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The Cincinnati Enquirer from Cincinnati, Ohio • Page 6

Location:
Cincinnati, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE ENQtriRER. TMI CNQUmt COM PANT, Joa ft. KcUu TWELVE PAGES. TMtl was far naUhit at Um teaks laweaig re- and asoreaslsg -pipinyimni ov tutat war shn-d in the 11 1- tl dsttrmaxxa of prim p-aper for was rdUy gvitd at Sff p-r nt Th few ca.I1 koenp tivat brvaev had a tmssr muuaJ placed with beaks st 3Hi rr cent, u4 petvt eeptalurl took th canateeei Urn loan that they could cat at par ml Maw Tort ease ana aaM b4wee bks at U2ba par ll.W) pramrom. th latLee s-etng tb eloelng rata Tba Pack ni nd rale was rdued front 8a par cant to par ceot, bat ster-Una tcm affected In New Tork.

neither foreign esofaans to thie market. Oe-inmtnl boed wara ftrm and doll. Local securities war In better demand end wara larger. Mererawvdla markets wara anlr moderately ee-Uv ta general weaker and moat trtlfl.i Groceries Aran a4 fairly active. wMb urr advanced in par 100 lb.

Cotton dull. mid-ur SIacu- firm and faJrlr active Whul easier, and the mod rat ofr-ring I Bold readily. Corn held steadily. bul in movement sanail. Oala taIr and demaed.

Rys steady, with offerings and derr.ar.d 'le-let unchanged and In fair demand Plili Tn Ksitixss vretew- wo rrfnUru far kU wi, a strcrtei ij lnrin( uwlaa err facet i. .1 wea1 iw '-eta ghli if vntntmtart meUmd a mo. ailwiw imili. Taa EaormM umab rmpmnmHsfw anyi i ar anWa aaw ronrr-nian Dollirer the srw of rwmon ptMl lttv 'lr iKKim, ren tf tbra la do hoi of uoroibatlon. Tb EoqulriT raoyot bring lt-lf to b-Mfre that the Jlknnaltea will look with favor on the proilnra of the Demo-era tic 8tat f'ooveutlou.

TUT 1 ait 111 doubt aboot Ilooaerelt. Tle RrpuNlcan partj la In an unhappy t-omlltlon Indeed If Teddy" holda lt deallnlea In hla hand. Hanator Pettjrrew aklHfnlly reaerTed aome of hla moat effective flr till the lat houra of Conrreaa. One of hla rloalng rhlerementa via to ret the rwortl of the Hanna Inreatlration Into print again. -a Thar are Repnblloana mean enoajrti nd "all'k" enooilh to draw HooaeyHt way from the Governor's offlc- with the Vice Prealdenllkl bait and then have an accident which would deprive hiin of that too.

General Oroavenor la a forward man In polltlca and haa nmdc qnlte a p'tkl of the noundlne and bounding Iolllver, Iowa. The Ueneral, however, should not aaiHM'late hlinaelf with a failure. IVrhapa. though, ho ha something; against the Iowa man and wanta to see! him climb high and then fall far and hard. What a happy thing It would have been for the Administration If the Ohio Democratic platform could bare been written In the White House.

Of course the President and Mr. Hanna nof expect an Indorsement of their administration, but they will be disappointed at the meaner representation given to "assistant Iter pnbllcana." All AJOaUGAJT ePKCTACLl. FRIDAY JCTK IS. foa. Ill awl tb Tba tfawtr 4 fvt into rw4m to to- faSrmltr.

to cm rwa- pbta Coaf-esttoa wlfl to wltoraaj a dreaaJ rrairI poor pU7- Tbt wf3 probablr tM Hamuli to rhtUxtatpbt vko wQl sot trti tta adttiaalofi Um toaTentloa kaiL They vfii ft bJf s4 tomtotoualT Uf tbetr frVada tbst tbry ta4 ft rtl ale Ome." UHIOH MIHERS Majavfty Iaotajfarooa. Jaaa 1 Tba raliad Mtna Worker- Jaau-naJ. ta ta aafa laaava. davotaa aaaoa apaca ta a rwrtaw of tba Car AJaaw InTartbrattoai by aad tka aniaarUjr raport of tb John UUoMJ. rraaadaait a tba orraaiaa-uoat, aara that tba Ooawr d'Alaaa ertcaa waa tba wane rear ia lalttad a twat iaa fraMleaa ta tfcla aawatrr.

oa4 aara tbat tba ABVHcaa radararlaai af Labor la ta poa-aeaatoa of all tha tratbaoor ktfcaw faafora tka coaantttaa. aJMl will publlak tba taatl-mocr Tba af taa Wortwi' Jouraai aara part "Tbatr publM rtataaaant tbat aba "army and etvtl autbortUaa wara JoatMabla ta thatr eixtrS without any of tba taatlroocy uiMnltced ta aabataotlala It. ta ot only prttaumptaoua. but roarartliy will, wa Mine, fall antlraly ta aatlafylaaT tba public, or acoom ILabl nm for Ita praaaotara tba raulta deatrad. It ta wan understood that one of tha moot hatooua crime tba! ever dtsaraoad a nation waa eotntnlttad arainat tba mjnara and cttlsaoa of Brteabooa County.

Idatoo. by aa 111-ad viae d. wanton division of tha Vnilad Butaa army, ajvd no in era XoraaaJ daetaration of a aatartad ma ortty of tnveatbTatora will aerva to aatlafy as oatrnfed and Indlrnant publto." MRS. GLADSTONE, Widow of thai "firmad Old Man." la r-lalaacxS By Itoaxb. Iomow.

Jm 14. afro. -Otdatna. widow of WUHaan K. Oladatooa, tba Eaarllab ataJaa-man.

died at 0:40 p. m. to-day. Mra. (ilad-aiona.

a ho had been unconactnua for about Ti houra. died without racov erlna conacluua- Tba newa waa Immediate! conveyed to tba Quaan. tha Prince of Walea. tha Daan at Weetosinster. tha Daan uf IJncoln.

Sir William Vernon Harcourt. Btr Henry Camp-ball Heonermu, Arthur J. Balfour and others. In tba course of tha evening William Gladstone, heir to Hawarden. arrived from Eton, shortly followed by two slaters from London.

The bella of Hawardon Church ran muffled peala. By courteay of tha Dean of WttmluLr. and in aorrd-anco with irrmnaemtnts mad In lww. the funarsJ wtll be held In tha Abhay The interment probably will take place on June 1. brine; of as private a character as nos-ilblr MAD SOLDIERS Oa the HospitaJ Ship Watched By Those Least 111 Experience Compared To Dante'i Inferno.

ipkui B4arTca to ras ssQciasa. iMDiaMATOLJa. June 14 Robert F. Una-enfetter, of thla city, has returned home after six months' service In the Phll-ipptuea. bavins been honorably discharged becauoa of disability.

