secretaries of state and is at present one of the two ministers appointed to form the new Chin se Foreign eufice which will replace the Tsung Li Vamen. Wang I a man OI affairs and was hin. -elf a member of the Tsung Li Yam.- n some years ago besides having ben director of mines and railways, lie hah b n with the imperial court ever since it lied from Peking. The record shows that ho always has exerud his influence in the direction of reforms.
What Itunaiu IrioetL LONDON, Nov, !. The Hankow correspondent of the Times supp.ies what he alleges is a collect translation of the authentic t'.ju of the .Mam iiuimri Convention propjseu by liu.-.-aa. Tne convention stipulates lor the gradual withdrawal 01 the Russian forces within three years, "provided no other reunion occurs and the posters do not interfcie." the number and stations of the Chinese garrisons must oe heitied In concert with tlie Kassian military authorities, and Rus-las assent must be obtained for any railway conir action in (southern Mancnuria. '"No mention is made in the text sent by the grand council to the southern viceroys of mining, commercial or other exclusive privileges," says the correspondent, "aim the viceroys believe the convention contains other clauses which the grand council is not willing to disclose." 210 HOPE TOR CARTER. (CONCLL'DKI) FilOM FIRST I'AGK.) on account of his policy in the 1'hilippines. A special examine r of the Pension Oflice is at Oswego. X. V., investigating the matter, and his report will he kept on tile at the bureau here, in readiness for submission to charges In case that body should call for it. Commissioner Evans explained to-day that he had no authority to revoke the woman's pension, but that Congress coüM do so if it so desired. Schley Court O'Ilclul Resting:. WASHINGTON, Nov. S. The Schley court of Inquiry to-day is transferring Its effects from the gunners' workshop in the navy yard to the uptown cpaarters in the McLean building. Vermont avenue and J I street, which will be the consulting quarters. No efi'ort will be made by the members of the court even to confer vpon the case, however, before next Monday, as they are in need of mental und physical rest. Capt. Lemly, the judice advocate of thy court, has gone to Kam as City, Mo., to attend the meeting of the National Prison Association, In which he Is interested by reason of the fact that lie is specially charged with the conduct of tho naval prisons at Uoston, Norfolk and elsewhere. I'auncefote Tnlkn with liny. WASHINGTON, Nov. 8. Lord Pauncofote, the British ambassador, has had a half-hour's talk to-day with Secretary Hay In regard to the proposition of the HayPauncefote treaty. It is expected that, in view of the progress that has been made, the convention may be concluded, so far as the executive branch of the government Is concerned, the latter part of next week. .n(iunnl CupKul IVote. WASHINGTON. Nov. 8.-General Greely has received a cablegram from Manila announcing that the inlands of Masbate and 1 anay have been connected by cable. It is expected that this cable will materially assist tho army operations now In progress. The Navy Department will send the battleship Illinois down to Algiers. La., in the near future to test the Dig noaung ary Tiie resignation of First Lieut. Leo M. Cutt, Philippine scouts, has been accepted bv the President. J. A. Matthews, secretary to Senator Fairbanks, arrived from Indianapolis this afternoon, and will immediately assume his duties as secretary of the Senate committee on public buildings and grounds. President Roosevelt had as guests at dinner to-night Senator llanna and Mr. John O. Miilburn. of Buffalo. They remained at the White House until after 11 o'clock. FAIR AND WARMER TO-DAY. Probably Fair and Colder on Snnday Winds Shifting to orthrrIy. WASHINGTON, Nov. 8. Forecast for Saturday and Sunday: For Ohio Fair and warmer on Saturday. Sunday fair; colder; fresh southerly winds, shifting to northwesterly. For Illinois Fair on Saturday. Sunday fair with colder In southern portion; fresh southerly winds, shifting to northerly. For Indiana Fair and warmer on Saturday. Sunday fair and colder; fresh southerly winds, shifting to northerly. Local Observation on Frlelny. r.ir. ThT. H.H. Wind. Weather. Tre. 7 a. m -'s to West. Clear. 0.00 7 p. ra Z).U 4'i 61 South. Clear. O.Je) Maximum temperature, CO; minimum temperature. -S. Comparative statement of the mean temperature and total precipitation cn Nov. 8: Temp. Pro. Normal 4S 0.1J Mean 3J 0..0 lK;.aiture 9 0.1.1 iHparture tince Nov. 1 43 Q.LS lparture !nce Jan. 1 4i 11.23 W. T. ULYTHE, Section Director. Yeaterdny'e Temperatures. Ptations. Atlanta. Ga ltismarck. N. D... liurTalJ. X. Y e'Aiirary, Aibe-rta.. Chicago. Ill Cairo. Hi Ch-ytnne. Wyo.... Miru Max. 7 p. m.
4) 5o 22 30 12 4) 4 4 44 IS ?.' 50 Ai i) 60 w2 ?.s ca i' 3 12 4S 1 0 64 2S 50 4 3 IS ts 74 70 30 44 30 VI 62 Zd 6i 61 42 RZ 2$ JS 26 40 (4 M 3 M 71 6i 42 6t 44 31 M 4i 44 ?4 U 2? 5S SO Zi 50 43 14 32 U 4 52 . 40 Zi 6 1 62 34 fr 50 21 44 Zi 2s 5 : 34 fiO 5S 5) 74 64 Zi 12 40
Cincinnati, u.. Concordia. Kan LaveriTo: t, I-t. Moines, la CAlvelon. Tex Helena. Mont Jacksonville. Fla... Kan-aa City, Mo.... l.tttla Hock, Ark Marquette, Mich.... Memphl. Tenn Nashville. Tenn New Orleans. La.... New York city North Piatt." Neb.. Oklahoma. O. T Omaha. Neb Pittiburg. Pa Cju Affile, N. W. liaplJ city. D T.. fait Lake City St. Lout. Mo.... Ft. Paul. Mlr.n.... isprinK-neld. Ill hprirxfirM. M... Vick-Lur. Miss.. Washington. Ij. C MOVEMENTS OF STEALERS. CIIKRr.ontG. Nov. S. Sailed: Kaiser Wilhelm d.r c;ns-e, from Hrtmen and Southampton, for New York. Was detained by fo. YOKOHAMA, Nov. 7. Arrived: Duke of Fif from Tacoma ar.d Victoria. Ii. C, for Kobe, Shanghai and HonR-Kong. HJIISKANi:. Nov. 7. Sailed: Mlowera, from Sydney. N. S. W.. for Honolulu, Victoria and Vancouver, Li. C. NKW YORK, Nov. S Arrived: La Savol, from Havre; Canadian, from Liverpool; Mongolian, from GlasKow. PKISRANi:. Nov. 7. Arrived: Aoranpl, from Vancouv r. P. C. via Honolulu, for Sydney. N. S. W. LONDON, Nov. S Arrived: Menominee, from New York. Saikd: Minnehaha, for New York. LIVERPOOL. Nov. S Arrived: Germanic, from New York. Sailed: Celtic, for New York. imOWHi:.r, Nov. 9. Passed: Campania, from New York, for Qutenstown aud Liverpool. MO VILLI'. Nov. S Sailed: Parisian, from Liverpool, for St. John, N. S. IIAMRURO. Nov. H. Arrived: Deutschland and Palatla, from New York. PLYMOUTH. Nov. S-'5ai!ed: Patricia, from Hamburg, for New York. GLASGOW. No. S. Arrived: Puenos Ayri'in, from Montreal. ANTWimi. Nov. 8. Arrived: Zeeland, from New York. UOSTON. Nov. 8. Arrived; Ultonia, from Ll.crpool.
