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ii 23D YEAR m). 0,033. WASHINGTON, D. C, WEDNESDAY EVENING, OCTOJiER 22, 1S90. PRICE TWO OiSNTf t J VJK 4 vjBBHfce t.OCAI. WHATHnit FOIU50AST. J'nr Iht PiatriH of Cotimbia. iffirnftrii, )r 'mi nrr unit ITrtti'mTr, inrrrnufnp ftnmfi .": a' d rtin; nortftrtlftrrln tenf ani hi v inner. STYLE AID WORKMANSHIP. TN order to produce the jbcst results tliera jnust be WORKMANSHIP as welt as DESIGN. The way a garment is put together can make It or mar it. One of the most promi nent features about OUR clothing is the quality of the tailoring. It is always the very BEST obtainable. If you want to see the most STYLISH as well as the best TAILORED gar ments in this country, call and examine our assort ment ol REEFERS and TOPCOATS for the young men, boys and children. All sizes and shapes, in every shade and color that is fash ionable and every grade that is reliable and at prices that are extremely mod. crate. We are still presenting every purchaser of Boys' or Children's Garments with one of those indestructible double paragon slates. Docs your boy want one ? B. Robinson & Co m AMERICAN OUTMTTERS, 909 PA. AVE. N. W. EXPRESS RATES RAISED. A Heavy Increme on Freight to lie Simla Next Weak, Mtw Yokk. Oct. 32. It was learned yesterday Umt at a meeting held Monday ut tie American Kxpress Company's ( Mice by the principal officer! of the dif ferent express companies' It was agreed to advance express ratea, beginning No vember 1. The baals for all express tatilTs is (be rate between New York and Chicago. The rate at prevent Is $3 per WO pounds. Under the new tariff it wilt lie $-30. ltatee will be ad vanced fifty cents from liosioa , New "iork, Philadelphia, llallimote and r tber seaboard points to points west of HuiTalo, SuUiiuuea and Pittsburg. '1 be re will be no changes to pointt cast of last named places. There will 1-t no increase greater than tifty cents to .-iy rlnl. and to some points it will be !'( 'I he increase will apply to busl- ess from interior points to the seaboard as well as In the opposite direction The p.ju rlulendeutg of the tariff departments (He different exp-ess companies will , ret In Chicago on Thursday of next '.vet k to arrange the new rates 'I lie advance in rales, it is sail, is i silo on account of increased expanses . f the companies, due principally Ut the Jar .r payments required by the rail j uls fur privileges. DROYI INT8 Til MYnt. T40SU4 lu Ike Hiium ami KVtskaat by lk Mexee. 1 M.aecau,. W. Va.. Oet. . J. McCoy of the shoe Amos' Urennan A iU C oy while crossing the pontoon 1 1 u' ut over the VUnewaha Hive Mon- .v Light drove off into Use river. ijil lie came to the surface hat was I vviin the dash board and the horse. -.. uue latter U trying to extricate hlm-;-n kicked McCoy several time. Mc i i aally managed to get away fm tu. Liise, wbudt sank inl was dtvwned. AUt uy was rescued aJmomdead. jr . uiu. Oct. S3 .The Sank of Paris v. .,i .vud 10 the hunk- ol Spain out) hun- i 1 u iHioii francs for three M. -. ..iHtv tutnished by Urn mi ior the loan consists of rv iUia!lt: boaniah 4 per cent bond, i lauk still emdin to give discount , i.Usor to discount Use paper of , 1 1 3i Madrid house. I uri.j (.issisi 4eeeW . t Mitn, N. t.. Oct. -i t-'nntmn iio ut iht Aucduan schooner e WUbud, ashore nt laitwfnt. La reived special pffrmmtean tram n.. Miiiiter of yiefctfrUte U wU w ii. . :.l u,Ou pounds of fiejk iHsi . :. r u. .he vefcael has ao mudu, dm4i t i.t to uiiilvo uuu" U j, buy v; UdttUl. Fur tuli luluriu 1 i AK iUul JotUl V Wlljga t uitct-UCU iul e atietto u. W. WALT WHITMAN COL. 1KGEH80I.L EULOGIZES' THE (MEAT POET OF NATURE, LOYING PRAJSE OF THE GRIZZLED SAGE The Great Infidel Orator Talks of Liberty and Literature. FOINTF.D DIG AT THE GOOD WAtUHAKER. "These Wendreus 'Liave3 of 0ra8.'" The ByPalhs sf Oenius"An Rlo- quenlasd Brilliant Peroration. l'litLADRtritiA, Oct. S2. When Col onel Jlobcit O. Imersoll stepped to the front of the singe In Horticultural Hal last night to deliver Ms lecture on "Lllierly and Literature," for tlio testi monial benefit tendered to "Walt "Whit man, the poet of Camden, he was greeted with a hearty round of ap plause from an auillcnco of about 0,000 perron. Sealed on the platform were Walt "Whitman, the ngl beneficiary; Sirs. Robert G. Ingersoll, 5IUs Maud Ingcr soil, Dr. John K. Mitchell, Mr. Whit man's biographer! David McKay, his publisher: Colonel JSuclld norland, chairman of the ways and means com mittee of the New York Legislature. Dr. Ittirko of Montreal, ltcv. J. II. Clif ford of (Jormanlowii, Horace L. Trocbel, Francis II. Williams, Harrison 8. Mor ris. T. 11. Harold of Philadelphia, and W. IJ. Hicks of New York. The eloquent lecturer lost no time In Introduction, but launched atnncc upon his subject, which he treated last night for the first time, and he held his nudlcncc spell-bound for nearly two hours. Colonel Ingcrsoll's eloquence Is as maikcd as ever, and as lie made the various points In his discourse and coin patcd tbo literature and the Intolerance with which tliu authors and poets of the past were treated with the liberty unit aplrlt of toleration of the present day, uiu auuicncemaniiesieti its appreciation by punctuating his remarks with loud nml piolonued