His experience In the Phlllpttnee were of the common run. but nl- description of the hospltaJ ship which brought hla comrades and himself to San Francisco, la Ilka Dante's "Inferno. "Think of a great hospital." says Line-enfetter, "with all manner of fever pat Ion La. and with tha patient' afflicted with all manner of hallucination think of thla great hospital afloat. Imagine, if you can.

tha hrtcka of the men, who were mad, re- trained fromvloienceby those patients who were least sick, and then you must bavve some faint Idea of what the trip home mailt We were to have been supplied with delicacies, chickens and such, but the were, by some bit of legerdemain. changed to tba regular army far. Tha tfeaad men troubled us most, thougl). aa many of them violent, and the aol- tltnese of the regular attendants. There were 13 of them In all.

11 volunteers and 1 officer. I remember one poor fellow who thought he was back on the farm, and who would talk in a rambling sort of a way to me, thinking I waa his mother. "Do I wish I were back again?" queried Llna-enfelter. "Back there in tba swampa. wading through mud and water, watching tb boys drop around me from fever and madness Back where dead women lie with little children In their arms? Back on the hospital ship, tb memories of which I fear I can never lose? It sems as If tha queationa eaould tb answers." IN THE CENTER Of tbo Table Llgbtalag Struck an OM Mas Will IMe.

sreci-tx. sisrATca to tii ssqeraaa. Biuxroimmi, Ohio. June 14. A terrific electrical thunderstorm visited ML Victory and vicinity late last night.

Business was completely paralysed for four hours. Many cattle were While Farmer John Oolden and wife were seated at breakfast bolt of lightning atruck the table squarely, shattering dishes and prostrating the couple. Oolden clothing was burned from his body. He wiU die. FOOT TOM OFF.

sraciAL DisvATC to ras nqriua PoartiHD, June 14. An apple tree, under which Walters Peters and Charles Siders took shelter, waa struck by lightning, both being terribly shocked. Peters had one foot torn off. lTT.T.r.T BT JJGHTJIJQ. tract DtsraTca ro raa xxgtnan.

Orx.n8BCRO. Kt. June 14 Yesterday evening during a thunder-storm lightning struck snd Instantly killed Mra John Jeffries, cf near Kxle. Ky. She waa deaf and dumb, aa la her husband.

BY-PLAY. Needed a Ufbt rDearott Free Preaa. "What did tb oenaua man aak you, Lar-klnT' said Bunting. "He asked me If I had a match about my clothes." No Reasotlea oat thv Boy. I Chi case Post.) "Senator Croesus says ha began Ufa aa a newsboy." "Oh.

well, we ought not to blame tbo boys. Some black sbi ap gat lute every Una of business, you know." The lUitxle Grow ad. Pfclledeiahia KorU Aaserleaa. "The mala fight la tha convention will be over tb platform," "Yea; ssppo every del eg ate wfn wast a chane to aaeuait It aad make at least on Poach." lflatrlosi, CMaas "What hi aMtropotta. Uacta Daar calrepala Is a town wber a wear new yellaw abooa wtthout tbaaa referred diarajietfuny." TBOLLEY BOPE Wrapped Aboatc Hew Tburoaa Saved By tbo sraoaa sautca re tn asacixKa.

CLmrwuum, Otoo, Jua la. Ta wauiy stimngleel by tha rop a troBey sjota waa thp trying experienc which bfrj Mass Ralaharu ot Beyaaour ayaaua, o-day whOa rndaaverlag ta pass behind a Euclid ara-Ba eax. srroeog gust of wtaJl asaai tb rep around bar Beak and ah waa In danger of being choked to death when fortunately the troBey pole broke. In falling tha pole truck her; oa the heal and Inflicted a painful brute. A great many thing are done In had to watch them on account of tba country for the sake of emphasis and display.

Thla la a period of organizations and dress parades. Men Join together In societies and travel hundred and even thousands of miles to bold conventions which hare nothing- In particular to do. Women also tire themselves out to hold suffrage meetlnrs, mothers' eonjxessea and other things which hare no practical results except to make busl-neaa for the railroad companies and the dealers In solid and liquid refreshments. The politicians, too. Sit about the country In large numbers In almost useless enterprise.

A large crowd will be In Philadelphia next week on account of Republican National Convention. The hotels will be crowded, and many men who have the luxury of hair mat-treasea at home will lucky to be permitted to curl up on a cot In a "drafty" halL There will be a large consumption of red liquor" some of It very had i -in Rnttefully to headaches that would dls- trea them at home. Grown men who are supposed to have reached the age of discretion will march through the streets by night carrying dripping torches and shouting for cheap leaders. Wheexr brass bands will be blown desperately in bote! office, and thoae athlrst will be reaching over half a doaen rows of shoulders to the autocrat behind the bar. Club dreased in Prince Albert coats.

tilgb hata and white glove, with enorm ia badgea on their breasts and carrying aes. will have traveled -ley nisht and ay to march through Market and Chestnut atrwta for tb. aatlsfgctlon of hear- Ing remarks at the curb-stones to tba ef- a i na liiai is a uue uuuy oi mro. DM anybody ever see a club "ragged oct in this manner that did not present a fiJM appearance, provided the drill master has done reasonably good work? Fine ejotae and rich trappings have con verted many a ward watcher Into a -perfect gentlemaji." Then there will be the ponderous gentlemen who will do the "heavy standing round" ba tb hotel lobbies and corridors and on the platform In convention hall, and the men dressed wltb a little brief authority la tbc distribution, of tickets, kndthe spell binders who will beUow tbemaelvea hoarse before an audience of 12.000 or 15j000 people, aad the mob who will jeU "louder," and the ladles who wiU trive liars, fans and lacs handker- eblefsTsnrl mil a dlsnl.iv of shirt walate and millinery. And all tola will cost from $20,000 to And an lor wfaatt To gi tb appmrufcc of doing tome- wt fwaaw flab aaaMefUfj Kt waapwTI Waa aV-wi.

4 asH aaea Mail SbVbY T7 fsCU doM beforo a deles to or a Ytaitor reaeheo tbo town. saasMlstaiea. as 9 TT vSt aswisjlliajiw absve aaaaMvaaa, 11 111 MeKlniey for Tic President who- aod Tom Piatt withta the next few days, and to adopt a set of reaolutiona which bar already. bei Indited and which bare tns seal of Admlnistratloa approval ttm them- What to tbo use of all this "fuss and feathers TVhy win men Join themselves into crowds and make themselves not ana nncomionaDM merely for tne sake of appearing to participate ta ooms-thlng that Is done sready? The work; of tha convention at. Philadelphia could easily done in a day, though the proceedings may "strong uf to iIts the thrifty Quaker City ansa to gld fry Caa.

by tbo a rare for tt ajeraerlated tiMXMTJM tor too nrmaatlaai a tba FIHotaaw awrlag Ilka aaxt 13 asm tba Win general Otaa as aa tarts tka tb saiotary power af tb rtHpiaaw ta toofcea, frmaJdy adaatta that tt win be years before a stable caus ba oaf abUehad. fntll aad east as ta operetta aa Asa ertcaa any af eewparioa moat ba kept ta tb Islsada Aeordi a Manila, disrate. ecBear af big raak now ea daty la tba Tmppam bar adted Jadg Taft. tba Free I nan I of tba cwaasalaatoai btr. btcKlalay raoaaXly aaaw ta Manila, tbax an army karwer tba tb laa-aaeoaa fore now In the lalaads will be ra.

aulred to aobugata the Filipino. 0nrJ rnla toft Manila mora than a naonth aax. whereas tb mtBomn wboas Judge Taft baa eonsuritad bare urged aa later of tb army of occupation within tb past few daya According to the statement of senator Ai-Msea and Representative Cannon, tba Cbalr-mea of tb Beetate and House Appropriation Committee, respectively, the coat of our war with Spain and tha Flllptnoe will aarracate by June SO of thla year To continue the work of benevolent assimilation until June 30. 1SW1. will eot (131.247, US.

