Semi-weekly Express, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 2 June 1896 — Page 4

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THE EXPRESS.

ftui ST GEORGE M. ALLEN. Proprietor.

publication Office, 23 South Fifth Street, Printing Houae Square.

Entered as Second-Class Matter at the I Postoffioe at Terre Haute, Ina.

SUBSCRIPTION TO THE EXPRESS.

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THE SEMI-WEEKLY EXPRESS.

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ne copy, one year Cftpy, six months

ft TELEPHONE 72.

(Now .thiait PjediiSemlS CSevteflaind has replied to congress about dihie river and jjttajrtxKf Ib'i£Cl lit would: like same remark, 'pro or laotrt, albau/t tits Cuibtami resolutions. jr y. Tihse hiardeasit Ibtow t* gold' Suae been' to5'jctai by itihe foroald tg-uiage wdrng of the pimhMtion (party twhiiclh. d'etoliares 3t ito wore© than iwW&ky lamki Kentucky hftnlka so itOO.

The Demoanafe prcfbaibly wffili appHa/ud Iplr. (Cleveland's veto of tlhe olliver arid paalbor Ml. If iftoqy tihliinik iso nveM df hfe puidlgtmieOTt -why Bo itlhey mlolfc iaooept hfis ^jdvutoe in ©Itiher iraatfters? Ee its not followed fey owe-itlhM |olf (hits party.

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(Mr. dev-edamd having successfully ^glarrleid out the Democratic plains to /empty fhe .treasury, logically ha® ito fv-eito the bills for customary expenditures. (He overilooks tfche fact that when ithe Mils come -due itihe treasury will toe fn other (hands.

jil The National [Park iBank of New York ^Seposited &• imiil'lion Sru goldi an fche subjBraasury in exchange for ilegal tenders'. tHhiLs (places in a dilemma 'the free silJpesr ranter® who must either credit a. Jj'ajitk wiith. a. praiseworthy act or adroit

Ibhait gofl'di is becoming plenty and' too idheap to (keep.

The imiinister's discovery of ia resemblance between t'he drummer amd a ^Methodist preacher does hot ©poll the Remark otf Mirs. (Partington Who said of Jier tEavoritie domjinite ftiba-ti "Tihe poodi imam "waja a H'oouat fpreacher (for |?eveni years, 'tfitea •& «3l'rou3 rtder awd bw Ihe Is an exhauster."

The .paiSfiin'g of Mr. CJjeve'laimd lha's begun ain'd albomt two-thilrds of !hiis .party fia.ve no furtflner use !for Ibim^ tout they have gome fiurther an'd 'fared worse' in Wesertinig ihimi for silver intfl-al'Ion. aai.d repudiation. If iMr. devieiaaiid cannoit jead has owni party the eanmoifc fhope to (finive tfh'e tR'eipuWloa'n© 'anid idictat'e tlhe Iwlfcy of icongiress toy veto or advice.

Tihe XaaiianQipoldB ISurn (figures out fhe tDemiOorat'io 'duty so plainly that the (wayfaring man. 'tlhouigih a (Pool caano ©•rr tit says: *"Those -mho favor a dollar frh-a't i's iwontihi a •dollar imuslt go "Wilfh tlhe Eio-called igoldi bugs. Those iwho favor ia idollar tihat lis not 'wwtih a dollar miust po 'wi'tih, the soca'l'led ©Ever 'fan-atlcs." iH-oiwever thel ODeanocratio rwayfaring tman d-s preiparlnig1 to err.

1

ISeniator DanW, rw,o,h Ss Ifor ifree collnBg«. ttinlcs rtJhiait it will causa a' "tamipoirary idiStnaulbanioe." Clonslidetiillnig tihe too&t oif Itihe iteimponary idilffturTDaimceis by tthe Wilson WiJil and the repeal of tih-e sH-rve.r-punclh'aee alct, iwhibh iwia® t/housainids of imillioins cam we afCond ainkthe.r ".tempoTGry td^fetaiiibajicie tDC His I'h'e last te'tfrQjw tlhalt -btreakis itlhe oatm^l'is back ainld 'Sflheliagt iblee^'ilng itihat oairries off the Iweiak ipaJtlieoit.

Wih'en 'the igfrannSfiafhesr of 'the pre&ent ^J'oQjin. Jaco'b lAs'tor idi^d toe left tihe (bulk tpf (his igrcat farfruine in ouch a way tthat j-Oiis grandson* ehou'l'd1 come fin possesion of i't "s\1hen 80 years old). T:ha't tiiimie ia® arrived aoid, tbe INew York authorities are claimteg t?he succession tax lumdler a laiw pas-sed1 sliwoe tlhe estate was (devils'? d'. There Is •gioun.d for a contest tbuit the lau't-honltle® fhlak, 'as 'the IheAr j&n'd not tihe •deceased de\M'sor has to pay he tax, that fh'eitT claim 1® igood' ifor a frory tidy euim erf money..

For BlcTj'lnie's relcdlpHoJaDty Wilson suhU3tulted retollfa'tlloin. •TJmd«r aistci'pirocity 'iriitiw !triads iwias tmaicle ibu|b amd'ex refcalJfcaitiion old tradieihaBlbeienilost. Tlhe Demoarla(t!i)c aidimi'Jn!aHt.rat!l.olnJ cstiaib'J.lshe'd a JbaiLf-wiay ifiret? 'tmadie a)n u\im€iriica a.md jraflaJiatd'om agaiinst Ameribai On Europe. ?The ooinn expioirt fell tfrom 54,000,000 "bueih(efe 0n CLS94 Ito 23,000,000 in. 1S95. In the

Ba/rrue tiime iforedgn-exs retaliated ub out cit tlhe sate o'f 1,700,000 ba.r.rels of flour antd 13,000,000 buisihiels of iwheat, ia.nd, (a.11 over Europe, retaliaticry measures have Spruing up la.g'ailni^t Aimeriloan. produfcitis. JA. ioa:mjaigrn off retajldailiiotni laigainet D-eim-Braittiic im^thcudls is opening to re-esfeab-IMied rediprcical reJat'ioms ibetwoea iAmepjcain pTOduicems a.ndi forergni 'ocm^uimers.

It was the very sarcum of fate that thu gigantic extravagance of the Ruspi'am coronation should be followed by /the mad rush for bread by the (hungry mob that crushed out a thousand lives jftit Moscow on, Saturday.—Tim-es-Herald.

The pteiragraphic squiib usually hao oiore snap than logic. It •was the irony of fate that a generous and lavish hasps Utility should result fan disaster and death but the idea of a "rush for bread ty a hungry anob" does not descriibe the •it'Uation. It was a crowd of merry jnakers, a multitude, eager tb Cbtaiin the precious souwnins of a wonderful occasions, la the siiape of mugs bearkrg «he portrait of t'he czar teas of tuou ^ands, uncoifs-cious of wliat they were Jflojng, or of the force of their combined Irtish* pushed reslstiessly against the (Main line of i'he fnoout t\ank or massed amuntd the -helpJei=a ce^ter. We have 'peen mad rushes by well-dressed, weK (fed people to this wuntry for food at iashlojiable ossembKea and public feiasts Ijthat otn'ly ine'eded bigger crowds to (have [^een dangerous. The presidents' taau fjgirral (balls (have been -the scenes al Sionue remoTkajble scrambles for food and f^rink. A mob of people, carried away ^jy one idea, te (much the saroa to all fjxxuntries, cxoe?at th«,t 'Russia ctoiUects

the largest, «und on* who g«fs Soto ooe takes a* risk, or becomes fua Instirunsezvt otf rkBk itb otbere toy Joining la 'the' rusbr arad push^ as raeaurty every cae does.