upplaute. and at times when the orator was especially marked and Impressive, by that rapt silence that showed the keen Interest of his listeners. WAl.T WHITMAN' ACIIIEVKJIKNT. He said: "In the year 1M the Amorloan people knew but little of books. Their ideals, their models were Kngllsb. Young and 1'ollok, Addison and "Watts wue regarded as great nocts: some of the more reckless reail 'lhomson's Seasons and the poems and novels of Sir Walter Scott. A few not iiultc orthodox delighted In the me chanical monotony of i'ope, and the rofllly wicked those lost to all religious shame were worshipers of Shakes peare. The really orthodox I'rotestant. untroubled by doubts, considered Milton the greatest poet or them all. ltvron ami Shelley were hardly respectable not to lie read by young persons. It was admitted on alt hands that liurns was a child of nature, of whom his mother was ashamed and proud. "At this time a young man he to whom this testimonial Is given he upon whose head have fallen the snows of more than seventy winters this man, bom within the sound of the sea, gave to the wotld a book, 'Leaves of Grass.' Tills book was, and is. the true trans script of the soul. The man Is ua ma'ked. No drapery of hypocrisy, no pretense, no fear. The book was as original lu form as in thought. "It was a marvelous collection ami aggregation of fragments, hints, sug gestions, memories and opheeUM, weeds and flowers, clouds awl clods, sights and sounds, emotions ami pas sions, waves, shadows and constella tions. HOW 'LKAtEfc' WAS KErKIVEU. "ills book was received by many with disdain, with horror, with indignation and protest by the few as a marvelous, almost miraculous, message to the world, full of thought, philosophy, poetry and music. ' Slbce the year IMS the American citizen Las concluded that it is hardly vinilU while being a sovereign unless be has the right tu think for himself. And now from this height, with the vantage wound of to-day, I propose to eiautine this Wwk and to state in a getwral way what Walt Whitman has done ami the place he has won U the world of thought." The lecturer here divided the dis cussion of "Leave of Grass" into litsTeiesa topics. Under the "Heligloe. of the Body." he said "Walt Whit man announced the gospel of the body, fle confronted the people, lie deeded the depraviiy of nuus. He insisted that love is not a crime. lie taught the dig nity and glory of the father and mother, the aecieu&tzs e' maternity. Matetnlty, tender and pure as the tew of pity, holy as suffering the crown, the dower, thin ecatSA-y of love. "Tome Uw most obscene wool In our language is celibacy. Walt Whit man defended the sac redness of love, tke purity of passion the passion that builds etety tome and tills the world with ut and sung- Whoever dBsfet frocu Use miiiiHerfe, especially wit a led snuhitmse. will ind out flow tfceir kaden thai he has eosa fitted an um uaiuVtfsvbbt sis. It is a crisne to travel a road of your own, especially if you Cup guide-boatds for the utforei of oihawsv "Ko writer must be measured by a word or line or paragraph, lie is to be measured by his work. We cnot measure Shakespeare by a few lines. awilker can we measure the Bible by a few chapters, nor , Levee of Grass' by a few usfugrnfssjs. "WaltWnkman had the couraze to s kpreaa his tsvougbt tfj eamior to toll the truth. Most writers suppress indi vlduality. They wish to plense the public. They tatter the stupid and pander to the prejudice of their readers. "If what ace hnowu as the beat people could have their way the works of llMkkcueM would have bee sup pressed- If she Scotch kirk couVl have otcuicd nothing would suve been known of KuUit Burns. But we axe uoi fenced to n.0 very far back If Mi.ektiipt.aic bau bec-u publUhcd for the Uiftl tiu.c eio Ut'.se ditluc pUya Uulii lliu. i uLIUcjIj Sud aciu ',iu'.ci cv n than the ctclltttliirrt of the mld nlelit sky wotthl be erelttded from the malic. tub ritKdF.nrATTOs or i.ibrrtv. "Walt Whitman is In th hlghMt sense a believer In democracy. He knows that there Is but erne exonw for fwernment the preservation of liberty ; to the end that man may be liappy. lie knows that there Is but one excuse for any Institution, secular and religions the preservation of liberty ; ami that there Is but one excuse for schools for uni versal etlwatlrn, for the ascertainment of facts, namely, the preservation of liberty. 'He resents lire arrogance ami cruelty ot pflwer. He has sworn never to Ire tyrant or slave. He has solemnly declared: 'I speak the password ptlmeval I give the sign of democ racy. I will accept nothing wlilcu all cannot have their counterpart of on the seme terms.' "lie fell as all should feel, that the liberty of no man Is safe unless the liberty of each Is safe. Whitman has reminded the people of this countiy that tbey aie supreme, ami lie lias said to them: 'The riesldcnt Is there In the While House foryou It Is not vou who are here for him.' "In fpeaklng of the Individuality of tlic American, he said: 'In order to pro tect the liberties of a nation we must protect the Individual. A democracy Is a nation of free Individuals.' Walt Whitman has told us that 'The whole theory of the universe Is directed lo one single Individual namely, to you.' Whitman