Bo tha total, 13 months benca. will amount to the enormous sum of 2 Even If the Flllptnoa. a year hence, have surrendered unconditionally. It will not be practicable to wirhdraw our forces from the Islands tf Mr Mc Kin leys Imperial policy Is to continue, and the Filipinos are to be "subjects" of the American Republic and sre not to be given Independence. If years are required to establish a stable Qovernroent.

ss army officers who are familiar with the situation declare wilt be the caaa. It la probable that the flnet of our war with 8 pain and the Filipinos will ultimately amount to I l.nrjo.Ono.OOn The appropriation for 1W)1 Is ret down sa a "permanent annual" one. and tf conditions In the Philippines are what they are represented to be by conservative officers now engaged In pacifying the natives our Imperial policy may coal us 1131.247. 153 a year for an Indefinite period What return. It may be asked, are the people of the United States securing from this lavish expenditure In the Philippine of the money wrung from them by exrea-alva taxation? Are we getting many mll-llona In trade yearly with the Philippines.

and la there any proapact of a commercial expansion which will reimburse the Cnlted States for the vaat sums they are squandering la a war of conquest Perhaps this question can best be answered by tatlsUea'l sent from Washington by a department of the Qovernroent. which. innocently, of course, supplies Republican campaign material by pointing out the unparalleled development of our foreign commerce. Theee amiable statisticians have compiled figures showing that In the first nine months of the present fiscal year the exports of the t'nlted States to the Philippine amounted to ll.UT3.TMM. For the correa ponding period In IHU3 the ea porta aga-regated only (V.TSt In seven years, therefore, our trade with the Philippines haa Increased 11 In order to extend our commerce with the Islands, however, we have sent nearly soldiers there, and have spent about 1100.000.uon In transporting them, feeding them and paying them for their service.

The Increase In exports which we have gained thereby represents probably the articles imported by our army of occupation. It Is not necessary for the American taxpayer to have a profound knowledge of business methods to understand that foreign trade secured on such terms la not exactly profitable. If the commercial Interests which favor a policy of territorial aggrandisement with "trade following the flag" are satlsfled with thla eort of expansion the Amertoan taxpayer Is surely not content to foot the bills. If this regarded aa legitimate trade development we could go about It in a different way, avoid blood-gull Un ess, accomplish tha same result, and give the Washington statisticians a chance to make an equally good showing with tbetr foreign commerce figures. Mr.

McKlnley could rent an Island nearer home, send men there without military equipment, feed them at the expense of tha United State Treasury, and pay them to remain on the Island while we were Increasing our exports by supplying them with the luxuries not tn eluded In the army ration. Substantially this Is the method we have adopted to increase our commerce with tb Philippine, with the exception that tn the archipelago our soipiars are supposed to earn their pay by shooting Filipino Under tba other plan the 70.000 men whom we would establish on some island near home would be paid to purchase thatr luxuries from the United State, and would not be expected to do any blood-letting wh extending our foreign trade. The taxpayer! of the United 8tates ar giving more than a year to compensate 70,000 American soldiers In the Philippine for adding tl.bvO.0Ou annually to our export trade. It ought to be possible to make a better business arrangement than this. IN MONUMENTS Taylor Kxpeadiag Hla Fortune To Prevent Contest Over Hla WIIL WuTCRnria.

June 14. In order to preclude the possibility of a contest over his will after be Is dead John Q. Taylor, of this place, ta now engaged In spending a fortune of 1100,000 In monuments. Mr. Taylor's avowed purpoe Is to use all his money in Im proving Lafayette Cemetery, on the heights of Brandywine battle Seed, a short distance from the spot where Oeoeral Lafayette fell wounded In battle.

Tb bodies of Taylor's father, mother, slater, wife and child are burled there. Quietly and without ceremony Mr. Taylor yesterday unveiled Ms fourth monument. Taylor haa completed tb base of a X23.000 monument commemorative of General Lafayette. DISAPPOINTED 1st Their Kat-FVy1g Experiansmt Ooeg.1 uqmIo! Empleres.

Washington. D. June 14. Th Post tomorrow will publish an article stating that the Republican Congr eaalunal Campaign Committee baa been endeavortng to collect aa a campaign contribution a part of tb extra month's salary voted to th employe of Congress just before adjournment. Tb employ ea war Informed that any contributkm would be voluntary, and saaay of then paid no heed to th communication i scat end.

while others mad only a small contribution, so that the amount collected will sot exceed jl SO or $1,800, Instead at 910.000 or mora, aa had been expected. RESCINDED Action of Cbaaaber of Oewaaaeroa la. -dorc Philadelphia Moasmaa. CatATTAVOoa, Txts, Jane 14V At a recent maeting of the Chamber Cosaaaerea of this dty. a i naulutlosi waa adopted In dorsing the Phflavdalphla.

Sfnaeam and ask. tag th Taue Ooagi aaamaa and Sana tore -to sopssrt tb bill pee stag Car the awp. port aad saamtesisao eg that saattterlee. At a aaaetmg of tb ebamber to-uighit a elntioe waa unaalaaoualy adopted re- reaoiuuoai waa twr ewtw re scinding Its former action, tha reason glaa being that after InveetigaHoa th chamber has oottdudad that tbaPhUeqelptUa Maaa TOLEDO'S WFTJLAnoa. TOUS4 Oernx Jwa 14.

Tb sehaet enuiav-eratora Bniabed their work for this dty today. Th official, school apameraJton Is aw laorsaea eC Xll ever last rear. Taking aeboel ejumratlon as a heats tb popuiatlo ec Toeado nt figured out to be 144.788, t- at THSES 30JXZD T0GETEE2. Tissue. Osmw Jan A cat eeloxtglnaT Joseph ITetschner gave birth te four kUteea.

three of which are Joined side by side, each having three separata heads. The curiosity la llvtng and bids fair to ris to cathood, BUS VIEW Of tha. We, FUa- ft irlaay Uatakawe bal OoajeraJ Otta. fa baa JasK i.tasws. to tbaa aaaotor Xraaa tko rbflkypbiea.

restar. ba Use rafTtiiiiiiiaa THE I2 QT7IBKB, CTSCTSJLTt FIODA JXTKE 15, lopg This Way From Europe For Relief io Case of Financial! Stringency. United SUtes No Longer tt the Mercy of Foreign Banker Tke Snrprisiig Iiere.se fa Cemaeree Hu PUee4 America SktuiIj Amoig th Great Money Power of the World. rCowTT-ta-at. Pkllaaslasila Pi ia.

ISOa sractj. atsravc re til asertaaa. New Yoaa. June 14 In UO. ht aa lb Presidential campaign began, there aaamail to be.