Terne H«ult« never ftaahed a brigtoter W'Qloame ito vieitone thaai &b has to Che T. P. A. as ia glimpse at itihe riot of color on our walls will show. Printers Bow has bid -them welcome im a blue* audi white sympfhouy which shows that -they are aoilM to fBaJt imporbant quarter. The Hooall post cif the TP. P. A., to Site preparations ito receive "the fellow knights of the grip, by dits energy amid taste 'has ait once represented its city ain-d d)ts gfeSt order most eucoeasfuUy and it only remain for Terre Hajute amid tthe T. P. A. ito find .What -tlheir mutual good impressJons of each other are more tfhani realized. Gemitlemerv of the gr3p anid •grtt, tlhe cUCy before_5scurf you donrt what you want, ask for i5t and get it.

As he pa'lmlts the wronss^oS^oo *. white "deimotnJ^ttaad" ^idver, tttue audlientce iaacomsaiotBSly tneiad® (waiter ini Sts own tears.—New York ISuini. •We regret ittttait «tTmB d'escrflpft'tan of tihe power otf omaitory does not apply to our own TDamiJel "W. Vooriheas, (but to the Hon. Hez Liang oif KenlOiKoky. Thie Sum wall ifaXi ijtoi tits altitem.pt ito (pmove ittoait •MQr. Hez lAin® is more palllh'etWc iamd tender, mlore toutelhitog ainld) wdbibly of voSoe tt,bi?'n Mr. ViOonhees irn r.eeitiiinig the sorrow©, albuises land toldiigniiWJes suffered (by itihie sfflvea dollar. Tlhe Hast time the senator qpobe otf eMver 3n Terre Haute, aiijid toM (hlow the $8,000,000 toolLned beidweieini 1792 and 1873 ihtaid paid for all the ipg.rimia df -tlhie Wedt, Ibouglhit tilni thalt dintiervail, lajnid pdfdtluired tlhe pLuitoioraitt (d'.rivaing a d'aggier umider itihe fiifth rlilb o'f fhe silver diodllair itlhe (Wiaibasto we nit on a tear. The How. (Hez OLninig 5is merely a iwieak 3mOtaJtoir oif tttxe oriiglniaJ. tfapamliiaih of eljlvier, our Mr. Voorhiees.

The oiLd doldU'etrs (were twllllling to 'folJow wihteinevier Cteni&fiall Giriartt Iteid'. The igreait leaid'er iwlhio iwais tas bo'Jd land dilrefat 5tn aidivoiciaitiing (hoimesit imomey as Ihe iwias to lartlbajcttciing itihe enwrniy slaliid !im feiis aecomd' imieJEisiase1: "Tlhie goiod Ifiafilttti ctf tlhle! govemtmanlt dainnot ibe •vSoJat'e'di Htotwaipdl lapeditors wHthiout inaibl'Oiniail 'dUggriaioe. "Our iflnst istiep ^houlid Ibe to secure a cuirremicy oif fix«id! sitiaible viailue, a curre'.ntcy igood iw'herever cifvtiSiziat'iioni reiigms. "'We muislt reituirti Ito nueajsuire o'f valines reocigmized ttorouisrhouit tlhe cftvliiMze'd world. Whtle we aise a ourrenicy not equ^valient itto tlh'ib otiamidiaird, elpecfe Ibedoimies a cicwnimodtity ilikte the pirodubts ctf itlhe sioil, itihe isurlpluis seeMn'g a marfeet whietrever Ithere iiis a demiamd: iflor ffiL"

INo CM ©olidlAir shoruaid' Ibe wlii-llimtg /oo •tiumi Ihfie 'btack on1 wihiaJt Orainit believed w^Jtih affl the Sntetnslity of hlia umiffeiated ainid 'honeist mature. He iwias as hon'eist Un IhaB vSews of puiblilc dieftxte a® to .ttose oif (hta prliivat© tde'Wtsi tfor iwhu/dh ihe Btirfpipe'd hiimsellf df Ihte imosjt preciiouis ainid siadred poegeasfionB.

ai IWhen EMis® Kate Field died at far off (Honolulu iwe tost on© of the brightest and -moslti admirable of (American women. For tlhe last twenty-tflve years sh.e has Ibeen conspdicuous (not only as a brilliant woim'an ibu't 'as a brave, gaWant •VvWker ifor igoodi causes 'as well as agiainsti adverse icircumstanoes. The iworld has heard oif (her as 'busy in projects for women's welfare, as a writer and lectiurer, as 'the able editor of !an inifluiential' paper and' ilast ae 'the correspofnden't of the Times-Herald in Hawaii: rwhere she was energetically and ooniscdemtiiousilyi investigating! everything favoring or againslt annexation. She ihiadl beoome deeply Interested and art'tiaohed ito 'tlhe iHawaiians and1 Ibelievedi itlha't an'nex'a'tton 'would (be for the comm"on' igood of t'hie United1 States and Hawaii. Those who saiw iM'iiss Field 'in this city «a cou'pl'e of seasons ago when she ae^tured on 'Dickens, wall have a pleasajut recollecftilort of her (as a 'bright and womanly woman.

WATTERSON ON BAYARDISM.

Mr. Watter&on's remarks lat a Ixnd'dn dinner, wihile a breezy atnd whteclesome triibute to Americai, conitiatoed a stinging reibuke of Bayard's apologtltio and deferenti'al demeanor before British audiences, when 'he saiid: "It goes without saying aind should need no self-peeking flunky, eager for sooial reciognitiion, no resonant lip service, del'lgihted to have an audience and rejoicing at .the sound of ito own voice, to impress Enigi'lshmen with the (truth that no intelligent' American desires anything except the most constant and cor'diailions of friendship."

Th e. imagiifiiat»0'Bf' "aiKl pihilosophy of Mr.':^a^re0itt^h&i4 given to the two peofdes thajbasis on which the English a.nd Amerioans can some day join an perfect accord to fulfill the destiny of the united Anglo^Saxoin nace, the greatest on 'the globe. S3id Mr. Watterson: "It is certainly true that these two great nations together ocoupy a position strong enough to rule the destin-ieS of the human jaoe, but 't*hey are not lfkely to agree^upon terms rntil E-'gtiii hmen find as much to thriOJ them with a feeling of pride and glory tit the tomb of Washington, at Mount Vernon, as the Americans iflnd to thrill them with a similar pri'd'e a't 'the birth'pQace of Shakespeare. I certainly do not mean to beard the lion in his den or twist his •tuH when I remind Englishmen we, too, have to Sherman, Dee, Farragut and Stone wail Jackscm An'glo- Saxoni soldiens and sailors whom! all Brx'tons shbuid delight to honor."