Is lire port of Individuality the defender of the rights of each for the sake of all and his sympathies nrc as wide as tbo world. He Is the de fender of the whole race." The next point dlscusod was the humanity of the poet. Colonel Inger soll said: "Tho great et is Intensely human, infinitely sympathetic onteri tig Into the Joys and griefs of others. When the rcrticctable people of the North, the rich, the successful, were willing to carry out tho fugitive slave law, Walt Whitman said: "I am tlie wounded slave I wince at Hie tiltoot tlie Clogs. Hell ihJ despair are upon me 'Crack' aril again crick' Hie marktmen; I clutch the rails of the fence my Mood chips thinned with the ooieof my skin; I fall on lite weeds am! stones; '1 lie riders fpur llictr unwilling liorwi haul clow; Taunt hit illzry enrs ami beat me with tus butts ot their whip. Atonies are one of my changes of trarment. 1 do not ask the won mini jiersun lionr l feels. I mjielf become the wounded Irsen." The lecturer then discussed the points, "What Is 1'oilry?" "The Philosophy of Poetry" and Whitman's two poems, "A Word Out of the Sea" and "When Lilacs Last In the Dooryard Dloomed." WAJ.T WHITMAN I.Ktl TJIK WAY. He closed with the following brilliant peroration: "Walt Whitman has dreamed treat dreams, told gteat truths nml uttered sublime thoughts. He has held aloft the torch ami bravely led the wiy. "As you read the marvelous book, or the pirwn. called 'Leaves of Grass,' you feel the freedom of the antique wotld; you hear the voices of the morn ing, of the first great singers voices elemiutal as those of sea and storm. Tho borlon enlarges, tbehenveus grow ample, limitations are forgotten the realization of the will, the accomplish ment of the Ideal, will be within your power. Obstructions become petty ami disappear. The chains ami bars are broken ami the distinctions of caste are lost. "The soul is in the open air, under the blue and stats the nag of Nature. Creeds, theories ami philosophies ask to be examined, contradicted, recon structeil. Prejudices disappear, super stitious vanish and custom abdicates. The sacred places become highways, duties and desires clssp hands and be come comrades and frleuds. Authority drops the sceptre, the priest, the mitre and the purple falls from kings. The Inauimate becomes articulate, the mean est ami humblest things utter speech and the dumb and voiceless burst Into song. A feeling of Independence takes possession of the soul, the body ex trends, the Wood Hows full and free. superiors vanish, rUltery is a lot art and life becomes rich, royal and su perb. "The world becomes a personal pos session ami the oceans, the continents ami constellations belong to you. You ate in the centre, everything radiates Hem you and in your veins beats and Ibreibk the pulse of all life. You become a lover, cateleas ami free. You wander by the shores of all seas and hear the eternal psalm. You feel the silence of the wide forest, and stand beneath the titer twined and over arching boughs, entranced with symphonies of winds sod woods. You are borne on the tides of eager and swift rivers, hear the i ush and roar of cataracts as they fall beneath the seven -hued arch, and watch the easeies as they eirclintr soar. "You traverse gorges dari and dim, and climb the scarred and threatening clllfs. You stand la orchards where the blossom i fall like snow, whet the birds neat and sing, and painted moths make aimWss journeys through the happy air You live the lives of those who till tue earth, and walk amid the perfumed nehis, hear the reapers' song, and feel the breadth and scope of earth and shy. You are in the gteat dries, in Use uddet of multitudes, of the etui teas professions You are on Use wfcie plains the nrairiaa with hunter and trapper, with savage and pioneer, and feel tke soft grass yielding under your feet. "You sail in many ships and breathe the free air of the sea. You trsvel tuany roads and countless pihs. You visit unlaces asui prisons, hospitals and courts, you pity kings and convict, and your sysnnntby goes out to all the suffering and insane, the oppressed and enslaved, and even the inf uutoua. You heat the din of labor, ail sounds of factory, inkl and forest, of all tools. In struments and ntachines. You becosne familiar with men and wosuen of all tuiploynujuls. trades and professions with birth and burial, with wedding feast and funeral chant- "You see the cloud and inine ol a.r vou eniov the tBitslahhi uerfect isms of nance, in tfrfa one book, in these wondrous 'Leaves of Grass,' you fnd hint and suggestion, touches anst frag ments, of all there is of life, thai Mas between the babe, whose rounded cheehs uinude h$nnnth has ittoahnv'i laughing, laving eyes, and Uw oUsnan. snow crowned, who. wish a wtafcte. ex tends frft hand to death-" iu row' kvci-i.T. At the close of the lecture Colonel lniiclt saked the t:ucl vf the even lo.' i oikc a few remarks. In Wlaiman is growing feeble, It... ' ;v.ni3 ifj'i u I a n wlili rtlfflnillt that Ire liegsn his brief ad dress. He sen!, tremblingly "After all the main fretor with me this evening is being face lo face with this anttterrce In a meeting like this. I thought I would come to night to be with ymt ami thank yon for coming and Colonel