Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 45, Number 51, Jasper, Dubois County, 4 September 1903 — Page 2

Weeklu Courier.

V. HOAK, JASPEK. "I t fablUhrr. l & INDIANA It has been disc overed that the rslne of the täte of the Ute Mrs. James G Blaine will show la eAitsm of. $1,-000.000-Carl Rudolph s. t . : ' ha. been le president of 'lie National Equitable bank, of New York. Ht is the roSBafi president but one In the I'nlted States. i SJSj " The richest gold nugget ever found In Mexico was discovered, recently, by O. T. Robinson, captain of the vessel Cbirtgaa The nugget is nearly twenty Inches thick, and U valued at $7.000. Post Office Inspector Flavin, of Spokane. Wash . received Sdvtctt that the nail stage between Canyon City and tfchltnev City. Ore . was held up. on the 25th. on Dixie mountain, and all ' the mail taken Martin Kellogg, ex-president of the University of California, died at the Waldeck sanitarium, in San Francisco, on the 26th. as the result of an operation performed several weeks ago to relieve a combination of stOBSBOS and liver troubles. Miss Helen Keller, the famous Mine deaf mute. member of the graduating class of Kadcliff college, has ac epted the invitation of President Francis tc take an active part in the deaf, duml and blind operating exhibit at tb World's fair at St. l.ou.s Twenty-one indictments against C!tj i and County Clerk Aichele were reported by the Denver (Cht.) grand jury on the 2Sth. The principle charges rebve to the destruction of put lie records and an alleged shortage of $6.o0ö In the county clerk's office. President Roosevelt announced, on the 27th. at Oyster Bay. N Y . that Henry C Ide. at present a member of the Philippine commission, would be designated as vice-governor of the Philippines, in succession to Gen Luke E. Wright, when the latter assumes the office of governor general. Senator Hanna was taken suddenly 111 while in his office in Cleveland. O., on the 25th. and a physician who was railed ordered that he go to bed at once Mr. Hanna. the doctor stated, was suffering from stomach trouble, and thV together with the in-en-e het prevaiA. caused the trouble. The International Typographical unton has been asked to investigate bärge that Geree Tracy, who inStalled the government printing office at Manila, was forced to resign by John Leech, the public prin'er of the Philippines, because Tracy was one of the organizers of the Manila union. Standing upon the trap of the gul.ows. hi hands and feet manac led aid the sheriff adjusting the black cap. Samuel Stiles, at Cuero. Tex . on the 2th, was respited by Gov Lanham of Texas The negro was charged with having murdered Doom Edwards because of infatuation for his wife. The fourth contest for the Ameriea'r eup was called off. on the 27th. by the New York regatta committee, when It was seü that the Reliance, which was 20 minutes in the lead of Shamrock j III., could not finish the remaining three-qnar'ers of a mile w ithin the Schaar limit set for the 3o-mile race. The French steamer Admiral Coy4on. of 3.013 toBS, which sailed from Mar-eilies. Fran e. July 15. for Saigon. 1 French Cochin China, by way of Colombe. Ceylon, which port she left August 11. has not since been reported, and has leen given up for lost. There were Z" persons on board the vessel. It was announced, on the 25th. that the total paid admissions to the Misaonrt sUtefair were 31.5. while the gate receipts were $5 In excess of T, aith,,.h th. amount of J premiums was ls.o more n in IB the fair had more than U In the treasury after all lnc1fcb:!r.ess was paid Excitement at Oaxaca City. Me. co. to at fever heat over the wonderfully rich gold deposit at EJutla, All mintag men. as well es many business men. have gone in a wild race there, and are staking out claims H is probably the richest and most exten. ive gold district yet discovered In that country. Orris J. Town. Jr , a former d'pmv collector of internal revenue for the eastern district of Massachusetts. wa arrested in Philadelphia, on the Mfc by government officers. charged with the defalcation o several thoaand dollars He waived a hearing before a United States commissioner, and bail : ? Gen Nelson A. Miles who went as the guest of the New Hampsh.re Veterans' association, arrived at Th Weirs. N B . fn.m California, on the tth He was rwceitn I with a salu'e of IT anas, sad escorted to the soldiers' pavilion for dinner by the tarvlfcri of the Fifth regiment New Hampshire eolun'eers. officers of the v. terata saociation and invited gueita. Princess Ixuise.on the .'.".th.launcfeed the Bri'Uh battleship I)nminlon at Barrow The DimlnloB Is the last of the three ships known as the King Edward VTJ class. When completed the Itomtnion will have co- ; -t0. The Dominion Is a first-class battleship f 16.350 tona' displacement. She is 425 feet long, has 1&o indicated horse power and will have an estimated epcd of over eiguteca knoia

NEWS IN BK1 F.F. Compiled from Various Source. PERSONAL AND GENERAL.

