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the t THE ANCIENT CITY OF EXETER A Town Built Long Before the Days of Cœsar. SPLENDID ROADS OF ENGLAND iThe Architectural Distinction of the Cathedral. Different from Those of Other Cathedral Towns—The Glorious Environments Old Devon's Capital—Roads That .Hake American Weep With JKnvy. Special Correspondence or Gazette and .Tournai Exetek. England, July 0.—Nature wears other aspects than those of sunshine and gladness in these "tight little" British Islands. though tumoled u| you by mischievous elves who have watched for your unwary coming, and the fogs and mists (lap about the hills and mountains and slap the faces of the glens and valleys like a ship's unstaid pounding its deck in a storm. But you find «sovereignty of elation anti exultation in wandering alone among tlie historic and scenic glories of any land. A good staff or stick, a stout pair of legs, a receptive mind and above all a cheery and sympathetic heart, whatever your luck, are tne regal companions for such loiter Therain falls nd nature never fails to appear to single devotees at her myriad doors and windws with radiant welcoming.". How witching is even this foggy morning, half disclosing the wondrous charms of valley, mead ana stream ! At. times scarcely can your hand be seen before you for the itrauge eddies, curlings and fantastic con -Volutions of the fog. There is your rood, hard as "British conservatism, beneath your-foet—one of the best and surest und 'most beautiful ways in all the world, to the heart of the American upon it the keen and patriotic pang that those of his grander land are shamed by honest comparison. Drip,drip, drip-from the leaves of the hedgesmto water basins of rock, tlie great .drops striking like silver pellets upon (Swinging glass: until the very chimes of j the fairies are rung in your oafs beside the i road. Not a rod away, but invisible, rivu- j lets of the night's making wimple from rocks to pools, in all manner of melodic , from the staccato of tenor trills to the baritone minors of stately psalms. j It was on stich a morning that 1 came over the east Devonshire hills and halted at a wayside inn, still high up among their wooded heights, as I neared the old cathe dral town of Exeter. As the fog lifted I could see from cart jogging comfortably day market day sales in Exeter. That morning, all the way to Exeter, alongside those huge carts which bowied along under their great, loads sxs easily as over a cathedral floor, and in a thousand other places on the highways of England, Ireland and Scotland, I have inexpressi bly longed for the power to bodily trans itif these gnu d old mails to our country; to make American millionaires, who may stiff have American pride left in them, see their beauty, magnificence and utility beyond those of all things money and patriotism can give to communities'; and to compel American farmers to know what might be the matchless independ ence of their lives anti living with these perfect defences for their toil and homes and granaries against most of the monop olistic and "corner" abominations of land. 1 set out to write about Exeter; but this subject of better American roads will not down. In live years time I have tramped along3,000 miles of British roads, time I step m y feet upon their broad, firm surface every drop of American I tingles with shame at the thought of the mud pikes and hot torn les* sloughs of our own splendid country- rich, greut ami strong enough to match the ads of Europe with« And yet for five months of every year, and in a lesser degree for the other seven, half of the people of our farming communities imprisoned and impoverished helplessly home. As one result tlie people uf the whole country pay. in an indirect Ukl : .bringing Wanderer window cart after to the Hatur fer Each !•!>'■ d road reek's delay. . through annual »harp advances on all food necessities of life, all of farmers lose. ; enough to nu liicli the each vear enormem s superb England anywhere possesses, around every section of cultivable ! United Mates. But our wi.-e American economists, and unwise and often suspicious und shift less farmers who, in the fall, winter and nths, prefe sr their filled and rotting graua .'political parties rat lier than build good roads, both retort ; "Ah, but the grand English roads you glibly write about have been centuries building, flow can we accomplish, in a year or generation, what has required 2 , 0 tH) years' labor f«>r perfection there'.*" This would he good argument wc ue. But it is not. There is not a Bri for that matter a European, stone in existence i hat was no* originally at constructed to absolute ( • begun and however long it may have been maintained. And, with K governmental and social c celvably hard upon peas; wherever these roads exist tin incomparably aids as land in the entire early spring brood and build • it ish opoai lit ions incon populations liti the people i ■i lium.y and prosperous tin while land values have invurmhlv been increased frt Not here they do ltlUto 1. .. . ago Austria built miles of stone highway up and from end to end ot Galicia Poland. Previous t « > that time, materially, a God-forsaken laud existed on the the earth. What was the result .* In less than ten years' time these roads did for the tJ.iMMi.oüO people of Austrian Poland in material and social advancement than aJl the churches, all tlie hooks, all the newspapers, all the battles, all the ruii wavs and alt the governments had c them from the tl the da ached. coiuplishcd 1 Mieczyslaw Cannot OTHfrilb of that grej tion at Cliicag t li vs make intfccussible dilhs i depart ments, prefiftosiw department ? Tin 6f visitors, including city and 'J • of the extensive and luuli olumbian expo-i he trimmed a little ihit i bit» in ati. x for a roa«l .liIV. ill;.ms »iirb: folk everywhere u in.se lu ah h -md pi< a^. largely uepmni on good r si a- w;:ll farmers whose better me vrould be incalculably augmented l.y fect roads, rmglit thus carry «wav with them a knowledge and j.urpor. would not only add bilii..n-o.<. ur wealth, hut land bkxitn and blossom fairer man «wertest gtrrjeri spots in ail th:.