NURSE BICKERDYKE DEAD
FAMOIS AIl.MY A.NCillL JASSi:S AWAY AT IIlAKi:il HILL, KAX. Knoun to All the I'nlon Armle of the Civil AVnr-IIer Work nt tlie Trout Death of Adolph KruuM. DUNKER HILL. Kan., Nov. 8.-Mother Llckerdyke, famous for her work among Union soldiers during- the civil war, died here to-day, aged eighty-four years. Funeral services will be held on Sunday, and on Monday the body will be taken to Galesburp, 111., for burial. Although Mother Pickcrdyke's labors were chiefly performed with the Western armies, she was known to veterans all over the country. Next to the general in command, she had more authority than any commissioned oilicer on tho iield. Through Mrs. liickerdyke's veins llowtd the biood of tho' Knickerbockers and Puritans. Her greut-treat-Krandfather, Thomas llodgers, was a passenger on the Mayflower. Her grandfather, John P.odgers, was a distinguished boldier in the Revolutionary war, and representatives of the same family were enrolled in the war of 111'. Her paternal ancestry was no less illustrious, being closely connected with the lovely Mary Pall, who married Augustine Washington and became the mother of the first President. Mrs. Bickerdyke (Mary Ann Ball) was born July lfJ, 1S17, in Knox county, Ohio, near the present city of Mount Vernon. At the age of sixteen she went to Oberlin to complete her education, attending Oberlin College and working for her board. Later she moved to Cincinnati, and volunteered as a nurse in one of the city hospitals during the siege of cholera in 1SJ7. Here she acquired that knowledge of medicine and skill In nursing which made her services of such great value in after years. She married at Cincinnati, In 1S17, Robert Bickerdyke, a musician who was a member of the orchestra that played with Jenny Lind on her trip through this country. Two sons were born to them James It. and Hiram. In lsöO Mr. and Mrs. Bickerdyke moved to Galesburtf, 111. Mrs. Bickerdyke was a practicing physician at Galesburg when the war broke out. A letter fiom Dr. Woodward, surgeon of the Twenty-second Illinois Infantry, which she heard read in church, induced her to go to the front as a nurse. She gathered a btore of supplies, and proceeded to tlie regimental hospitals at Cairo, where everything was in confusion a situation which she soon relieved, ufler several heated controversies with the officers in command. On Nov. 7, lbül, following the battle of Belmont, she was appointed matron of the large post hospital at Cairo, and all tlie hospital stores sent by the people of Illinois were given to her trustworthy care. After the battle of Fort Donelson she went from Cairo on the lirst boat to assist in the removal of the wounded to the hospitals at Cairo, Paducah and Mound City. She followed the army to l'ittsburg Landing, where 6,0oo wounded men were to be cared for; and thence to luka and Corinth, Miss., where she was given charge of the military hospitals. The same experience was repeated at other points in the South, the accomplished nurse alternating between the held hospitals and those established in the large cities of the North. She was the accredited agent of tho Chicago Sanitary Commission, and also received and distributed the bulk of the supplies contributed by the commissions of Indianapolis, Cincinnati and St. Louis. General Grant gave her a pass which would take her anywhere within the lines of his department. The pass was renewed as his authority extended. She was at V icksburg and Jackson, Miss., and in the Chattanooga campaign. Hardly had the battle of Mission Ridge been fought before she had established a hospi tal at the base of the mountain, where she received and cared for nearly two thousand wounded men. She was the only woman at work there for thirty days following the battle. From Chattanooga she went to Huntsvllle, Ala., where the old residence of John C. Calhoun became her headquarters. . She was at Beaufort, N. C, when Lee finally surrendered his army to Grant. After peace had been declared she proceeded to Washington, and on the day of the grand review the now famous nurse, mounted upon a glossy saddle horse, but wearing a simple calico dress and a sunbonnet, was a conspicuous figure in the throng that gathered from all parts of the country to witness the pageant of victory. Her services as army nurse closed at Camp Butler. Springfield. 111., in March. ISO;, when the lat Illinois troops were mustered out. For a year after the" close of the war Mrs. Bickerdyke served as housekeeper in the Chicago Home for the Friendless. In 1S67 she conceived the idea of assisting the ex-soldiers to procure homes in Kansas, and a wealthy banker furnished her JlO.uoo to be used for that purpose. Through this medium fully three hundred families were comfortably sttled in central Kansas within the next two years. In this movement she had the heartj co-operation of General Sherman, then in command at Fort Kiley. The next four years were spent in NewYork, where she worked under the auspices of the City Board of Missions. She made frequent visits toVashington, and was admitted to xractke as a pension attorney. She was Instrumental in securing pensions for over 3 army nurses and for scares of veterans. Her wonderful memory and carefully preserved letters and records have often supplied the needed link in the chain of evidence. In one of her cases before the department General Logan vouched for her by saying: "Whatever she wants is right, and whatever sh? may say will be the truth." She has a statement compiled by the department showing an annual Payment through her personal agency of Ooo pension money. In 1X71 she returned to Kansas to make her home with her son, and here she had lived, with the exception of a few yeais spent in San Francisco, where she had beta given a position in the United States mint. Having done so much for others, her friends decided about fifteen years ago that the government ought to do something for Mrs. Bickerdyke. A bill was therefore introduced into and passed by Congress granting her a pension of $25 a month. OTlIClt OIHTL'AUY. Adolph I. Kraus, n Sculptor Whose Ambition Led to Insanity. HYDE PARK, Mass., Nov. 8. Announcement was made here to-day of the death of Adolph F. Kraus, the famous sculptor, which took place at Danvers Insane Hospital last night. Mr. Kraus had been receiving treatment at the institution since last July. He was llfty-one years of age. A widow, four sons and two daughters survive. A pensioner of the Prussian government, and winner of the grand prize of Rome, the name of the sculptor was established In Europe before he came to America, in 1SS7. In this country he continued to win fame, and It was the disappointment of his ambition to produce a masterpiece which is said to have caused his mind to give way. He had partially completed a model In clay of a heroic figure of Belshazzar at the moment of seeing the handwriting m the wall, when it began to crumble and Kraus was compelled to abandon the work. Hi? mind became unbalanced soon afterward. Among his noted pieces in America is the Theodore Parker and the Cripns Attucks monuments. He was the sculptor of the winged figures of Victory that crowned the towers of Machinery Hall at the world's fair at Chicago, and which received great admiration. Cnpt. Hedfcrd Sargent. PHILADELPHIA. Nov. 8.