Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 45, Number 8, Jasper, Dubois County, 31 October 1902 — Page 6

Weeklu Courier. C. DOANB. Pakltaaer. JASPER. I I I . IN L 1 A N A.

The territory avt the moul i of Fkunk river, in lown, was uu iidi.tcd. for the fourth tune tins. " ' 11 list, causing a vast auiouut of dum- : age. Senor IVm Fnillio de Ojeda, the new , Spanish minister nt Washington. pt tilted his credentials tu the u i dent, on the ltd, MM) VM cordially j welcomed Ivj I'm am t sseosnaslt The depreciation ill UM value of ilver has ecat tfe Philippines insular flKirnilt approximately mil" lion dollars, und the prospective sur plus for public Improvements hus vanished. C. n. Hull, a cousin of the Younger brothers, said, at Kansae City. OS the I2d, that the hotly of .Tim Youmrer would not be cremated, the reported wish of the dead man bes-? a misconeeption. President Mitchell of the United Mine Workers of Aroerica is busily tngnged in the preparation A statement of the miners' side of the eoal controversy to be laid before the arbitration commission. In the British house of commons, on the 22d, the chancellor of the exehequer announced that the c"urnment did not propose to ir.tro.iuce the Sotith African loans bill taring the present session of parliament. President Koosevelt, on the Slat, 0 beine notified of the action of 'he Wilkcsbarre convention, immediately ummoned, by telegraph, the members of the arbitration conimis-ion to meet in Washington on the 21th. Before midnight f tbe2d a total of $.100,000 had been subscribed for Methodist missions at Use meeting in the Grays armory at Clew land. O. The scenes during the rui-insr Of the monev were full of enthoeiaena. Col. John S. ftfocby, special agent of the interior department, anya that millions of acres of the public domain that ought rightfully to be open to the homestead settler are illegally occupied by stock raiser I, President Paer of the Philadelphia Reading sas that dealers who, have taken advantage of the strike to exact exorbitant prices from SOWBttRV M of coal will be remembered in epp rtioning the output for immediate 'ieo. Gov. stone of peaaoylraaia. on the fist, declined to aay when the state troos would be withdrawn from Uae strike territory. He said the generals on the ground would be the beat judges of when it could be safely done. S 1 The anthracite miners' blicrata contrition, at Wilkesbarre, Pa., on the 1st. decided, ithont ii die atlng voice, to accept the mediation of tue faanldlWt'a IHIl BllaslSn. and it. was ordered that the men re urn to work QS1 tbe 23d. The San Franeiseo Hulletin A the md said that fire had beta baralng in the coal hunkers of the baitl.sliip Oregon for three divn. and had not yet been est :nL"i Isatd The VOMcIa oejKirture f r IfasUa v-as delayed in saneequeBce. The Adams KxpreM Co, has been Indicted bv the federal grand jurv. at j Keokuk, la., for nn ftHeged violation i of the internal revenue laws in deliv- . ering C. O. D. poeaagee f liqoora ! from consignors in other states and making collections. Boon of the coal mine opt raton in the anthracite regie are rcqutrlag tin men who apulv for work to Riga contracts Mading'hetnaehrea aol to Interfere with BOA-UniOD WorkiOCB who may be em lloj ed . Many refuse to sign t he con t reeta. Four ItrilNh gunboats have beea ordered from SbangliHl to aaCCDtl the Yaiur-Te Kiang to Hnnkovv. lee. use of the failure of the CtdBCM authorities to deal with the mnrderers of Hruec and IevviH, the Bngttstl misslotl' arii .v who were killed in IIo Nhh prov inee. The coal operntOtl it the anthracite Wgluai are abandoning the work trains in and tut if the i it i- and the eommisnry dpartnients in side the Workings, with tlM result that the baportod men nr 1- aviag in liirge numbers, having tbe li Id to tbe old hanitCharles Fleteher and Jantee lnr ray. while digging a ditch nine mib-s northwe-1 of Parte, in., nneanbed tioremains of a fnll-si.ed mSRtodon, Heven feet of the ritrl'.t Itnll MTU intact ami was attached ' the skull The full et of tipper teeth, also, were well preserved. Irur:n'r his short stay In Qoaolala, en reatc to Manila, t valise contalalog kwelry, monev and Important i'nper. belonging to Lieut. - ti. Mib-a was stolen from the room of l.ieut.1 cd. Maas, his aide-de eatnp. The valise was siihscqaaatly recovered tnlnu the money anl jewelry. President Itnosevelt's arbitral mn eommission met in Washington, on the 24th. and oegtnlaed ith .Ttidpe Georjje (Jray as prcident and Cnrroll D. Wright recorder. A call was innd at the White Route, whrre the president gave the commission ail Instructions end named two an mat go the rerder

CURRENT TOPICS. THE NEWS IN BRIEF.