-. old worn out Rurope. With such t nouent.*« as with the carts ami cartrnen, along brew of the hills skirling the noble valicv of the Exe, vo ancient Exeter, whit far away to the warm green upon the red cliff» It wa* ioSancient ...... town, built long before « : Öfter Isc, onarians observe that, like trading towns, it was built for .safety some little distance from the sea, and just yond where the river K navigable. Discovered coins of the G dynasty in Syria and Egy: Phoenician •here many y Gornisii and Dartmoor tin. Tlie station. f Devon. ml called the river. Anti 'el •s to i h: s hef • ' hr;.-'. ade and made i: «great i.astly the Saxons fortified the Exe, ami traded here with lomish Britons across the Tamar. ier then for The Exe was the fro Dazunonians, I drove the rebuilt the walls t.f Exeter. The < ■ Britons, cooped up among the ro< Corn wall, soon had their avengers. ■wtiing up the Exe black s.iife and black banners wintered in E>..t.T in 870, rejoicing 4ja.\on beeves and alo. The old ret! «till seen in the Rougemont ruins day, was aiwova getnng beaten ah. Ftezun/ram mîlRary angines and chipj by crosfabpv. boita. William the j|«ermvfrflBi«£o«kiv wishing to meze A t.h el pellmell i wall cs tl ' i Githa, rriother of Harold, «ml her daughter, but they escaped vilely to Bruges, while Perkin AVarbeck.au Bichard IV., when joined by the Cornishraen of Bodmin, besieged the place but unsuccessfully, and was linally hanged at Tyburn. And that lias left just enough sc; ness on the lovely, leafy old city mellow charm to all 'you know. Fifty thousand folk do not live together in a more winsome snot in lina ltuid. Thu embowered Devon hills which surround it, the glorious valleys which reach their greens and blooms to its very doors, the grand sweep' of the Exe vale to the sea, the city's nohle old antiques, its beautiful street's, half in the shadows of « remote architectural past and half in the sunshine of modern elegance ami adorn ment, *give everything upon which you look a awoct und' winsome face. It all blends in that tine sunset glow which somo of these old cathedral towns take on so fittingly. The pleasant seeming smites back to vou from policed from snow white old arches, from red roofs and brighter red hanks of from marvelously clean stone step" and uremvays, from hits of ancient tilings, from doornobs and brasses glittering like burnished gold, from the snuggest ami t rimmest of shop windows: indeed, from all things that can tell substantial, well kept age without the semblance of a wrinkle or a frown upon it. feel this sense of radiating liearti Kxeter around and runs the grim story I imro udd a bright ness and amplitude again i the market places on these pleasant market days. All the country folk gathered here are all garmented, comfortable They all look as though they had stepped out of the "merriè old England" of the hard books, their faces for old Devon and Exeter, its capital, and in themselves. They do say Ihçkens found his "bat Boy," of Di.ttglcy Deli, among them. And well he might, for they aru fat and tine and staunch, and all. Rosy, overlapping jowls and big paunches, suggestive of plum paddings ami the fumons "clotted cream" of Devon, are everywhere among them, ) 1)11 are thus in love with Exeter long before you have many times wandered up and down Oucen and High streets, satin* icrcd through the arcade of Chapel street, peering into the old half timbered strue tnres that cluster in stately fashion around the wide cathedral close, and have at last come among the silences within the great cathedral walls. A pedant can alone tell dÖÖthöi' Hie exactitudes and of j "• , sll °h a mossy, massive, i edifice. Coming one In j splendid cathedrals, y remember «*1 them all those impressions upon your mind and heart which seemed to most powerfully characteristic of each, j In the sense of architectural distinctive ness Exeter cathedral will remain in y. memory remarkahly distinguished frt all other English cathedrals. Their plans invariably Comprise a intge central tower I sum smaller as our in and this not find outside the f those books. Pride glows in England's will at least aurelv Mere towers crowning the transept. This does away with the usual four cumbersome •hitecfurully separating nave and clioir, and permit» the grandest uninter rupted view of vault and vista of the entire nave and choir to hi* found in England. Two other structural peculiarities are seen in this cathedral. The choir anti the of equal length, and through« the whole edifice the openings are wide and low, rather than narrow and lofty. The latter feature contributes greatly.*along with the emphatic hading that the struc t is not a liodgt se in the bc holder of indescribable Whatever el »readtli and spa ay feel Cathedral, which has < within Ex here practically as y ... tainly mure than GUM and perhaps will remain in > î cathedral of England the highest exprès in consecrated »ton« of perfect dignity and repose. Eui.au L. Vyàkkman. * tli: menioty of C II O h FRA / NCR EA S I NO . Mortality. 2-'. - The choierais fhe death rate at •no. July >ff. Samara is higher, with a fewer number of eases. At Astra ban there is a decrease in •taiity. A i that place July 19th sro reported 10* new deaths, as compared with 10ft cases and 132 deaths July 18th. July 10th tin deaths at »Samara, against 7ft 5ti deaths July In It, and ; the be d 13 Sa ratotV lit d ft7 deaths against 20 new :a$es and I t deaths. in •s ami tlirc de: •ported. At Hostoff'the figures i .31 have increased deaths. At Tsuritzirn, July IStli. there Ni new cases ami .*4 deaths; at Tagan s and rog, three deaths, and at Azof,'. D. and 22 deaths. < V X A n.V l'KARH Mm :kal, (an.. July 22.—Prominent men of this city have sounded an 'ainsi the danger which they de Catutda fn lieu I ah •holeru " the IT • as well as t the itmrnntine regula tions of the Pacifie and tfiet.itlf .