Indianapolis Journal, Volume 53, Number 221, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 August 1903 — Page 2

THE INDIANAPOLIS JOURNAL, SUNDAY, AUGUST 9, 1903.

PART ONE.

SHOWEBS TO-DAY.

Ir niid Warmer Weather Throuata. ont Indiana on Monday. WASHINGTON. Aug. g.-Forecast for Sunday and Monday: Indiana Showers on Sunday. Monday fair and warmer; light to fresh south tu west winds. Illinois Shower on Sunday. Monday fair, with warmer except near Lake Michigan; light to fresh south to west winds. Ohio Showers on Sunday. Monday fair, warmer in southern portion; light to fresh south winds, becoming variable. Western Pennsylvania Showers on Sunday. Monday fair and warmer In south rn portion; llht to fresh south winds, becoming variable. West Virginia and Kentucky Showers on Sunday. Monday fair and warmer. Lower Michigan-Showers 8unday; Monday partly cloudy, showers in northern portion, fresh wind;, mostly south. Kansas and Arkansas Showers and cooler on 8unday; Monday fair and warmer. North Dakota Fair in western; showers In eastern pontons on Sunday, followed by clearing; Monday fair. South Dakota Generally fair on Sunday gnd Monday. Minnesota Fair in southern, showers in northern portion on Sunday; Monday talr, warmer in western portion, variable winds. Wisconsin Partly cloudy on 8unday, showers in southern and eastern portion; fair t-xcept showers in northeast portion, warmer in west portion, variable wiuds. Nebraska Partly cloudy on Sunday, Shu word in southwestern portion; Monday fair, warmer in west portion. Iowa Fair in western, showers in eastern portion; Sunday warmer In central and northeastern portions; Monday fair, warmer in central and eastern portions. .Loral Observations on Saturday. Bar. Ther. R H. Wind. Weather. Pre. Ts. S3 29.M so 70 East. Cloudy. 0.00 7 p. m 39.42 70 W South. Cloudy. 0.03 Maximum temperature, 71; minimum temperature. t. Comparative statement of the mean temperature and tutal tree 1 pi tat ton on Aug. 8: Temp. Pre. Normal TS 0 11 M-n to 0.U3 Departure for day OOS Departure tor month 2f O.SJ Departure since Jan. 1 1 1.41 W. T. BLTTHB, Section Director. Yesterday's Temperatures. Stations. Abilfi)-, l.sa AruArlllo, Tex Atlant. Os , Btamsnk. N. O Buffaio, N. Y Cairo, 111 Calgary. Alberta Chattanooga. Tenn . Cheyenne. Wyo Chk-aao. Ill Cincinnati, O Cleveland. O Columbus, o ncordia. Kan Davtnyort. la Denver. 'ol Txxlz ""ltv, Kan ntoiK ut . Is. t a. m. 7 T2 f sa Mix 96 H2 M 80 70 v2 7 si 74 73 71 73 80 7f 84 v, 7 H 94 88 94 74 I 78 SO S2 2 80 76 0 U 70 80 SI M . 0 TS 7 78 80 74 76 t3 78 90 90 ;o 94 76 76 7H tts 7 p. m. 52 82 74 68 78 72 78 64 70 72 72 72 1 1 74 ' 74 80 8 60 88 84 90 68 78 74 78 80 78 74 86 74 . St 82 S6 84 S2 64 78 80 8 . fi 74 86 74 70 68 48 2 ....CO a .... 56 . . . "4 . . . . .... 64 .... 60 .... 68 .... -Juluth. M!nn fci Paso. Tex Qalveeton Tex Grand Junction. Col Orani Rapids. Mb h Havre. Hpnt Huron. 8. D HHena. stent Jacksonville. Fla ... Kanaan City. Mo .... Ijaru.r. '.Vjro Uttlt Hoik. Ark .... lxmisville. Ky Marquette. Mich .... Memphis, Tenn M-'-ltna. I'tah Mon'i; tnrv . Ala . . Nu!;ville, Tenn ..... Ntw Orl an. La .... New York. .V Y ... Xori'olk. Va North Platte. Neb . Oklahoma. O. T Omaha. Net) Palestine. Tex Pantenburg. V. Va Philadelphia. Pa ... PlttfhurK. Pa W N TS 60 52 .... 54 hi M . . . . H .... 2 .... 4 .... 72 ... 64 H .... 70 .... 0 . ... Ti .... 62 . . . . 76 .... M .... w ') .... 74 .... 63 N . i S4 S8 54 Pueolo, C'i gu lie. Assln ... ty. 8. D i. Mo Minn I ity. Ptah ni. iVx 4 56 SB .... of 60 tta pid CI 8t. lui St. Paul F. ' Lsk Ki4r. Ant' 70 IS 86 74 90 72 80 72 72 M Sama Fe N. M 8r.r..; or. , i sstssjin ll. Ill , IrUfflelC, Mo Vil. r.tlne, Neb Waah'.ngton. D. C ... Wichita, Kan M 7 so 5S 54 MOVEMENTS 07 STEAMERS. M W Y'RK. A-. -Arrive!: Etruria. from Liverpool: CeUric. from Liverpool and Cueenstownf Pniladelphia. from Southampton. ROTTERDAM. Aus:. S rrived: Rotterdam, from New York. Sailed: Noordam, for New York, via Boulogne. QUKKN3TUWN. Aus;, S. Arrived: T'mbrta. front New York, for Liverpool, and proceeded. Sailed. Celtic, for New York. PLYMOl'TH ua. 8. A i rrvad : Friedrich dar Grosse, from New York for Bremen, and proceeded. .'HKKHOrRO, Aug. R Sailed: Bluecher, for N m York; :!. for New York. BREMEN, Auk. ".Sailed: Roentgen Luise, for New York. HAMBURG, Aug. 8. Arrived: Bulgaria, from New York. GLASGOW. Aug. 8. Sailed: Columbia, for ?Cew York. ANTW'ERI', Aug. 8. Sailed: Vaderland, fcr New York. LIVERPOOL, Aug. S Sailed: Campania, for Nasi York. LONDON, Aug. 8.-Sailed: Minnetonka, for tfew York. HAVRE. Aug. 8. Sailed: La Savole, for New York. NEW FALL STYLES IiVOW KKADY In our Famous We hare also the new fall ityls of Stiff and Soft Hats STRAW HATS Any Hal in our hcase for OIVK DOLLAR This includes our 12.50, g; and 4 Straws NEGLIGEE SHIRTS A new line f patterns that are very swellhave Jut arrived, at ONE DOLLAR EACH Danbury Hat Co No. S E. Washington St