-Capt. Redford Sargrnt. marine suierlntendent of Cramps shipyard, died to-day of heart trouble, aged about sixty years. He had been ill Mnce Tuesday. Captain Sargent became connected with Cramps' shipyard about nine years ago. AU big vessels built by the tTramp Company during that pt riod have been under the direct command of Captain Sargent, on their builedrs and official trials. Dr. Min McDonald, ST. JOSEPH. Mo., Nov. 8.-Dr. Silas McDonald, aged eighty-nine years, who for more than a half century has practiced
medicine In this city, died here to-day of Pneumonia. lie was the author of a number of well-known medical works. Frederick S. Xeuell. KENOSHA, Wis.. Nov. 8. Frederick S. Newell, one of the best-known manufacturers in the Northwe.-t, died to-day after a long iilntss. aged fifty-six years.
CITY HALL BUSHED. Bradford. Pa., Hun a Destructive Fire Thirty-Seven Horac Cremated. BRADFORD, Pa., Nov. 8.-Fire which originated in the livery stable of Frank P. Reamer to-day destroyed a dozen buildings, including the thirty-fivc-thousand-dollar City Hall. Thirty-seven horses in a stable perL-hed in the flames, and tho ten-thousand-dollar library of Brown & Schoemaker. city attorneys, was destroyed, together with valuable maps. The fire burned b'.dldings on thrte streets Kenneuy and Boyleson streets and Patton avenue. The lo.-s is estimated at J1,J. In lighting the lire three firemen were seriously, but not fatally, injured. They were James Butler, Chirles Flick and Melviiie White. The city records were in a fireproof vault and we re not damaged. Oil Iteunery Destroyed. PITTSBURG, Nov. S.-At 3 a. m. fire broke out in the plant of the Pittsburg Oil Refining Company, at Coraopolis, Pa., and destroyed the main refining building, the waxhousc, compound house, filtering houses and boiler house, and spread to the tanks, one hundred in number. At 11 o'clock the fire was still burning. At the office of the company in thi3 city it was stated the loss would be about JTu.Oou. The buildings destroyed covered four acres. Hotel Damaged. MAS3ILLON, O., Nov. 8. The Hotel Conrad was damaged to the amount of fc.'ä,oi) as the result of fire to-night, the flames being communicated from a burning livery barn in the rear of the building. The damage was caurtel principally by water anel smoke. The guests all escaped, but some were unable to remove all their personal effects. STRIKERS' PLACES FILLED. Denver & Ilio Grnnde Ilnnd Xot Crippled for Lack of S wl te'liinen. DENVER, Col., Nov. S. Manager Herbert, of the Denver & Rio Grande system, reports that notwithstanding the strike of the switchmen the company's trains have been moving to-day with very little delay. He says that S3 per cent, of the places maele vacant by the strike have already been filled. The strikers, on the other hand, assert that the switching has been done today by yardmasteis and other officials of the road, and that the service has been seriously crippled. An official of the road, speaking of the strike, said: "The strike of these men is not a serious matter to the railroael. They insisted that we should recognize their union by making a new schedule for the switchmen worKing in the yarels. We could not do this without violating our agreement with the Trainmen's Union. The schedule already with the trainmen takes in the switchmen, and we cannot branch off and take in all the branch unions they wish to form." Injunction Refused. CHICAGO, Nov. S. Judge Chetlaln to-day refused to grant a temporary restraining order against the International Association of Machinists as prayed for by Robert Tarrent, a machinery manufacturer. Tlie court said Mr. Tarrent would have to show that the pickets were using force against nonunion men before he could enjoin thestrikers. KILLED ON TOP OP A TOWER. Frank McCiy llleetrocuted 150 Feet Above the Street. COUNCIL BLUFFS, la., Nov. 8. Frank McCoy, an electrician, in the employ of the Electric Light Company, was electrocuted by a live wire at the top of a 100-foot electric tower to-day. lie went to the top of the tenver to repair a broken light and was founel elead later, a current of five thousand volts having passed through his body. He was suspendeel in the air, hanging across the railing of the platform at the top of the tower. Xatural Gas Pipe to lie Seized. WINDSOR. Nov. S. J. M. Gibson, attorney general of Ontario, has sent a notice to Sheriff Her, of Essex county, to seize the submarine pipes which are used by the Interior Cemstrucllon Company of Detroit to convey natuial gas from .Windsor to Detroit. This action has been taken as a lesult of the failure of the company to obey the order in council passed by the Ontario Cabinet some time ago for the purpose of having the pipes removed from the Canadian bed of the Detroit river. Crew of Fifty Lost. VICTORIA. B. C Nov. 8. The steamer Queen Adelaide arrived this morning after a stormy passage of twenty days from Kobe. Japan. She encountered very rough weather off the Japanese coast and t ade very little headway for three days. From the Japanese port she brought news of the lossof the steamer Tsuruhiko Maru, a 2.'J00ton vessel, which ran on the rocks off Goto Island on Oct. 11, and her crew of fifty were lost. The steamer was carrying coal from Kobe to Hong-Kong. Arabian Acrobat Killed. CHESTER, Pa., Nov. 8. Ambark Benhady. twenty-three years old, an Arabian Hcreibat. was instantly killed at the Howellstrect station of the Philadelphia, Wilmington & Baltimore Railroael, last night, by an express train. Benhady lived in New York and was one of four brothers who had just completed the season with Pawnee Bill's show. The show was going into winter quarters, and in getting off the train the Arabian stepped In front of the express. Dr. AV. D. Parr Chosen. COLUMBUS. O.. Nov. 8. At the meeting of the general committee of the Church Extension Board of the Methodist Church to-day Rev. T. C. Biff, of Delaware, O., and Dr. W. D. Parr, of Kokorno, Ind., were elected ns the corresponding secretaries at salaries of $2.5o0 per annum and traveling expenses. An appropriation of JID.OOO for the relief of the Simpson Memorial Auditorium at Los Angeles, Cal., was allowed. Llneotypc Operntor Record. DAYTON, O., Nov S.