-I St. Lawrence are most defective. The i liait governme quently been called to the defective system but nothing has been done t" remedy it. Dr. Lefever, chairman of the Maneuver, B. C., hoard of health, declares tin danger Atlantic coat î . it of c the t ex P. anti <ai y against and small pox, by immigrants and passengers from China and Japan. : in; FhtliMfelliliia lltirnoil • Their (' .. .»uly 21. -Fire of t tie tug boat Irwin of !;•• lay at her wharf here tin* dlscat Tim Irwin «> Milford—TP up less the ; .. Mn. roan, D the upper v. / burned eurlv t bis m< -t discovered in the pilot ah Work ot the Mi :ppl the b pr< d to tlie pih • !. "tie- extent -îiirti . i and t.stly -.tvetl theVlothes th 'J 1 , Udphiii parties and was fully .\|)|*i*iatinei)ts. •e rail mat I i lloid. He Ini I »ei mar i.v H. \V. 11 i S! r tor there. a:- ! per with the and ... , r ' 1 some be •n tipp*. in ■ I'.. \\ . , M.'iiger c.s Rohi h- 1 intuck. \ .«1. t ms 1 Ik t a ct : i per vis I. has been f !*.. W. A B. ra red the divi 1 Phil: i)H wc.' U •1 i.. Mother of the We, rait ivnu divi. d has succeeded Mr. MoCiii daiori. . I the Pennsvlv; . the i i Maryland i t. in i'tc A sail boa ir: the D' laware off dday I t he place, t : ■ ..(•cup: ,ed drotvni i narrow: v I. su'..' the I 1 and fr d Hie >r that the I that they w called ; \ Anti- I tie ' Kevoiutiiiii Krafl. General V. Duz he Fa\ gi»l ft;: y ■ V Hus morning, !au- Judge Nel Wood of Morristo'vn. and a lineal lunt of Jonathan Dayton, first f the I Ions*'ol' Representatives, ras a member ol the Daughters of the for the desp ! the with the lution. Jie\ t l>estmye«t i: .' A Co:« .k. Pa.. July 22 . The Bar Wit, The with and i i el Pittston, operated by the Coal ( «itnpanÿ, rning. The Five hundred cud shaft i Pennsylvani; stroved hv lire this a» de The loss is ici u ot the jii and Of lire is unknr boys •tit of work. • throw f.HMlrr ftnhlietl. •VJr.1 of John Thieve« enteret I Meal *., . No 20ft M irket snroet. W.îdncsday ■ i ' evening and stole tèft'i from the • sal. 'n.;- J drawer, after which they Proceeded to the cellar and emptied the larder. A TERRIBLE TORNADO. A Three Liven Lost anil Much Property Destroyed. Damaged Madison, Win.. July 21.— A destructive trtrnudo visited the town of I Sylt ysburg late Tuesday night. The storm formed on the Missouri river and swept, west through the state as far east as the Minnesota line. At Gettysburg the storm assumed the proportions of a tornado, completely demolishing the Methodist church, school houses, several tine residence* and 1.1 business houses. Every vestige of the Athwiite printing house, with its heavy machinery, was obliterated and tlie ? scattered about the prairie. Mr. William Herrin and dren were crushed to death in their home. Twenty-five horses and cattle were also killed. The railroad tracks were torn up 1 telegraph wires prostrated. At the town of Woolsey, AO miles south of Gettysburg, 10 buildings were demol ished, hut no one was hurt. These storms covered a wide area and it is probable that, much more serious dam age will be reported as soon as communi cation can he establshed. o chil • LIGHTNING, A WOMAN Kl I.LEO Eli.endale, S. D., July 21*—-A heavy electrical storm struck Dickey county last Tuesday night. Mrs. T. H. Bunker of this city was instantly killed by lightning. A TORNADO Wit ECUS A TOWN. Thu People Fled to Cellars and Cave« and Only One Man Was Injured. Ottumwa, 1a., July 22.—A terrible tqr io swept , just west of here, yesterday, blowing down and unrooting several residences. The tornado struck Hitman without warning. Tlie first- building to suffer was Welsh Union Church. The store of the Hitman Supply Company caught it next and was ruined. The Wapello com pany's hay barns were the next to suffer, and*in a few minutes they w ruins. Twenty dwellings w many unroofed, and n regular panic oc curred among the people. As they cellars and caves for protection many k with flying timbers or carried fre their feet. Only injured. the mining town of Hit the ss of wrecked anti ns seriously FOREIGN MINISTERS. Three LcndltiR Ml.wion» Filled by the I'rctilrienl Thursday. Washington, July 21. —The President sent to the fHinutc to-day the following nominations: State—Andrew I). White of New York to be envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary of the United States Kusoia. A. Loudon Snowden of Pennsylvania (now envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary of the 1 njted States to Greece, Rmimania andServia) tobe envoy extraordinary and minister plenipoten tiary to Spain. Truxton Beale of Californiafnow minister resident and consul general of tlie United States to Persia) to lie envoy extraordinary and minister plenipotentiary to Greece, Roumania and Servia. OEACOX WANTS A DIVORCE. s Store Muy Result in Sending life Wife Paris, July 23.—Edward Parker Deacon, who is serving a one-year sentence, at Grasse for killing M. Abeille at the Hotel .Splendide, lias opened a proceedings against his wife for adultery with M. Abeille. This action is taken by Mr. Deacon in consequence of Mrs. Deacon's application summoning her husband to permit her to have access to the children. According to the French law, if Mrs. Deacon is found guilty of the charge the husband makes against her, she will be liable to a term of ini^irisoninent. custody of thcchildren was awarded , amt they are now in charge to M r. I )«•; of his brother. PREP A RINO TO LEAVE. Mr. Cleveland Starts for Gray (.aides and Stevenson Cliicaco. New Y<on;, July22.--Ex-President Cleve land and his wife leave the city 1 bis after clock on the Fall Riv L boat for Gray Gables. General Stevenson leaves to-morrow morning for Chicago, on tlie New York Central railroad, by special car. He will be accompanied by "General John T. Brock, Judge Goodrich, .fames E. Ewing, Adlai Ewing and W. G. Ewing. Mutter.» are quid about the political headquarter.» this morning. Mitr.hell Still Minting. |*K liHVK, Md., July 21.—The parties that were hunting the shores for Mitchell, the absconding express driver, have returned unsuccessful. A man win* had been intimate with Mitchell states that he heard him say a week or two ago that fie would like to go to Mexico. At the same time he said that if there for a bad deed t here was treaty under which he. could he hrnugl back. Mitchell and was well posted as to where he could not go in safety. Some of the pie in Havre de Grace think he had life place picked out where to go and he lufe carried out the plan. Parties are, still hunting the shore.