It is to be conceded '"'hat America's true greatness and power dan. be exhibited only in perfect union.—a union in which «uH that has been discordant is forgotten or forgiven and all that has b€*err honorable aind glorious rememberedw It 3s coming to be so tha'i the# great chliracterfe of the war are honored and admired North and South, Grant in the South and L»ee in Che North, "but the mutuafl respect for prowess and manStaess is mingled with pride pxj» America and a. race that was not disgiu/afd. iti either ©eotion.

It 4s & similar rapprochement that Watterson considens essentiaa th(e

$m^m^

cordial and tasttni? frteMtehlp wdA aiinaaace of Oresut Brtta^a sovd America. If would mean -the pride of Britons in gireat Amerioans aa their kicidred cund a reciprooail feeilins ap our ®id® whloh •while rertaJhifiag the memory of the revolution: wKxutd not persist in oaftUnfe It t?hie disgrace of EogtiraL The Amertjane as a ru9& do not resrtdnd the Brttiteih of Washingtom and the revolution in a nianaDer to promote good feeling or to make *the En-glish. forget «th»Lr toss.

EXCHANGE ECHOES.

Rajnsas City 6tar: IMr. BuiUesr, who ithinka that ,t3ie time may come when the people will prevent the ma&rotoni&n'ce of the public credit'by yncftaiing .tfhe offioiala of the »oveffinrment for issuing bonds, goes ijT. TiUmaai one better, and faas shiown South Oarol-ima ^nat she can't get ahoad of North" Carolina.

Chicago Times HeraM: BCacJcbT£rai, xec-oHl-ect, has oairqriw«l, awxt Keirvtucky, bout the Kemitucky Dearaooriacy only, for free §Ever. It lis but a little .white atac© Kenitiuoky eJeoted Ihier flnst Kep-utuHea® governor, and she did it on a gsld jflotform. *Ph» blue grass state ds for an honest hiorse raoe, honest whisky aind an honest dollar.

IawJiiainapoCiia JournQjl (Any person whk) hiais a tamp of gold worth at .the miarkfit price |20 cain take or .send 4it to the ltol't#d ©taities anant and get a twen'ty dollar gold piece for 6t, no faore and no toss. That is free coinage, and •under dit gold as mttitntiatinod at par ibecarase ''the ibu'lKoni in -the cotim is wortih as much eis (the coin fthaeilf.But under free coinage of silver at 16 to 1 th© owner of a iSurrap of siiver worth iftt t3v$ irj'arktet prk4* a lib tie more 'than $10, ©Cyuld tiake 'or send lit to ffihie mint and get twaibty siilven' dollars for it.

Niew York Sum: Tthe rapid rise of the Hon. He® 'Lung, t'be greatest tsfilver oirator iin Ken'tiuoky, to "tihe pinnacles of raatiolnal iPaima da aUreiatdy oaiuitsiinig mawy envious m'U'tit-enitn'g'a and growilings to 'the bosoms of the irivais wihiom he ihiaa displaced and distanced. The (Hon. (EOez Lung Us "too igreait for (hate, too hli'gh for rivaflry." He its .no sciolist. Hie ihaa mastered the monoy qnjestitin. He studied "3t miare t'hain a week. His lexpwsiitton lit as as clear as crystal and a® strong (as 'mountain diew. His msttaiplhors are as lively as (monkeys, as orna•mieinital as radnlbo'w®, and as forcible as Wildcats. Strong omen wiiil Qelave a. carbecue for the 'fake of Wearing him As he ipaC'nts 'the winoinigs of poor, white, "demonetized" isllver, the audlienoe unconendously .tread'a water to fits own tears. Where 1s P. Wat Hardin niow? Where 1s Babe 'Baiil-ey of Texas? .Nay, what ts more Bind most of all. wiWere is Richard Pairfcs .Baar.d h'lmself? AH beaten ®J1 left be(hl'ind all forgottan. More .nwudlant tthiam tlhe imorntog, the Htorn. Hez (Lung towers aind iglows over Kemtucky and over the World.

VOICE OF THE PEOPLE.

A Plea for Protection aa to the Remedy for Hard Times. To tlliie Edlitbor of The Express

Sir: Will you allow me space to the col'uimms of your paper? I would litoe 'bo gftve imy views om protection and 'the cause of our diwamc'iiajl depression as I Giook ait lit. Pirotecti'cra mteans to proteat, not to protect ii jregn affaiiirs, but our home dind'usitTies. What has caused so many thousand itinaniips or whia,t caused Ooxey's army, isoimjeiJiiiiing ithait ivevei- occurred 'before in hiiidiDory, especdailiy umder .Republican rules? Some jjiay it Is on amount of aoarcity of -iroouiey. If bo, whta.t ins .the caurse Oi the •soarojcy of money or 'tihe iimajnioiai d'eipa^i«ioa? I assy it fits on acaunt of tlhe lack of ccinifidance of itlhe monieiyied men- in the ipresent ad'mjiml3tra.tio». The Xemocra.tic adminiistration held the retina of governimenit tfior 'Uiiurty ytars previ'oiua 'to tn-e tote war amd wha't wa.s 'tlhie result. Tlhe result rwos financial depression amd na'tionaJl 'bankruptcy. How much inoniey wias in the tineoisury when Mr. Bnchainnan left tlhe chair? CNot a dollar. Our 'fathers cried for free itrade and got it and .©hey pasid' from 25 cents to 40 oenitis per ytard tcr calico. and otlher .thtoigs in ipro'por titan. And •now 'the iamOoratis say we want free itrade again. The Democratic party issued bands ait 6 per oenit previous ito the war for the maintenance of the .govoxinment aind mow itttnew ore doing the same tlhiinig. Whiat this government wants to a ihiigh iproteotAve tariff, and then there will be a surplus to 'tihie 'treasury. Theft we cam meet our ina'tiflnal Obligations. The iMoK.'nley 'tariff .Lavr was a good Daw, and i6u.r g'oveirnm.enit prooparcd more under t'hiait law than for years previous or S'-Jnee. Look at the bamquat tendered Mr. WiLBCin to the old country ion account of 'has tree trade bill, and look at the list of 'bank raal•uires when tlhe Wilson bill became a law. Look a.t the number of undustrles ithiat weirut to chiaos on ithe passage of 'that bun. And when 'the foundries of various descriptions went down what was the result9 Why, (thousands of laborers were thrown out of work. Miners were compelled to strike for ihightar wag«was not as much dieimand for coial. ^-ye us a tariff on wool aind our

fJ^^rs

naibe more sheep and get a better price (Or wool. Give us tariff on eggs and Canada wiil'l not flood us and put our doiwn These are omly two cases in mamy. Protection means to protect home amd not foreign productions. pay the Old countries a tariff'? -iif not matae them pay a duty cn the luxuries and not on 'the neoesSitiia^of^i^e

FarmerSburg, Ind.. J*ume 1. The Miinnea^podi® 4s fastest of warships. 'Dr. Price's* of baking -powder.