Ingerwdl for speaking, ami with there wortfi I bW you good-bve." After the meeting broke up rmny cam forward to shake the hand of the aged pret. He Imde Colonel Ingersoll a very atTectirmate farewell ami offetwl his sincere thanks, to which Mr. In gersoll replied: "The debt is all on Ihe other side. I am Indebted to yon, Mr Whitman." HORROR IN A TUNNEL. raMrnRtr nml i'ltliclit Train Collide, 7 lie Killed Rtiil iDjnrcri. CtSCIXKATt, Onto, Oct. 38 At o'clrck this morning the soutli-bmiml passenger train, No. 0. on the Cincin nati Southern Hallway ran Into a freight train In a tunnel a few miles i south of Sr.mtriel, Ky. One fireman ami a cotelnrtor were killed outilght. while several others were fatally Injured. Following Is n list of the killed and Injnic-d furnished at the general office or the company In this city: Killed Postal Clerks C. I.. Dolgan and J. G. Gajle, both of Cincinnati; Firemen Walsh and Gould of Cincinnati; Ilrakc man .T. K. Montgomery. Injured Knglnccrs Plnlolt and Taylor; baggage master, name unknown: passenger, name unknown. All of the Injured re side at Somerset and arc being cared for by tho railroad company. None of them arc fatally hurt. The accident was caused by the freight rnglnccr moving without orders. It sldo tracked at Sloan's Valley until one south-bound passenger passed and followed II, the engineer believing he coul d make the next side (rack before meeting the other passongcr train, which was only a short distance bjhlnd the first one. When about midway of the tunnel Ihorc was a terrible crash, followed by the groans of the dying and Injured, lloth engines were totally demolished, In addition to several coaches and freight cars. To add to ihe horror two of the coaches caught file. and Postal Clerks Gayle and Dolgan were burned ailve. The more fortunate imasongers and crews Hi rued their attention to rescuing those Imprisoned In the wreck and who were being consumed In the Ihmci. Those takiu rut were removed to neighboring hourrs where they were attended by physicians tent out by the company. A wrecking train has been sent out to clear away the irVArtV and there will be no delay to traffic. UNITED LABOR ALLIANCE To Jlrreat Cnnillilnlna WUn Will Not Vole In t.nliut'a Inli-rcati. HufcTox. Oct. K. ltepresentatlvea of thirty labor orgaulaiatlous Nationalist and Socialist societies attended the meeting of Ihe United Labor Alliance last nlabt. The secretary rend com munications from fifty organizations In vatlous parts of I lie State, which In dorsed the slot and object of the alliance, promising to support the measures adopted. livery etfort will be made to secure the defeat of all candidates for legis lative positions who will not unbuilt fledly promise to vote In the interests of the labor, or for such measures as shall receive the indorsement of the labor ami other economic organizations. DEFENDED HIS MOTHER. an Inlurlculeil Man Sleela I1U llaatli t I ho lluucli iif a titepun. GttAMLLK, lu., Oct. ?! David Grubhe, a well known farmer living four miles above Grayville, was shot and Instantly killed last night by hU 31 year-old stepson. Arch Wicks. Grubhe had been in Grayville all day dtlakfng heavily, aad on going haute about 8 o'clock began abusing his wife. She ran from the bouse followed by Grubhe. who was about to plunge a knifa into her when her sou. Arch Wieks, attracted by her screams, rushed upu the scene with a shotgun and fired at Gtubbs, Instantly killing him, I.Ike ic Tblr ia Ilia A'lsht. I..KKM.HT, N. Y., Oct. SS. Kev. Mr. Bau-ntine of Seottsvllie. a delegate to the Presbyterian Synod, was found dead in bed at the house of Mr. Alfred Xotfsn, ktre he was stopping, this mornirg. I hart disease is the supposed cause. Eiuteir tVIIIUui at tka TtwMtra, Bkkljk, Oct. 3S Emperor William attended the Berlin theatre last night and witnessed Herr Barnay's acting la "Keen." This is the Brat imperial visit to the theatre since the expiration of his period of mourning. I'nliliwil tar u IititHuuut Wretufc. Pnot ipfcscc, It. I., Oct ft. In lb Cosunton Pleas Court yesterday Jerome Sweet was found guilty of the murder of his wife by saturating her body with kerosene and tting it. lie was sent to prison for Hie. Kttsssl hf iSM KSft4SlSiSMS LiTcuntto. Ximl, Oct. S3. The hotter of thrasher engine burst near hete yesterday, ifeuais IkeUy, aged IS. wns killed, aid twelve jjeniM injured, one Intally- wnunsim u Sr. Pkikuiiu, Oct . Count hUxecui is dying front the eSees of . bullet wound received in a due) near Iwustadt Monday. mt Psjus, Oet. 88 The ptodue-ttou of "CVtropnirn' hen bneit dtdegsed until The Pwtident has (Theater C. Thornton Indian AlfcAcy, Waabington. t YusnUp AjannjrJ yaalBBsn? Ls&a.