-. They will take in all possible hiding places before they inpnny is doing Mitchell and will Hav All I of readin •rv ft op. The express ct ervthing it can to find commue until they are successful. Conductor Flagman Killed. Haukkhtown, Mi*., July 22.—In the Norkfolk A Western railroad Rileyville, this morning,John Stoffer, freight conductor, *t* killed. The det Hunk, tiag :i' lent was caused I the wheel of a freight the cabin to the broken car and t.v the breaking • r. The Glich •nth jumped. An Anarchist Plot I P\uts, July 21.—The / ., thar the pul ice have disci î - r.lut to blow up the bourse and other public buildings. The paper adds that tv.o of the i;r*n.spirat(irs have been arrested. near! hrd. ■d • a ttailroad CnUfeion. T-.vnit. •t.. July 21.- A collision took Duinte railroad this •nötig, m which Engineer Chi e«m the Buv Har.lv ; •re killed. •» in lliihmnia. —Mr.», ' hew. wife of Mr. .1. («. t hew, .»ecrotary of the American legation in this city, died at Marian hud, Bohemia, to dav fr. Andrew !>. White Vltmster If. 'V •: jiinot'in, Mil y 21.—The President is afternoon will the Senate the f Amlrew 1). White nd he minister to Russi James Hum.; moon !.<• wilds of. w ul eounty. Pa., Thursday night, with and duo gallons of dimer, was hv: ail his stills iüicitly distilled whtskv. Thi off he i in his h, • and war . apt' led guns, which he : I with th i the dark the h i- thought at. Louis that the .! ib.'-r- ot the Amalgamated Associoti (unploycil in the mills in and uround ( ;!\. who have been out. July fet t.n account of the failure or refusal of the mill owners to sign the scale, will return to work within the next week or two. It is believed the companies will sign the scale. a strike si V. l' 0 |. of the oBcots. luniMl of tho circus men Ivor,, daticcrmisly wounded. The officers were driven off. but the affair attracted a iar;.o number of villagers, who overpowered the circus men and dragged 12 of them to the Village ioek'OA. the A. dispatch from Pine Bluff. Ark., says that J. G, Kelso, president of the Bank of Magnolia. Ark., vice-president of the Ouchitu Yalley Bank ofUauiden. Ark., and of the Gate t ity Bank of l'exarkatiH. Ark., parsed thi'oug!i there Friday evening his way home from French Lick N Ind. lie denied the hpnngs, that he cnsatii of f 70,600 tah .as a defaulter in the i.t: three hanks. fr< the altem pt by sheriff's officers :h a circus at Phœnl*. Oswego comity. .. tlie oircus meu officers ttii'l a ri de is the New York, Thursday night. < damage to a ennui hoi«, i the i otjened lire hlift'd, in which the staxd nr the baht. A 0. to of of Republican Reminded of His Duty Ills Tarty. York Times. "Bah! Wlmt vile oil thnt is! It Isn't old boots. The idea of a human being t irvitig such stuff Ins cucumber.». Having said this Mr. Jackson sat hack his chair and scowled. of that. Jackson, Burnham, who was seated of the table. "Y here and take spoke up tlie other just come lmck •n modi ' What do you mean by that."' de lm 1 Jackson. "Why. you're a Republican?" "Certainly I am." "And stand up for the tariff 'like a little major ?' " "Well, then, pour some of that oil those cucumbers and down 'em, and mind that you smile while you're doing it. You 't expect, to find' pure olive oil in an rdinary restaurant when yon are collect ing a duty of lift cents a gallon On every of olive oil that is consumed In the country. "1 haven right, being u tariff reformer, sit, hack and make faces at that, bottle, but you haven't that right. It is not for yon to wonder what's in the bottle. I »et. it kerosene oil, whale oil, lard oil, cod oil. rattlesnake oil, or goose grease—you it. That tax of 35 cents u gallon levied for the protection of some infant industry, and every good protectionist must stand by the baby even if she does look badly and smell strong. Don't go hack on the baby, Jackson, whatever you N of a w do. "Beside*, oltl man, it's nothing v than cottonseed oil, after all. Aon stand a little cottonseed oil on your Cucum bers for the dear baby's sake, car -. just try one mouthful. ' *. of the cottonseed-oil T^ink what would b industry if all the Republicans in the country should do what you are doing "You know. Jackson, that, tlie iiltenl in muke it so expensive hut the rich can afford tlie pure article, so that those who have to practice economy must buy something composed almost exclusively of cottonseed oil. If the cottonseed-oil men could have their way. probably they would put a law the statute books providing that body should eat any other oil in ; than theirs, but they cannot have just what they want, and so they, like good citizens, are putting up with what the present law gives them. "That law says that its proper for poor devils like you and me to oat this strong smelling. gagging stuff. You say the law is all right; now, be a man, and help carry out the policy of vnur party, which y j vou approve. Give your cucumbers a >oa sousing in that oil and then eat them, t go back on tlie poor little cottonseed baby, Jackson." What taxing olive oil is that salads Burnham would have said may only be conjectured, for just •finished his last sentence Jackson started for the door. "I'm not mail, Burnham." he said, "hut 1 feci a little bit squeamish." As Jackson passed out of the door a gen tleman at an adjoining table leaned over toward Burnham aun said, "That's the best speech on the tariff that I tened to." Will Tnk* life PunishiMf Jkpfrw Treasurer Ed T. Noland will go to the pen itentiary to-day. He declines to talk fur ther about his case, except to say his mind is made up to take his punishment like a mail. He has made a brave tight, and much regret is expressed by his mimerons friends that ho is to don a convict's garb. He will he unsigned to clerical work in the prison. Ltho a Man. r. Mo.. July 22.