Juat as there is to-day. a tendency to export from the Unirad State to Europe a considerable quantity of gold, and yet the el ml laxity of theee tendancte and the utter dissimilarity of the feelings created by reason of them emphasise tba am sing change tbat haa occurred In our financial condition sine 1XK Then, the anziesy was so Intense leal there be a heavy withdrawal of the gold from the Federal Treasury and thereby panic or demoreitxatlon be created at the height of the Praldri tla- campaign, that certain bankers of New Tork. under the leadership of Frederick E. Tappen. eub-crtbad 26.000,00t) In gold, some of them practically depleting their own supply In order that the credit of the Federal Treasury might be maintained.

This subscription did serve that purpoee. oold ax roars. The words -gold exports" were night-mars at that time, and the recollection of the dread which they occasioned when they were spoken at any tims during Mr Cleveland second administration serves even to this dsy to ereats apprehanalon when the words sre spoken now. But we are going to ship probably within a month perhaps as much aa $15,000,000. and thla week, on the eve of one of the two national conventions, the steamers are taking from thla port In all probability next week they wtll take as much more.

But In the simple fsct that we are exporting gold to-day as we did In Mr. Cleveland a second administration Is to be found the only similarity between the transactions In 11J0 and those of 14 snd 1-iOfj. From sn economic point of view, or the one which International financiers tske. the transactions of this week and thoee that sre to follow are of the highest consequence In 1844 and lSUS the gold that was tsken out of the Untted States went because we were In a certain sense within the clutch of the so-called money power of Europe. We owed a debt and European bankers wers able to demand our gold In payment or else destroy our credit-In that sense there seemed to be at least an apparent Justification for the charge made by the Democracy that the States was st the mercy of the bankers of Europe.

However plausible or however specious that assertion may have been. It cannot be made to-day. There Is no power that Europe possesses that could draw one dollar of our gold from this country If we did not want to send It- The 13.500.000 sent this week is a loan, although, possibly, some of the gold may have been bought outright, and It Is only sent to Europe because the Bank of France has offered to our bankers Inducements strong enough to persuade them to send the gold; in other words, they can make a profit In letting th gold go, and they are able to make a profit because we do not need It tn this country. sTMr-roat or rrantoTn. Furthermore, tha disposition of American bankers to send gold abroad la all the stronger because th exportation of a few milUons may tend to steady and ease money markets on the other Bids tn manner that will be beneficial to the great American credits already established there.

Thla exportation of gold by no means represent all our loans to Europe, although no one is able to aay how many million wa have lent to the bankers of the continent and of Great Britain through a shifting of American credits that were created by reason of our enormous trade balance. It can therefore be claimed that th exportation of gold on the eve of this Presidential canvass Is a symptom of the financial Independence and strength of the United States a proof that It has expanded, financially at least, so that It has become a world money power, whereaa. In 1SOQ an exportation of gold would have been accepted as a sure indication of financial panic and business demoralisation. By another rather strange coincidence, and one that waa not planned, there la to be furnished convincing proof of our ezx-panalon financially, so that to-day. Instead of relying upon other parts of tb world to help us, the nations that are great are looking to us for help for thero selves.

This argument Is furnished through th presence In this city of the Prealdent of one of the greater banks of Russia, Mr. Rothstaln. Every financier of prominence ta th United States haa long known Mr. Rothatew by reason of his brilliant management of tb Imperial Bank of Russia. He Is now tn tb United State, as somewhat flatteringly says, to get from personal experience a good view of our great development, and he adda that in Europe It la believed that the United States has really only Juat begun what promise to be a career of extraordinary influence and importance in the field of International commerce.

growth of yoaaaaw coMstxaca. In 180 we bad practically no international commerce of the kind to which Mr. Rothateaa refers. We did aeU other parts of tb world great quantities of cotton and of other agricultural products. We aided materially Is clothing aad feeding other nations than our own- But sine that time we have been selling enormous quantities of tb product of our maaufactoriea, so that this year it is probable tbat our total sales of manufactured products to the other nations will aggregate tn money Vain That Is the kind of ratersuv-Uenal commerce tbat Mr.

Rathsxaan be tn mind, and It baa been to m. great extent developed sine lass, although this Rossuao Baak President and his friends In thla dty like General Fairchild. once Mr. Cleveland Secretary of tb Treasury, ar discreetly diplomatic what they ar aaked i aap Mr. Rothstaln' purpose to larltsb branch of the Russia bank there, or te float a loaa here, aevertbeleaa It la the prevailing epialoa aaanmg ur bankers thaaj it to the-purpoee to establish bar breach or the Imperial tresis Bank, or at et a hanking Inatitutlou having do relatlea with that hank, aad eeoasr or later te attempt te float hers another Rasalaa la.

Of course, Russia woold aot seek te setae ltsh here a banking tnstllutiou cloeety allied bar ewe eyilase tb reeling was very atrong that th two nation a are to have greatly mc rasas financial ralslosva. Aed If there to te be great tBcreaae tw neaactai relaOona that as oat an raw that of ABaVaa vevwlncta Utile eC the product of Rasata, Had tbetr way te oar ewa market. rvrtbaraaor. If Ruasta soaks float aav ether loaa We that meat he take. eC the rooosjnltkrm by that great It ha li thax ma eot he aaderwTittea by atty sysdtoate of bankers, hot may possibly be by ether ceprtai thad that which is hwa wte IV, psetati eg marketmg the dUTsraaca a tar aa the geaerat teatarea ef the traaaactioa are simi ei nal far th keaa wffl he aoated by a merle eapttat the te- ct win he paid here aad ha en the pilnimal ft self erul he a ha th uui iJiw and rail way aupplle.

sUaAPrgO DrraRST Is lSsJ it la probable that not eae dollar eg Interest ipsa anjr Snaociat ebltawttea. of the aaTaaVi'aT 'Taeay the) Ode bag mierevt aaai e9v44evs has hssrae te 8s seat tnfsimsa hashes a a that enrbta aav Hbar year we aSfcaB prat ably he reeetetaai SO te gMVOasas tat the term aieidssda seal I eili aa sasctal lessen ss fusel ga I a a aad thda ewes ssst uatlede the ta teres paid apis rhs hashers leas, arbfa-h ar uprsaaem by aieerr-- It at weO ksjeera tbat It wee the retp ea wst Metises aad tarteraat by OreaX Iwrtalajspotabar- eaeaed tbat aallia te look wtlh asreasserlty epos aa ay pi rest trad halsaea that wee aerates be-, smaae tSSS we bee bearan the happy aap arise re and Mr. TsVothststa aaeiiras has rrliela fa thSa etty that It to and Mr. ta tlxto ctty usee the belief hs Kawepe tbat th Aanartrea eajrftaJ ht the ewUgetlew of fr-etga aatloaa are te at a fitly aad swiftly tsv erea ba the aeaxt ftser te free years, of tb baeksss ever there balag tb to that the rAaae 4 wot far tart we ahafl match fur1" ttaetf ba tbto r-speec Mr. Rothstata spsahs sutJamfawtr ef tbxtreoc-diary eotc1deac that Justaa we ar capeurtmg the wvrtd aaerketa with er asauaafaeterod paeduet ar ala puttlag ouxsarvee alsaest at tb head ef the goM producing aarhso ef the world.