-A remarkable record cn the lineoty. i machine was made Thursday in the of.ice of the Daily News, when Claude Couse tet 3.2T.0 lines of nonpareil. i:uon ettr count, making a total of M.r-oa e ms in eight hours, machine speeded to seven lines a minute. To secure this result it was necessary to touch the keys l&,0o0 times, or nearly six times a second. Victim of Hydrophobia. CHICAGO. Nov. 8. While suffering from hydrophobia to-day August Brocksick knoekeel a Tolic man down and was sublti"d only after assistance had arriveel and chloroform had been administered. He was tnken to the Detention Hospital, where lie died soon after his arrival. FitKllsh Company Otinted. MANAGUA. Nicaragua. Nov. 8. The appellate elivislon of the Supreme Court sustains the arbitrators in declaring that the Kngiish company, which had obtained the concession, has forfelL-d the right to exclusive steam navigation of the San Juan river and Lake Nicaragua. John (iruat'M Crime. NORTH PLATTE, Neb., Nov. S.-As the result of a family quarrel John Groat, last night, stabbed and fatally wounded his wife and then cut his own throat and cannot recover. Th-y are- an aged German couple and have resided in this city twenty years. Acquitted of Killing a Millionaire. CRIPPLE CREEK. Col.. Nov. S. The jury in the- cae of Grant Crumby, who was tried for killing Samuel Strong, a millionaire mine-owner, lure, recently, returned a verdict of acquittal. They wire out four hours. Slops the Cough Mini Works Off tlie Cold. Laxative iovno-Quir.ine Tablets cure a cold in one day. No cur, r.o pay. price cent.
! TOWN OF TU1V1ACO TAKEN
DETAILS OF A IMPORTANT VICTOUY J1Y COLOMBIAN HLIJELS. Four to Six 1 1 mi el red Clover imient Soldiers, Several Cannon and Mnny Rillen Were Cupturcd. WASHINGTON, Nov. S.-The State Department Is in receipt of a dispatch dated Oct. 2!i from the United States consul general at Panama, reporting that the Liberal forces have captured the town of Tumaco, south of Panama about 500 miles. They took 4uu to Goo soldiers prisoners and captured live or six cannon, many rif.es, a quantity of ammunition and one small ship, the Gaitan. The Navy Department has received mail advices from both sides of the isthmus toucnlng the revolutionary situation there. From the west side Captain Perry, of the Iowa, reports from Panama and on the cast and on the gulf side, Commander McCrea, on the Machlas, submits a report from Colon. These reports are important as throwing light on the political conditions there rather than as conveying news of warlike movements. Captain Perry says, under date of Oct. 2S: "There are no insurgent troops In the neighborhood of Panama City. The condition of affairs in Panama is normal. "Tumaco, near the Ecuadorian border, has fallen into the hands of the insurgents. During the week the Chilean cruiser Ministro Zenttro arrived In Panama road with an envoy extraordinary on board accredited to the Ecuador and the Central American republic. They remained two days and then sailed for Costa Rica. The French cruiser Protet remains the only man of war in the harbor besides the Iowa. The British gunboat Icarus Is at Taboga." Captain MeRea, under date, of Oct. 29, says: "1 have to report the usual ejuiet conditions prevailing in Colon and along the north coast of the Isthmus, lhe Colombian gunboat Pinzon made a round trip to Bocas del Toro during the week, touching at Intermediate ports, and site reports all quiet to the west. I inclose papers showing to what miserable straits the local authorities have been reduced to raise funds, and am not surprised that the steamship companies have agreed to protest. If this path is once opened to collect the sinews of war and no protests are made there is no limit to the annoyance which will follow, and traliic over the railroad would be seriously interfered with. This resolution doubles the harbor dues, which are lumped together and called 'the commercial contribution. If meekly acciuiesced in, steamship lines might be ellverted from running he-re, which would, of course, injure the traffic on the railroad. The department has been informed of the i various ways in which the local authorities have raised funds, Ftich as hypothecating J all the dues from the Panama Railroad I Company for six months to come, adding ! -0 per cent, and then doubling the custom ! dues on all articles, and by levying 'war taxes' or assessment upon all solvent Colombians. These measures, if taken by the republic of Colombia and enforced throughout, would, perhaps, be justifiable as war measures. But when associated with the discontent almost amounting to revolt among the seldiers because of no pay it looks as thoush the funds being raised are for some other purposes than suppressing the revolution." CONDENSED GENERAL NEWS. Admiral Schley has accepted the invitation of the Knights Templars and Retail Merchants Association to visit Nashville, Tenn., and will probably do so in January. The admiral will be accompanied by Mis. Schley. The Pan-American Congress at its session In the City of Mexico elecideel at the suggestion of President Raigosa to adjourn for a fortnight in order, as he said, to allow the committees time to consider the projects submitted to them. W. N. Miller, counsel In the Ellis Glenn cafe, employed by the State in connection I with Attorney General Freer, was notified j nt Parkersburg. W. Va., yesterday that Judge Nathan Goff had granted an appeal j to the United States Supreme Court. i The Commercial Pacific Cable Company, recently incorporated to operate a cable line between this country and the Philippine Islands, yesterday filed with the New York secretary of state a certificate of increase of capital