THE SILVER CAMPAIGN. The reports frolm Ohio anid' Kentucky dnditca'te that the free Silver men are 5m control of tlhie (Democinatfc party in botth those states, says .the Imdiamiapohs News. Th^ey w&ili [have ^n- oveirwihelmdin'g majority am tlhe Kemtulcky convention, whu'Cih m:2-£'ts 'Itofe' 'week, while Ohio they ihiave won an imlport'amt vUctory In Haimi'Moni tcoumty. As Ci.n.c|jnmafi had beeit tlhought to be a gold s'.ronig'hold—a/nd there cam ibe l'.ldt'.ie douibt that the ©ulbsfcanit'iial Deimoisr-alts ctf that city are for .gold1—'the 'free s'-lver gains there are *mlost mvpcirtiank. The effect of sucih niewS as ithGs ought to be to arouse the sound money Democrats everywhere to the serCousine^s of fhe crisis" iwhDdh conlfronits them. It ought ito kCndiie tihe zeal of'those 'iin thfe cd.Timur.ii'ty who have resolved ithait the Populists shall -not run off witih the Democratic party Of tlhe Seventih congressional diii^fcriict. The greater the profoaHUy of a free sl-lver •conquee't of the DemocratDc party, the 'more important dioe-s it become 'that those who hold to the .tiime-thonforeid .Democratic principles should stand' toigeitiher against the FvipuKi'ts.

The question is one ivvhCch corucerns them as patrittoams first off all, for 'the reaison that, no matter what 'the Democratic party may or may molt do, the petoiple Willi finid acne .way oif killing the fr^e cotiria.ge heresy. We do not 'believe ^:h!at there is the eSightest chance for a silver vi'Story. But 'there is a most excellent chatnce -for rurniintg the Democratic party. Ht .'is to be savod, Hit must be isa.ved by those men who are against the cheap mciney, de/bt-acalimg poMcy wbich is now havin'g such a run. We do ndt mean to imply tnat stflch a work i?a not patriotic. 'It lis jjatriotl'Jc, bemuse the Demoiorafic paoVty, 3o Jong as it is true to iits tradiWoms and to its best oonteewporary thought is a valuabi factor fen our politicafl ?3fe. But what we meam to say is, that tthe •ooum'try is going -to ta'ke care of itself in any event, and, ithewefore, that Sit lis ftlhe -lilfe of th'e party, -rather tihiatn the welfiare o'f tihe country, wih'idh Ss tfciainlbXiaag to the balance.

Bo far as tlhe profcsgtiomail eHvenifes ore ccmcer.wed, there is mo use to wasting argTJimentis onlth^tm. Those of them who are honest are itihte victims of a mania- whtfch Tenders 'tiham imcapable of rdcoen^zEng facts, or weiigh«jng Jcygic. WhiJe those of them who are dftsftioraeet are beneath contetmpt. But there are many people who have (been led astray by demagogues who can easily be reclaimed. It Ss to these people, (both

TERRE flAUTB EXP&Bgg. TUESDAY MOANING. J8SE & 18Bft

•wltMn «uad wi&tlhoijt £h9 lenocFatllc party, ttha* One appeta nvdU Ibe xataOe «izrte« th« oonAoir qafrnpaHgm N«r "mill St b« im-gyte irre vnto. lot Mairtom county the naajodKty off Wh» |nwmlb€is of bdth parties *are already ^utty ailnv® to tbc terrilble coreequenoea tovoivesd to tihie free silver theory. The tbcanocmutB ctf TmrifleunapoliB intay be itTTwfdS to, teeep ths party to tlhe ooamty sfiraJSghtt on Itihe money question* Thi© mie«*TO-£roBni Keivtucfky and

Hamfflfon ct*tmity, •Ohio-, wlU ciaitlher stbnuilaite .tiluaio dtiiscaurajge tihemi. It does not oe«d: aTDrophet to forecast tihe oonditdonx»f,'tthin!gs two yea*w faenoe in the Demo^pa^io party free silver men control 'itg mitiibna)! oomir«iQltloin. By that .time the cheap rnloney cease will have -run' course, the party wHM be 4i9orgax$eadlf einft discouraged land thiera Will 'be'5 no more umpopular and despfisedi "'mem in its rainka thaitt those fvWho are now apparently supreme in Its ooumcuto. Ttoerd is nothto'g mora disastrous to & poiUtfoal orgtantoajtiion than .tc^be baaten on a false principle. And there Aa no (more hopeless fabe than itthat of the man who lead & party *to such a defeat. In the present case, dft. iruay as wedi he understood now ae iater .that there are thonisands of DenDocrats^n this state# as in all states, who simply w&l not volte for free Biilver. What afflrmiaihirve action they will take can mot mow be foretold. But they will no dkubt fintd some way in whach to express 'tlheir ooovviictioni* *)t fhe poOl^ if they fl-rid tihiarf: UJh&lx pa^ty is captured by the Populists.

There are mmkiiueatHioinaWy mamy honest and misguided, ^jlveri'tcs who do not begin to comprehend what tihe adoption, of tihe free silver policy would meanto itlhe man engaged dm business. Yet one would tihtwir thati senslbJie biwi would understand .that th^ firM requisite ito a prosperous business 14 a nxsxi etanld'ard of value. The moment there is any doubt about tihe character ofr quality df a niatSoni's -money trouible is sure to follow. The business of the country lis necessarily .done on. credit to avery con'Si'deralyle extenlt. Crediifc 18 otoly posisibiie where (there is confidence, and there cam* be no confidence when the deader cannot'be sure .t-h'ait hie loan wiM be paid to Mm in money as good as that jwihi-dh he lent. Business men unlderstiaund this. Bankers mindenstauiKj it, 'too. They Jwiow perfectly well that the very moment .the people suspect Wie possibility of a change in our standard of value, tlhe depositors in the bai^ks will demand tlheir money tostamitly. Such a demand 'would ruini the banks, force them to ©uspond payment. Of course toe -bamiRa would refuse to make new loam, amd would call to their old Ones as rapidly as poasFbie.

How, then, oa«a W ibe expected thia£ the (business tniaihi who foresee all these amid mamy nnore dreadful oomsequenoes of .this suicidal policy will vote even for their own. party on such an issue? &uc(h a tesJt of (party loyalty to tioo severe. Men wiil'l not measure uip .to it. Partisans will go .to great lengths raltfher thain sutrieot themselves to the suspicion! of being mugwumps, but they wiH mot vote for fLniancial ruin simply that they jniay vtodiifoajte orthodoxy,

ABOUT PEOPLE,

Prfincese YouriieWSkii, tlhe mior^anatiiio iwidoiw of Ithe Czar Alexander II.,^haa toooigiht several aicires cif loinidi (at N'ice, uuear thie Boulevard de Oilmlfez, aind ttv tfenid elio trulild a laicge vliilla there.

wto the wOeige yeair of Hhie Unilversiity of Caffiiforn'ia o(peinis om ithe 13itih of inext Aulgtust tiheine iwiilll Ibe chJiiir ot d'iivin'ity tfior thie firsit 'time, and I't wBl Ibe filil'ad by ProSeasor J. M. Jeffeirscn df Viriglinfiia. :Loird E'dhviardi Cie^iil, whto Is 'to take servtioe din Ithe Egyptiilain army for itihie operations an tlhe (Soudajru, is (Dord SatiiisIbury'is fooorth son. He is oVer 6 feet 3 itachiete tall and Ih'as am entihiusilaetiic love oif anjilitiary d'uit'ifes.