Mim Mary Jenkins, the 17-year-old daughter of William A. Jenkins, an architect of Denver. Tol . fell over a teep .lift on a mountain-c llmb.ng expedition, on the 2:.th,at Dachet Springt, and a killed. The Fort Smith St Western railroad, on the th. flU-d with the Oklahoma territorial secretary h first mortgage for 5.tH '." iu fav.r of tue Mercantile Trust Co . of New York Before a sreat crowd of specta'ors at Readville, Mass.. on the 34th. and with the track and wcaiher conditions perfect, Lou Dillon paced by ' Tcggy from Pans" and Carrie Nation, trotted a mile In two minute, a new world , record. Two cloud-bursts, on the 20th. destroyed hundreds of the isatids dollars" worth of property in Council "Bluffs. u Jhe Mom ,nrnn, tru. tree: of the city Into torrents, and hundreds of families in the lower district of the city were removed from their home with difficulty David Q William, aged 63 years, ago. died at Cambria. Wis . on the - ti died at Cambria. Wis., on the StttL from blood poisoning, which resulted from the Lite. Mr Williams was a member of the lower house of the last legislature. He served in the civil wa. Rufus Connell. president of the five state banks in the Kiowa-Cimmani 1 country. Oklahoma, is charged with selling $'.4 "on forged warrants to the Guthrie national bank and sajvttaj thousand to the Capital national. The Northern Pacific liner Victorix. which arrived at Tacoma. Wash., on the 27th. from the orient, brought in a consignment of orchid bulbs from Ma- j nila. I I . wh:. h were forwarded to St. Louia to be exhibited at the fair. These bulb- were sent ost from Manila by the government, and a very" rare specimen of the orchid and worth many thousands of dollars. B. F. Davis, president of the Firs: national hank of Park Rapids. Minu . was drowned in Fish Hook lake, on the 27th. while sailing with a party of friends A squall snapped off the mas:, knocking Davis into the water. He drow ned before help could reach him. A Missouri. Kansas k Texas passenger train truck a freight train which had no; rlrsd the main track at Rhineland. Mc . on the 27th. Frei Daniels, fireman, of New Franklin. Mo . was Wiled, and Engineer Burk seriously injured. At Kent. Ia. on the 27th. the engine and 17 cars of a freight train on the Burlington road went through a bridge that had been weakened by the high wa'er. carrying down with it the engineer and fireman. Both escaped by swimming to shore. Capt. Edward Nathan Burton, the last of the oil-time lake captains, who sailed the "BBtatted seas'' before many of the present -day vessel men were born. died, on the 27th. at the home of his daughter. Mrs. H. L Proctor. In Ogdensbur:. N. . David I Murdock. once distric Judge of San Diego county. Cab. died at the home of his sister of a nervous affection. aed tT years. Judge Muri dock was born in Illinois and served i through the civil war in an Illinois j regiment. He leaves two brothers. Dr. E. P. Murdock. of Chicago, and J. T Murdock. of Streator. 111. A decidedly new turn in the case o: the United States vice-consul. William C Mageissen, at Beirut. Syria, who unreported to have been assassinated on the 2Cd, developed, on the 28th. when it became known that the rejort was in orr t . and that, although Mr Hagelssen had been shot at he had no: ; even been Injured Six suits Involving MM acres of ! land, valued at M0jMOgMt, were tied with the district clerk of Hardin county. Tex . on the 26th The clain. is alto be one-fourth interest in sub"'visions of the tMcw Brown tract on which there are numerous oil well, A mooter niourain er,gm. explodSouthern Pacific shops at : rr- i .. ..,w TI, 1 m Mill. At tu lim 4iu. mau gled remains of C. C. Mayfield. the fireman in charge of the boller. were found 5" yards away One entire en 1 of the shops was demolished. Southern Pacific passenger train Sc 1 4 was derailed by a defective switch near PlCamCBUirjr, I'tab. on the 28th Eight of the 'en cars left the track. th baggage, two express cars and a day coach beiDR completely demolished No one was killed. While the condition of Senator Hanna, on th -'h. was not considered serious, still It wa not expected that fawould leave ti hom fir business for ; some time. Engineer James M HUchkis. who I was injured In a collision on the t'nlon Pacific railway, near Brighton. Col . I between an excursion train and a runaway flat car. died on the 2Mb H" waa the oldest engineer in point of service on the I'nion Pacific system having been employed by the company ! 23 years. Sir Thoma.5 I.ipton declares that he ; will never challenge again for the America's cup until a man has been found in England wlio equals Nat HerreshotT In yacht building. The baronet admits hla disappointment at bis failure. With tremendous i'.evonations. heard for miles, a new fissure opened at five o'clock on the evening of the 28th. in tb -(ine of Vesuvius, and from the ner gap peered tons of burning lava, which flowed in the direction of the village of Ott a Ja no. John Wilton Cunningham, aged 36 yesra, one of the most widely known of St Lou- artists, died of consumptlon at ObJBB RettaBCe, near San Antonio. Tex . on the 27th, to which resort he jounced In July In quest of health.