from $100,0)0 to $3.000, cXO. Final arrangements for the prerentatlon of the silver service to the battleship Illinois at Old Point Comfort have be.n made. The ceremony will take place Saturday, Nov. 16. The Governor's partj' and Illinois delegation will reach Newport News Friday evening. According to the New York Tribune John Hays Hammond, the mining expert, who had an unpleasant experience in South Africa at the hands of President Kruger s government at the time of the Jameson raid, H to make his home in New York. He will reside on Riverside drive. Gebhard Terlinden, recently held at Chicago for extradition to Germany on a charge of forgery, was j-estcrday granted a stay of execution until Nov. 13, at which time the Federal Court of Appeals will be asked to review the evidence. In the meantime Terlinden must remain in Jail. Edwarel Glennen, of Akron, O., was found dead in bed yesterday in a hotel at Phoenixville, Pa., having been suffocated by gas. Glennen was employed by the Stirling Company, of Barberton, O., and was superintending the placing of some boilers for the Phoenix Iron Company. The fire in the Mikado mine, at Bessemer, Mich., was extinguished yesterday after a damage of $10,(K. Two hundred men are thrown out of employment. The body of Erick Johnson, one of the entombed men, was found clinging to a ladder 150 feet from the surface. Williams's body has not yet been recovered. The contempt case against the editors of Hearst's Chicago American was concluded yesterday and Judge Hanecy reserved his decision until Tuesday next. Judge Shope, on behalf of Judge Hanecy, closed his argument with a lengthy Interpretation of the law in such ca?es. Every inch of standing room was occupied, chiefly by lawyers. Philip Schmitt and John J. Hefner are under arrest nt New York charged with swindling Thomas E. Greacen, a wholesale shoe dealer of New York, out of goods valued at upward of $10.000. Hefner is a traveling salesman employed by Greacen, and according to the police he transferred large amounts of goods to Schmitt tinder fraudulent sales. Verplan Colvin, former superintendent of the State Adirondack survey, has filed acrair.st the State of New York a claim of $370.211. In It!) the General Assembly legislated Mr. Colvin out of office. Mr. Colvin claimed that the plans, maps and papers In his office were his personal property, and under protest surrendered them to the state engineer and surveyor. Two of the Indian mounds on the world's fair site In Forest Park, St. Louis, were opened yesterday under the direction of Prof. D. I. Bushneil, the well-known archaeologist. In one mound were found the skulls and fragments of five human beirgs in a very bad stnte of preservation. Mixed with the hones were pieces of pottery. Nothing else was discovered ia the mounds. Francis C. Cantlne, as referee, has filed Ids report in tho New York Supreme Court approving the accounts of the Morton Trust Company, receiver of Harper & Bros., publishers. The business of the company was bought by the new firm of the same r.ame in September. 11" rj. The receiver collected $1. 3 51. Claims were presented by forty-seven creditors, aggregating $.O;4.203, and these were allow d. The new corporation he'd $1.003.037. The balance in the hands of the recdver which is available for distribution is $3,t;77. Mrs. Guy Denlberae and her infant child, who were severely burned in a lire which burned their home at South Norwalk, Conn.. Thursday night, died yesterday. This makes four deaths the record of the lire-, two of the Dcrdberacs having perished in the house. An explosion of a lamp, which spread burning oil eiver the familygroup while at supper, was the cause of the tragedy. Sheriff Bryant, of Baldwin county, yesterday brought to the Mobile (Ala.) Jail for safe keeping Wesley Jones, a thirteen-yeur-old n sro boy, charged with criminally assaulting the six-year-old daughter cf Rev. Rencher. a minister who resides at Stockton. Baldwin county. The girl is said to be la a serious condition. The boy der.les the charge. Fears of lynching caused the negro to be taken to Mobile. At a meeting of the Boston Clearing House Association yesterday the vote parsed Aug. 13. of this year, by which checks drawn upon banks in Nw ICnarUnd
that did not remit at par to the Boston clearing house were coi.ected by express, was rescinded. It was voted that the banks of the. Boston Clearing House Association charge a quarter of 1 per cent, on the checks drawn on banks which do not remit at par. John C. Bellany, an Englishman with several aliases, was yesterday held at New York for extradition to England, where he is wanted for a diamond robbery. Bellany was arrested as he was leaving Blackwell s island, where he served a year for attempted burglary. The London police say he is wanted for stealing diamonds and jewelry worth JJ..O. Ik was identified by the peculiar design of some tattooing on his left arm. In an address to the student to y of the University of California ytsteiday PreM!ent Benjamin lde V'heeler, of the Ljtate University, who ha 'ately returned from an Eastern trip, made tlie announcement that President Roosevelt had Informed him that he purpoed making the reclamation of arid lands in Caii.ornia a part of the national poiicy. President Roosevelt, he taid. was greatly interested in the affairs of the coast and would visit it early next year. Charles Miller and Mrs. N. C. Collins, who were indicted bv the federal grand juiy for alleged use of the United States mails in the operatfori of the various schemes to defraud, were brought to trial in the United States District Court at Kansas City yesterday. The principal scheme alleged to have been worked was a matrimonial bureau. In th? indictment Mrs Collins is also named under the aliases of Grace Arnold and Grace Allison, while Miller's other nanus are given as John E. Morton and M. II. Boss. Alexander Seaman is in prison at New York charged with a series of alleged swindling stock operations under the name of M. F. Phillips. Tho police say Seaman advertised himself as a member of the Stock Exchange and secured a number of out-of-town accounts. No return was ever made and several of the customers wrote to the detective bureau complaining. Seaman was caught when he called at a branch post office for mail. It is said Seaman served a year in the Kings county penitentiary for passing worthless checks in Brooklyn in lOS.