—Ex-State "Tired All 1 h» Time. Is the complaira of many p know not whore to «nö relfef. rill«, posse which you mortals, who Ilot Kl s Sarsapa Just ihnen eleinonts of strongth narueatly t: , it will build you «•k. you an appetite, »treugttoen stomach and nerves. T r J* it» HooiI'k Fill» net especially upon the liver. its natural duties, I assist digestion. rousing it from torpidity constipation Pm LA DELPHI A A FF A 1RS. coal denier, committed suicide, Thursday, by hanging. Joseph Ft. Sinnott. formerly of the Times editorial staff, died Thursday, aged 28 years. Ground will be broken s old. John M. Garber, ftO y member day or two Morris and Tasker streets. Frederick W. Kempff, steward of the Windsor Hotel, committed suicide yester day week by shooting. Willie Rhein hard, !fi years old, was drowned yesterday week while bathing in tlie I Vela ware river. Charles Gervert, IS years old. was fatally injured yesterday week by falling from a scaffold at the Episcopal Hospital. The body of : years old. was found floating i ware river Friday evening at Camden. Elizabeth Henry, UK? years old, fell 1 sustained im prove fatal, ears old. of Ash . about ftO the Delà down stairs Thursday juries which likely George G. Louden, 72 bourne, was overcome by the heat Friday and died while he was being removed to a hospital. Johann Matz, ftft years old. Thursday while attempting Reading railroad t racks, front of a train. as killed toss the Oak L Patrick O'Connell, Jr.. 33 years old. was 1 h 'k while rescuing Wo! (I, wli while cleaning a well. James B. Falls, P* years old, a licud in railroad brakeman, killed Thursday, while coupling G irani avenue st; hristiun Nelson, aged .30 years, a the steamer Dunmnre. Iving at street wharf, 1 was drowned. Bainbridgc «•hoard Friday ; coach Thursday ; streets. I Delaw: fell a Continent«: Hotel Juniper and Market •s Matthews and a lady h were injured and tho t was demolished. Christopher Nelson, aged 48 y Friday fr in the abdomen inflicted Wednesd alleged, by J. it. ilcnrlerson. 2 a neighbor. Henderi . died lie effects of a stab w h yeiM-.s old, John Price, one of the striking employes of Hughes o Patterson's rolling mill, ehargcl with hreadi of the pea Himlt and battery oti Isaac Kee. turned to his r>lri place in the mill, held last week in $1,000 bail w|. electrical bureau t hid Walker of pared plans for the trolley system narine and Bainbridge streets, m,; Thirteenth and Fifteenth streets, and they have been approved by the Tracti pany'a chid engineer. William !•'. Ehcrhardt was vesterdav sworn in as an immigrant inspector at this port. He is financial secretary of tin* Local Union, Nt». 8, United Brotherhood of carpenters and Joiners, and a district organizer of the American Federation uf Labor. I ■' During the fin c months of this year, according to reports submitted at Thurs day 's meeting of • insurance pat ml, gated $1.It 17.Ml. In the corresponding period last year there were 047 fires, the losses fooling up $l,4ti*, tftl. Tho ayorsaid Friday that, under the decision of the court, a permit would have to he granted for the erection of poles and wires for the trolley system on entb and Bainbridge streets. The work, he said, will he under t lie super vision, of the city authorities, and every exaction will be required to insure the safety of life and property. A government inspector at Cramps' ship* . i said that work on the armored cruiser New York was being delayed on account of the armor not being receive^ from the •s. the ( arnegio Hteel Companv, limited. The Homestead plant is the only at which armor can he made. Half the side armor for the New York has I »een |. received, but none has been put in place, bpcau«e it is incertain whun th. re m.intlor will come. 1 he vessel. .» remly 'be barbette lu.d swle armor, and work ! cannot be pushed ahead without n. I j he Take Don't fool With iuoigesciun. Beeeham'8 Pills. Il Eilt TO SIX MITA.10XS, Baby Boy It rings Joy to tlio Hearts of the Ilnmersleys. New Vom;, July 21.—President George 0. Williams of the Chemical National Bank, No. 270 Broadway, received notifi cation this morning of the birth of an heir to the Hauler.-ley millions. The baby is the ! erslev of N v o. 41 I Madison avenue, a cousin of the late millionaire, 1. ersley, who: of Marlborough. Mr. Williams is a trustee of the estate, I rejoices with Mr. Hamersley new arrival, as it will save g tiens should tlfe Duchess ol die and there he which would go in default, charities named by the duchess in her will. The notification was as follows : of .1. Hooker Ilam is 0. Ham the Duchess the rest eompliea M a rl borough heir to the fU.O0O.ti0O, New York NBVVPOHT, I., .1 tiljf 81 .—My Dtar . Uavm: Great Joy tuts comet) «h In the shaj . !»> ' , healthy lad. n appear e. has conic I» stay. My wife and the hoy Rom omber •8, Biucprvly. «I. lfiioHr.it Hameksiky. The trustees feared." said Mr. Williams, "that in the event of the early death of the Diichess of Marlborough tlie will would again he contested by the relatives to pre vent the money going to charities. The birth of the son of J. Hooker Hamorsl straightens matters ont considerably. Should Mr. Hamersley have more mal is®no, the fortune left by the lute Louis ('. Hamersley will be divided among them." Under the provisions of the will the Duchess of Marlborough goto the income from the estate, which umoiui 000 annually, until her death, when the entire fortune reverts to the heir. The hoy is the third child of J. Hooker Hiuuersley and his wife, who was Miss Katherine Chesholm. The (fide fit child, a girl, died of the «rip at Atlantic 'Tty. The second daughter was born May 7th, 1881. Lily Warren Price, the prêtant Duchess of Marlborough, hecume the wife of 1. C. Hamersley in 1880, when she wa years old. INTENSELY 1IOT WEATHER . to Mr». w mum *. Y< *150. •born 24 . Kan*«« .Sweltering Old l.tidy Dien Ft Atchison. K-xn., July 22.—The weather is extremely hot throughout Northern Kansas, lu this city yesterday the ther mometer registered 104® in the shade. Three Missouri l'uciftc trainmen ,. w .w overcome with heat in the afternoon and am now in a critical condition. Mrs. Sarah Freedolz, an old lady, succumbed last, night and died before the arrival of a pliy t U«. A Deed of Darkness. The Uhcsterttiwn (Md.) Transcript A report from Uliurch Hill states that a farmer living nights ago heard a commotion i j. lie got his gun and started on a*) tour of investigation, and seeing some., shadowy object near the hen-house iie > fired, not knowing whether the object was a hog, dog or what not. Immediately* after the shot he heard a groan, and getting a lantern found a negro lyi with a sack of chickens which Stolen and killed to stun their that town^ several' he hud" Mnri-if«l life Aunt. Dayton, Ohio, July 21.