Thirty acres of land aajolnlns. tho Market lead works in C.rann- City. 111. has leen purchased by the 1'nlled l..ad Co as a nu tor Hg new plant and shot tower Attorney-Ueioral Crow announced, on the 27th. that he would lie ready, on the "1st. when the Cole county circuit tour meets at Jefferson City, Mo., to fv Senator W Matthews, of St. ban . charged with accepting a bribe from L J. Kelly for his vols on the alum lull Before the adjournment of the annual meeting of the Missouri Pres asseiation. on the 2eh. a resolution was adopted to pBTgt the body of some objet t tonal le members who have been brought Into prominence by reason of their connection with the recent boodle exjKures in the state. Joseph Haworth. the well-knowti actor, was found dead in a room in the Kingsley hotel at Willoughby. O.. on

the night of the 2Mh. The discovery of Mr Haworth's death was made by h:s sis'w Mir- Kaie Haworth. wac went to his room to call him. LATE NEWS ITEMS. WH taw anerlcaa incomer works, of New York city, an order for a "tandem com pour. 5 ." designed to lie the greatest of locomotives, was placed, on the lV.a. by 'he Baltimore it Ohio railroad. This giant of the rails, when completed, will weigh MMN pounds sad surpass in weight any locomotive ever built. It will be exhibited at tht St Ixuis World s fair. President Koc sev.-l announced, on the P Ith, that he and his family Would return to Washington. D. C. September 20. if nothing occurs to interfere with the present arrangements. Ths summer home at oyster Bay. X. Y., will be rioted at that time and again Washington will be the home of tht president. A reHrt was reefived at the navy department from the commandant at the navy yard at Brooklyn. N. Y.. saying that an examination of the battleship Massachusetts since she has been in dry dock shows that it will cost fl:',(Wu to. repair the damages which shs recently suffered near Bar Harbor. MeCity and County Clerk Aichele. indicted by the Denver (Col l grand jury on the th. The shooting was done larceny of records and destruction of public dexuments. appeared in the criminal court, on the tfth. and furnished bonds in the sum of $12.'". Ht pi. 3d m t guilty to all the charges Becaaet the ban has been placed on the ne-ro laorers by the citizens of Greer county. Okla . there will be aa estimated loss of MO bales of this years cotton crop Greer county, which, until a few years ago. was a part of Texas, is one Of the big cotton producers of the territory"Without a word of warning two men were killed ar.u tw others wounded by hold-up men in the cashier s office at the barns of the Chicago City Railway Co.. Sixty-first and State streets, onu the 3oth The shooting was done bv three men who tseapcd af.er securing H,. Five men on a gra-el train and two on a freight tram were seriously Injured In a collision on the Pennsylvania railroad, on ih- :'."th. at CoiBSsbu. Ind Conductor Like and Fireman Greenlee of the freight were scalded, and may die. William J Bryan announced, on the 3"tb. that he wo bM deliver a number of political speech in Ohio in connection with the democratic state campaign His itinerary has Leen partial arranged. J-..!re Hmmon.b at Jfferon Ci'T. Mo., on the 31st. overruled the motion for arrest of fvdgBkeat in the case of Senator Wm. P. Sullivan, of St. Louts county. Mo . who was recently tried, convicted and sentenced to pay a fine of $1".' for soliciting a bribe of MN from a representative of baking powder int rests for three votes in favor of the bill to repeal the antl-tnist