COLE YOUNGER DECLINES. Former Ilanelit Itefnses Police Captnlnry at Minneapolis. MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Nov. 8. A. A. Ames, mayor of Minneapolis, to-day tenelered to Cole Younger, the notorious bandit, now out of the Minnesota state prison on parole, after serving twenty-live years of a life sentence, a position as captain on the local police force. Cole took the matter up with Iiis friends in St. Paul, where he is now engaged as clerk In a grocciy store, and, on their advice, refused the offer. lie said he wished to avoid all notoriety. AN ENGINEER MANGLED. Part of Head and Side TUotvn Away by a Roller Explosion. LOUISVILLE, Ky., Nov. S. George FustIng, the engineer in charge, was killed and three Injured by a boiler explosion at the Central stockyards this afternoon. The injured are Louis Just, Jake Young. John Douk. Fusting was terribly mangled. The top of his head and part of his side were blown away and death must have been almost instantaneous. SETH LOW, NEW YORK'S MAYOR. Characteristics of tho Successful Nominee. - More than ten years ago, In a gathering of prominent educators in the city of Washington, when the question of a national university was under discussion, a Western man said: "If Columbia University, ever awakens to Its true position and power, and the city of New YorK has its civic pride in that institution stirred to commensurate and practical appreciation, there will be no need of planning for a national university; it will be Columbia." But to lift Columbia College to the plane of a true university, to quicken and enl&rge its life, to make that life at all equal to its possibilities, to send the college well along this career of great usefulness and renown, this were a task calling for the exercise of che very highest administrative qualities. Approved business methods were demanded. These characteristics must be united in one man if success was to crown the effort. A scholarly appreciation of educational needs anel resources combined with rare business ability, thoughtful consideration of the rights and welfare of ethers, a strong hold upon the confidence of his associates and of the community at large, accurate observation, sound judgment, tact, loyalty, good faith, patience the best qualities of leadership. With singular unanimity, says James II. Canfleld in the Review of Reviews, the choice fell upon Seth Low. lie was Just lorty years of age. In the very prime of his life. He was graduated at the head of his class in 1S70. A little more than ten years later his ability, his manliness, his absolute independence, his strong sense of civic duty and hi3 fearlessness had so commended him to his fellow-citizens in Brooklyn that he was chosen mayor under the new charter of that city. His administration constituted an epoch iu the History o! municipal government. Men who watched his career most closely during those four years saw the more to praise and the less to blame. Adverse criticism was rare and constantly decreasing; appreciation grew into warm approval. When he turned aside from this task Brooklyn was one of the be3t-governed cities in the Union and every Bruoklyniie was proud of Low. He hesitated long and sincerely about accepting the presidency of Colombia. He made no pretensions to being an educator in the technical or professional sense; the task was a severe one, the burdens were very great, the necessary sacrifices were unusual. To sell the old buildings and site at a good price, to purchase advantageously the land for another campus, to determine In all its details the occupancy of this new ground, to plan buildings and drive construction through to a finish, to transfer all departments with no serious break in their work, to successfully refund all outstanding indebtedness, to provide for largely increased expenditures, to expend the entire curriculum and to thoroughly organize the entire educational machinery, to accomplish the alllliations of the hitherto independent colleges, and in ten years to be able to leave all this so reasonably complete that tho leading spirit of it all may withdraw without a jolt or a Jar being felt in any part of the machine and with no apparent lessening of either power or speed all this is surely a noteworthy achievement. It is, probably, without a parellel In the history of educational Institutions. It is a very able administrator who can so determine and direct the relations and work of others that his own place and value are scarcely recognized, and that he can retire without causing what Wall street would call a slump In the local market. It is far easier and far more common to secure a reputation for brilliancy by keeping one's seif ostentatiously in sight, by insu ting upon constant personal Initiative, but this Is not organization. In this already great university Mr. Lowhas proved himself an organizer, an administrator, of remarkably high and strong character and qualities. For more than twenty years Mr. Low has stood squarely and insistently, and unselfishly and fearlessly, for the theory of business principles and not partisan methods in municipal aHalrs. He has been its most conspicuous advocate, he has been its very incarnation, and for four years he put all this into practice in a remarkably successful manner It is scarcely too much to assert that the public affairs of Brooklyn during his mayoralty became as though his private business, and as far as possible were administered upon precisely the same basis and by the same methods as would direct his conduct of private affairs. He tried to save money for the people precisely hs he would have tried to make money for himself. He endeavored to secure the largest possible returns from the resources at hand, just as he would have labored for like- results for a firm in which he was a partner. He regarded taxes paid by citizens as a definite Investment for a definite purpose, and he was as eager to realize upon this investment as though it had been made by or for a corporation of which he was a director or the president. He made character and efficiency the sole test for appointment to public service and the sole assurance of continued tenure. He carried municipal administration to tho
highest point of efficiency ever reached in this country. And iu all he malnfesteel the characteristics which gave him success at Columbia, and which made him conspicuous in the educational world. For many years Mr. Iiv has been under most severe tests, in the very fionvst and whitest light, and has always, says a writer in the Criterion, shown himself sane, well balanced, wholesome, possessed of and by common sense, most uncommon of all senses. His perceptive faculties are alert. He has shown himself to be a man of the strictest Integrity. In public and In private his life has been peculiarly blameless. Born In Brooklyn Jan. is. 1 son of Abiel Abbot Low. a noted merchant, he received his primary education at the Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute, graduating from