PERSONAL AND GENERAL. The remains of Jim Younger were consigned to the grave in the eeiaeter at Las's BiUauatt, Ho . tm ÜM I H) Four mm. is of ihe Younger attend ed the funeral, and several former member of OnitHicl's hand acted u pail bearers. I lu- schooner Courtney Ford and the ship Louis Walsh. hoth of mh Francisco, have been lost in Alaskan uaw is. Four nn ii were drowned. Efenneaeev i.e Boyle, a wUkaowa actor. AM at Yucaville. COJL, on the ISA, from ervsipvlas. Me was native of Australia. It. is suiti that, within the next few weeks the Southern l'aeitie will be called upon to increase the wages f its more than :tO,0OO employes, who are organized into strong unions. The convention of the Ihsciplea of Christ, which closed at Omaha, Neb., on the 2:hi. was the largest, in the h. story of the denomination. Over 7,000 delegates were registered. In the Molineux trial, in New York, on the 23d, the defense scored a point when Judge Lambert ruled thnt the Harnet letters, as evidence, must be excluded ns Improper. At the close of a speech in Indianapolis, on the night, of the 2M. Senator Ilatma almost collajwed from pajrniaal exhaustion, and had to be assisted to a seat. Pension Commissioner Ware arrived at Fort Scott, Kas., on the 23d with the remains of his father, who died in Washington. The funeral was held the same day. The directors of the Masonic Tempie, Chicago, have decided to pay tli taxes on the property of the association, amounting to $'.:;, foO n;i I pro ceevl against ('apt. Williame to recover the .:.'""''i received by him to pay the taxeLrnst Augustus Kenner, formet prineipal of the Cincinnati publi. sch' ols, died at his home in his eigh-fv-firt rear from heart failure. Il was one of the 12 nun who , tarried Napoleon Boaaparte'e eofln "ii Ite n wil from St. Helena to Pari-,. Twenty child ma were born in 1 years to .loseph Meti.ver. a painter, 45 years obi, who died at Bptiagfleld, Mass., on the ltd, from the results of injuries received in a all. Albert Sei, the ls-.v . ar-old youth who threw a brick, causing the d. ath of aged John M chslcr. in St. Louis. 1 on April 23, was OOttTM ted of murder in Um second dtajroe and sentenced to ten years in the penitentiary by a jury on the I ML Jttdgt John Henry i'lournoy. of the superior BOlUrl bench of Virirmia, ftJ fwliaplll Bprnttiiri? of st.'lte o .i i . . .ti . Virginia. dropped dead in the corridor of the Latham hotel. Houston, 'lev. on the 23d. He was president f the ; Pacific A Atlantic Oil Co. Uncle Sam has opened his chrys anthemum show in Washington He hM WO of the plants on exhibition, and these represent tfj varieties. The . gast bloom Of the big bum B known ns the "Hlack Hawk," meas urea 12 inches in diameter. According to the estimates of the mineral Inspector Of the eight districta of Pennsylvania, upwards 0j 70O.OO0 tons of anthraeite coal should be mined during the week beginning on the 27th. The normal weekly output ia 1,150.000 tons. In the preaenoe of a large fattOfr Ing of confederate veterans and their families nnd friends, the Confederate Veterans' home was dedicated at Tewee Valley. Ky., on the 23d. In Old Bafley court la London, on the 23d, Lawrence Gerig, the c'tk of the Crnnegie Steel Co. was founil guilty of defrauding UM company of 25.000 by foigery. and was sentenced to five years' imprisonment. Mabel Ellison, an ex-tCtephOB girl, has been aire ted in Ina Krane -. ,, for rneoqnerading in mnle attire. She aetd as bellboy for six weeks in a leading1 hotel, because, she said, she could earn more while acting as a boy. Ä Northern Pacific trnin was held up by a lone bandit east of Hear Mouth, Mont., early on the morning of the 21th. Engineer O'Neil was shot and killed nnd the mail nnd express cars were looted of valuable content. At last accounts bloodhoundi were on the trail. In a collision between doubleheader freights on the