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Autowear 4ft 1 Hats

KILLS RUSSIAN CONSUL

TURKISH (.i:DARME SAID TO HAVE Ml RDERKD M. ROSTKOVSK1. Dispatches Received at Belgrade In dicate that a Crisis Haa Been Reached at Monastir. INSURGENTS OUT IN FORCE m PRINCE FBRDIXAXD THE MOST FRO!rUE.T FICilRE AT PR ES EXT. Ipon the Attltnde of Bulgaria's Rnler Pence or War Ik Believed to Depend Largely. BELGRADE. Aug. 8 Dispatches received here state that M. KostkovskI, the Russian consul at Monastlr, has toeen murdered by a Turkish gendarme. m IXSIRGEXTS ARE AGGRESSIVE. Twenty Thousand Suid to De Operating in the Monustir Vicinity. SALONICA, Aug. 8. One thousand Bulgarian insurgents, half of whom are armed with Mannlicher rifles and the remainder with hatchets, are threatening the town of Vodena, forty-six miles north of Salonlca. Sixteen battalions of reserves belonging to the Salonica and Vodena societies wt re called out Aug. 6. Sixty Turks who were wounded In the fight at Sorovltch Aug. 6, when 1,700 Bulgarians were routed by Turkish troops with artillery, have arrived here. It is reported here that lO.Ouo insurgents, divided into four corps are operating against the troops in the villayet of Monastir and that lOjOuu more are operating at Castoria. A military cordon has been drawn around Monastir, where all the shops are closed. A number of workmen who have refused to repair the railways have been threatened with death. It is thought probable that all passenger traffic through Macedonia will be stopped. a - MOVEMENT IS SPREADING. Inaarrectlon In Macedonia Appears to Be Growing Wider. CONSTANTINOPLE, Aug. 8.-The insurrectionary movement in Macedonia appears to be widening. Bands are reported to be active in the sanjack of Uskub, and the Bssrjsi of Krushevo. where the government telegraph offices have been dynamited: while in the district of Dibra, four Bulgarian villages have risen, provoking a corresponding rising in the neighboring Albanian villages. According to the statements of the Porte, however, the authorities have succeeded in calming the Albanians and inducing them to return to their homes. The diplomats here are uneasy, fearing that the trouble may spread outside the bounds of Macedonia. So long as the trouble Is confined to the usual skirmishing bands and occasional dynamite outruses it is not believed that thert will be any serious cause for alarm. Up y the present the action of the embassies has been confined to advising, the Porte to prevent the Mussulman population from engaging iu fights with the insurgents. Tv lve battalions of Kedifs. in the sanjack of Serflj and the villayet of Monastir have been called out. WHAT WILL FKRIMVVM) DO? For Him to Decide Whether There Shall Be Peace or War. VIENNA, Aug. 8. One of the most promineut figures in the Balkan situation is Prince Ferdinand of Bulgaria, upon whose attitude at the present juncture peace or war is believed to largely depend. If he elects to continue the policy desired by the powers the disturbance may be confined to a few skirmishes and dynamite outrages, and a Turko-Bulgarian war may be averted this year, at any rate. At the same time it is recognized that the increasing pressure at the revolutionary committees may force him to take action. Kir. u- Peter of Servia is a new and unknown factor in the situation, but in view of his age, reputation for prudence, and his friendship for Austria it is thought unlikely that he will take any step to add to the existing complications. KING I'KTER TERRORIZED. Publishes an Appointment, hut Recalls It Almost Immediately. COLOGNE. Aug. 8. King Peter, of Servia, Is being openly terrorised by his entourage, according to the Belgrade advices of Um Cologne Gazette. Most of the present court officials, who actually participated in and were privy to the murder of King Alexander and Ouecn Draga, says the correspondent, appear to have strongly objected to the appointment of Colonel Leschjaniu. the Servian attache at Constantinople, to the post of court marshal. The Official Gazette yesterday contained the appointment, but shortly after Its publication all copies of the Gazette were called in by the t olice, and a second Issue appeared from which Ijeschjanln's name was eliminated. Leschjanin is a brothr-in-law of th- minister of finance, who was court marshal until the late King Alexander's marriage. KLF.BR ATE AT HEIDELBERG. Centenary of (he Reopening; of the I nlverIty 1st Observed. BERLIN, Aug. 8 The University of Heidelberg has been celebrating for several days the centenary of Its reopening. The directors of many Austrian and Swiss universities have been present. Prof. Hugo Munsterberg represents Harvard University. The Grand Duke and Crown Prince of Baden and Prince Max are attending, while the many strangers include large numbers of Americans. On Thursday the Grand Duke of Baden delivered an address pointing out that the professors of a century ago awakened the patriotic sentiments of students and their action resulted In the creation of a national spirit and the movement for a united Germany. Professor Maroks yesterday delivered the principal historical oration on "The Untversitv in the Nineteenth Century." It treated chjefly of the university's rj4e in introducing liberalism into ti. im:iny. There was a grand torchlight procession of students Thursday evening and last night the old school was illuminated with Chines lanterns and Bengal tirea. Professor Pickering, of Harvard University, has been given the honorary degree of Doctor of Sciences and Mathematics in connection with the celebrations. LONDON JUMfl SCORES HOOLEY. Methods of the Promoter Condemned In Emphatic Langnagje. LONDON, Aug 8. Attorney General Finlay has instruct, d tin' director of public prosecutions to investigate some of the transactions of Promoter E. T. Hooley, in connection with the Sapphire Corundum mine of Canada. Hooley's meteoric financial carter aud his heavy failure were tie- s. ligations of lomion a few years ago. The bankrupt has since been operating In his wife's name and has been living in the greatest luxury. In the course of the hearing on Thursday of a suit to recover money paid In connection with the deals, Justice Darling characterised the whole transactlon ni Hooley and his colleagues an fraudulent and declared it wus a grave reflection on the courts of the country that such a thing coold occur In the middle of London. Thlmble-rig8ng on a race course was a simple crime compared with the transac-