Columbia in IsO. He turned from the lawschool to enter his father's tea Importing house, becoming in l7ä a member of the firm. After serving his term as mayor of Brooklyn, to which he had be. n chose n In 1VS1. he was re-f Jetted in 1n3. He was nominated for mayor of New York In 1vj7 by the Citizens' party, but was defeated. MERELY A SERVANT. Identity of Prince Ilnnjlt of Baluchistan" Revealed. NEW YORK. Nov. S. The mystery as to the identity of "Prince Ranjit of Baluchistan." which puzzled London for two weeks and finally induced the India Office to publish an official bulletin about him, has been cleared up In New York within twenty-four hours after his arrival. This Hindoo was a servant in a New York restaurant. SISTER SUPERIOR SHOT. Wounded by n Drunken Janitor Whom She Had DlsiuisMed. NEW YORK, Nov. S.-Slster Superior Agnes, of the Academy of St. Mary of the Lake, Lakewood, N. J., was shot in the shoulder to-day by John Lawler, whom she had dismissed from the position of janitor cf the academy. Lawler's eiischarge was because of intemperance, and he was drunk when he shot Sister Agnes in the hall of the academy. The wound is not serious. TARIPF AND TRUSTS. Compilation of Corporation! Formed Inder the Wilson Ulli. Omaha Bee. In his recent campaign speeches William Jennings Brj-an has reiterated his former assertion that the tariff is the "mother of trusts," in spite of the notorious fact that some of the most gigantic trusts were formed long before the adoption of the McKinley tariff. Mr. Bryan still clings to the delusion that the tariff alone is responsible for the existence of trusts. But neither Mr. Bryan nor any other American statesman has ever known a mother who was younger than her offspring. In order to refresh his memory and that of all other people who still labor under the delusion that the trusts are the outgrowth of the tariff we deem it proper to call attention to the following li.-t of trusts, representing nothing below JlO.ooo.oo each, that were organizeel before Mr. McKinlev's inauguration and flourished under the Wilson tariff: Shares When and Formed. Bonds. American Sugar Co lsj-,7 $37,0::g.w0 Consolidated Ice Co '..103 ll.Sää.em) National Salt Co lsr V2S ). ) National Starch Co ls:) lLfAV.) Sperry Flour Co. (Cal.) iv lo.Ooo.uoO Chicago Beef combine 1vn. Unknown American Spirits Co 157 otVJ35,3eej California Wine Makers' Company 1SS7 lO.OOO.CW Chicago Brewing and Malt Company 1S91 22.0S0.000 Milwaukee and Chicago Brewing Co 2ri.0y).W) American Tobacco Co IV) ol.Osö.O o National Wall Paper Co. ...179 3."i.i31.r,ao Standard Roje Co 1:h 2412.O0 U. S. Leather Co ls:i3 lSKCvyimo U. S. Rubber Co 1S02 ÜJ.lyi.ojO American School Furniture Co l2 n.r..ooo Central Lumber Co. (Cal.).liotJ 7o,oOO,ooO American Window Glass Company lM) xono.nno rittsburg Plate Glass Co... 1801 PUxio.o) American Cotton Oil Co....lSS3 33,r,:3.7i) American Linseed Oil Co...lW 2s,ro.Oo Agr. Chemical Co 1S00 ,riO.tn(Hio Standard Oil Co 1S72 bl.2.W-) Fuel and Iron Co. (Col.)....lS92 20,837,000 Coal, Iron and Railroad Co. (Tenn.) 18S7 30,000,000 Lake Superior Consolidated Iron Mines 1S33 2S,722,0'O American (Sewing) Machine Co 1S03 in.010.r100 Union Typewriter Co 1S03 IS, 015,000 American Electric Heat Co 133 10,000.000 Electric Storage Battery Company .1??S IM'n.rvw) General Electric Co l:2 2'.f)i3.0"0 Westlnghouse Electric Co..lVl 16.4s3.0."0 Anaconda Copper Co 1 SOI ZO.ffioiO National Lead Co 1S01 29,S22,003 Brooklyn Wharf and Warehouse Co 1835 30,0, 000 Western Elevator Association 7 15.ri00.oio Diamond Match Co 1SS3 ll.Oo0.O00 Aggregate capitalization $l.O03.SS1.233 Many of these trusts have been reorganized and now represent an aggregate of more than two billions of capital.' While many of the more recently organized trusts have been stimulated by the tariff, it will be conceded by Colonel Bryan that the destruction of these colossal concerns would have seriously affected America's commercial supremacy In the markets of the world and materially retarded the growth and prosperity of this country. MURDERS AND SUICIDES. At Mount Holly, N. J., yesterday, Harry Allen Baxter, of Great Neck, L. I., who was convicted of attempting to kill his father-in-law. Judge B. P. Wills, was sentenced to pay a fine of $!j0 and the costs of prosecution, by Judge Gasklll. The coroner's jury which investigated the death of Ernst T. Merkt, an iceman, who was found dead in an alley adjoining a saloon, in Buffalo, on Wednesday morning, has exonerated James A. Howard, the bartender, who was held pending the result of the inquest. Merkt's death, the Jury says, was accidental. Otis Greene, Indicted at Des Moines, la., for murdering his wife on Sept. 0, pleaded guilty to murder in the second degree, yes-" ttrday, and was sentenced to the penitentiary for life. Greene shot his wife on the Etreet and then shot himself through the temple. From the effects of the shot he became blind. Noah Barden, of Glenn, Allegan county, Michigan, was shot and killed Thursday night by Pearl Starkey, his cousin. Barden's wife narrowly escaped the same fate. Barden's house was fired by Starkey, who then shot himself dead. Starkey worked for Barden last sjrlng and was discharged. This was the only known cause of trouble between the men. Will Jones, a negro desperado who recently killed three men in one day, two blacks and one white, and shot several oilier members of the sheriff's posse, was publicly hanged at Madison. Fla., yesterday. Several hundred people witnessed the execution, a numLer of whom were negroer' Jones showed no weakening of nerve and made no confession or speech of repentance. Robert Catlett has given himself up at Sevbrville. Tenn., to answer the charge .f being an accomplice in the murder of Laura Whaley. in 1V07. Pies Wynn ami Catlett Tipton were hanged in Julv, lsoo. aR the princijals in the murder of" Laura Whaley and her husband. William W halev, and it was charged that B b Catlett had paid Wynn and Tipton a turn of money to get Whaley and his wife out e.f the way. Catlett was tried and acquitte-d on the charge of be-ir.g an accomjdice in the murder of William Whaley, but was late r indicted on the charge of being an accomplice in the murder of Laura Whaley. Con f cftiloit of n Youth. SPRING FIELD. 111.. Nov. S. John Schrick, aged sixteen, who, with his uncle, Charles Cook, ageei thirty-nine, w.a was arrested in Ht. Louis suspected of having kllied Sieclal Officer J. W. Brown, of thVandalia Railroael, mar East Caren.b.l. i, on Oct. 20, made a confession implicating Cook and a thief, who was killed i.i a fifit with the d'icers. as the nun who kiiied Brown. Cook admit being in a party .f thieves caught stealing brass fpim the Vandalia road, but denies the killing of Brow n. TwoOIIIlloii-Dollnr C:trxo. SAN FRANCISCO. Nov. S The steamer Hong-Kong Maru brought $Ummm) n frnm Ijntti fnr.tii'rcil In th.. Si . t l.'.. clico mint, and Chinese silk valued at $1,-