law. There was a ten'-ral resumption of work, on the list, la the numerous mills of the American Woolen Co., throughout New England, wh ch have ben shut down from one to two weeks Upwards of 25."o hands participated in the vacation. Co' ton mills also in various sections resumed after periods of curtailment or idleness on account of the i-.tton ritaat toe. Gov Caatttertcej Bf Wyoming, on the 31st . announced his intention to appoint W. C Irvine täte treasurer, to succeed Henry G. Hay, who resigned to sccept a position with the I'nited States Steel corporation at New York Mr. Irvine 1 manager of the Leiter cattle ranches in Wyoming Dr. Philip Wolf, formerly editor of the Boston Saturday Evening Gazette, and also connected with the Boston Leader, but s resident of New York city for tht past two years, died at his home, on the 31st. of apoplexy, aged '.5 years He was the author of a number cif novels. Agsin. on the list, the beautiful cup defender Reliance failed to register her third victory over Sir Thomas Upton s challenger. Shamrock III . because th wind died to nothing and the time limit of five and a half hours eapired liefore she could rea n the finish line. Andrew Geddes. for some years chief clerk Sf the, depart men' of agriculture at Washington. D CL was relieved of office, on the 21st. on charges of a personal nature, and R. B tr h. i hief clerk of the bureau of animal industry, ka-s been appointed to succeed him. The transport Thomas, which sailed from San Francisco, on the 31st. for the Philippine Islands, touching at Honolulu and Guam, carried $5,000,000 in Philippine silver certificates, accompanied by a guard of 25 enlisted men of the Fourteenth cavalry. Senator B L Matthews, of St Iwls county. Mo . will be tried on the Indictment for receiving a bribe of l,'oo from Daniel J. Kelly for his WM on the slum bill In the Missouri legislature, on Monday, November Is.

H00S1KBHAPPENINQ8 1

rold in Brief by Dispatches from Various Localities. l-'tiuiot Itrail. Logansport. lud.. Aug. 3!.--Josepti I'n. at her, dg d 2o. ' . as found dead ou a pile of ties near his front door Sunday morning with bis skull crushed. 11 ts Um son of Charles l'naiher. Suturda night young I'ncathcr and Harry (ira. wtmse attentions to Mrtle I'mather. a sister of Jos ph, bad leen ordered stopped by her father. mi the father and mother. A qiurrel followed an! (tatet ttkfCtJ a stone, striking Charles l'ncather. who sw.ire out a warrant for Grate's arrest Mr and Mrs l in-ather left the two young men to.-thr loiter after Grace bad (n arrested, they returned borne and saw young l'ncather lying on the ties They heard him br. at hing loudly, but lid not disturb him Sunday mornlnu they found biM lying in the same position daii. No arrests have leen niu.le. Grace is sc 111 in jail. nennt llon- n n .Innrui i. Darood, had., Aug. 31 An bbbsbsI era of bouse moving is in progress between Pweod and Kranktor, as a result of which the latter dty promisee to lose a great many of Its dwellings. Six or eight years ago. w hen the bottom fell out of the building boom wh: h was then in progress tin re, hundreds of people moved away from Frankton. and many fine residences were left standing vacant. A large number of these are vacaut to this dav. but Elwivod builders who gave the matter investig;atmn learned that they could buy these houses and have them moved to Elwood. although the distane is six miles, cheaper than they could build here at the present i mgn price or material. Men. or ten or them are now being: moved. ' Pssstame st OM towraela Terre Haute. Ind.. Aug 3!. The Exiiress. which has been Terre Haute's morning paper sinn IVM, has gone ou of exi. tenc-e. and Is sti 8tedci by the Star, which 1 one of a number nf Stars Osotgt P McCulloch It starting in Indiana cities. He now has Stars in Mum in and Indianapolis, and others are to he started. They are neutral In nolitlri and avoid local isSBet Mr SdcCnltoch repftstatt the Philadelphia syndic-lie which i ' merging lnerurban lines in Indiana. 