tions of thse people with millions instead of peas, he said.

Dropped Their Bombi, PHILIPPOLIS, Capital of Roumelia, Bulgaria. Augr. 8- A dynamite explosion occurred to-day which wrecked a number of buildings in the most thickly populated section of the citr. Up to the present portions of the rem ins of three persons have been discovered in the ruins. It Is stated that the explosion was the result of the police surprising a band of Macedonian revolutionists, who in their confusion dropped the bomb;. American Squadron Sails. LISBON. Aug. 8. The American squadron sailed to-day for Villafranche, southern France. It will spend the summer in the Mediterranean. Cable Notes. Andrew Carnegie has offered the citj of Dublin the sum of $140.000 towards the erection of a free public horary. No hitch will occur In the enactment of the Irish land bill in consequence of the amendments made in the House of Lords. The London Morning Leader prints a dispatch from Berne, Switzerland, which says that Dr. Menyer, an American professor, was drowned while s.wimmirig in Lake Maggiore. Colonel Schielat. who was commandant In the Boer army during the Transvaal war. died in a hospital at Reichenhall Saturday. His health was shattered by the privations of the war and his confinement MM I prisoner of war on the Island of St. Helen i. The report of the British commission which investigated the prevalence of dysentery tad enteric lever among the British forces during the S .uth African war fills a bulky blue book. The commissioners express the opinion that there is no connection between the two maladies. The comparative immunity of the Uoers from enteric fever is nttributed to the boiling of the drinking water. The committee finds that files were the active agents in the dissemination of enteric fi ver In standing camps. It is calculated that enteric fever during the war entailed an expenditure of upwards of $2U,000,UUO. MELVILLE WILL REST CHIEF OF THE BUREAU OF STEAM ENGINEERING RETIRES. Father of the Turbine Idea as Applied to the American Navy Rear Admiral Rae Succeeds Him. WASHINGTON, Aug. S.-Rear Admiral George AV. Melville, who was retired for age last January, relinquished his duties as chief of the bureau of steam engineering tc-kiy, and was succeeded by Rear Admiral Charles W. Rae. Because of conspicuous services as engineer in chief, Secretary Moody requested Rear Admiral Melville to serve out his tour of duty as chief of the bureau, which expired to-day. Throughout the morning the engineer in chief was saying good-bye to the many navy officers, army officers and friends who called to extend their goo'd wishes. It so happened that the last paper which Rear Admiral Melville signed as engineer in chief was a tentative plan for the arrangement of the turbine engines in the proposed scoutshlps. Admiral Melville has been at work on the turbine project fr MVeTaJ years, being the father of the turbine idea, as applied to the American navy. He said to-day: "The pleasure accorded me this day more than compensates for all the trials gad tribulations and disappointments of the last sixteen years. And the congratulations of my friends is sufficient balm to heal the wounds at parting with them." Admiral Melvili left to-day for Philadelphia, where he will make his home. WOMAN TO GIVE "TIPS" CAROLINE I. GRIESHEIM WILL TALK TO INDIANA POSTMASTERS. Government Clerk Whose Mission Is to Cilve Pointers on the CivllService law and Routes. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. WASHINGTON, Aug. 8. Caroline L Griesheim, a clerk in the employ of the Civil-service Commission, has been sent on a tour of Inspection by the commission. She Will visit Indiana, Ohio and other States and expects to be gone about twenty days. Her nominal object is to confer with the local civil-service boards of the various States, see how their work is getting along and give them any Instructions that may be necessary, but It is known that the real object of her tour of inspection is especially to talk with the postmasters of the various towns and give them a few pointers on the civil-service laws and rules and point out to them what can and what cannot be done. These timely tips to postmasters are of Interest because of the recent revelations of the failure of postmasters in many cases to observe the letter of the law in regard to appointmnts and in other cases to disregard the spirit of the law. Miss Griesheim s trlpy is sure to attract much attention and the employes of the Postofflce Department are wondering whether there will be any dismissals of present encumbents as a result of her missionary work. J. A. Mathews, secretary to Senator Fairbanks, and Thomas Shipo, secretary to Senator Beveridge, left for Indianapolis today. They have been here attending to department business for the Indiana senators. xxx Rural carriers have been appointed at Algiers as follows: Regulars, Albert H. Norton, Emerson B. Whltesides and William R. Kerr; substitutes. Mat tie M. Norton, Hampton Whitesides and William Dixon. JOHN E. MONKISLANDS MAY VANISH. Low Archipelago and the Tuamotu Group Ag-nln Storntswept. PAPEETE, Tahiti, July 23, via San Francisco, Aug. 8. It would seem that the ninety islands known variously as the Low Archipellgo and the Tuamotu group, are destined to be reclaimed by the Paciflc ocean. Last January they were swept by a flood, and in consequence nearly 6,000 of the inhabitants of the islands were drowned and property to the value of one-half a million dollars was destroyed. And, now six months later, fierce gales from the southwest and southeast have again caused great crests to sweep over the islands. So far only four persons are believed to have perished, but the fear is great that when all the islands are clean-d there may be a distressing list of fatalities. The steamer Excelsior suffered much damage during the series of gales while sh was on her way from the Tahita to the Marquesas group. Three of the Tuamotu Irlands were undT sratef to such an -xt'iu that the inhabitants Jil l to climb coeoanut tnes Cor safety. Houses and buildings and finally the cocoanut trees were destroyed, while the inhabitants had a close call to death. It Is thought that most of the islands of the group were visited by the storm. i i i mm u .i I Stock of Paint and Glass Burned. OMAHA, Aug. S. Fire in a five-story brick building at lfiUSO Harney street this evening gutted the building, destroying a grt-utt-r part of the stock of the Midland Paint and Glass Company, which Is a local branch of the Pittsburg Plat Glass Company, and the Mark Saddlery Company. Several employes had narrow escapes and two re ceived slight injuries. The total loss will exceed $200,000, with about 80 per cent, of insurance,