The Emperor of JRajpain1, wihb (has pramisedi to vMt EingSaind, Ss ain limdividual •wiho would 'appeail to itlhe CEJngliish hfeiart. •He fe ami alil-round' Siportomen, devoted' Ito ridftng, ehooitJjig, itanniis, ifisMnig a»nd bUEiards amid a paitron of footlba'll.

Th'Omas Fitzmitirtiis^ a. Ifiarmer livinig ait W.hiitie River ijui^tefiom', Vt., was fined $34 for -giiviinig 'awlay* twk driniks df hard •diider to viisitcwB atf hiis home, and t'he sheriff iconifi'soaiteii 200 gallons of dider found in the ceifar. Thlis iwais done under the piTotojilblitoiry tow o'f the state.

Henry iTviing hai§ enlgalged Frederic iRcfbimsoin to suteiceedi th'e llaite Mr. Howe 'in ftlhe London Lyceum company. Mr. Robinfoin, 'niow iim .mis 64-th yaar has lbee:n ifor ifoirty-seven years upoin ith» s'Jaige, and, botih/lto ^femigland aind Ameirlica-, he ihias flnifiy ^nid 'worthily held a Ihl'igh poelitton asOa^seholor amid tais am atrtist on hie profession.

IMiiss Elfia V. Hicfbar.t oif Sb.n Francisco, w1h(o lis engiaged 'to marry Charles Adclip'he Baldiwiim^ a son of itlhe late (Riear AdmlTia-l (Baiidwiiim and ibirotlhor of Mrs. Deaicoin,, possesefe "wlhisit 'Ls prclbafoly t'hie co'sitxest (tenndls court liim the Unl'ited) Staites. It oc'cupi'eis tihe elite of a 'hand©cimie reeiden'ce whjch Mliins Ho'bailt's if'alhfer .purch'aised for $70,000.

Miss Hanrlet Holl'lJster cif PccHcvDlle, Conn., 'is the datiglhtier of a revolutionairy tsoldfier. S'h'e ihias juet received Uhe official isouvenir sipoon given 'by the mtiomaJ society, (DaiUight'eis of the Amcriican Revolution. Muss Hoilister 'is 93 years old, ar.d, altihouigh 'Mind and qulLe deaf, .has a wonderful -memory. Iler fath'er, JosLah Hoilfister, enlll'sited Fefb•ru'ary 7, 1777, in .the 'regUmitinit' of airtMcere.

A Belifai?t man recently sent a :pamplhltit, einilTMed "Evoluit.ion' Veiwuis Reason and ThfeoliCgy," of wih'iirh he is the aimthor,. to Mr. Gladstone. It eXcit^d a iletter, iin wihCloh Mr. •Q-'2iildsl'C«ie- eaid: "I am oonicermed' to heair .t'hiat tihe 'passictn cif 'Uinl'ait'.'ljelf 'in amy degree prevails in BtKDast, !for I had hoped tihat «tiiio town wass like iretend in gem'i.ral, exempt ?fro».-u 'ius 3way -but I sftiaill be very glad iff your la.bors slhlcmild haive the effect of ciontriioutiinig to a naome hmailthy stale of t'h.n'gs."

There lis but one ideally perfect baking powder—Dr. Priice's.

AN ADEPT, NOT A MAHATMA.

Divided Opinions About AXme. Blavataky's Miracles and Occultism. Backslid* irs from the fadth. have been known to ques't-ion the Liategrity cf (.'he leaders, and the^so-rfhists wedl advanced in -the cult 'have not tKoeiita/ted to impugn one another's motives. W-iitness tihe mutoal rending of Mrs. Bagarat and ':he late Mr. Judge, says the Washington Post. It is said for Blaivatsky that the would not toMc of -the miracles she worked, but dt may^'feJeo be said theft iid nc't attfacfli fetiLeirs or padlocks to the vocal crga,ns of her adherent®. They were tot liberty to teH what wonders ihey chose of tihe priimoess' perform ng. She never ocuntradSixsted a meport. On "tihe other tdand, one of the pledges extraciced "y ctonvwrtB to the- escrterto session is that they will controvert every etate"nent Ifhat may discredit BJavotsky oc *Nf «s

iter w»lt. They deny wMih regard to Ra tankOk, kite maJOMr lav tesocb Stauvwteky wm not a maffiataxm AM fsi qja adept la kMiiixiAHo the

S®to»-

oes9 woa too erraUo to aittoto. tShie e«t devi^opmenJt of eout She wb» *iat of t«mper and of ooar^» fiber. A't tAooM Oj«r oaavereatton w*b ep(fl* thait there imig mti^rouaikA tuptc^nw tu Blaivta/tsky's frama bou4 of tlhe otlcbrated Cafthaxtoe of JEkusehb had found its abiding place. VulgarSty a «oft imrwd a emootih desor4pt*ow of Blavaitsky's ooeivereaitiioniaS style. As is kaiownv oh© waa am inoawam* «noker of dgarettes. She made her own amid had beooone eo expert thait hi^ttory sjocoumits Iter bull owe persapage who waa toer peer to the art. Biarvaitsky would piaoe two cttgoret'te papeos on t®e talble or desk at wtoach

Tnight be slating, and placing upon inho groper qualntflty ctf fto&uco waifl4 imll •both eimuilt*!n«o usly—erne wSt'h itoer ®e»t and one with her right fcaind. Bo til would be perfectly oomatructeds H»Xii«u* ftniEhed them shie woadd haind owe ko Wh^e- peraoo to whom 0h« might be 'talktog and to«ent tt»h» otlh•r to heir a^roth. Piriooe Lwte N*poleom wws, parhaps-^some French po-ten-taite, 4m any case—tihe omfly othar mvb^decxtrou® cigarette m«lt«T «o corn a fonto public notice. 'As .to- the,im'iTacIe^ worked "by Biaivoitslcy there are many opdnionis. The music ^vWlah sometimes was heard in her vicinity is explicable on 'the theory of f^rma iA nruslc boscs sew"ed) in. t'he opulenit (nal'amisnt of the imajhia-tmia/s 'friend Ther« ls 'anoth'er 'theory to aicootcnt for the (be'H ringing in harmony. The Yankee at King Artihur'si court, whose adventures are Kjarefuilily reporlted by (MajSk Twailn, nOte^ a. stagular thing. A tonight would be aibseant for severaJ days, and, returning, woutd tell wonderful srtori^ of prtooessei? he hod rescued' and dragon© he had: s'l^d'n. The Yankee re-aiia-rfeecl that while each' one knew he was tying personally, hte accepted* t'he storiieis of his ibrother tonights with unquiestttoniiing credulity. In the case of Biavaitsiky amd .her disciples aftl one had tb do to get a. reputation fwas to assert that he had heard stranfee sounds amd his statement wenit as* it Was made. No one doubted, (but on 'the contrary •imlited to spread the news. One nii'ght at a gathering iat her 'home a young mam suddenly exclaimed: "I heard a beM." He Mad previotfly been laidvteed that 6f he sought popularity tihe hearing of bells was aa easy way to get it. So he said he (heard & bell, amdi aif terward told hliis aldwiiger'he 'had! said .whait was not, for he had heard into beHL- (To holm oame, toward the dose oif the evening, another mo vice in matters oooult. "Where did tlhe saunid' of th'e bell seem to originate?' he asked. "In madam's room," was tlhe reply. ''How many ohdmes did -you h-ear, one or three?" "Three," said the Mar, unbluShAngjly. "I heard it myself," responded itihe other, "but I didn't 'know but It- might be another belli."