Mr. Rotketeln to said te have spoke ef the tmpreamoa th aturooe tbat wa asw to called wpo am anad lately te make gaad tb wertd'a deeejry ba coal. And tt bap-pens that there come to-day from tb statistician of tb Treasury Depart naent aa amazing report with rasp act to this unexpected commerce In Mr. Cievetand" day i tt waa asserts that If we malatainad a tariff Bpon coal we would not only fall to get any foreign market for our coal, bet would com pal th manufacturer of Pew England, for Instance, to pay aa unjust trthi te to those whom Mr. Cleveland friends were food of calling th coal hirons.

coax. Taana tecaaaaiwo. But It so happen that we have been expert Ing coal ream the United State In amount SO per cent more than we exported in the previous year and SO per cent more than we exported In 1M3. whereas during Mr. Cleveland's Administration the exportation amounted to practically nothing.

But great as haa been the Increase rn the exporta- tlon df this product of our mines tt prob-i ably wtll be trivial In comparison with the Increase reported next year and for many years to come. Already every available i steamer that can be obtained at reason -i able rate haa been chartered to take coal from American port to Russia, to Sweden, to Italy, to Havre or Bordeaux and to two or three German porta. And If there should be, by reason of any ahortag of crops, a I falling off In our agricultural export next tall. It ta probable that the loss will be to a considerable extent made up by the ex- port of coal from the United State. Fur thermore, It Is now believed in Europe that the United States Is speedily to become not only the greatest of coal producers (It Is practically that now), but also to supplant Great Britain as the greatest of coal ex porters.

Whst that means in the development of trade and In the securing and maintaining of prices Is easily understood by thoee who know what Oreat Britain coal mines and their relation to her export trade has meant for her. Holland. MOTORMAN Found Dead at His Post After the Crowded Car Had Made Wild Dash in Front af a Freight Train. Caicaeo, Jun 14. With th motorman dead on th front phcrform, an Indian Avenue lecnrlc car crowded with passengers shot across the railroad tracks at Fortieth street Juat ahead of a freight train late last night, and for three blocks raa at full speed, with no one at the controlling lever Th motorman.

H. A. Morgan, bad fallen hsipleea of heart disease, but the passengers did not realize their danger until after It was over, and the car had been stopped by the conductor As the car approached the raJlmait cm. tng the conductor heard the sound of an ap- proacning train. Ioktng ahead ha aww hv the signal lights that the galea were down.

Aa the car failed to stop he pulled the bell rope and shouted to the motorman. He re- eetved no answer. The watchman at the I crossing, thinking that the motorman had loot control of his car. raised the ium in I hopes that the car would cross the track before the locomotive could dispute the right of wsy. His calculations were right, foe the car Just managed to clear the crossing In safety.

The glaring lisht from the engine's headlight as It swept serosa the face of the f'aaoengers snd the unusual Jarring In croas-ng the railroad tracks caused a panic tn the car As soon as th crossing had been passed the conductor rushed to the front of the car where he shut ofT the etectre current and found the motorman lying dead on the platform. STREET OAS Wrecked By Freight Tral Three Women Were Killed. HtrrcHiKsoN. June 14. A Santa Fe freight train ran Into and demolished a street car at the Main-street crossing hr to-day.

killing three persons. Mrs. J. 8 Patten. Mrs.

William Burtch and Mrs. George Kown. lira Patte-n'a body wa cut In two. Mrs. Kown was dragged from -the wrecx try ner nusoand and died In hla arm.

Kown was badly injured, but will recover. Mrs. Edward White. Mrs. J.

H. Glascock and Mrs. Daniel Con kiln were seriously injured. The street car was filled with oeo- ple returning from a lodge meeting. The passengers did not see the freight until it was upon them, and then In their excitement several Jumped under the train.

IN CANADA Willlamsoo Is HuuUng His Fattter, Who Haa a Fortaae. srxetax. nsiiri to raa avocraxa. Darmorr. Jun 14.

Aionso Wll-UameoB. of GreenvlU. Ohio, wa ta Windsor thla morning trying to locate bi father, William Williamson, whom he haa not seen for nearly 40 years. The elder William son served In th Civil War. want home without leave, and had to teve hi sH lown to avoia arrest.

Brace tnea bla family haa not seen blm. Aionso som lira ago learned that his father ha fallen heir to a big estate in England. He thinks th ota man is uvtng in Windsor under aa assumed name with another wife whom he married in Napoleon. Ohio. SHOVED TO THE FR03TT.

Leslie' Weekly. 1 There's lota o' men called leaders la the cailin'a they hav chose. When evrr one hi forgin' to som otbar feller ewes; Bom feller who's a ebeertn' blm by stasia' ef a song. Ah' backfn' of him up the while famea coajtin him along. The world looks oa approvtn' aa' asserts 'at is great, Tbey-re lectin' of him Senator or OVrfaor mt tb mat; They say nat'ral laadarahip by fax ha -as aai ii wm let o' unknown fall Jars shoved him lorwara from hahind A let whole-etmled fellers with the htg- Seat kind o' heaurta.

Who Uvea ar spent sv-levwSa leeaa er mlxin' tn th marts, ThT stand behind the feTior. with a faith tat Drial COIsAstWsghgi Aa sstUa hla abeeJdars tfll he's dola' of hie beet. Tae feller forges onwai till ebole world take htm up-Aa with the sweets e' faeaor fame to fiJOln' ef his cup; a'braldVmlnd1- a let e' unknown foliar ts ta tb eats or aswa His Pct are's ta ta The world applaud hat jear a like aa eot If else' had made 'ess they'd aethia' xrw nu s-Wiae ye ro crasy him. he's a 91 van'. 1 1 n.i Sa with tos hla eoorag hllad.

When a kx unknoem feUers showed aim TESTS 0TES A jZITrjDSETX wc a ras aagr-rtrra XAaCHJWTaa, OaTJO, June li-hfrt, gasaa Soott died assg here to-day at the age ef iaa. pan ir.a paper Bnkad with latst segaihisa aa quarterly asttthsa. theeurh I 1 -gas-i 1 .1 Maee Id Cad TtBsMM Te O.S Id." he hssree Be the 9 I Ctart ef Mew rT.TV- 'U- assd -Red IrrMea." wad -Tee KVgbx These Jerswy. Tb giiasas levvd her all hs aeeheT est the r-eerem. -JJZLZZ SLfZTJZ: the weTrwwerd te gteo tto.

rw is, a. -Tt e-ewg tweTw lrui aaahea the e. vseb te aa Istlawtag: cea eeest saere toterwcxaaT ta the taet thee a tor whSeh tbeydid. w- CMARDfCR KIM. sWrxtae te the a tisrsrsy ere heira Ss ra CastsM the hlaehaoe reeeer.

wia- la.a.t.iig the ran. we, eee aiaialag Ds sea veeywet tr ssaais tna. wTateh wee swetied she eaissd ta her heek Caetas MserT a raer ta wK ear hepto fa ear Eae. Pwddsely hew. enbiet a eaajsase.