NEW POPE HAS A WILL

PItS X I PROOTING ALL OLD CXSTOMS AT THE VATICAN. Shoeked Ills Courtiers by Deelinini to Permit n Demonstration in His Own Honor. KINDNESS TO W0RKINGMEN MASONS WHO HAD DER.N ORDERED A WAT RECALLED. Blessed by His Holiness to Their Great Dellabt Preparations for To-Do-s Ceremonies. ROME, Aug. 8. By special permission the representative of the Associated PruMI was allowed to enter St. Peter's to-night to observe the preparations for the coronation to-morrow. In the central aisle a wide space has been fenced off for the passage of the cortege. The chapels, including that of St. Gregory Pauses, have been richly decorated with red damask fringed with fold. The papal throne rises maj y tic ally at the farther end of the great building, being a bewildering mixture of gold, red and silver, and appearing altogether too gorgeous to be sat in. On the right a space has been reserved for the diplomatic body, the Knights of Malta and special representatives and envoys. On the left another space has been reserved for the Roman aristocracy. Close at hand stands the bronze statue of St. Peter, dressed in full pontifical robes and looking strange to profane eyes, the great toe worn away by much kissing of the faithful being In evidence. The high altar is adorned with gilded candelabra, after designs by Michael Angelo, Collini and other famous artists, in' which many candles will twinkle on Sunday, while several thousand electric lights will illuminate the whe'e church. The portico of St. Peter's has been dosed by immense curtains to prevent any one from looking In as the Pope passes, which would seem to confirm the statement that Pope Pius X will not bless the people from an outside balcony, as was half expected. The new Pope has been upsetting all customs at the Vatican. When courtiers thought to-day to give him pleasure by saying that he would have a tremendous reception at St. Peter's on Sunday the Pope" was much displeased and absolutely forbade anything of the kind, saying that he would not have it. He called his major domo, who thereupon issued the following proclamation, which was distributed as widely as possible: "It is the warm desire of his Holiness to have no acclamation at the Vatican or basilica, and that the most devout and most religious silence be maintained." Another innovation at the Vatican is the Pope's refusal to permit everybody to be sent away when he tppatn. A gendarme had ordered away some masons who were working about the grounds because the Pope was about to come forth. The Pope himself witnessed this action and had the gendarme severely reprimanded. The masons were recalled and the Pope spoke to each of them, laying his hand on their heads and giving them his blessing, to their Immense deliRht. The Pope also Insists on continuing his habit of accompanying ai persons whom he has received to the door, no matter how humble. Every diplomatic measure has been adopted to have him abandon this custom, but without avail. He declares his wish to do so, and be will. The outcry regarding the distribution of the tickets for the coronation ceremonies has assumed vast proportions. Many distinguished Catholics, especially foreigners, have arrived In Rome for the purpose of b.ing present at the ceremonies and they have been unable to obtain tickets, while speculators are selling them on the streets. At the French embassy, accredited to the Vatican, great Indignation prevails and a communication has been addressed to the press informing the French colony that it will be Impossible to provide tickets as only thirty have been received at the embassy. The government has ordered 1.000 troops to occupy the plaza in front of St. Peter's at 4 o'clock Sunday morning. The departure from Rome of Cardinals Langenieux and Leco without waiting for the coronation is much commented upon, as the French cardinals had refused until the last moment to vote for Sarto. After receiving several cardinals Pius X this morning admitted to private audience Signor Andrsassa. mayor of Riese, the Pontiff's birthplace, and some of the municipal authorities. The meeting was full of interest, as Andreazza knew the Pope familiarly years ago. It is persistently stated that Cardinal Vlncenzo VannutelH will be appointed papal secretary of state in succession to Cardinal Rampolla. TRADE, INDUSTRY, LABOR. The bank of Devalls Rluff, Ark., has been placed in the hands of a receiver. It is alleged that $10,000 or more of the banks funds are missing. It is believed that depositors will be paid in full. Adolphus Busch, of St. Louis, has offered a cup worth $G00 for the best exhibit of hops grown In the arid States and Territories, to be shown at the coming session of the National Congress at Ogden. The Morrll Commission Company, of Omaha, a grain and