Cincinnati Southern, at Oneida, Tenn , on the 24th, a fireman wa killed. Both locomotives, l." cars, two residences, two More hnildinga nnd a toolhouse were destroyed by fire caused by the wreck. Andrew Carnegie attended the laying of the foundation stone of one of the branch libraries in Dundee, Scotland, on the 24th, to which he had contributed $18..00r), and was presented with the freedom of the city. Secretary of the Navy Moody will issue orders for the reassembling of all the torpedo craft at. Newport, K. L, next summer for drill in torpedo tactics. A number of additional mines were p-jt in operation in tbe anthracite coal region, on the 24th, and the output of coal was mensurably Increas -d. The house of bishops of the Protentant Bpteeopn rliurch, at Philadelphia, on the 24th, elected Uev. Sheldon Munson Orbiwold, lector of Christ church, Hudson, N. V., aa minaionary bishop of Snlina, the weatern district of Kansas. Mai Fleischer, who waa one of the atronpest men on the Notre Dame "acruh" team, while attending the university, la dead at South ll-nd. Ind., aa the result of injuries received in football practice.

Tora Horn, the fainoue scout end stock detective, was found guilty of murder in the llrst degree, at t hey emie, Wo., on the With, for having killed W illie Nicholi ou duly 18, lltt, at Ins father's ranch in the Iron Mountain country. One hundred members of the Chicago Press club left that clt.v, on the night of Um 2tth, for St. 1ouis, to participate ill the dedication of the Press building of the Louisiana Purchase evpoatf ion. With the end of September a full v ear had elap-ed since a ease of y low fever had originated in Havana, a fac that stands unpnLaCeled in the Mian of the oldest ph aielaa there. William I. Kllaworth, postmaster at Kveleth, Minn., has been removed pending la vestige tl OS of an alleged shortage of $s.000 in his accounts developed by pos t a 1 inspector Secretary of Agriculture Wilson spent the day, on the 24th, inspecting the cattle show at Kansas City, Mo., and made it couple of informal speeches to the cattlemen. LATE NEWS ITEMS.

Prank M. Flagg, ticket agent of the Illinois Central railroad at Texan Junction, on the Cape Girardeau branch, has disappeared from his office, and the eoutenta of the money drawer are also gone. He is thought by some to have been murdered. After wandering in the Sierra Madre mountains with a party of friends for 20 days, most of the time without food, United States Consul Garrett returned to his post at New Laredo, Mexico, on the 2tith. P. L. Kimberley, a student at the State Agricultural college, at Ames, la., was killed, on the 2fth, by falling from a train on which he was stealing a ride from the city to the college grounds. A man was killed at Cold Spring Harbor, N. Y., on tb. nipht of the SJjth, while holding nn apple on his head to be shot otT by professional marksman of a traveling company of ahowiuen. (,en. Uyrenrorta, commauoer-in-chief of the bnion eterans' union. has issued nn appeal to veterans Of the civil war to organize into a brotherhood for mutual protection. At Wilke.sliarre. Pa., on the ?'th. the Polish, Lithuanian und Slavish members of the Mine Workers' union presented President Mitchell with a gold badge and gold watch. A number of Fr nch aeronauts met in IHiria, on the L"ith. to dertac plans under which to complete for the $100,000 prize offered by the t. Louis exposition management. As a result of continued heavy rains, five blocks in the city of Brunswick, (in., were under water, on the L'.th, and c nsidcrable damage was done. An automobile nnd a trolley car collided at Vonkers, N. Y., on the 2titb, with the result that 22 peraous were injured, three of them seriously. In a game of football at Staunton, 111., on the 26th, Edward Schmidt was so badly injured that be died while being taken to a ph; sieian's office. Seven