-Ahnnnv Tssw"W" awesa" eaannvsF "snMsnnlageHp h1 Vtnrtn!' to-flgur kgU. a UtVUtk isnptoved that De. Waks thhtht he wW be out in a short Hum- 1u ou waut to uiakc inouc It to u.. oU t Wwle tlelus. Vui full iuU-: u IUXJ . un I n a. u cal U V. i.l ) - ON THE ELLIPSE WHAT THE FI.YBH8 AUR DOING AT BBNNINiTS TO-DAY. SYRACUSE WINS THE FIRST EYENT. While Bliate Jmdc Dishn First Mk tke Wire ia the Mile Rac. HELEN WALLACE GETS THE THIRD. The Excellent Csrd Prstestwi fr Speta Uten To-Day Owip f lha Tnek. Ia (be Stable aid PaMsek. The Washington Jockey Club tmiH to le a futtnante totporrttlon, for, tin like Its prcdccctMr, It has been, thus far In Itscatccr, bleated with excellent weather. IU losiigural mectlog Utt spring was phenomenal racing weather for this section, and the autumn meet ing ling opened under equally auspicious surroundings. To-dtty, the second of the meeting, was an ideal racing day. There wai a chilly suggetliveneM In the air that tnrulc overcoats and wraps it necessary .adjunct to one's comfort. Hut wlttml the llennlng track wnt m comfortable a place as the sport-lovlntr publlr could find. Tho beautiful scenery, with the Maryland hills stretching away in the distance, and decked In autumn's choicest colors, tho red and gold, ap pealed In tho artistic seuse of the spec tators, while the noisy, jostling, pushing crowd In the belling ring revealed the material tide of man. There was a much larger number present to day and the fair sex was bet ter representee!. The grand stand was comfottably filled, and when the odds were iosted for the first race tho pooi lawn was parked and Jammed with a scrambling crowd eager to Invest their money on their favorite choice. The card was an excellent one. and the different events were hotly con lesled. The public had a better elm nee than on the ttrevlous day, for the fields were not so large and picking n winner was decidedly easier. Following Is a summary of the day: RYH.Cl'K TIIK WINNKII. First race, mile Klla II.. 110,11. Doncn. 1(5 and 0; Lsdy M.. 107. Tully, 1.1 sml 0, Syracuse, t'.t.'.Scovel, t straight; Consignee. 110. Rogers, 5 ami 'i; Spen cer, 115, Hill, 1.1 and 0; Slohlcan, 110, Ionen,Oand:t;GrevGown, lM.IIaggln, 10 smltl; ThelUven, 11.1.Taral.7aml2, Iht rati. The small field got an ex cellent start after several break sways and The Haven took the lead, followed by Consignee, nlth the others well bunched. At the half Haven was lead ing by two lengths. Consignee second, while Scovel on Syracuse was a good third. At the turn the positions were unchanged, and, passing the three quarter pole. Haven had a laid of a length and Consignee bad fallen hck lieaten, Syracuse moving up to second place, and Mohican third. Into the stretch the horses came with little change lu their position, but, ncarlng the wire, Scovel let Syracuse out and finished an e.wy winner by two lengths. Haven second awl Mohican thltd. Time, 1.134. HI.VE .KAN IX TIIK HKC'OXIl. Second race, 1 mile Klcve, Itogert. S and 8: Hlue Jeans, 115, Taral. 8 to 5 and 1 to 2; St. John. 110, Tully. 13 awl 0; Lengstreet, 110, Scovel, 13 and 0; Fannie II., 107. Jones, 13 and 8; Wyndham, KU. Hay. 10 and -I; King llaieu. 101. Hill. IS and 8; Foxmede, 101. Sinev, 13 and 0, Keiiwood, 139. Taylor. 0 3 straight. 7Ar Kit-4 Hlue Jeans made a run away race of it, leading front start to nalsh. Tarsi e-ot away In the lead, ami at the quarter Wyndham was meck-and-neck with him. Fox made third. St. John moved up Into second plaee at the half, hlue Jeans leading by a length and Hell wood third. In this order the horses passed the three quarters and Into the stretch when St. John fell back and was passed by both Fox wed a and Hell wood. Blue Jeans won handily, Fox wide second and llellwood third. Time, lit. Bt.ri-T or THE TU1KK HUB. Third race three quarters of a mue. J.Ln X, 100: Hay. n and 3: Adair. 103, Hayden. and 3. To IJpe, 103, Kiley. 7 and 3; Yftijel. 103, Taylor. 3 and i; Sit que see colt. 113. Tarsi. 7 3 and 1, Wal'ace ally. 113, Leonard, 7 and in ro Helen Wallace Stat, Two Lips second, Sequnnee cost third. The following are Use remaining vents: rourthrare.haniitoap, 1 l-'K Miles-Vivid. V0i C-uuwor, ttf; Iceberg. Mi M. tuke. to; Wue Jeans (femserlj hassosi;, UW; strad tei, 115; hbutljrr, ). Filth race. selMtuc, ! nule - Prank Ward. 11 Parthian and sUsntvie. to? earn; l-subnuest. 10fv. Vivid, UH; liover, M,tieu eiul IkHtlangeri v7- 1lf stuMi Tun TtueK. nodo was gatne rally tipped for the 3 jear old raee. but she was not in it at any stage of the game. Salle t Or's time in Ihe mile handi cap. 1 Hi. shows the track to be in -celu-nt condition, and if good veuibtf rontinuea it will he decidedly f a hnfnst the end of the week. iitadford and n. Luke ought totlnish in the otdet nanud lu the fourth tmx to day - Jiuuujr fVw is making an etueitont starter. He got on In the big sWfcfe in the Am two mens excellenJy. although he held thn hosaes at the post in tnir titst kunge than was necessary. The tajpnjt vs all upset over Mabel's victory in the fttai and Cesebus' in the third. Both were long shots, and the lucky unns played the uwrj more tor M-nUnittirt than ant thine le. Tun ITiUTU was ahead on the Ui. k tu.w. as uul- It puMithed the results iu Lbe Stat two races. Htting nothing to fe-ir fr ui t).. enndty of the club, the "JVuu e -ui.. t-ook toiduyw are posting odti "U i-n. rac'ta. IHtsth-vood tsiifht have won yeatecdnj lu the thkd rave had kt not been for h& rider. KwUy. With kix pounds onsw weighi he tan a good acood, and An worst of it ia, the jockey ktic-w he w ocrweijrbt nal weighed ia with a ii!hl saddle. The Irte-k 'tc iceu-.l tTui Lbc race- iij.1 iLi i.'Jjt J I, L.I kLi.t I .1 I 1 iLi , '... 