stock brokerage firm, suspended Saturday. The concern did an extensive business. It was said that Mr. Morril had been ill and had been compelled to suspend business on that account. A certificate of incorporation of the Pittsburg Union Stockyards has been filed in Jersey City. The company was organized for the purpose of buying, selling, slaughtering and packing live stock. The capital stock is I100.UOO. A dozer corporations In Fall River, operating twenty cotton mills announce that the curtailment possibly will be continued this week. About 6,000 hands will be idle all the week and sev eral thousand additional will work only part of the time. Machinists and helpers in the employ of the Boston & Albany Railroad at the Allston, Springfield, Albany and Rensselaer shops went on strike Saturday. The cause of the strike is the failure of the company to grant a demand for an advance of 12 per cent, in the hour wage rate. The strike of the employes of the Buffalo Union Furnace Company, which was settled Friday, is again on. Five hundred men are out. The strikers say they quit this time because the company refused to reinstate some of their number who had taken a prominent part in the previous strike. The entire board of managers of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers held a morning session at Cleveland Saturday and adjourned until Monday without electing a successor to the late P. M. Arthur, grand chief, and A. B. Youngson. first assistant grand chief, also recently deceased. Notice to be served on the St. Louis Mer chants' Bridge Company, cf St. Louirs, commanding it to show cause before Sept. 4 why its charter should not be forfeited for violation of Its charter, and the bridge taken in charge by the secretary of war, was received by Major Casey, of the United States army engineering corps at St. Louis Saturday. The general lockout of the jewelry workers in New York decided on by the New York Manufacturing Jewelers' Association, is In effect. The cause of the lockout is the demand of a walking delegate that Shiman Bros., manufacturing Jewelers, discharge an employe, a member of the union, for the nonpayment of his union dues. The firm refused. The textile strike in Philadelphia, which was inaugurated ten weeks ago, was yesn rday practically declared off. 2,000 of the strikers through their executive board promising to return to work on Monday. It is estimated that about 6.000 textile workers are still on strike and the determination of one-third of these to return to work, it is believed, will fofte the collapse of the strike. George Wharton Pepper, receiver for the Bay State Gas Company, of Delaware, has posted notices announcing the public sate of the effects of the company on Thursday, Aug. 30. at the federal building in Wilmington, Del The property to be sold include

real estate In Wilmington and buildings and other appurtenances for gas works, which were built but never operated. The receiver announces that bids less in amount than 125,000 will not be considered. The Cash Buyers Union First National Co-operative Society, with an authorised capital of $5,0u0,0U0, has been incorporated at Trenton, N. J., to conduct department stores and to transact kindred business. One of the peculiarities of the charter is the provision that the company may enter into contracts with its officers and stockholders and with any other company in which it may have an interest. The opinion prevails that the company has for its object the acjuirlng of large department stores throughout the country. At Honolulu Saturday Judge D. Bolt, of the Territorial Circuit Court refused to grant the restraining injunction asked for by the Hawaiian Commercial Company, of Sprecklesville. the largest sugar plantation on the islands, against the Wailuku Sugar Company, both on Moui Islands. The litigation Involves watet rirhts to the value of several hundred thousand dollars, the sources of the water being in the mountains. Upon the issue In this case depends scores of old royal native grants, leases, deeds and boundaries. The transcript contains 1,000 pages of testimony. An appeal will be taken to the Supreme Court. In the United States District Court at Wilmington Del.. Thomas F. Bayard, representing the Mercantile Trust Company, of New York city, was on Saturday granted permission to file a bill In equity against the United States Shipbuilding Company, the Harlan &. HolUngaworth Company and James Smith, jr., of Newark, N. J., the receiver. The bill atks permission to foreclose the Harlan & Hollingsworth establishment on the first mortgage, amounting to $16.000,000, which is held by the Mercantile Trust Company. The rule is returnable on Monday, Sept. 7, at whih time the court will decide whether to grant the request. BOER OFFICER IN CITY