—A strange wed ding was celebrated here last evening. It was that of Maurice Ydker, a Russian, aged 21, and Mrs. Bertha Jacobs, a widow, aged *15. Mrs. Jacobs has eight children by her first husband, and is the aunt-of the young husband. The couple would never have been licensed to wed, but the clerk of tlie court did not interpret the Russian language correctly, and did not understand that Yuker wanted to marry his aunt. Italdvvin'K Divorce Grnntftri. Elkton, Mr*., July 21.—A divorce has been granted Daniel L. Baldwin, president, of the Baldwin Manufacturing Company. He charged his wife with wilful desertion. The custody of their two children was awarded to the husband. the Cholera Spreads. Sr. PKTKRsiu'Rti, July 21.—It is officially stated that cholera has broken out in the Kooban. the east shore government of the .Sea of Azoff and the black sea. deaths have occurred from the disease i that government. K. C\ Knight. Cait. May, N.J.. July 21.—E.f\ Knight, the millionaire sugar reliner, who 1ms been lying ill of pneumonia at his cottage here, died at 3 o'clock this morning. He was 70 years old. POLITICAL. The People's party of the Sixth Illinois district has nominated S. H. Bashar for Congress. The Republicans of the Sixth Minnesota district have nominated Judge Sea rl es for Congress. The Republicans of tlie Sixth Missouri district have nominated U. L. Haut* for Congress. S. D. Cook lias b.een nominated for (V.. gress by the Democrats of the Fifth Kan su.» district. The Republicans of the Tenth Missouri district have nominated Dr. Itichard Bar thold for Congress. The Sixth Kansas district Republicans hove named H. L. Pustina a grcssinnal candidate. The Republicans of the Second Minne sota district Ini ve nominated Prof. James Mi t Ipary for Congr Congressman < rain has been renomi nated for a fifth term by the Eleventh Texas district Democrats. B. F. ( »racly was renomi nated last week)by the Democrats of the Third North Carolina district. an Thomas H. Carter, of the Re publican national committee, returned to New York Friday Tr The Republican national committee has secured headquarters in New York by id-room building, No. n:s Fifth avenue. Louis E. McComas of Maryland, has been appointed seerotary of the Repubii liaitotial committee, and lias accepted tin* position. Among tGo nomination! Senate Friday by Preside that of Ad; the Harrison was Evcrlyt.f Philadelphia, to bn Bifiningham. Th« Rt'piihlicttii South Dakota, it nominated Pickier and C. II. Sheldon for governor. The Republican state convention Michigan, at Saginaw, Thursday ....... nated John T. Rich for governor. A res lotion of sympathy with Mr. Blaine w adopted. convention of Madison. Thursday, i Eneas for Com uf in execntivi' session Friday of Andrew Russia, A. Loruien and Truxton confirmed the appotntiue D. White us minister Mp; minisuL 1 Beule, minister to Greece. The first state convention of t he People'« party of Georgia met at Atlanta last week. \V. {.. l'eck was nominated for governor, and a full state ticket was also named. The Omaha platform was endorsed. A Washington special to the Baltimore News says that "it is understood by some of Mr. Hill's admirers that he has for soin« time contemplated resigning from the Senate. He may do so ac any time. ' The stale convention of the People's party of Florida met last week at Jackson ville. A number of Republicans partici pated, und it was announced that, "if the state ticket is half-way acceptable to the Republicans they will endorse it and a hot light for the Democracy.'' The convention of the Florida People's party, at Jacksonville, on Wednesday night, nominated AUnzo P. Baskin governor. The platform embraces Omaha platform, and a resolution was adopted recommending a tax of *1 per box all foreign oranges ami of 10 cents all imported long stapfe cotton. the the of life the pound of Democratic state convention of Mis »een souri, at Jeffers nated W J. Sto re- bullol,. The nlulfnnu rleclarution „nhc « 'hicus ceridns the "K | .'ity, last week, _ : for governor, after commended convention con twree bill." The convention was in session nearly all of Tuesday night î-thit (1 of the dele and at>one time fully ] gate-- wer« obliged to leave the ball, owing ' to the intense heat. IX GENERAL. Ex-Mayor Courtland H. Smith of Alex andria, Va., died Friday of an overdose of rpbine taken to alleviate pain. Three cases of small-pox have occurred within a week among the servants of a hotel at Block Island, Rhode Island. The wind reached a velocity of SO miles "" hour at Huron, S. D., Tuesday night, 1 several buildings were unroofed. Lieutenant Samuel II. May of the U. S. Navy, committed suicide in New York lust week by shooting himself in the head. A Burlington freight train broke in two ami was wrecked yesterday week, fc'hrce tramps we Colonel K. A. Carr of the Sixth Cavalry, was last week appointed by the President to he brigadier-general, vice General Stan ley, retired. Henry ,1. Gardner, who was governor of Massachusetts from I8ftft to ISAS, died at his residence in Milton on Thursday night from caucer. are the Son and Plattsburg, Neb., killed. say The iron miners at Belvidere, N. J . a strike because of a proposed reduction in their wages of 50 cents per ton, to go into effect August 1st. Abram Provost, an ex-judge and prnmi politieiau and merchant of New Brunswick, N. J , dropped dead Friday. He was 00 y oars old. The proprietors of the Helmbacher fc Tudor Iron Mills, at St. Louis, have re fused to sign the wage scale submitted by the men and a lock-out lias resulted. During a severe storm at Richmond, Virginia, Monday night, lightning at ruck a house and killed a Emmett, his wife and three children. Four workmen were asphyxiated