1 Wr;. tht dropping out of the Expres. republican In western Ir.d: ina. i n a territory of a dozen counties are without a daily par y newspaper. Pattaasw Bee n-nt. Elkhart. Ind. Aug .11. David H. Rohrer. a croeer. has made an assignment. If. I". DtSBBfwal being named as assiirr.ee The liabilities are estimated a? IxMwien $s.ihm, an( c,ooo. with assets about $1.."i"o in stoc k and about Ht In bc.Hk SecCkwBtS Mr. Rohrer claims tha' a bupcotl by labor union people her a use he employed a non union clerk, and the fact that many of hli patrons left him to patronize a new store, without settling their accounts wi'h him. are the caBSt of hla embarrassment It Is sail he may be able to offer settlement at U cents on the dollar Mini n'inti Imprninl. Lafayette, Ind . AVV 31. Fred Meyer president nf the Iletatl Merchants assocla'icm and A Y Alder, president '.f the Commercial club, w ill all a publli meeting scn to discuss the opening of the Wabash river to navigation Delegates will als be elected Mayor Richard B Sar -de has been authorized to name a egatSon for the council to accompany the eit'z.ens commlftee. Th project Is being widely dlBtSIStd here, and no delegation at Terre Haute on September 15 will le more enthusiastic than the one ent from this city. T c nr- BeeffMessa Mar 'on. Ind Aug. 31 Dr J H Forrest. ex-presiIent of the state herltp hoard. n?r demonstrated to his satisfaction that deafness in mativ forms i an !e cured by the use of the Finsen rays He announces that he has successfully experimented on himself, a do.if sir) agc-d 17. and a boy. The cirl had BSBM deaf sine birth and the hoy for three years The apparatus used by Dr Forrest Is a modification of the Flnsen apparatus the Haft being Induced from s'atlc electricity. T lm-iriirnlrH. Marion Ind.. Au. 31 Father Rile who nas ben at the head of th- Boys' Brigade for atvtffad years, is to be asrteted in his work by prominent Marlon citizens. The lr;gade will be incorporated under the name of the "Marion Imlustria'. Sc hcxil for Roys '' Th objec t of the organization is given as "to r.riivictr- emolovmen' snrt rive I proper industrial, moral and reliclous training to boys, not over II years oM, who may le committed to Its control, and is not for pecuniary profit." V ..in fn lirm nt ue nf HlT. Iijiorte. Ind. Aug :il. Mrs. F. L. Turc.ynea. residing near Terre f'oupee, la dead at tlv c. of lo7 years She was born in Poland and fOTSBOrt than half a lenttiry had lived in Laportt and gt. Jofeph cunties Family records substantiate the statement as to her age MERE MENTION. Th Japanes pBtrt n OM nt. It issald.lt about to import Ht ttsvthtTI from thr Unlte.1 sta- i to t aw h Knglih in Japan. The first BStel if .liamonds from tht Prenler mine was exhibited m Johannesburg July It consisted of stone aggregating ttjMt cara's In weight. The British royal commbslon n alien Immigration re. cimtnends that th immlgratlnn of ce rtain c lasses of aliens be subjected to y'.T" i BttffOl, and proposes a nurober of regulations and thei-tab-llshment of a department Of Immigration.