CAPT. W. 9. O'DOXXELI. IS PROMOTING COLONY IN MEXICO. One Hundred Boer Families WW Settl In the State of Tnmplans on 1,000,000 Acres of Land. Capt. W. S. O'Donnell. an officer in the recent Boer war, who is now promoting the Boer colony in Mexico, is in Indianapolis, stopping off a few days on his way from New York to Chicago. Captain O'Donnell served through the entire three years of the Boer war under General De Wet, the great Boer officer, and was in all the important battles of the war. On several occasions he was injured and as a result will carry scars the remainder of his life. Captain O'Donnell, with General Joubert, another Boer officer, represent a Boer colony which will soon emigrate to Mexico, where the two officers have been since the 1st of January making preparations for their settlement. They secured a tract of 1,000,000 acres in the State of Tamaulipas, which Captain O'Donnell says is the richest land he has ever seen. They secured the land from the Mexican government at a price of $3 an acre, including 3,000 head of cattle and 1,000 mules and horses, and arc free from duties, taxes and military service for fifteen years. The land Is to be paid for in twelve installments, the first not falling due until the end of two years. Captain O'Donnell said that they had made an effort to secure land for their colony in America, but were unable to on account of the high price of land. As yet no settlements have been made, but by the first of the year one hundred Boer families will be on their way to the new colony, where they will have freedom and peace. The tract of land Is near the seaport of Tampacio and is on the sesu so that the emigrants will have a port of their own. The country is free from sickness and fever, as a great sewer syst-m has recently been put In and the diseases that formerly were prevalent have disappeared. General Jaubert is now in New York making further arrangements for the emigration with Senator Butler, of North Carolina, and Senator Pettigrew, of South Dakota, both of whom are much interested in the movement and are the linant ial backing. Captain O'Donnell is going to Chicago to make arrangements for the publication of a book written by himself and General Jaubert. It is a history of the Boer war and is entitled, "A True Story of the Boer War," fully illustrated with all the pictures of the leading general?. He will be in Indianapolis until Monday. If necesaary. Captain O'Donnell and General Jaubert will return to Africa and assist the families in moving when the time comes. Until then they will remain in America. LOST HIS OWN GAME. President Defeated ly Ambassador Sternberg at the Rifle Targets. OYSTER BAY. N. Y., Aug. 8. Ambassador Von Sternberg is still the guest of the President at Sagamore Hill. This afternoon President and Mrs. Roosevelt, with Ambassador Von Sternberg and two or three of the Roosevelt boys, went on horseback to Jaynea hill, several miles away. Later they were joined by members of the several Roosevelt families, who went in carriages. The entire party enjoyed a delightful out-of-door luncheon. The President and Ambassador Von Sternberg, in their ride practice yesterday, barred the use of both Amerin and German weapons. Both men are experts with the rifles. At the 100-yard range the score n-r.a a tio Thft President defeated thft nmbassador at the 700-yard range by 7 points, but at the 400-yard range the ambassador turned the tables on the President, defeating him by 9 points, SWEPT OFF THEIR FEET. Two Persons Killed and Several Bad ly Hnrt by Hook and Ladder Wsgon. NEW YORK, Aug. 3. Two persons were killed and several others probably fatally hurt by being swept off their fett by the projecting ladders on a hook and ladder wagon as it turned the corner at Fortieth street and Ninth avenue to-day. The dead: George Gill and Richard Knight. Seven other men and boys, of whom two had fractured skulls, were taken to the hospital, and about a dozen other persons were taken to their nomes after their Injuries had been dressed by ambulance surgeons. Seeond Primary Xeeessary. JACKSON, Mlts., Aug. 8. The Vardaman men now admit that a second primary will be necessary to settle the governorship. The best estimates obtainable from Thursday's primary gives Vardaman 126 votes to 108 for Critz, necessary to choice 134. Vardaman has from 3,000 to 4.000 plurality over Critz. Noel has twenty thousand votes to be divided between Vardemau and Critz. The date of the second primary is Aug. 27. Race "War Feared. OKLAHOMA CITY. O. T.. Aug. 8.Early to-day a mob of men and boys dynamited and set Are to a house in Archard Park, which is being erected for a negro woman. The whites in Archard Park have warned the negroes to leave, but they have refused and have armed themselves. Some of the negroes have stocked their homes with guns' and ammunition. A race war is tea rag. G. A. R. Headquarters Special Train. TOPEKA, Aug. 8. A Santa F special bearing General J. T. Stewart, commander-in-chief of the Grand Army. Mrs. Am. t Hall, national president of the Ladles of the G. A. R., and Mrs. T. J. Taylor, president of the W. R. C, leaves Chicago ug. 9 and Kansas City. Monday. Aug. 10, at 11 a. D&m ovVr tne Santa Fe for the Grand Army encampment at San Francisco. Witness Burns His Home. JACKSON. Ky.. Aug. 8. Tom Tharp. who was a witness for the defense in the Curtls-Jett trial at Cyntbiani, went to his home at Elkatawa. four miles from here, to-day and sat fire to the house and stood guard over the blazing building, and shot at all who attempted to extinguish the flames. The agcd father of Tharp received a slight flesh wound.

LAME BACK When the Kidneys are Diseased (he Whole System Becomes Deranged, Complication t Set ia aad Sent yi Results Wdi Kilsw. WEAK KIDNEYS Pain in small of back, painful passing of urine, inflammation of the bladder, torpid IK er, cloudy urine, pains in the back of the head and neck, rhenmatic pains and swellings ail over the-body, erxema and jaundice show that your kidneys are diseased. CURES WEAK KIDNEYS. "Gentlemen: I was troubled a great deal with kidney trouble, and my business comidling me to be on my feet all day only made the pains worse in my kidneys. I was advised to try a bottie of Warner's Safe Cure. Well. I did. and the result is that 1 am a new man now. I can walk home from work, .something I had not bern able to do for over a year. I can honestly recommend Safe Cure.' MICHA KL F. BHANAHAN, Bradford St.. Albany. NY. "Safe Cure" is a most valuable and effective tonic. It repairs the tissues, soothes int!ammation and irritation, awakens the torpid liver, aids digestion, stimulates the enfeebled organs and heals at the same time. safe Cure" is purely vegetable and contains no harmful drugs. It Is free from sediment and is pleaaantato take. You can buy "Safe Cure" at any drug store or direct. Sue and $1 a bottle. Beware of so-ctll -a kilnev cure, which are full of Soiimnt an I of bad odor they ar ost v-Wh rmfal and do not enre. WARN E i'S SAFE PILLS mo tho ! m I i ' sua aid i ceu cure, Write Warner's Safe Cure Co., Rochester, N. Y., for free medical book.