persons were injured, two of them serii n sly. in a collision between o locomotjve nnd a trolley car at Chattanooga. Tenn., on the SCth. Mrs. Kliaabetb Gady Btaatoa, the well-known wof . aaffragiat, died 1n Ifew York, on fb - dh, old age being given aa the cj u of death. The anthraeite coal strike commission held itt first meeting, in Washington, on the 27th. The time and method of proceeding with the investigation were dlacaaacd, and tlie c iumis.sion decided to begin its work ou the nsOfiing of the :toth, making nn examinatioa of the mines and the homes of the miners in the riciuity of S. rauton. Pa. At Kiverton. Ind.. on the 2Ttb. Newton b. staugh. the poatnuster, shot and killed Herbert M ( annoii. the sweetheart of Sadie Staugh. daughter of his slaver. McCunmui is -aid to have threatened to kill the entire family before he was slain. About a thousand students of the Michigan agricultural college went ou a strike, on the 27th. because s,,me Of their Somber bad been Mspea'd fur viola ti oar an edict of the faeultj against engaging in s lreahma sophomore "rush." At a ball game at Belfontalnc, 0., on the 27th. OflM BMS vvas a wtllg an ofx-ii knife to a companion, w hen foul ball struck bis hand and drove the. blade into his side, severing an artery and killing him almost instantly. Roben Thoinp u. a convict in ttaS Efabraaka pnit4'ntiarv . w hose term aspired on the 27th. was turned tftt to otbeials from the Iiominiou of Canada, who were armed with extradition papers, anil taken to Toronto. rarer Walton, the militiaman who a Old ihn tatlj killed a boy nt. Anoka, Minn., while shooting at a target, and was tried on a charge of manslaughter, was acquitted by a jury, ou the 27th. rratigemellts have been made for nanrt ring a cnmpnnv of Kurnlcs and a baud which the Mexican government will have at St I uis during the entire time of the World's fnir. Mrs i V McNott died very ROaV dealy at Pana, in., on the itta. n r husliaiid was killed, on the 2 .1. 'oy falling into a coal mine, and she had Imi n nOOOtrated since bin death. Connaetor Forest waa fatally injured aud aix other trainmen badly hurt in a eolttaioa Itetween freight IrahiK on the llo k Island road, n"ar Brightou. In., on the ITtA. At Omaha. Neb., on the 27th Anton (Siristcusuu was Kentem-ed to life imprisonment for the murder of bid wife on August IS,

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Arrival of the Colombian Cruslef Bogota, Formerly the Jessie Banning, at Panama. WELCOMED IN CONSERVATIVE CIRCLES. Is pi. Muriumlukr Wctioiuol HO0I (riiaii u Soaeeaea Poodeaea and SmIhsih 'I lie t Mplslii Will ltrtru Bias the ( oluiubisn Fleet In Aturrletiu Ml,-. 1'. main. i. Oct. 2s. Phe Colombian linliai Bogota, foreaerlj the eteaaaai Joaeic Banning, arrived lure at ten o'clock 'londav Btorning from Baa Praaciaco, October t. Onpt ll. H. Marmuduke, her commander, informed a press eorrckpoiideiit that the vessel made a slow trip because the crew were exercis- d at target practice all the way down the coast She stopped at Magdalena bay for about three hours, tightening parts of her engines and also for target practice. The Bogota made very good time after that, taking the outside course, and reach d here in flue condition. tnused Mirk Dnlhmia.iii. The urrival of the Bogota COOnod much enthusiasm in conservative circles, where the event is being properly celebrated. A band of niusie played through the principal parts of the city. The laud forts saluted the Bogota on her arrival and the cruiser replied. W eleome to t apt. Mnrmntlakc. Soon after the Bogota's officers had lauded, they were shown the fortifica tions and Mhts or tne city. vapr. Marmndue visited General- l'erflomo and Balarnr. who welcomed aim most cordially. The Colombian gunboats Chueuito : nnd n.ip,.t m oader ÜM orders of ., ....i.,,, who. as chief com- - " r - Iii I mander, will have eharge