nriTTl DV Uflllfl

DCHicn Di ninui NOT BY SHAMROCK Contest Was Wholly Between the American Yacht and Time. SHAMROCK TWO MILES ASTERN Pslleast Fnlletl to ll.ulner Her Tuini Vleteei Pteeshte Wrtaal BJted out oiii Peeleasis Hati Ceattel Aleeesti DesMIed New York, ept t - Again Monday the beautiful ciiji tefesdtf fttllSAeS ftiied to register btt laird rlctorji ocr Sir Thomas l.ip' oil's chsUengtt because the wind died to SOthlBg and the time limit of five and a ball hours ux pired b for.' she could rCBCfl tht tuiish line. Her margin was apprnximati'lj the same aa on Thursday last She was less than half a tulle from tht finish when the gun sounded The Shamrock III. was a faint blur on the horizon, fully two and a half BtUtt astern Reliance s failure to .score the race was tht more exasptratlBf boeaast her ultimnte triumph Is now conceded, even by Sir Thomas himself, to be simply a formality Only I'rolouit Iii' The superiority of tht Herreshoff boat in any kind of weather is acknowledged by the yachtiug critics of both skies of the Atlantic, and yest. rlay'g fluke only prolongs the agony ot the contest that has already bttfl fltcided. tho waning interest in the cup ra,es wa8 strikingly illustrated by the . , , ....1Wt, P, m ,hA size of the steamships that went down to the ocean race course could be dignified by such title. Outside of the revenue cutters, which patrolled the course, ll consist!. 1 of half a dozen side-whe. lers, with almost empty d.-cks, a few seagOlBg tims and a score of steam yac ht s. I nil Spoil ISM ln-e. The easterly wind ami rain had served to knock down the sea somewhat, although it was mugh tBOwgh the first two hours of the rSCt to tn. ezcnrslon lioats tumble about a good ileal and tho yachts to tlangt , and stagger OB their way to the outer mark. Hut sj the day wore on the wind hauled to the north and fell to a mere zephyr, hardly strong enough to round out the enormous canvas-es of the sloops, and the sea subsided to a smooth surface. Cagnh Urlimi- Ken. The race was spiritless from the 1 eglnning. It wbs laid l." miles to windward up the Long Isiand shore and return. Its sailing feature was the start, in Which Capt. Wringe, by a pretty piece of maneuvering, neatly turned the tables on the Yankee skipper and captured the windward b-rth. Even so. the yachts crossed tho line abreast like a harnessc'd team of horses. Shewa H-r Beels t batteacee Hut within fifteen minutes the def.nrter was showing her heels to the challenger, and when the Moat at th" OOU r mark was reached she round d it 20 minutes anl SI seconds ahead of her rival In the five times the bOBtl patt met this was by far tht worst boating Shamrock III has had iu windward work The only Interest which remained after that was as to whether Reliance would be able to reach tht finish line In time to score the race. The regatta committee of 'he New Torh Yac tit ettsh announced last night that the yachts would race again to j lay. Heenril of the Haeen. Reliance allows Shamrock 1 mlnutt 57 seconds. THVR8DAT, Aug. 20. No race; winl failed; yachts could not finish within 1-htsV limit. RtllOJMM led by nearly a mile when race was called off. Straightaway course 11 miles and return .10 miles. SATCKAÜY. Aug. 22 Reliance woa by 7 mintites and : seconds. Shamrock led at the start, but was passed In first hour Reliance covered thecoursn in 3 hours .12 minutes and 2 1 seconds. Shamrock, .! hOOTS 41 minutes and 21 seionds. Straightaway course, same as on August Jo Wind, 10 to 15 milt an hour. TUESDAY, Aug M . Reliance won by I minute and IS BjCOBilB. She led at the start and was ntttr ivrtakcn. Reliance covered this course in :i hours 14 minutes and "it soco.-il-haBtrock, hours - niButes and io seconds. Trianpular course 10 miles to log H miles. Wind, 8 to IS nlles an hoar, THURsDAT, hag. :., race; wind failed, neither yacht being ahlo to finish within in the time limit. When the ra was ailed off ReltaBCt was 12 minutes ahead of Shamrock. Straightway course. It miles ancl return. SATURDAY. Aug. 29 Yachts did not start Sea too rough. MONDAY. Au'. :il No race; wind, failed; neither yacht finished. Next ate over same course September 1 Late dispatc lies from Minister Irishman give in detail the ondit ions in Turkey, and do not differ materially in tone from those previously sent. Minister Irishman does not. as reported in some quarters, request the withdrawal of the American ships from Tsrhtth waters. While reports by way of Londan state that no attempt was made upon the life of Vie Consul Magelsscn, offl advic es so far received show that such an attempt was made. The present status was known before the ships left Genoa, and this government did not decide to c hangt tht orders.