IT IS AN EASY MATTER

to launder t sUfft or any other garment well if you know aj WIS KNOW HOW.

We call .or an 1 leitv?r linen The CORNER. STONE OF SUCCESS!

f c dation of fortunes. Our Savings Department receives $1 or more, and pays 3 per cent, interest, compounded semi-annually.

Northeast Corner Monument Open everj day, y to 4; and LOOKING FOR WORK. Result of a Test Made by a Member of a Charity Society Charities for August. An interesting experiment was recently made in Philadelphia for the purpose of finding out whether or not m-n able to work, and willing to turn their hands to anything for fair pay, need be without employment in that city. It was made by Mr. Benjamin C. Marsh, a fellow of the University of Pennsylvania, acting as an investigator for the Philadelphia Society f r Organizing Charity. He went for part of a day in search of work, dressed as an ordinary laboring man, and records his experiences as follows: At 7 o'clock in the morning I approached a foreman at the Belmont filtration plant, one of the large filtration plants being put in by the city, aud stated that I would take anything to do. The foreman immediately offered me work to commence at once or the f next day, with the promise of some for my bmi her if he would come. The contractor also, not knowing the offer of the foreman, promised me work in another place. An hour later I applied at one of the larpe shipyards at the otner side of the city, and was told that I could get work If I would come at the regular hour for hiring mm next morning; they vre hiring men right along. At an iron works within half a mile of this shipyard a trial wai also promised me, to b'gin in a day or two, if I would be willing to take rough manual work. The boss helper at a factory in the outskirts of the city looked me over, and upon my statement that I had fired for a regular furnace for a couple of days he said he could give me work th next morning and would fit me in at something. Then two of the large manufacturing companies in the city were visited, and on stating my case work was again promise i. Then at a contractor's office, at one of the railroad offices and along the Delaware piers the same appeal was made for work, and in every case with success. In some instances the employment was not to begin at once, but was promised me Monday, possibly because it was thought unlucky to begin work on a Friday. Some of the men who hired stevedores on the wharves said they were glad to get men at 20 cents an hour, and they themselves were working fifteen hours a day. Back to the city, along the line of a number of establishments, work was promised at two iron foundries and two chemical works. At every place visited during the day, except on-, wages were to be $1.50 a day, with a chance of getting more if I could prove that I was worth it. In the one instance I was to start In at 145 a month, although my handwriting was a h lp to me in securing this position. My appearance was slightly against me, and to my statement that I had worked in a gas works and on a farm in summer, statements quite true. I wa& told that my hands looked as though it were years ago. One foreman f a very large manufacturing company said: "I will hire you, but I tell you frankly I am tired of hiring men like j-ou, because in my single department I hire about twentyfive men a week, and they work from two hours to a day and leave, some of them too lazy to come back for their pay." As a sequel, the next morning Mr. Marsh says he sent a number of men professedly eager for employment from the Wayfarers' Lodge to these places, and then In a few days wrote to the employers, giving the names of the men and asking if they had applied for work and been given it. Several of the employers replied that the men had not put In an appearance. One man returned saying that he had been promised work, but did not haw any place to board a difficulty which the foreman told me they could arrange for. From these experiences Mr. Marsh concludes that, having secured the promise of seventeen Jobs In eight hours, a man able and willing to work can Arid it in Philadelphia or its neighborhood. He adds that one employment agency in the city told him it could place fifty men at work on farms every day if it could get them to take farm work, but that men refuse to leave the city, even though they badly need work. Obituary. ST. L.OUIS. Aug. 8. George A. Patterson, of Detroit, traveling representative of a New York city tea importing firm, was found dead in his room at the Southern Hotel to-day. Death is attributed to heart failure. PARIS, Aug. 8. Henry L.ewis. aged thirty-nine years, of Dayton, an art student at Julien's studio, died to-day at St. Joseph's Hospital. Make Track Record. PROVIDENCE. R. I.. Aug. 8.-Harry Caldwell defeated Jo.- NVIhou lit a twentymile motor-paced race at the Colosseum tonight. Caldwell's time was 25:30 2-5. slightly inside Walthour's record for the track. Hoffman beat Hunter in four miles on motors, making the distance in 5:02 4-5. his third mile being in 1:12 4-5. a new track record. Losses by Fire. Cincinnati, o., Aug. 8. A disastrous fire in Covington. Ky.. last night caused a loss of over $115,400. The following buildings were destroyed: Consumers' Ice Compnny; Jos. Ilartke & Co.. dry goods; ft Ht-lle. feed store; New England distillery; Hager's saloon, and the F. Bteudebeek & Co. spice mills. The origin of the tire la unknown. People having no false pride select Cook's lmperia' Champagne at club and hotel banquets entirely through preference.