AB Iree te XsUey. w. J. aesthar ssava were eg the ery by snmtiaa r-e swlhll a by the eT At a -e aa ai aa ii hiaiath has heel a ptee terms af tee wal wev eeealty dJvtdeal ab theekght asenehea the Wt e's eeyaeue vaiar rich dar Io Ties soft dare asaoeg tw see aad three tee, cm mt Ceseata Meu-y. orhoea she hed si ana a it hetese aaelted.

tb el, the a.aaisat pewetdad thai aev eeoa-a. 'T'lJClTZ aad I a. ba. srw ebmii aim ehah dar sslsai si at as Isig let the share asst. wear wa Tr sM uTiT mXiT rm riTrTr thhl- lid-terage aaady.

wee swsa sat his way te atoet-e aay tor two aaraia aae two eewa euri waysai katas- Hsraag tarns sua aw -1 -e bag tb Hfelsaa ef rw ee? tb ea-wter-s, i liecle wear hie papsae mmm --1 wec taa rai: a-i 0.. Jdarsaret aad Martha, eaeh Hm a the pribahrg they we km tb will a. -v Sytag ta an Id heT" I ee ta Chi I td Wta "la Id hot eneugh for year" set der an Utah ef dar darrlbla emvwtlea! Dar gvee- acep. no way to dar eheU bona if 1 rofuaalea te saisw td. Caoght ta der toes aieer ail doe yer.

eld kind Heaf en aaad sueai reUef? Bed. Id CHABDKR IWEL For a moment all vas a atlll yew could der BBoe-kat drop ta Vail street Den like der raddl uf musketry ea a roof garde der qvaatioa fell all around ma "Vas you vita or black aad how da you account far tt 7 "If a brrtng and a baif ot a shilling and a half, bow much la te-cat cigar vorth tn American money "Do you eat oatmeal for breakfast, und vy do you eat breakfast vend Id ta cheaper to sleeb? 'Lit you efer belong to a trust, nun. vaav- 4 1 fnr Irf und bow "Vas you a pro-Boer or a pro-bono pub- 1 lico -i "Haf you efer had der measle. und vy? "Dit you efer have a policeman In your family, und vot vas hs after? "Do you save money personally, or do you ged drm to save Id for you at der race track "Vot vas der moat money you efer vun on a race "aj Yen you voke ub dlt you turn ofer und vent to sleeb again? "Do you own der house you llv in or does der Janitor dink he owns Id? "Dlt you Intention to wlslt der Paxil Ex-poeay "Vu your married Ufa habby. und who la to blame?" Den der census looker vtped der parsplr-Ings from his prow und boring a hole In his tongue mlt his lead pencil, he valted for me to hand him a cubble anewer "Ye.

I respotiswd. abseot-mindins') CHABDER DRE1 Dare i as thunderous sound ven der ankry storm clouds vaa brewing in der brewery Id vaa my vlfe coming down stairs. "I haf ofer heard him." she vlapered mlt a hoaraseness. "Vy do you at ant dare like a vooden mans? Vy? Haf you got no braf-ery lefd Vare la all your Dutch courage? Show some of id. show Idt Ask him some qvestlons! Haf you lost your Interrogation point? Go on; be a man und show your spunk! Ask him a cubbla of hard vun'" "Id Is too late." 1 made der murmur; "too lade.

He knows eferydlng!" "Ach. Himmel!" set my vtfe. "Does he know dot I am still veering last aummefa Mother Hubbard?" "Yes." I responded mlt a sorrowfulness, und den my vlfe collapsed herself und a large part uf der hall floor. Mlt a fiendish laughter der census tooker dlsappearanced In der next door, und I knew nuddlng more because he knew Id all. D.

DlMKEtaplEU Per George V. chart. TO THE GRAVE Preeideat Dtaa Followed the Remains of Hla Loyal Adherent. Crrr or Mexico, June 14 President Diss was chief mourner to-day at the funeral of the famous lawyer and statesman. Don Jus to Benltex.

a full brigade of troops escorting the remains of one of Mexico's greatest men to the tomb Justo Ben I tea waa a close associate of the President in the campaign of the army which General Dlax i created and ultimately led to victory He took great Interest in the progress of the United States snd shared with Latin- 1 American Liberals the wish that the United States should remain true to ancient tradl- tlons. He was opposed to any measures looking to restricting the liberties of the people, and enthusiastic In the admiration for the great leaders In American statesmanship. WEATHER FORECAST. Wabhinotom. June 14.

Forecaat for Friday and Saturday: Ohio and Indiana Partly cloudy Friday, with showers In southern portions: unset tied weexber fUtarday; freah to brisk north- West Vlrgtnla--Lo-al rains Friday; unset tled weather Saturday; nortioaaterty armda. Lower Michigan Fair Friday; fair aad win arts ahiftlog to Xntcky 6howe rs Friday, with ta westers portions; fair Saturday; verlabl wmxp BTAras Waa-raraa Btraaatx. Cx- ebnuTi, Oaio Rcord tea- Jobs id. lsoo. p- at, aenty-flfth arhllaa eomparleon with the tMTTesnoadlaaT aay tor tae last three years: r- TTT- Hrrna.

Wind- Rata. Weath. SS caeedr XMa. 1990. 1SPT.

Max. ternperatwr 7g fuT at Mux. texnnar a ur T- vf HamfaU 10 a Btatniaanl ehewlua tb MaMa mr parexarre sum precipitation at Urvctnnatl: iw ttenaparetwre far tb T-aee In tmuesrtarw um. xm. i uasv io Axeamalated deficiency la temperature slne January 1, lautj 4 V7.

IT4 Defieiaaey predpitatioa for the -07 Dficiencr rn precipltaxtoe aioc Jus 1--1-4U aeenBBlated dencieetey ia is saajilisllon sin a eaaoary a. luo avrs "extJ tbareasaiaph reedrnga Ctoeel ttm: 11 a. 1 p- as- 7 a. 74 J2 72 ds.m....T5 8a. 1 p.

8p.m a. I. a Tie 1 a. aa 7- IIiiiTIisi sarsalf My vtf ass Pse- bat I sr. i Fret the passrs aisd te Che suit It tbat Joeepa Klnswlaed, Jr wee by tb will pasture end provide that aboold take rare of the But ta le) there arce a family dtapwta.

tbs oetcem of which waa Joaepe, annoanced that he wd prt ve aw psaoraca as aay iw for the rwa Kaatber did be until the time ef bis death, a year ago. aad his widow still ooetbswed te refuse to gt pasturage aad bay te the cows of kfarcsret and Martha KUMrataad It has come to that tby hav gone to la. aboot it Ms Martha b-ng year OM ana him atarsare nevjns Xbay ae.tre lb law to mterrer roaae i. I i i tbelr brotber Jeseea pasture eau pnnM hay fcr the owe. Tba brother RJcherd, who held the burden of feeding the horses, taa.

It seem ltvwd up to bla contract. There has been an action la oheneery aad ryr. precedent could touad for gunlaoc. vow it go to th Supreme Court, guidelee aa er The of damages cli by tb sister for the refusal or taeir orotner to iika care ef the cows la tl.utu. As may be Inferred tb family Is an obstinate and new lea-el points may be recorded be-aure of the contest.