"BEST SPORT IN THE WORLD" American People to Show Their Appreciation of Sir Thomas. a PissselBtlea sse lasBBsat ' jto lu be NatSeatM I hnmeOT fain steel ieetlaieati New York. Stpt. 1. The initial step toward the presentation lo Sir riitiius I.ipton d' a memento from the Aiiimian people probably in the forts uf t silver ttftlct, was taken, Monday, when tht (oilowtBg rteointlOB was adopted ut a meeting bcll at tht Waldorf hotel "The undersigned committee, named to arrange a memento for .Sir Tlounis Upton, feel assured that Iii' n-pre-eiit a universal SentlBtttlt of appreciation tntOBl all classes of Americans who love sport and admire a apoitBBBSg, and. Hctlng upon tins assurance, they lUfgtel to the general pnblit a popular stthterlptlon to meet tht end la view. Tht WetterB national bank of New York has consented to receive subscriptions, it is desired that those be BatkMsSl in character, since there is no state or section where the phuU. liberality and good temper of our late antagonist, ever our friend and now our guest. lia i noi won all bear's " The following committee was appotBted: Oca Joseph Wheslor, chairman; OsL Henry Watterson. bMh rill; Patrick Coiiin . mayor of 1 1 -ton; Thomas F Walsh. WMhhlgtOB, D C; (leorge T Wilson. New York; Robert T. Tod. New York: Valentine 1 Snyder. New York: Limbay Russell, New York: Senator Kearns. Utah; Xlmothj l. Woodruff. New York. The following tel. tram was rec eived from Mayor Patrick A Collins: "Will serve on committee with cremtest pleasure for gold as well as silver, as nothing is too good for the best IpOfl in the world." SULLIVAN'S MOTION IS LOST. Court DfcnWinMa Mattmi In rrt of .lu.lf niral In I h ' of ItiO.i - Sanstfetas seeetaai Jefferson City. Mo . Sept. 1 Ju dff Timtnonds, Monday afternoon, overruled the motion for arrest of judgment In the case of Senator Win. V. Sullivan, who was recently tried, conrfcted and SQDlSBfBil to pay a fine of $l"'t for sidiciting a bribe of $ 1,600

frlln a representative of baking ivder interests for three votes In favor of the bill to repeal the anti-trust law. He w rote a BtTOBg opinion covering; the decision An appeal will now be taken to the Kansas City court of appeals. Judge Timmonds declared tint the pleadings were sufficient to maintain the action at common law. hence he overruled th motion. He sad there was two reasons why this protti BtlOB under the common law : ' mid lie maintained. First, because it was a misdemeanor to solicit a bribe; second, because It was an act which was injuri1 QUS to the public. MATTHEWS' TRIAL IS RESET. st. intets mit) Bseesew wm be Trlnl on Iii' idletSBesrt l or HteeelvlBtl " HribeJeffersoa cit. Mo., Bepl i senator B. L Matthews, nf St Louis COUBtT, will be tried on the ladkrtflseel foe recelrlBg a bribe of 11,090 from Damle I Kelly for his vote on the alum bill In the legislature, on Monday, NoreSBBtl 16. It was set foi that due i.y Iudp? fltttlt. of the circuit court. Mondav morning, by agreement of tht attorneys Attorney-dcneral Crow wanted the case continued that it might be tried after the .iscs of Sena'ot- Karri and Smith, but at this term of the circuit lourt The Karris and Smith cases were set by Judge Grav-j for the flrst week in November MR. BRYAN'S DATES IN OHIO. llr nii They Have ot Been VamBettedt Three of Them I'nilIKinetl Till Orluber. Lincoln. Neb. Sept. 1. Wm. J. Bryan says that it was press of businctl that led to the BCttpOBtflieBl of his speaking tour iu Ohio with Mayor Tom L. Johnson. Three of tht dates will be filled this weak and thi e !!! be postponed until Octet), r. "The dates were not cancelled ' sol Mr Hryan, "they vvre pottponod because I was unable to reach Ohio I will leave Monday evening and will till three dates, beginning Tuesday nigh'. The other thre- will !. filled iu o:olier.'' c etteS villi Hrwitnie urk. Boaton, Sept. 1. There was a general rttttnptlOB Of work. Monday, In the numerous mills of the ASStflcSB Woolen Co, throughout .Vow ICnuland, which have been shut down from 'n to two weeks. Upwards of S5.600 hands partklpnttd In the rscattoa. Cotton mills also in various sections resumed after periods of curtailment or idleness on account of the OOttOfl SltUStion. Bcll-hmmii Anthcir Head. Now York, Sept. 1- Dr. Rhillp Wolf, formerly editor ot the Boston Saturdsv Kvenlrv nnsttlS, and also connected with the Boston Leader, but a resident of this city for the past two yeir. tUtd at his home here, Monday, of apoplexy, aged fi;i years. He was the author of a number of novels. Ho. J. n. J. sfensesitsl. I). D. Thllad Ipbla. S. pt. 1 Rev J 8. J. KeOonnell, D. D. recording sec retary of the board of churc h extension f the Episcopal church, died, Monday, sltsi a protracted Illness.