GO TO

WHITF-'S Before 12 and after 1 and "AVOID TH M3t t : Mil' Auto and Launch Supplies I carry a full line f spmk I'lntr. Spark Boggle, Lrftuip, Uunu, &w itches, etc CECIL E. GIBSON. The ! icycle Man 116 Ohio St. At CARTER'S Nos. 15 West Washington St. and 776 Massachusetts Ave. Drugs and Patent Medicines AT BOTTOM PRICES. v. ii. roocwooo Patent and Trade-Mark Lawyer 115. 18 Lemckt Building. Indianapolis. Ind. OR LAUNDRY

f Fvitab'.M iUiri

'Phone 't

Young men and women should learn the uses, not the abuses, of money; that money is crystallized labor; that each dollar represents a value; that economv in small chancre is the foun-

t Place and Bast Market St. Saturday ovonlnjr. 7 to 9. GOING IT BLIND .... in your choice of a plumber is apt to lead to unpleasant aad expensive consequences. You've too much at stake health and propertyto use poor mate rials or workmanship. P!aee your orders here, and b sure of bavins; the best of eaeb and pay ing only the right price. C. ANESHAENSEL &CO. The Lrmdiag Plumber, Ea9t Ohio street. SUMMER CLOTHES. Men's Dress Reform That Wfli Promised Has Failed. New York Times. The dress reform promised for a aaason or two by the bicycle and golf seems finally to have failed. There was at one time good hope that the trouser, the most ungainly aud irrational and ridiculous article of apparel ever devised, was about to "go." The nineteenth century saw the introduction of it. We do not recall any instance in portraiture of its apperance before the year 1800. Washington and his contemporaries, like the "Captain bold of Halifax." woia "regimental small clothes," a decent and cleanly garment, which did not draggle and accumulate mud, and which, combined with boots for rough riding, or with pumps for occasions of ceremony, left notlhng to be desired. Thomas Jefferson, we believe, wore trousers, and was one of the pioneers of that hateful practice. The trouser somehow came to be regarded as a symbol of democracy in the early days, possibly beceause it reduced all human legs, shapely or unshapely, to the same level of ungalnliness. The contemporary populi.-t. aa he looks on great old Bryan, Floping slowly to the West, cannot imagine w. J. in golf stockings and breeches. And yet Mr. Bryan has presentable legs, and would cut a far more dignified figure in garments th it should rtlToal their comeliness. But evidently it would be his political ruin to wear so sensible a thing. The abolition of th trousers is the chief desideratum for a rational summer costume for men. It seems that that desirable consummation is indeflnitelypostpoueii. The men of 1896 and 1897 who boldly wore breeches and bicycle stockings to their places of business would not this year venture to be seen in them, except when actually aFtride of a wheel, if even then. But the next desideratum, the "soft shirt." Is gaining in favor, the philanthropist may rejoice to note. Starch is the chief enemy of human comfort In warm weather. No man can be comfortable inclosed in a stiff circumvallation of starched linen. The soft flannel shirt, once known as "Crimean," is an ideal summer envelope, which, however, requires some courage to wear. Aa Lowell said, it takes a hero to walk down Piccadilly in a slouch hat at the height of the Loudon season. But the haberdashers now exhibit confections of unstarched eotton which reconcile comfort with convention, and in which the most tlmcrous of mortals need not fear to be seen. Nobody whose festival occasions take him about New York can have failed to remark, with a touch of envy, that the most rationally dressed human brothers he encounters are the Chinamen. And what the Chinamen wears are simply the "pajamas." in which no Caucasian would dare to be seen outside of his owa bedroom. It is true that the Chinaman so far truckles to custom as to adopt the trouser, or the drawer, to the despair of the sculptors, insomuch that we have not heard of any yearning on the part of any sculptor to model any laundryman. But race prejudiee being laid aside, what an admirable summer costume it is that the mo n go I sports, loose, easy flowing, entirely decent, and with not a trace anywhere of the starch which ia the chief ingredient of his trade. He sink the fhop in his private habiliments. When we have the courage to Imitate the mongol In his summer dress we shall be far mora comortable and far more instrinslcally respectable than now. A ( arolislaa's RetreatNew York Evening Post. There is balm for wearied workers of the town in reading of the retirement to rural scenes of Col. Jeems Howie, of North Carolina. He ha constructed a house which does not appear suited to the needs of a solitary man until one learns of the owner's restful philosophy. "When I get tired of sleeping la one bed." h says. "I want to go aad crawl into another bed. and I always want to be able tit iok in a fireplace when I am in my beds. There is nothing like having plenty of beds to sleep in and plenty of fireplaces to look in " Accordingly he planned ljis house originally with two rooms, two hed and two fireplaces, but his Ideas rxnnde5 and the house now under construction will contain six rooms, mix bed and six fireplace. If anything could add to the air of restfulneaa conveyed by the architect plans It would be the old man's declaration of what he Intends to do on his Sabine lrm. "What will I do up there?" hn aked of his questioner. "Why, I'll lay under a big eaa tree and look around. Thai s what I'll do. And maybe I'll raise p a a and cabbage, and maybe I won t 1 don't know about the peas and cabbage. But as certain as I live 1 11 lay under that shady oak tree aud look around." There, with a cot beside a rlU. a btMik of verses, a night of the furrowed gl-be, a jug (is wine the beverage of North Carolina?), and a loaf of bread, bis wildeiusen will be very Ilk Paradise.

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