Knight & Jillson Co. Manufacturer nl Jobben
WROUGHT IRON Pipe and Fittings BOII.BR TUBES. MILI SUPPLIES, PLUMBERS' SUPPLIES, PUMPS and WE 11 MATERIALS, INDIANAPOLIS, - - IND. Treasury Statement Monthly statement for October, 130L showing balance in tho state treasury at the clee of bushnss Oct. 31, IM. as appears in the olliccs of auditor and treasurer of state: Balance in treasury Sept. 30. lmi $r..o:s.c) October reeeiits 4'j.!j.21 Total $l.tt2.'2C.Sl October disbursements... 4uv.727.43 Balance on hand Oct. si, r.' i $ci3.a.n Ralance by Funds. General fund $tH.tf?.G3 Be no ole-nt Institution fund 31. W F.tate debt sinking fund.. lls.vS School revenue for tuition S3.I'-:s.F.7 College fund principal.. .. &o,y.5.77 College fund interest ZÖ.'Sl Permanent endowment fund rincipal 41.4S5.93 Permanent endowment fund interest 415.00 Sales university and college fund lands 4l.70S.4S Sales permanent endowment fund lands S.477.S2 Educational institution fund 2'-1.45 Excess bid sinking fund. 1 ..:.;. 25 Fnelaimed estate. Sales state lands !.13vS7 Swamp land funds 13.51s. Common scheoI fund 5.732.70 Escheated estates 1.2;.. 56 State sinking fund 4J7.7S Surplus revenue fund.... Li'O.uO T.ital $5t2.2:3.0 Outstanding warrants, JC0.C13.91. I,EOPOI,D I,EVYt Treasurer of State. -W. II. HART, Auditor of State. MACK BURNHAM MAY DIE. lie AVus Assaulted hy Unknown Men In His Own House. The physician attending Mack Rurnham at 324 West Chesapeake street said' last night that his condition was critical an-I his chances for recovery were small. Alnjut C o'clock Wednesday morning he was struck over the head with a file, cutting a deep gash, from which he nearly bled to death. Two men entered the place after his wife had opened the eloor. She said they had. made a mistake In the house and ordered them out. Rurnham was 111 In betl. but got up and ordered the men from the place. One of them picked up a large wood file used as a stove poker, and after declaring he would not leave the place until he had run tho fide through some one struck Rurnham over the head. Both men then ran. The police secured a description of the men, but had not found them last night. DR. T. A. C0LLETT HERE. His First Visit to Indiana for n Good Jinny Years. Dr. T. A. Collett, of Ida Grove, la., who was at the Spencer Houve last night, has come back to Indiana after an absence of many years to visit old scenes and old friends. He has been practicing medlcin r.ear Ida Grove for twenty years. He tays that town Is a bustling little city of 2.0fJ. i ulth trie nhr.no crv nt ntirt TciliHe h( nt. ing plant that he'i the residence of the town so far as Its rapacity will allow. The Iowa farmer has taken advantage of the telephone service, the doctor fsys. and many In the neighborhood of Ida Grove have 'phones in their houses. CITY I7EWS KOTES. Dr. David Ross was called to his home nt Brazil. Ind., yesterday on account of the serious Illness of his father. Prof. M. Frederick Everbach will lecture to-rnorrow evening at Mansur Hall on "What the Twentieth Century Will Bring." Martin Heti, a saloon keeper at IZQ West Morris rtreet. reported yesterday morning; that his saloon had be cn entered during the preceding night and a large quantity cf chewing and" smoking tobacco, cigars, liquors and a watch taken. The independent tracker bakers of the country will hold a meeting in Cincinnati Monday to discuss plans ef meeting the competition of the National Biscuit Companythe trust. Bryce's bikery is theoniy independent one in this city anel will be represented at the meeting. Cenernl Wheeler w Firearm. PHILADELPHIA, Nov. S A company of which Gen. Joseph Wheeler to a director is conte-mjdatlng the establishment of a plant in this city for the manufacture of a ne w firearm. The ge ne ral is here and purposes making Philadelphia his home. The chief merits claimed for the new weapon are 'freedom from recoil and the automatic loading and firing. The I'nited States board of ordnance and fortification, it is said, hag ordered a test given. A GIRL'S TALE With a Reason for Milral!iifr th Father. "We have tried for a long time to persuade papa that perhaps Lis die t had something to do with his ill feelings, he used to laugh good-nnturedly and say. 'Why. girls, I've been used to eating and drinking ever since I was a boy; I was trained that way; no, I fear some change has taken place in my body and I shall never be well again.' "We ftt n suggested that he leave off coffee and tobacco, but he urged that they did not hurt him and were a comfort; so we acquie sctd. until one day sister Insisted on making the coffee half Postum Food Coffee, and it was made that way for about ten days until j apa s.emej brighter and comj'laine-d h ss of his head. 'That's it!' siste r xclalrued. and from that elay she served Po.-turn alone without any c 1 11 l. "Paja never detected the difference for We have le.irmd th- secret of making Posturn to tziw it a prime-, crisp fUvor. it is asy enunh. Ju-t allow it to Continue boiling fifteen minutes, counting from the tii:n boiling commences, pot from the time It Is jdae-ed oil Stove-. "Well, the elear e.Id soul seemed day by elay to take n new life. He began to stay at the edhce later and was full of fun when he- eame home- in the- evening. "The proof is piain enough th it. morning1 after morning, year in and year eut. we had I e n fee ding our dear e.d governor with codVe that Is r-.4l!y a strong liquid drug and it was gradually but nurely killing him. "When it was partially removed he got a ; little bdtr a"d when it was entirely re-
mod and ln- l'ure ioo.i conee. Postum, serve !. his recovery wa: rapid. "We don't fool paj. on many things, but we just had to tills time, for he was tteadliy and m;: ly b axing us and we Live the ear old man to much to leave- anything undone that will ke e p blni he ! c. "It is wom.in's privilege, you know, to tease, e m jole and b-. then 'tliifj' if the e'.ear o'.d h erd-he:.ded think won't lUtOQ to reason."