The affair between 'Mfme. 'Rlavait-slky and Mrs. Cramer itwo« years' or thereabouts before*th^ imaidiam's delaitih became more widely celebrated than an ordinary fight between the two women' for the reason 'that it was attended by a "phenomenon1" or incident explicable on occult grounds only. Mns. Crenj*w'as a guest of ©lavaJt^ky's house London, am'dl was a proimisitog addition to the inner circle. She was wealthy and educated, and was withal—is yet— one of the handsomest women tin her set. Mrs. Cremer read th'e. report of Mr. Hodgson—a practical, rude person—who characterized Mme. -Blavatsky's miracles as tricks arid 'described) her as a mount-ebank. Mrs. Cremer saiid it was a well writ fen and interesting production, which statement was carried to Blavatsky, iwho sent word to Mrs. Cremer iin vigorous, muti'lated1 Engiiis'h, to depart the house.

IMTB. Cr-enver went to 'tihe house of a friend', 'frorp '•CvihOcQi, ias 'from aj fartaldice, she shot oritiiciismis and' assertioinis. and all I kinds of h.ansh wioir ds. The madam rallied and replied -wiitlh a wealth' of epi'thet', gathered -from the seven* modem laimguagies w'ith which she W'a® conversant. When fhe (hcs'tilOtte© were ragSing the hottest Blavateky surprised h#r home ci-role cm© mlgflvt by isudidleinly ainisang and reciting, as If she read from a .newspaper, am article on rs. Cremer. •"What aire you reaitSjrug, .miadaim? In wihat ipaper 1® lit printed?" These and' a score 'o'f sim'Jlar queattons w«re asked Iby ithe au'tlhors., "It Is the -Poonaih Times' (am Indian newspaper)."

Then, iait the request of her 'frieinds, the priimcetas repeated the article, and it was taken dowin. (by a. stenographer. Mrs. Ainnlie iBe&ant and Claude 'Fails Wright, cine of Blavatisiky's etud'amtis, went out to tiffi'di a Poonah Tiim.es to verify the madam's report. They foumd the ariiicle, word for wordL a.8 'Biavatisky had given, i't. In tlhie connection Mrs. Re©an.t's memory performed her a surprising trick. At the time she amd Wright verified Mme. Blavatsky's recitation the Poonah Times had been. iSn Doindcn ten days, long enough for an ordinarily gifted person 'to have •memorized' sever-all columns. In. giving atn account of the "tlh-finiamenn-iR" .some months' later. Mrs. Besant made the very materia.! statement that the paper 'containing the article d!:d not reach Lomdcn until oix diays after itihe princess had! 'reieiri it in the powerful illum'iination of 'the astral •light."

One thing the mahafcmas did at avo/tsky's request -has never been explained as a fraud. It is one of the fw instances of her occult power, so cabled, whose integrity has not been attacked. She was riding in pa'la.nquini3 one day wulh a, party of English women, in India. One of the .number, remarking an uncommon looking brooch another wore, said: "I once had such a brooch as that, but I lost it, or a servant stole it. That wa.s sixteen years l3(go," tihe added, regretfully. "Would you li'ke to have lit agal'.i? inquired Blavatsky. "Certainly." "It's in that cushion you are setting upon."

The ousihiom was opened* and, as the adept had said, in it was tihe sixteen years' lost pi-eee of jewelry.

Blavatsky's disciples had two op inions of her. I-t has 'been said she was not a mahatma, but an adept. Her

:a-

abllOty at all ti'mes to subject the body to the mental or intellectual pant prevented her from .reaching the height of her development. Many of the deeper students say it is impossible for a. woman to became a mahatma. There is another theory comcenning Blavatsky, and many subscrt.bed ito it. That "was that the real Princess (Blavatsky d': many years ago, and from "that tame •untril her second death her (body was used by various .•mabatmas, who air.4maited it in. series, aind instructed tlhe seeders for truth.

Sciemce declares Dr. Price's Baking Powder the purest and best.

Killed by a St«*ra IMcyHo.

(Boston, June 1.—S. H. Roper, of ROxbutry, a mechoitfical* engineer, while pacing Tom Butler, the professional bicycle rider, *with a steam bicycle, which RopeT had invented, yvas killed at fahe Charles River Park track today. Rop~11£

er*a nuuoUlM becazav «owm«««W« and be waa "throwo* diriklny 11909 beatt. !Hs AM a €tm fuommfti fcfter. Boper. "who traa 70 yews at «ve, fta^. Tjesa ait work 00 motor tiwaAty-ffvd years.,

LAST DAY 6t QRXOE.

Kid*n bt Mw Blk« Moat Haw 9«U* At tar Today. It JmperatSve tbait tbf tornte wf tlh» bfldycle bell tie (heard) on itfte treats of l^rre iHajute droan tioidiay Hlhe d«al«rs ara prepsurtog ifor a irudb tlhSa gnornSng aa thiere are fcnsnldredis of wheeEm^i iwiho have waited untCli tiha teat minute 'before puitthasinig. When «ha new city ordinianoe was passed) a unafrtrtty oif the ridera pUrahased bedis, miost ctf t!hea &>ethe new Jatw waa effecttlve Orom liihe data oif pasaaga Thowe who fcave inrit ye* provided) t"hennaelw«ae wWhr UtoR ntaisy Ktias toatnuimettvto iwstrt aware otf (the Ifadt that ttih'ey bad tmo «re«iks grace. Mayor (Rotsa says tlhe provisfioais of the orxJinlaraoe reSiat&ve 'to siwedi and tUne carryiaag ctf hells wlil Ibe rigidity »afxnced. He made a tour otf the to1toyt3e #tores yesterday amd adcej»totoed 4tf the dealers had a gupply of :beS]is on hand. This woe with a vfrew Ito m»eietJin.g amy fexcusels Eif arrests are made.

LADrS BICYCLE COSTDME.

The ideal Wcycffcnig cosl^ume tfotr summer is 'the cftytsh sikilrt with (a shirt w^aist. •Leggriings tio Imaitwh .tlhe fiSiirt are oic^t ibecotaimg. ibut mainy- prefer oat-km ca-n-vaa or oatittoai covert cloth for oomfa*t.