of the Columbian tket, which he will reorgnu1 ize in American style. luqulrr ' Admiral ne. When the BogOtg arrived hero hear Admiral Casey, the American commander, sent an otlicer on board 01 her to inquire if the exchange of fla:'had been prop, rly made. Cupt. Mar- j maduke answered that the exchange of flags had been made i" San FranaJaeo, and that the t 'olomluan flag had the right t. be where it was. At ttir- tioTrrnnr'i HeM-pHn. At the governor's reception of ( apt. Marmaduke. Qcn. Salaar said he drank to the captain's health and expressed the hope that his misaioa here would be fulfilled to the epe. ;ation of the government of Colombia and that he could count on the gratitude of all conservatives. Capt. Marmaduke, in reply, said ho would be bappf to properly fulfill bin mission nnd carry out the obligations of the Colombia government. 'next lieutenant-general. J AilJ'l.-Gen. Corbln Snya TU! UJ.tjaa- s. n. m. youdk win m tien. Mllca' Saerfmir. Washington, Oct. IS. "1 do not , think I urn betraying any conti U i.c: when i :ay that Maj.-tien. S. I!. If. I Young will be the next Ueoteanntr I general of the army." sai.l Maj. tii n t orbin, Monday. Then UC added: "And his promotion will be enjoyed by no one more than by myself." Lieut . -( o n. Miles will retire for age next August, and this declaration by den. Corbin was inspired by tome comment to the effect thnt the appearance of his (Gen. Corbta'a) name in the monthly army list next after that of Qea. Miles pointed out the probable succession. Ab a fact, it is Stated that the order of the names in the list was fixed by the seniority of the commissions of the officers. (!en. Young would have .about a pear to eeree in thai grade) if he is made liout, -rant-general. A TICKET-SCALPEK'S caste. Arrested for ItenlinK In Vu-Trnna-frrnhle TieUrla. lie la eiulltrd un a na isla Bneaoa Waaaington, Oct. tS, A. F. Machold, the ticket broker, .irre ted for contempt of irt for alleged violation of the restraining order granted by the dietricl taprenae court in the cases brought by a number of railroads against tluse fhey charged with trafleking in aoa trsaafernbla tickets is,u.d on account of the (i. A. U. encampment, was on Monday released from custody. The defense was that Machold was not guilty of contempt of court, because he had not been personally served with notice I I the original proceeding-, Jutd not filed any nnswer thereto, and had not participated la the proceeding. The court upheld this defense after giving warning against further viola tions. N'o Morr Football for Them. Bl I unt n. 111., Oct. 2-. Aft. r the death of Bdwnrd Schmidt, Sunday, full back of the Staunton football team, who was killed in a came with the ( offoys, of St Louis, tbe other members of the SiauntoO team took? off tkeir suits nnd. piling tlim around the goal posts, set fire to them. Thej then tok up the goal posts and threw them into the hl.ie. and when the mass was corsuraed the men declared that there would be no more football at Staunton, nor would they ver go into another garOO at any other place

ALL OVER THE STATE.

Events in Various Portions of Indiana Told by Wire. M lor l.lbrrl. . v Albanv. Iml.. Oct. gf .lacob Walter, u horseman f;l known oo the county fair eiiaaite of southern Imiianu, who ua declared 'f uuound Und last week ami daced in jail at Oorjrdon because of alleged violence, has filed hahee corpus pmceedlnga against Si.erifT l.cttieh. alleging that ba is illegally restrained of hi lilK-rty. Walter was thrown from a Msfkj in a race ever.il monftis ago and waa severely injurci' irlnir nnil Indianapolis, lud. It rd !. Oct. 27 - Friday was widely ob-erv.d in the pulilic schools of Indiana as Arbor and Bird day. The prime object of the observance is to promote among the minr a higher interest la I reei and Iota for birds, The laperiatendcnl f public instruction prepared a manual for the ehaola anggeatiag e progrraaime far the OOeaiion. and it was quite generally observed. hot Himself. Fortrille. Ind.. Cht. 27.