VOVJJS'i BULK Saved Her LAfe Whea eb loll the Fir Eaesp. I New Tork Welt For the first time In her life Mrs Agnee McDonald, of No Twelfth street, Brooklyn, is thankful for her ample proportion Mrs. McDonald tips the scale at StlO pound Her super. uou flesh saved her from horrl bla death last night Mrs McDonald has been tn the habit of visiting her next door neighbor. Mrs Young, by mean of the fire escspe.

a platform of which is Juet below their klteben windows Their flat are on the fourth floor Mrs. McDonald started to cross the fire-escape lat night, and Mrs. Young, who was sitting by her open window, had already greeted her. when Mra McDonald tripped and felL Down through th opening tn the floor of the nre-ecae she fell, while Mra Young cried loudly. She's kUled! Shea Other tenanta ruahed to tbelr rear wln-dowa.

Down peat th startled gaxer on the third floor dropped the unlucky woman, her gradually expanding as a parachute Smoothly she passed through th opening of the fire-escape platform of the third floor. At the floor below It waa a tighter squeexe. but she dropped through the opening there, the speed of her fall slackening aad her skirts bulging Keeping straight downward, ahe struck the opening of the plstfnrm st the first floor. Here she stuck. Head, arms and skirts remained above the balcony, while her feet Just grazed ths spike of the high Iron fence below.

For 15 minutes Mra McDonsld was obliged to remain In this precarious position. John Fox, a tenant on the first floor, tried to pull her out. but be is small, and Mrs. McDonald had not lost a pouad Four policemen at last accomplished the feat Mrs McDonald waa taken to the Benry Hospital. Her arms and body were badly bruised, and she was suffering from shock Her friend.

Mra Young, who had given her up for dead, had fainted, and waa ha-tertcal nearly all night. BELLE BOYD. Incident In the Life of a Remarkable Civil War Character. New Tork Sua. Belle Body, who died in Klllousn.

Wis had Just left school when the Civil War began. Bbe had a lover In the Confederate service without whom she thought she could not live, but she married another before the war was over and made him a traitor, waa divorced from a second husband 20 years after ber first marriage, and within a year after that married a third. She saw lifs in camps snd military prisons, waa a prisoner on shipboard, was banished from the country, and after re- lununf iq it htm in various states in tn East. Weet snd South; was In sn insane asylum for a time and afterward' lectured throughout the country, often under the auspices of Grand Army posts. She was about five feet five Inches tail, with bright eye and sn aquiline nose, and when ahe waa young her hair wa described as of "a reddish golden hue Belle Boyd was bom in Msrtlnsburg.

Berkeley County. Va. now Weet Virginia, on May 9. 1S43, the daughter of Benjamin Read Boyd, and was educated at Mt Washington Female College In Baltimore County, Maryland. Not quite 1.

years old at the opening of the war. she entered with all ber heart and spirit into the service of the Confederate causa. Shs wsa a resident within tha Federal lines and knew many of the officers, and she used her acquaint- i aac and her blandishments to gain from them information which would be of serv- Ice to her friends of the Southern armies. to whom she conveyed It at evrry oppor- i tunity. Many of ber messages she sent tc General J.

E. B. Stuart. At favorable cp- port unities she abstracted the side arms of ber Federal acquaintances when they left them carelessly about and the ahe forwarded to the enemy. She wss sus- i peeled after a time and then one of ber note fell into the Federal hands and she waa arrested, reprimanded and threatened, but Osoerai Shields set her at liberty.

Gen eral Shields, she aaid afterward, waa completely off his guard and introduced her to officers of his stxfi. Tb night before Shields set out after Stonewall Jackson he announced tbat he wa gotng to whip Jackson, and eotmetl vas held tn what had been tb drawing room of Belles aunts Through tb floor ot a closet off a bedroom above the drawing room a bole had been bored, for whst puips Ball had not found out, hut as she bad discovered tb hole she e-t ap te the eieeet ana an-puea ber i. Wbea tb cetxtacfl a ma an bl id Eb was able to bs of such merHem te Jacksoa that bar a let tea- after ha Safsat of Oaarel Beaks, dated May 2. 1S8X tbstah- lag ber i advice ahe faaiaisil to JXX Jacfcsoa aaad her aa ataif with tb raak of Capitis after which areas aad whea th reatow jatd Cokmel Leslie- TMiflsrav rr a a spy she was twice seatsaeed te he aboC aad era far 11 asortb a prlaoasi ta ta CarroB aad Capttol ritaaaa at Waah- rUn BertrCs eereer fa the arlBtary i n. whea she wag captared with hms kt" -a 4ral aad left largely to theas-pyroa te bar.

abatella her sUotogTaihy. ilisnairhea pw rTaZaa -wylde BsJrtltesr. eg the aeey. ZZZVvt r. cbare- LrT ee llselaa.

Tb Lll i 1 I I I I waat aftar fartber away. For alMwtaa the eece ef his ll.ri.- -rmatmA aad Irlil hat he ws act ratavfrrtaat. (tail Bays, erh we ejs- torwd with aimieks. jrala aatd wesat to C1al- Maremsl -a i. 4 a i si Caelaad k.

saarrtad Aiw Ias aa St. Jam a Cwerea, ph-i. u.Mtu-. luker wa sai Harding, ef Braohly. HarOaf ressrwad th ccuetry and ksnesae a Cesvf Aerate epv wife became sa actress la Englaed and returned te Amerkra after tb pewemmt i kj.mJ ii See ta.

o( Nln, -IfT-rwal time VaCXed sure estfulty te pat I Mi! through lb "blark-estd-ta'' of Tessa is lart aba mamad Celoesl Jebst Swam- stnn llammoaad. Quit tbs stag, weax. la li neal th wttb bar husband ts Cailforaia 4-hged tu ntr an tnaaa ssylusa. wSt(. son was bom and wbar be died Th mother waa brought East and i ered.

aad until ISm and her basaaad Oved ta vsrtoua parte of the coaatrr Tnreelewa c-t ha rxuMreet wee bora to them la la. wb A eor.t' their heme wa tn Texsa eftr a year ef 1 1 r-tigt mu-rb trouble. Mrs Hsmmowd said that she. th get an absolute dlvtwca Tbat was tn No- Southern I veenber At the t-eermnlng of the next year ebe married aa actor who wa a minister son. Nat High, son of Rev HUB ef Toted With him sa weaat oa tb rued, gtvtng dramatic recitaUoas In costume After ih4 she besn in Toledo giving recitals or lecture with her hfe as a rebel spy aa ths euioect and continued thla work for several years, usually appearing uivter the auspice of A R.

rvt At Norfolk he gv her lartur-e for the benefit of Plr set t-Buchanan of ivn federal Veteran fen 1KN Thl ber firt inclur In the South While alia wa atlll In England. lna. she published Hells Hod In imp and i Jrtsvn. and Vera Augustus Ba. wrote; an Introduction to It.

tn whvrh he sakd "Bell Bo yd th Reoel Hpy. I In ro slon of a vast a rrvou rw of lafvmuei im- pitcaung high ofT) 1. at Washington, both. In public arl private acandala whwrh he deem It Imprudent st present to publiah i T.he time la not yet TILL FE1C, Three Mile Loag, Protscu Pnvaa Park From Tramp. Iflnir iroM Cor New Tor Susl A.