Ooit'ton diuck, oamvae galafteo. cloth,

brown ihoOTiamid, -amid the cot'tioina wttiiich aire made to resemble covert icttotlh are •aiLl usitd (ficlr -akirts, but nuuet -be hetavlly faioed to imsure 'WetJgihlt. emouigih to keep •tihem froan flying atoouit uirlccimifortalbly, such a skirt ,w?th 'legginiga- to ma tcih and) ainy isoit of sihiilrt twix'sfc wllcefl ta dellght'fu?ly oaoH aind dhfic -ctostimme for a short spinv •bu't for taumJng a- clotlh' skirt to .prefeffiaibLe.

One off misted tWetefd with failing of leath'etr, wais IWOTO wBtth Cairiivas IJ^gmgs of feather ^olor, 't'he tontokexs were of fialtJne of t'hte eiame islhaid'e. A flas-colored' 'Klniem sQiirt waisit oomipl^ied thi!s smart ouitiflt.

A white jduck sn'rt with legg^ngla of •tlhe same, with & wihl'te lCmein slhfJrt wihiilst wiaa ohormimg, hut cannot 'be recom^ nuemldled ifor anything ibut ,a dress parade. •A 'skirt of 'black wultlh b'lfeuck canva® •lelggiinigsi, bloick eaAftnie -km'ickerbockers •aind ia iwihtte tslhirt waiist .with black tie ama 'belt maikes a strUkfimigly neat costiume.

The ekiil is cut circular with a bi'las fc/ack se'ajm iwitih 'bhe fuillness loEd: din ifwo forward tirimming pletats on- eitfier slide, 'tlhe placket be'img /ait ,the .fronit gore, 'both side's of wih'iloh button over -the snide.

The paititern of .the shiirfc waisit is No. 7,792, it cute from 'thirty to forty-two todies bust imieaeiure aind a medium ©Size requires three and omie-'hlaif yards of 27-iindh goods.

The ^'kirt pafi'tarn is No. 7,793 and is cut from 'twenty to ithi irty-4tiwo itoches wfeiiilst meaisure. A medium size requiireis tlhreie yoirds of 42-toch goods. fThe ten'Jckeir'bocke'rB laind legig^.inge are onie pattern. (No. 7,794, amd are cut from itwemty to thiifty-'twio lilnicto iwaist measure. A m'edii'Uim sliae refquires three yardls of 27-indh goods.

The maximum of nut.rltitdon is secured only by using Price's Baking Powder.

QUINN HAS

A

RECORD.

The Youthful Thief From Brasll "Ha# Doen There Before." (Marshal Louideirlback otf Brazdd was iin t'he cflty yesterday after Ed Quinm, fhe 13-y-ea.r-oi'd boy who stole §50 at Brazil and started ftr 'the "WKd and Wooliy Weisit." 'He returned tb t'he Clay county caipOt'ol W.th ih'js youthful prisoner yesterday- AKIhoughi but 13 years "old Quinn has a oriim'inail rectord' which dates Ibaick almost to tihe ciiadiie. He 'has a mania ifor stealing etveiryth'img that he is ist.ror.tg enough to carry and when but 9 years df age stcile ia hojtse. He rode 'the amitoal to Terre Haute, ibult 'he lo^t h'is way and was caiptured' early dm- the motrnilng after (haivtog traveled all n'ight and gotten cnS'y a f-tuv rciiileo ifrocn the ©taible-from •wth'i'dh t'he ihlonse was stoiten. It was t'hougiht he was too youmg to be prciseicu'ted and- sent to tihe the reform school and a» tlhe man 'tot whoim the horse belonged iwas1 digposied to he lenient, he was released' on fhe promise of hiis pa remits tihat 'i.'he boy woukl be closely watched and an effort madia to reform hiim. Ed, however, nvas too mucih of a ®chem©r 'ficir h'is parentis "amd has been a source of aJmost constant aniaoyamce by his petty stealing. The marEihal says tlhe parents have given up hope of ever retform'ing 'tlhe boy and are wlBing that he eihell 'be sent to the rtiforro scihocl 'bdfore he cor-Ufmues hlJs work until 'he is older and receives a mw seiriouis aenteixrce.

.1. S. t'lurksou S«.Tlfm«ly 111. New York, June 1.—Jamta S. Clarkeon of Iowa, is sstrlously fill dm hiSs aoparicnerxs at 'the Flftih Avenue Hotel. He tias ibeen V.'l tor several days, hut his Sjlness was net ccns'ldeired icif a serious nature. -Laist n'.feh't, ihoweaxir, he was reported to 3e vn a dangerous oondlit&on. He is sufferir.ig if ram hieurt tlrouiblie.

Troubtf With the Stnrlent*.

'Loaiiotn, June 1.—A dl 'iipaltch from Cairo e»ays -iiaat durirtg the di'Sturtjance at the iMoslecn U.nt^rsjty mosque there the pojice were comspelled' uo "fire on t'he ^tudeftts, and thai. 200 amrrsta were mejde.

Fiftj Hortea Borued to Death. •Ndw Yark. Jtme 1.—Fire la^t n5ght destroyed tihs five-story Wvery barn of Herenam Boh&oaji om. F'.ftyjUhird street Fifty horses war® (hurraed to death. Total loss, $80,000.

fhe StMmshlp Arrivsls-

NeW York, Junte 1.—Arrived: Noma*#jc, tnom IMnerpool. (Havre, June 1.—'Arrfved:

La

J?**1-."*

EXPRESS PACKAGES.

yet Uttle W^ll«.

are*Ihuodred aubtl® sttngs jrtok Ob to our 4a|hr waik A yowpg Crudt cankered on Ha stalk,

at55«lg-t*i

mapo^ for ail Ma wtngs,

Thjf® *b a lack tn eaOttuda, V** a load-to jbr6ng at a#o Ow» ano^Mr ffedera atrUe,

Alt soXtude. Sl«arp ^nruaupy, dews, bfled aft last her pains.

TWhyri 1VQ9M6L

IWe leaf, 1flVe vti-Og, tbo froatfu) Wast Forget the troubkirue YEUEM that, Iin atwe or ache, dtd «nd ait Cast. —Ohmisitoa Rosotti.

Of «be 1,703 ta3)iaft*taata of Rumford FtehDe, Me., 1,013 ware borti to tho town. Jelbay to gatfrsg »to6y by Abbey &

Liu. That's hhnfl of a enrima done* db3 is. Ne\-er too hit» marry is the mobto otf Fere HyaiofcptAe, w(ho is afixnit to wed on American girl.

There Is a, woman to A'tohfson, Kas.. who -rtides a wfheea When she goes to visit she# grasidchcHdren.

This is th^ kind of a season that 1s not going to leave any scarcity of jaim ana preserves mext wtaiter.

The usaM Jaw of nature !s re-versej among frogs, t!h© male inajklrcg more noisd than the fiomiaile.

With t'he mercury u® 'to 102 In May Loa AngeOes ia maintiaJnlng its reputation aa a superior winter resort.

Rain on Iecoraticin Day is a condition that 16 iperfeqtily familiar .to the people, bUt no one folia ai^y iiheory as to Ihe cause.