-William Cook, a young lineman in the employ of the Marion Traction Company went to the home of a young woman with whom he was enamored and on the veranda he fired a bullet tbr. ui.di his temple. He was picked up and removed to his borne and died at ten o'clock without regaining eoaseiooe-n-s Knnrrnl vrni. Muncie. Ind.. Oct. 27 - Rev. C. M. Carter, pastor of the First Baptist church, seys he will preach a funeral pcrmoa each Sunday night for five weeks in his church, but qualified hie statement by saying that they would be only imitation funeral sermons, in which the imaginary subject will have the truth told about them. larain In Operation. Marion. Ind . Oct. 27 The big factory of the Macbeth-Fvans ( himney company has begun operation after being closed for Ht re than four months. AH difficulties between the company and employes have been settled and the fire is Ivegun under favorable conditions. The local plant employs about no men. Gnn ' ' n rll. Oreentown. Ind.. Oct. 07 The new pas well in the eastern part of the city i just completed. A Mrorg fl"w of I gas was found after drill intr 11 feet in Trenton rock. The well i- drv and the pressure i 225 pound-. A second well j in the western art of the citv is ling I drilled and a third Wall wiil be ru' down at once. In the Trnat. Indianapolis. Ind.. Oct. 27 Indiana chainmakcrs are interested in the organization of a big chaininakers' c mbination just perfected at a meeting in Cleveland. O. The Todd-Obea Chain company. New Albany: Indiana Chain rompany, JefferaonriHe, and I'nited Stales I hnin company. Oreenfield. are in the deal. SmattpanK, Marion. Ind.. Oct. 27. In fpite of the efforts made by the citj- officers and precautions taken by the city councdl. the smallpox epidemic in North Marion i spreading. It is reported that the entire northern portion of Marion may be quarantined and it may he necessary to close the North Marion schools. Will n Coal Land. Anderson. Ind.. Oct. 27. Busirsj men of Anderson. Muncie and Alexacdrla will organize n stock compaaj with $2.'.n.otH( capital, to bu LOOOacreo of coal lands in Sullivan and tireen counties. Committeemen from each City have been named to carry out the plaas of organization. Shnvr rnr "ale. Kokomo. Ind.. Oct. 27. --The owners of the Sipe lUliputiSB tbOW, whieh I as headquarters here, have announced all the stock and proportion of the show for sale at public auction. Tbe ihoW starteel on the road Mff) in the spring and vva nnstn e. teftll KeCV Rural Rontr. Indianapolis, Ind.. Oct. LT - Kural free ilelivcry servii-e has been ordered established November If at Lakeville. St. Joseph COUBty, Length of the route. 22 miles; area covered. 1R square miles; population served. 7fi0; number of houses on route. ISS. Rirni Prove Patal. New Albany. Ind.. Oct. 27. Mrs Mary Sloemer. wife of Councilman William Sloemer. died from the effects of burns- suffered by the explosion of a gasoline stove. She was 36 years old nnd left two daughters. Christian Conference. Middletown. Ind.. Oct. 27 The annual meeting of the Indiana State Christian conference will lie held here O. (ober 2S. 20 and M, Ministers and members from over the state are expected in large number. Sent to Oklahoma. Martinsvlle. Ind.. Oct. 27. The Grand hotel, operated this summer by an Indianapolis man. has been eh 1 and the equipment will be shipped to Oklahoma Cltv. Killed l.j the Cars. Washington. Ind.. ( t. 27- Um Tewell wa walking on the railroad track when a era eel trnin struck and killed him Bt was deaf. Prison nnla Indianapolis-. Ind . Oct. 27.- Prison Pnnday was generally el.w.rved thronchout the ntnte.

SCULPTURE AT WORLD'S FAIR, Mitea Hundred fcculplarod rtaurv WMB aw ried and Croi d at lhC I ...il. World' I nr.