1 c ' i.i ' i v.L i- i i Lul . . what the mlMake hi, strchtrtcfcwryskonM not 1 tolerated. Most of W. It. .Temitws?!' hones are In prime eotwiltlmt, and It will tm wet' for speculator, lo keep an y cm thr-m. CotnellR will tret there before the meet ing ia over. Walt nntll Klphln and Klllarney crt the run of that jmripfng course. Mo Iermotl's Idg howe will make a orry show of the rest of thew. In the or roml race yesterday liCnti Hue wtw heavily bscken i the hrtr went lo the pott, ami the odds pounded down cotisiilprably. What l Judge Iturke gnlng to do about Mlrlhwomfg overwetgnlt W hst will the executive committee dot Tw say lire least Kelly deiertes a repfi mand, and so dn Ihe owner. WINDOW OLAIS TRBST. It tit It tlnl.T llrtimrnla n Mlnorllj- f the AlimiifnctHrern. Cnka.o, It t , frt. 22. The window gla manufacturers will to-day complete their nrgnnlxttlnn. Subscriptions to the capital stock of the American Ghtm Company, by whleh name the trust Is known, will be made this morning. The capital stock la lo be $600,000, the factories contributing $100 for each pot In their plants. Manu facturers representing 100 pots signed the agreement, alrout 300 pots remain ing Independent of the trust. The organisation as completed In cludes all the factories at rittsbtirg, all In Ohio and all In Indiana except the factories of C. P. Cole at Dunkirk. Hint State. The United Olas Company, a smaller trust, will probably ire ab sorbed. The companies refuting tn join the trust say that no attempt will be made to lower prices or Interfere with the operations of the organization. They will mark prices up to the trust scale, and to all Intents will be In It except that they will have no part In the ex penses of the operation. BASEBALL TROUBLSS. Chances or an Amine tile Hattleineiit Are Milliliter Thau liror. Nrw Yokk, Oct. 38. From all ap pearances this morning Ihe chances of an amlcablo settlement of the bttc bnll troubles are smaller than ever. The Independent feeling which existed yesterday among the mom bets of Ihe various conference committees has beeu strengthened and has now become a determination to stand by the course already outlined by carh committee. It Is admitted by many baseball men that the present state of affairs Is due lo the action of the Players In fmciug their way on to the conference committee of the Players' League. Tue various com mittees had several private conferences this forenoon and the prevailing opinion was that there would Ik- no regular conference to day. STABBED IN THE BACK'. A tVuiilil-lls Itulitter Nmtrly KIIU a Wi-alUiy l'nrmar, iJKTitoiT. Mich , Oct. iW. A special to the AVi" from Port Huron says: Last night a man named Pellett called at the house of James O'llara, a wealthy farmer, living near here, and asked for a drink of water. It was given to him. and while O'llsra's back was turned Pellett stabbed him several times. Mrs. O'llara Interfered and was also brutally pounded and stabbed. Mr. and Mrs. O'llara It is thought will die. Pellett eaoaped, but otttcers are In pursuit. Hobbery was the object of the ataault. MATH AT THE ClOiSUN. rairnm lBjttrl umt an risglnaer Kllldl lu h Kallr.Htil CuIILIuk. Kansas City, Oet. 33. A collision between two passenger trains occurred early this morning at the craning of Ihe Union I'eeiiie and Hock Island roads west of Amourdale. One of the engineers was killed and a number of passengers Injured. Tlukortus the TartM. Herijk, Oct. 83. The baals for negt tiations to secure a revision of the commercial treaty with Austria is being & i'tldered at a conference of expert a representing the federal Slates of the tifcpire. Only a slight decrease in the duties on iatpotts of agricultural products will, however, he agreed to by lieiuisny, ttkk-h country will probably favor Italy to the same extent A Wealthy Hitwer' S44ai Ilaolfc Xew Yobs. Oct. 93 Joseph Rubsant of the nrm of Kubasin A Hermann, the wealthy brewers of State Island, died suddenly front apoplexy si a late hour last night at his home on Boyd street, Stepteton. feVinttn Island. Mr. UttUant was 3n years ot age. lite fortune is variously estimated between l.08u,u0t and $3.uuu,ia. His wife and one daughter survive him. w AUIL.jclnl laUaUtk. mgkammsm "nwsstsppr tw y mwnm9so Jiot-LAKo, Mu-u., Oct. 38 Her. John Koett-r. paator of a non awtirtan church here, is now In jail at Grand lUphis. charged with altoantlag the af feetlous of Mrs. John Lint from her husband Mrs. Lint is a metuher ( Koster's church and the nrteat has caused a big bensatton. Lint wants fS.touu dstunges and bis capias is the cause of fccOaWr's Inesjceratton, Amm $ dmswtann. 4 9um. fauts. Oct. 33.-4 meeUng will he imiii b tbnnsnmheH of the naetv of slight in the Cbambei of IffJUHtf to twnsider paopostiion to hwy poll tat. o foreignnr. Hjut4.it. ct- 33 It U said that the accHoJiu. will orgnnUe a bureau to ascertsiu the cin-uuisiances of the worh uMfs is connection with the matter of cre-cikn ef cheap dwellings tor igudc use t iixu MMttn WsasV h d.i.M.. Oct 33- Captain Jam. rJhtttor, fotwrly president of thstlnouah tw Jtx.pn.ss Cotnyany. and since kham nsnnngei for the Adams c.s.pres t asn pnnylt Uds city, drhd to-day. Venus n4 a wnrtwimataeyn, S.w FuvNvI-ku July i-. -Morgen tLiUACu 9 cicuJ e uJ iOi orks W.lI U il -' Ul't ..I ll IIU'IU . 