in a vat at Louis lluck &■ .Sons''tannery, in Chicago, Thursday, and three died. The recovery of the fourth was said to he un likely. ' Advices from Loon Lake, in the Adiron dack», say that Mrs. Harrison is improving «really euch day. Wednesday she walked, >tor the first lime, some distance from her in m Î named Dale a li cottage. A Pennsylvania train, at jersey.. Wednesday, struck a Newark, New , truck which the track. Two the driver, James Burns, were was being driven f killed. t'hurle« Reilly was convicted in New York Thursday of murder in the second degree. He killed James Kelly, who re fused to go on a strike when ordered to do by Reilly. A violent electrical storm, accompanied by rain ami bail, passed over Harrisburg lost night. Several buildings were damaged, killed and Harry Meek was ik by lightning. The cases, of small-pox at Block Island have caused that popular resort to he almost entirety deserted. The cases of the disease «vere-not serious and all the patients have been carefully isolated. Tne officials at jUtyHlkg June IU2 smiths and Pff •'New Yorkrfroiu abroad. They wc fur different parts of the country. The result of the enumeration of Chi cago's population, which has been going for some time, under the auspices of the school census oommittee, shows that Chicago ha» Jr.-tüSpIl .S people within her limits. Mother Catharine, the Order of N general of the order Milwaukee yesterday. She was 71 years this country from France Ellis Island machinists, moulders arrived in î bound report that 2f8 black mother superior of Dame and commissary America, died in old and came in 1847. The President has approved the joint resolution providing for an investigation of the slums of cities. Also the act pro viding, when a plaintiff may sue as a poor person and when counsel shall be assigned by t he court. The Pennsylvania company has made a passenger rates between Louisville I Chicago, and the Louisville A Nash ville has announced a reduction in tlie rate for round trip tickets between Louisville and New York. A case of sporadic Asiatic cholera ported from Saginaw. Mich. Tlie patient died and the authorities took precautions to prevent the spread of the disease. Tlie who died ha«i come from Scotland only five weeks ago. The Coroner at Covington, Ky., lias re turned a verdict in the matter of the fall of the Covington and Newport bridge. June tftth, whereby 25 lives were lost. The contractors wdre absolved from all the blame for the accident. The schooner Fred Tyler, laden with coal, hound from Philadelphia to Boston, ashore on the rocks near Guilford. Conn . Thursday morning. The vessel to the bottom with G00 tons of Tho crew escaped in their yawl. Tlie puddling department at the mills of the Crum Creek Iron and Steel Company, Ridley township, Delaware county. Pa., sumed operations last, week with union men. paying the new amalgamated scale. A number of the old hands returned work. Two prisoners, ore a white other a negro, e Island, New York, Friday. They jumped into the East river, intending the Long Island City side. ? ! drowned, but the white man reached the shore safely. tool. ntui tlie ied from Blackwell's Hie ne The principal fit millers of New York city--including Hecker s mills, the Jewell Milling Company, the Kings County Mill ing Company, the .Stuten Island mills and Jones »V Co.—effected a consolidation Thursday, the now company having a capi tal of *7.-Viu,0O0. J. J. Bowles, •bant of Keedville, Ark., vesterday>hot and killed two while ut, Wilcox and Ace. They had quar relled and Wilcox and Are went to Bowles' ; with the avowed intention of killing m wounded, and he s they entered the store. Michael Parley amt his 7-vears-old . Annie, were found dead in the of Varley's house, in New him. Bowles had shot bot h hath-r York. The gas was turned on. It, i: known whether their deaths were dental cripplo with her father. George Downs and Joseph McAfee, two miners of Hnrrilon City, were run clown icitl killed last week by an eivr.ne a short distance above Manor, Pa., on the f'laridge branch of the Pennsylvania railroad. They both under the influence of liquor, the track when the intentional. The child was a •J always slept in the same room ere sitting tine struck them. Tersev ( itv Thursday t hat tho TV in pi ••paring •I va a Railroad Company railroads, all converging in Newark, thence to Je City by way of the plank road, and to New York from' Jersey City by means of the Chambers. Dtsbros.ses and Fourteenth street ferries. A naptha launch, bottom up, Wednesday Robert Soltau. a well-known India rubber •liant of Now York, ami bis brother •st, lately arrived from Hamburg, were missing. They started fr York in tlie launch f. Monday, and it is supposed the launch was caught in the storm of that day and •ere drowned. dies with oh If lids , wns found g Branch. N. J., and K I : Branch « dthat both A Wheeling disnatch savs the ger of a riot at Opokiska, on the Monon gahela. The union miners struck because of the discharge of eight miners by the Acme Coal and Coke Company. 11th. Twelve non-union at work, and have since heen subjected to abuse and intimidation by crowds from other mines. The company has called the sheriff for protection to its prop for per remained ertv. The President of the United States Thursday issued a proclamation, in accord wit h the action of Congress, declaring the 21st of October. 1892. a national holi day. it being the luoth anniversary of the discovery of America by Columbus. The President especially recommends that the day ho observed by patriotic exercises in thi* school houses throughout the couotry, and that thanksgiving services be held in the churches and other places of assembly. The.Secretary of the Treasury has written Samuel Gompers, president of the Federation of Rubor, accepting his offer to detail two members of that organization assist the immigrant inspectors in the enforcement of the Alien Contract Labor law. In his letter, to which this is a re sponse. Mr. Gompers says that he has authenticated information that ; ■et lent cd number of ire steel workers had arrived i in the past ten days at New York, Balti more and Philadelphia, most of them giving Chicago as their destination. He says he hears that they expect to be shipped from Chicago to Homestead. letter I!) tho workers and this country EVEN IXO ECHOES. In '04.