Ft. I.oui. Oct. 2b. The plans Chi. f Bat kstuhl for i uiptut as grounds und in the main . vhibil buildings of the Louisiana Pur. haae exposition hav. b. . n approved bv tat executive oaaaanfSea. Asps ntUI b on the mir grounds about 100 sculptured figures, in groups, statues, la relief panels und in sfBsSnffSts Sf traue s. Chief lluckstrbl ays: "It will be the most magnificent displnv ever massed at .11 i" itloB Ihe Keheine is connected and logical an has reference lo the bist irj and evolution .f the luiisiana Perchaae territory, it is. m lasaari all ijie and I'.HUjil'. Ii' : si vc to the average citieav. ihe allegorical aud sot cue will play but a limited role lusteud of fusiuf on to the j lastlc element of sculpture an SSaOM or the literary element, tbe sculpture will be held to the photic as far as possible, "he aesthetic o.-mg primarily insisted upon, and the educational being suggestive rather than insistent, and w thin the limits prop er to true sculpture. The first inhabitants or owners of the land were tha mythological nymphs, fauns, satyra, dryada which will be used in the focal pieces around the big cascade. With them will be used the winged horses, and the sen-dragons, which fable connects with them. Next "iH coiue, at the cascades are left behind, the In dians, the second owners of the soil. Keokuk, chief of the Sac and Ko tribe, and Black Hawk, chief of the b w as. will have statuei in the gardens at the foot of the cascades. The animals, simultaneous. owners witb the Indians, will be shown in the radiating avenue in compositions. feet high. The wild broacfeo, the bear, buffalo, elk, HocVy mountain lion, the alligator, the Kansas steer and the moose are the eight animals sugg. ted for this use. Among the Indian composition Frederick Kemington is sugpesU d for 'A Che venae Hunter.' Indians in canoes and In dians moving are other Indian compositions which will hold a (dace ia the avenues near the Transportation building to show primitive methods if transportation. "ihe explorers and trappers who eon the land from the Indians and ;he wild animals will then he shown. Statues of Lewis and Clerk, the explorers, will stand rcstscctively at the bead of the east ami west bridges ahich cross the lagoons at the foot sf Art hill. A statue tdf Pierre Lalede Ligucst will also apiwar. Uijantlc sculptured groups sh v.ii g De Soto discovering the M.s-i- ippi. aud Marquette and Joliet, exploring the stream, will hold a place in the avejuea beside the Orand lagoon. In '.he avenues at the south entrances of the Electricity and textiles buildings. Mntod statues of Napoleon gad Jefereoa will ;,e placed. The f. rnsSI to be shovni deliberating as to the li iral.dity of signing the pi.ri-hasa tnaty, the latter triumphant with the pareaaaa treaty in his hand. Two rrcat companion groups will stand in the main transverse avenue, one in front of the l'reiieh pavilion, the oth?r in front of the United Stat, govrramcnt building. The lormer will ih.'vv symbolically the ITSteraity exsting between trance and the I nited States, the hitter, a grouj. a feet high, showing 'America, the Universal P.-aceniaker.' " Each of the big exhibit buildings ia the main picture is to be equipped aith allegorical sculpture, svn.polieal the purpose to which the structure m to be devoted. At each entrance .ill be statues showing the primitiv badaatrial operation whose do i. p ucnt ia illustrated within. RURALES AT WORLD'S FAIR. ItransriarnU Made for Qaartrrlaa Ih uropan or Mrvlcss Haralea aad Hand at t. I.ooi. 8t. Ixiui.s, Oct. 28. lircctor-of. Works Taylor has arranged with Mr. Albino U. Nuncio for quartering, on UM World's fair grounds, in ISSt, the ci ii pnay of Buraiea and the Ifetdenui Lai d which the M.xican goeeraOM nt 1 wiU hem here during the entire fair. The Haralea ani th- Issad eetii hae a military camp BM the camp groaaafa in tl.e houihwest portion of th tract recently added to the WorM'i fair site. Four huildiags are toJ erected for them a llaban for II hrsea. barracks f i '." musi.-ians . Utting ÜM li:;nd. barracks for the Kurnlcs and quarters for the ofamSS in charge fa Other ofheers will be ladgad in one f the domiitori s, ia each of which are suites of r.oma that include parlor, bedn OBI and bathroom. Mr. Nuncio visited the exhibit department chiefs and arranged definitely for the allotment 'f spaea desired ly Mexico in the exhibit molding. klK Insillf to SI. I.wala. Indon, Oct. 2 "King Leap IJ." sas the I'russels turfeapoesdent of the Daily Kxpresa, "has promlaad Commissioner Walsh to visit the St. L. uis exposition." tlrjan Slatuplna: f a.'or v. .1. Durango, Col., Oct. V,'. .'. Hryao tx-gan his tour through Colorado at Orand .1 unction. Mou lav morning. He was accompanied by Senator T. ML 1'atterM-n. t ottpie- -1- .mi .t. Bell .ind other prominent democrats of the state. The Hatlroad tar Shorlaav. New York, Oct. It Wallrond officials declare that the lasHSSttsni of a cur shortage throughout tTie DOMS1 try are becoming more and more propound d and the outlook is causing do little apprfhenison.