3 I , ' TAX ON GLOVES I II I ! ' IT IS FArECTKU TO RKTrRN A RKPRESKKTATIVE. GOV HILLS GREAT SPEECH IN OHIO. RfMfctis Men ami Dwwcnila Adrind to Doth MeKialty. THF, mrklU lMTHi KEYSiDNE stats. Quit Calltt Dm to Dmeal Warns Mm- Vatgk's Ling g 0ttiag His Ptiy f "Bigniilen Silent." One of the reasons urged for Ihe re election of Heptesenlallve Snnfonl f the Twentieth Wew Yotk dlsttlct Is that he got a protective duty on ladles' gloves, which will enable the glove monopolists of Qlorertrille, X. Y., to reap a rich harvest. Oloversvllle Is lire centre of the glove Industry In this country. Heretofore Its product was confined to men's gloves. The new duty will enable these thrifty persons to lax for their own benefit every wearer of ladles' gloves. There was a fight over the duty. Mr. San ford was opposed In his scheme to benefit some of his constituents at the expense of everybody else in the coun try by Hilly Mason In the House and Senator l-'arwell In the Senate. They represented the Chicago and New York glove Importers. An enormous lobby becked by great wealth, with General W. Y. Dudley as their attorney, opposed the duly. Of course. Mclvin ley and his men wouldn't lose a chance like this to Impose a new tax. The new duty consequently was laid and San ford is banking largely on It to get Itlm hack Into Congress. Tlie lnitort of ladle' gloves have been from $0,000,000 lo i.7,000,000 annually of late year'. For this booty the monopolists of his dial i let can 'well alTort to send Sinfor.l beck to Congress. The New Yotk l'rt Is sod because blmllnrr twine is nu the free list. A machine shop In llrooklyn had a mo nxly of making the machinery that manufactured binding twine, and now that that article is dutiable only at seven tenths of a rent a pound that part of the machine shop's monoply Is broken up. The l'rtu, of course, cares nothing for the Western farmer who will lie benefitted by the reduction. Governor Hill of New York mode a great -peceh yesterday at Canton. Ohio, McKlnley's home, liefer ring to the course of the Republican party In the late session of Congress he said: No party baa more rvcklestl j deflect prece dents, mure rtagrautly disregarded prinel plfs, wore boatUullvuvrlurncl traditions, umm acrtoiuly Invaded private rigbta, mora arbitrarily encroached upon prerogatives of States or more tyrsnicallv used the power of apartlssu majoilty. Tbe animating mo- ttvw .if Its ! kM. in !.., Im.br amIv tliA perpetuation of lt owu powar. It has ' eared r.otnlng for tbe Coaatltuttoo, notbing for tbe Treasury, nothing for the people. Its chief desire has iten to get such a Arm grip or control of (iovernetent that tor gea erationsto come Its politicians auy feed upon the apoiit of or. The Governor riddled tbe Republi can party ami closed as follows: Then In rone-lution of tbe contest le this, tb- Sixteenth Cotigrrastoual d'stilct, 1 urge every Uewoerat tu vote- for Jubn U. War wick. be mttaucratlc- i-sadtdate. For McKlule). iwraonall), I have Uw hlgtteat respect, lie l a geutlL-utan of Integrity, capacity and many ot In r excellent quartUs; as a elllsett and a Belgbbor I have no doubt ou all thiuk well of him. lie wlU not deuy that he I a most bitter partisan, ami was never known to aupport a Democrat for a public position, tit friends art tut asking eompnmeutary votes In his behalf. 1 want you to refuse tkrtm, beeauae he represents principle In which you dou't believe, lie has no jut claims uj.oo your utTrayc-a aa 1 "tmocraia. There appears to be no reason to fear j jacnit-cvy aaucicwi. The campaign in Pennsylvania, con linuts to grow in warmth. The Lincoln Independent Itepubllean eommtt'ee of Pblladmpsdnnow call on Senator Quay to unseal ihe lips of Wayne Mae Vnagh in telaiioN to the charges freely preferred against Quay that be looted the State 'fitasury of Pennsylvania, and that tenatorramnton. Mr. MneVnngh. Chris Msnee and others ntadn good the de- Quay's silence only grows ni&sd. dig- Quay has steuned Jarrett of tin plain fajsw nml Consul nt Htrmtngham from ntnhinst stmeches In rVnnsvlvania. Jarreti, it charged, was drafted during the war, and to es cape service skipped to Wte. He also, during President 4'' tout's term, referred to him M gotuuiacd. bt-tter ntled to Ug fat thn kitchen than nay other prt of the White House. Aud further, when he went to England, he reprusensed him self as the spuclat bearer of goad wishes from the President to Lord Satiahury. It I wdd thnt bundle of 50U press clin pinss. mostly from Indiana and Illi nois, has been received at titst While House, urging the sppotnimeiat of Judge Gresham to the nupreme IVwut. ti,iti, Uju, tht J The depirt sent Handing c-wtunUtoe of the al dkrs' and aiuVm Houw ho tuajc a tlaocough esmination tu'" the cbiuses so f rtTy published against the Uomt hew and has iud a rvtajfttttortemitng the cmclal in ehWtfe of the inntittttinn from the- ic-euiJwu ut u.iaiaanajc nuut and ve'tWe-t. -4Utug uuwuaaxtHvreeM aaVctnU, t?.cN M lo. 'i't V- (M .'' I'M.i-u'.ci't 11. n ' tic Un.ixjj sVtayrfnrsnn vf ifexim hns gncosnniiiBndttd hoecott ed the San eli"nf" and Ann- gmm ! llGrenl trV emU. 4WaUnsVnmmmmL. buaethe tond aefusni tw U .sw 9iito& tetdsnte to ewunamnvs ni nemusnd rate. tc v. u aii. r . UiW. luoUtc ' to L v '. ' at Wwl 11, uL a tV.r !.'