A Anderson, cf New York. Is surrounding his wife's estate here with a wire fence eight feet high and three miles long lis also engaged Oeorg ler aa a -PeH-lsl C'onstAbs. him 4.0 -1 ut dered htm to svrrtt Htfftta vtctlon of on dtvmailnc tb hrultwry or build irLC hr a.1o ben pot4 Mr Andfrnn wif. who th duchter i I ho lt- Jrrml.b MUbftink. of New York, own.

what was once the summer home of Boss Tweed This hs been added to until are 1HC acres In all. A lake three times the alia of that on the E. C. Benedict estate ha been constructed and a road four miles long laid out from the Anderson residence to the Coscob road, winding about the lake through the wooda and along th shore of the Bound The woods were once the home of A mo- 1A. the abode of trsmps who drank at th springs and occasionally loitered there sal summer.

It Is for the purpose of breaking up these nests of tramp thst ths fence is being built and the officer is on duty. This wall of wire la similar to that about Mr Benedict's estste. only longer While th park Is private ths roads are not prohibited tn residents of the town who wish to drive through them and admlrs nature. GIEL All TED hen Big fsaake Wrapped Itaeir A boat Her Waist aad Bqaeesed. Westminster ape.

BeitlBrtare Amartcaa A singular but well-autbantlcatad snake tory oome from Pleassnt Valley, about five rrlies from this city, th principal actors In which were tb snake end Miss Cora ijearjT-v. a (KHaejuc employ so. ny G. Tingling. well-known farm.

near thai place. Mia Lea-ore went te the bam to milk the cows, as wa ber eus-j tomary doty. She did not return aa prompt. ly a usual, and. becoming uneaay after time.

Mra Tingling seat sosn owe to the bam to look for her. Sh waa found lying In a dead faint la anq upon i log revived appeared dazed and frightened Finally she becam auffU-iaatly luaiui naiil te tell tb caus of her nm misi luuauss. Bh said tbat while milking she fait something moving about ber clothing, but supposed it was a cat, until ah felt a constrtotloa about ber sraiat. and found bsrsiif loekiag late the eyes of a snake which had wvappad itself about ber. aad reared ita head tn front of her face flh was too much frighten, to notice what eort of a serpent was thus confronting ber.

but, striking ax It with ber hand, fainted away. Wba she wa found the snske had dlsppared- fight with eagles. lAltooaa rr-eaa.) Cor. PHtabsag Trasx. James Writ bank, of Iog Valley Hunting County, met a rather gseer experience oa Satrxrday.

He was going dewa a steep pert of the Black TLog when be caught hld B-rev IBOBBIalB sTld. Tb vine broke loose sad he landed ta the top OI a lan-nerr ewwa XB BfcnBlll lla Tut tb tree was aa eaaTlers a set, a both tb Hs sorrssdid ta fnar and struck at the htrds sag katf to keep them off ewtO ae sad hied te the ground. The talon ba hto toft tts With a wn directed bow aght WlUbsvak caedea ta xiuteg tt waa the gave a scream aaa aew away. WlXhaak over me lemiumi xe stS County. Me wis tseea the wu tut waJTTDr mirTgfjw for sJimeay the max-aue, sebmlts the he teeWved sartxfy raax x.

mmm afrkle. the Iswalrv wtfeef JohaO. bahy aw wfaer he ar-mk aw a.a zirkz: a 1 ma wU ho a losx Urns Moaxataia sT-rap vrm and Till i A BeA-ass amis TT rt tor a dassiBt esestrextasx aw the hsbiiJ tar, which, h. esaU ftdaa -sksaaT ZZd I i sB er 11 The grv bi- I seek It 1 thai tfee teeated ter fc r. the utktn.

S' por-ulatl-wi tmt be rereeeer ta -tral Wee.m r. at ate frae I 't able meet ir r. Sernat a I Iretir- It eeeana r-ec aumber H-r wis: be lrre-1 ar ard jKi't ii ttit-fea It 1 111 be ftvnnJ Mi r-f a ttl- It-. r. IT alt'--'-- car.

cotnlrtg nine rr" rnrector of ft- the popula? trr t-i twee 70 if r. of lyn ihnwr ra. pree-nt ratio rE vided for or mor. ENDLESS CHAIN" iKf M4Haesft tA 1 V. eT avsbaj tHartrf.

Tn lit at A VsbA.VILa.at, HI- rN-r14. Norwich. rv -ao. of V-i vf bride rbr.fr e. JadTO MM 1 1 Wtrftt IO AitaifllAV, TrtrotAfb hrr iMtrurii: ut-mI ntrmr Normwt -llfc Mr Ma mnA hri i nar a i frU Htt, frvf-RVshd MwssMI Mr V.

ttm grrm to whrm Mra Mar. comeHin of Mlaa Norwich The result wat ti between Miss I o4 ripened ltuo lore ar.J Stavenson vtsiiad hu r.a...-. saw ber for th rtrat time acquainted, of u'. day decided to get mr Will ill at eet i'dM SOCIETY WOMEN Will Drive Hiitl.cd ollect I are Cera aad srscisL starsvea iu rs a. r.

i Committee of the 1 A of tl.s m-e rr. Of lb. U1! ft they will appear and Central tnj 1. drivers and eor. "lt'-t company have the cars to rtuae ew-pted for Saturday afrr and will also nr.

a the Central Cit en: rat eoetempiated rr masculine eaatstan' sK tha regular drlieri they might be hand -tf tba occaaloc a l- ON EONES They aVce-atcbexi Their H.o',. Btluod Poiaolag i arwrtal. eavrrw i-. IstxHasar-ut-ja. Jr Leu Is Bmlth ar.i F- 'i ef the Indianapui: tng from blood -the doctors.

A few c. thatr hands on t-ev. working, and Imror--. gas fi-a. work.

Their eondiu-jt. Notlttag Hon I baa fa ft Fraaceti A good daa, of these days to r.d Klaley feis t. pot oa tn ticket aar mar tbaa fair a -how they leei a-to-t k. Pret era of Mr I ---U5 1 Bl It IS sisrniSrajit rha ta Bt naaart tb aatr. dangerous ekemeet tlon 1st should be -USUI Left-Utkau 1 With Foraker.

of Kinley. of Ohio, U' -i dK-tate tb terms of -ie McKlnley. ef Onto, ti be litti left for the 4tt Waka Mr. Hanna weakaeea a ef his stJecgi-a, is the j- trad cosnbtnes with mix-- which be "or Sew Tsrk WC.t TV. .11 Hkaa tb 0-i aad Bbas beat- If a saaa ooeld he fsmnd migc; -t -f iMft.l an inanrra kasss WU Be a Res-alar aerlag fk ST kertrt m.

a. FaJ: B' -e dae saav be as4 to see raiij Flat fWa-ktaa-t- Tits- If Mr. Laos fasc tr Bcty aiklalniai for kts iji a rsmmg ri Ase-naff te tae V. area BZSfakX a 7 etwa eiSV-iaiiy aAttktal aeabf.f II la taa rrtewcataMe maiMaia It THte ts eoe I rte WIT! afw eb 4e f4 srtievtr Tor er.s---r -a -f -in1 l)iis4s -IS'-reaa- in i- ba Us t- ZZlZZ? L. her AsBatotraJi mo.

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About The Cincinnati Enquirer Archive

Pages Available:
4,580,058
Years Available:
1841-2024