After adisappeammoe of metre than thir* ty years the firat OoJnfederaite flag ma-ld in iMisaissippi ibas been found in New York.

This has (been an umusual season foil mad doge in New York, tair^cl 'the Pasteup lnstttuU) (has been doing a lamd office bust# ness.

Even ihe Philadialph Ite newspapers "leaded" the cyclone hews from St. Louis oftid rain itfive story on 'the first page under* •aoame" (heads.

Aftother remarkable effect of the St. Dauia tonrtado was "t'he crowding out of Major MtiKtoley's name frcm I hp front pages of the daily newspapers.

A single swallow doesn't make a sum. •m«r, but all tihe same a single swallow? can dievour 6,000" flies in a single day, ur.l iboo, without lessening the number of dn the world.

ANew Yoatk ai^aitistician has, after carefxd study «Aij3 inquiry, reached the conoiuadioin traat tihe oonournyption of wh-.-ut in tlhfia icttiuinittry te a lirtje less thrui four buahi^is per capita. ,.

Tft& ircijKraotf -wlifflbb Joseph Jefferson ad* •irttoiahtred to a fcemiww of thie Star Rival* oOrnipany tor cihewimg goim was er.tlroly oomsistierot Ith tfiia't 'ino-blo veteran's efforte 'to elevate the stage.

An imddctaner«t aigainst a Cimcin.na,t( young oman wthto reoaratly •nial.i'e*!, w.hen hfctf at'tortnlay produced to court a twin brotbei of the 'defendant so nearly like him that owe might 'be mistaken fcr -the other, even Iby 'piarscasa who hjnew tihem both.

The most ibeao»tlf.ul woman in Boston is a m-uCaitto with a dasth of Jewish blood. Iirreproachaibly dressed, graceful in bearing, Wi'.lh a euggestion cf Oriental languor, she to a rare d'?^8ht to the eye, and her vOiqa .!s ltke umto 'tlie voice of the v:ola.

After locking at the squatty FennsylvTcunsia. DuitJh court house at tai:toij, i^nd •sampling its hotels. fitraingeTB wonder how iin thte wiortd amyUhiing in the way of presidential ttfimber everf happei."ied to spring up to that town.

M'aijcr M'cJtyniey had the same kind of hck in courting his wife thSut ho 'has in running for itfhe pres'Menitial nomination. He had half a dozen or more likely a Ed piieseMtaibTe rivals, but none of them were "3h it" after Miss Sax ton met the "major."

There has been scarcely a day in Kansas City since tiho beginning of spring when a woman could tell what kind of a dre?s r»he wanted to wear ta a picnic. Thin f'easo'n nlobody can te'.l an hour ahead what the weather will be.

Tha doors of Drawyers Presbyterian Ohurch at Odessa, Del., one of Cho oldest houses in the oountry, ih'aive t»een olosc-d foT twenty-flve years. Today tlwjy v. ill be apenijd, ami seiwice will be held under the auspices of the Friends' socicty. Recent^ ly iihe dhuroh was repainted -and repaired.

On Sunday iast a large ostrich drawing a 'buiggy weighing 2S0 pc-unda and a man weigtaUn'g 137 pounds raced aga!'.n.st time at Ocnorjado and nearly overtook a^ fast whselman over a half mile course. Without a lead it is believed that an ostrich could easily dlstarco the fastest cycler in the world.

A great city is a gigantic eater, in comparison to whose daily feeding tho enormous baniq ue t-3 of Gargantua and Pantagruel sink into insignificance. Mr. Jonn .Gilmer Speed computes iha t, on a mo'iorate estimate, the city of New Vork consumes

305 000,000

pounds of beaf and MO.OfKJ,-

000 e'ggs 'in o-ne year, and .neair.y 300,0W pounds of butter every day. The busy little tee has forced into a mew ibusimess—.fhiaii of 'the ma.aufacturo of medicated honey, in a variety cf- llavors, for as many kinds of diteas,.^. It ia •a "Frt-nicih scientist," of course, that fiau 'brought a'bouit 'tilvis vaiuiaible iaii.'tlon to 'the pharmacoepia. He keeps the bees in a 'large conservatory, or at any rate under glass, so that they can only piaturu iki flowers especia'iiy provil'd arl chose:n i-»r special medictnal jircip^rties.. In this manner ready made f.f*ysic of the most defcious kind is garnered. In Phis wav irfl'uenza, coughs air.d cold'3, indi^^tion, asithima and many otlher ills arc sail to_ bo readily, if imdirectlj-, reac'uxl. and while tihe mlate of tlhe weaken«d invalid ant thia stubborn ohl'd As tickled, lie is being surreptitiously cured.

St. John and G-llck. two of the most trus'ffd sfir\Tamits of r*h-© state of

Kan.siaf

dusd ire^tbtfy and weno burX*! wH!a ceremonies at Laaising, t-iKi ae-a't or^ tna Kansaspfffl'itieinitiary. TQi. s? indust. iou^ patriots were roa^s a.nd many y«W'3. al•bhcugih brokea in hcXtih and spirucs, laboriously trudged back

an^

'^'h

through the mines at tho s^ate J'1Lrj forming their da«iy tasks. -A't the h-cxi ct St. John's grave waa erected a.^ boanl ibee^ns 'tho toscr.ption: S. John. lj!7S." "G'lick, 1S84," appears on headbo»ard at the grave of 'h-i^ coqviw.nion. The former was aoqiu:i*d 'by 'the inatltut.on in

governor Kansas has ever had. Reject all "just as good" and lrs.s( upon the perfect (baking powder—Dr. Price's.

EXPRESS MENU FOR TODAY. Nature is too thin a screen. The lory of tho one breaks .in everywhere. it.mersom. BREAKFAST—Lettuce and Radishe''. Bacon Froze. BngitSh Muffins, lotiubard

Sa-uco, Oatmeal Oraobera, Co*Tee. DINNER—BroUfd Becfstw-k. I^n^olion Oreeins, M-acaroni with '.h^ase. Stewed

Tcwnatoe.-i, Browned Pot«tixs. lareb Swe^t Pickles, Whole Whaat I.read, Gceen Currant Tarts. 0UPPE.R—Cold Meat. Rice Crcxiwtt^. -Tiread ^nd Butter, Stra-werrl«s. Spo^iga

Cake, Tea.

BACON FBAZE.

•Btut fooar epg.s ini» a

hat'5

oup of crf^rn and -teaspo.n il«»r. thin fried slices of Vaj" in battered pan, pour the batt-C c^ er. Brown both eii*x and serv^ hot. (Copyright. 1S9».)

Gold for Shlpn»«ut T«»«lay.

New York. June l.-Ladenbiwg, TaWv man & Co. will sh'Jp $500,000 'in goud 0^ -,ihe stciamtihUp ©pree, saii.'.ing or -rrnary tacPay.

Much refreshment in littio bulk,

Liebig COM! Extract of Beef

'S

That's why you should take It in your traveling bag.

Nor-

maiiwdie. tfirom N«r York. **,

4

....o-.f.-u.

v*-i