! cufoitu . m yijt I j..: ul ' iii If WiLi . t-i l i. ,w - A-.1 3 Cl. 3 . i Ul UTl JTrtT. A l)athlfi- TVrnne .ltth6r rrMet-M Htte h In a Trance, IfRW H0Lt.A!tn, P., Oct. .-'Tlrfe body of Helen Se'tiey still lfm athnf Htotlter's home. The mother so fat- rs refitted to have It lnterre 1 m she Hst thinks her daughter Is In a trt-f. The story of Helen's life is im follows: At an early age she was led astrsy nml soon left her dull country home, anil after a short career in Lancaster she went to Heading and stihseriuently lo Philadelphia. In Philadelphia she mot a young man who prevailed nnrm her to go west wtth him, and he desertml her at Mt. Vernon. Her career there Is told In a tftsiMtcfc received yesterdav from Ihe editor of the Mt. Vernon tianntr. The dltpwKh says In July last tbe girl came ttVetw from Cleveland. The hmtse In which she lived was raided lost week awl Helen was fleed add warned that for (he second nffene he would recelte a workhouse sentence It was the fir time she hot! heen arrested, and, feeling deeply the degradation she took trlmt. The coroner's story was suicide tr arsenical poison. It wasnotlcel thttt mir features were slightly tlngetl wtth color, which the attending physic ian said was the result nf extravasated blond, usttdly occurring in cases of sudden death. This probably explains the trance storr. The physicians here are satisfied thai Ihe conclusions of the Mt. Vernon authori ties are correct and no autopty will be matte. WANT MORE MONEY. r'mplejn an All Ihe Trunk I.tnrnAak fnr Inrrrii'ril Waee. Dktmoit, Mkii., Oct. 89. The mat ter of Incrcatcd wages for passenger trainmen on the Michigan Central has not yet been decided. A similar demand lias been mode by the Lake Shore men end by those on nearly all other trunk lines, and It Is possible that the man agers nf the systems reflected may have a conference before the final settlement of the matter. Although the reiuM for more pay Is made simultaneously on all the lines it has none of tbe features of a strike. The men make no tbrents and fix no special day on which their ropiest must Ire granted. WORK of FIENDS. Italia I'lUil Am it on n High Trratlo Chukx hh Accident. Kansas City. Mo., Oct. . X freight train on the Chicago. Milwaukee and St. l'aul Kallmad was wrecked yes terday on a trestle forty feet high, be tween Colorado Springs and Moalev, by unknown villains. The fireman, 'John Wright of Cincinnati, was Instantly killed. S. C. Mt Klnley, a brakemin. bad his ankle sevetely sprained, lite rails had been loosened end the end pried aimtt with a crowlmr. which wss fastened between the ends to at to pre vent their tllpplng back together. GONE UP IN SMOKE. A Wlille- Lemi tVttrkaTutally ilruye.l bv rite. PiTTfWitti. Pa., Oct. . Davie. Chamber A Co. 'a White-Lead Work, at the foot of Forty sixth street, wet almost totally destroyed by Are at 1 o'clock this morning. Tbe origin f tbe fire is unknown. It was dlscoveied In the drying department. The lost k estimated at ftrO.ouo, fully covered by Insurance. Fireman James KIIU wiw dangerously hurt by lumping; from the third story of the building. John VallftS. soother tjr man. was hit by falling: timbers and badly hurt. MU HER AND S0IC1K. A Mutt Kill h Married VHr ud KtMta UK IIhr T.tfe, 8ak Axtusio, T-.. Oct . A. murder and suicide were commltUiil about o'clock last nlgbt at the cosnsr of Frio and Perez sirens. Mrs. August Mehlle, tbehandeome young wife at it railroad laborer, was shut and killed by Isaac Weiss. Weiss then placed that muzleof the smoking revolver in hit mouth and literally blew out bis brains, hHewfuHy Cost tUt) WI, Maoisok, Wis., Oct. '.'. A fewynart; sgo Peter I ean, a rich old bateheior. died in Superior, leaving a will whleti set aside the land is that city, valued ai 1200,000, for park purposes. Ills brothers and other relatives made a east test, and yesterday, so a dispatch safe, the circuit judge of thnt circuit dsielnjnd it void, an creating unlawful property and ff uncertainty. The case will bat appealed to the Supreme Court. is eave reiiean seas as rsssejej Jfgw Yc uk. tct The muufcin! council of the Irish National benjttf met last night to arrange with sWisiJaw from other Irish toeieties for njtanr tion to William U Brten and JohnimV Ion. A public demuttstraiion n shw cided upon to be held l ntthsw Madison ekcuare Garden or thnMetmv poiiten ttaarrn House hloveenhnr t. 4 general admiislnn will be chnisjed- Vsft eWtjaMeS X tfesisSfeUft SMeKtmto. Kew Yonti. Oct ii-H to repofWm that the IVnlan Drutherhood, In oagr ventioa in Patterson, K. J.. Mfnimy eight, decided that hesenftsw alt r cecdtega of the order shculd b r This change in the system -' r isssJd t have Usen made .!. -f ttpos) the Kcommendsti u i - . era! secretary. Stetnn t fst St. Pah.. Mm..Oc " r km of St fn ' a l loe Mica.. li - Iry. Wi -i ,g untied j' .- r a tlgb' tc ii t -L n Mveuitcr . m t ltry tu! i - .Utsi . - i I winner wt Uu. .rill )....' . r Jae-Vsen c-s bis Uii ii g VlUCiil 1 i-lkUiHUc. Wl. . CM suit of i- H Wawrmau asainst tbe Cntcsico and Ju-m (t r dUMe l coUUhm in tget mill oi tne company, a m tendeud againat the company eeoi. Do mu want to make swat, f Ulhl 4 . ,? wi mum- ad page and aohn . Wagpa- WswatJfJBnWpeaein vspRp p eeww"m Jw sm Ums see snsond nane and 4ohn fmir fi Ik Dutn t V' ! iu i. Ji i I ,,, J nh i u '. 4. . mum