—Fred—You look tired, old man. Ned—I've studied pneumatics two hours. Fred—Pneumatic tires are very common.— Yule Record. Teacher—"Can anybody tell me why the multiplication table stops with 12 ? ' Son of Superstitious Parent—'Cause its unluckv to have 13 attable." --Dundee Weekly frétés. "I always get up in a crowded car and give a seat to a lady," remarked Widgley. "Lucky dog,'' returned his corpulent friend. "I always have to give up two seats."— Chicago Nem. Featlierstone—" What did your sister told her I was here in the Bobby— say when ; parlor waiting for her? "Nothin'. But she took a ring off finger and put it on another."— ~ rife. win v NOT? There was a small urchin named Guy. Who It ad eaten too much apple-pny. He'd groan and he'd suy, And out loud he would cruy, "O Goodness, I know 1 shall duv !" — fit. Nicholas, "Been any callers?" asked the Hon. Mr. Blunks. "Yes, one," answered his secretary. "Patent medicine man was in to see what we would charge him for getting a few testimonials into the Con gressional Record ."— Indiârutpoli» Jour nal. untii 1 m et you." He--"And I never kissed a Î irl before in my life." And little oUnnie, who had been behind the por tiere, tripped softly away whistling: umthing of a liar myself." York Herald. She—" I never loved any : New Presence of Mind.—Jakey—"Faddcr, a shentlemans haf fallen troo de coal Isaac—"Clap te cover ofer him for a rreM him for ub for hole ! kcrvick, mein sohn, vile 1 r policemans. Ve must li vin' to steal tc coal, o tamages."— Life. "llow is your father coming on?" asked Col. Verger of a darkey he used lie am dead !" • lie'll to own before the "Dead, is he? Ho must have reached advanced age." "He did «lat, for a t'ac'. He was libln up to de berry day ob his deff ."—Texas . Siftings . "It's a pity to let all those old settlers drown," said Mrs. Noah, as the ark floated. "They won't if they're truth ful." said Noah, with a chuckle. "One of 'e this storm isn't a marker to one he re membered back in 47001)0."— Life. Friend—" What on earth arc you doing to that picture?" Great Artist—"I am rubbing a piece of raw meat over this rabbit in the foreground. Mrs. Do Shoddie will be hero this afternoon, and when she sees her pet dog smell of that rabbit she'll buy it ."—New York Weekly. Mrs. Brown—Isn't it a shame? Here's a base-hall pitcher that gets $5,000 a year and there are plenty of clergymen who do not receive $500. Mr. B.— But telling me yesterday that ! He—"Do you ever mean to marry? She—"Perhaps 1 may sometime." He "Have you made up your mind who | the man will be?" Sht—" Mercy ! no!" lie—' Still you think you will marry i somebody sonic time?" She—"1 may." | He (desperately)—"Weil, what's the matter with me ?"—Someroille .Journal. it is just possible, my dear, that tlie pitcher has a hotter delivery than any one of those clergymen .—Button Tran • script. "Did you destroy this feather duster ? asked Freddie's* mother. "Yes'r answered Freddie; "1 wanted to he Indian chief, that feather queried his mother, die; "but Indian chief« d :h things." "But don't you know dusters cost money ?" "1 did." said Fred 't think of The prominent citizen walked out to his barn the other morning under 1 said "Well, Samson, his old darky 't you No, in to de umbrella hostler: praying for this rain to stop? deed, sali, it's Lord to stop de in when du wind Kansas i'ity Times. f»prigg»ns' Little, Game.—Friend <at a French play)—Why did you applaud so vigorously when that comedian made his speech lief ore the curtain? Sprig gins (confidently)—So folks would think i understood French. What did he say ? Friend—He said the remainder of his part must be taken by liis mother was dying.— flood News. Conductor- "Can't take that six pence, sir." Indignant Passenger—"I'd Conductor— smooth." Indignant Passenger : me that very six-pence on this car this morning. 1 got it from you as change." Conductor —"Well, you see, sir, wo are more —Dundee in de east." lerstudy, like, to know why "It's --"Well, that's cool. Y par lieu li Weekly News. "Yep," said the old geologist, at the country store symposium, "that's the stone that has the fossil foot-prints, though there are' An old farmer, who had ju«t come in. took up the picc than î in this piece." •It, and "hefted ' ghtfully. "?»--ighbor," said he, "it's a? heavy and as hard ns i fossil, or w hatever yon call it.mnsthave had powerful hard hoofs to make prints it. th an'that Bill Plnmbottle, telligent youths oi Harlem, v.Tio had been traveling all over Europe, returned '■a, and told his friends rent irkablc things of his journey. Among other things he said : "in Home 1 had a long conversation with the Pope, and from there 1 went to Berlin and had a talk with Bismarck; then T. traveled to Munich, and- "And •t Munchausen," interrupted one of the listeners. "No, hut I traveled in the sa vne ear with Tom Ochiltree."— Texas NV flings. i\ story is told of an Irishman named Pat, who lately came to this country, recently. Ono day ho found a round bit of tin, stamped with the name of a big brewery. A policoman whom lie consulted about it told hint for a joke that, it went into a saloon ami called fora beer. He drank it and shoved the piece of tin across the bar. The barkeeper pushed it hack and said: "Why, man, that's tin." Arid Pat replied : "Faith and is it tin ? I thought, it wor five; have a glass yourself thin." — Tribune. One morning when Rufus Choate entered his office ids clerk rose and said • "Mr. (, 'honte, a gentleman has just left here who wants you to undertake a case for him." "Ah! And did the regular lee ted $ü>0, sir. $100, and in Choate said : "But, sir, that feesional—yes, "But, of the mos not long llect staining lee?" "1 only col ' The regular fee was a reproving tone Mr. s urtpro very unprofessional." ," said the clerk, apologetically, and anxious to exonerate himtelf from the charge, "i got all he had." 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