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THE WLMINGrllXN MESSENGER, FRIDAY, JDXE 22, JOOfc fflBERS OF HOUSE ARRESTED Hauled Before the Bar to Make! up a Quorum Minority Loader Williams' Tactics Re sponsible for the Order by Sieaker Cannon Occurrences in tlie Fiast When Reprentatives Have Been Put Under Arret. ; , , , , . . I .Considerable irritation was exhibited by some of the Representatives who, through Minority Leader Williams filibuster in the Statehood matter, were arrested by the assistant ser- geants-at-arms and presented at th3 bar of the House. The resentful ones complained quer-. ulously of their arrest to the Speaker.' Uncle Joe's eye., however, did not be-, come bedewed with sympathy "ver their lamentations. Heis old-fashion-! ed enough to be willing to do some work for his pay, perquisites, and pre-! rogatives. He didn't advise the com-j plaining ones to tell their troubles To the captain of the Capitol watch, ! but he brought his gavel down right in the middle of the sad stories of. several.. j "These fellows haven't been here -ng enougft to remember Buck -Cil-i core," was Mr. Cannon's private conj-j Vreui on the comnlaints of some 6fi fh these brought before the bar of the House. "Buck not only didn't want to stay off the floor, hut he kicked his way in." He referred to the occassiou, ten or a dozetn years ago when Buck Kilgore the Texas Representative, kickod to fiDd-jrs the main door leading to the Hou.-e floor. At that time Spakei Reed had in operation his simple t-ut great scheme of just lockiif e.m in to maintain a quorum. Whenever n sufficient number of -"Representatives to constitute a quorum Altered in, Czar Tom, with a nod, di rected the vloorkeepers to elose and lock the doors, and the entreaties and prayers of members who wanted to get off the floor for any purpose what- SOHvtr were alike unavailing. Mr. Reed needed tlem there for voting purpos es, and there they stayed. The main door to the rbor was thus locked and bolted One afternoon when the brawny Kilgoir , who'd been delayed in arriv ing at the House, swung along. Buck pushed at the door and found it unyielding. "Hey, wat's come off here?" Kil gore demanded of the doorkeeper on duty. "Why can't I get in? House adjourned? " Speaker s got a quorum, replied the doorkeeper. "Well, lemme in and I'll add to it,' said Buck to the doorkeeper. J Cai't open anydoor, sir Speakers tf ders," said the doorkeeper. jr"That so?" said Kilgore, and he promptly kicked the swinging leather covered wooden doors to kindling wood, entering the House like a roar ing, ramping lion. Most speakers would have sough the punishment of a Representative for pulling off a trick like that. That however, was the last thing the big- minded Reed thought of. The auda city of Kilgore's act appealed to Reed's imagination, and it was all right for the Texan. THE CASE OF CY SULLOWA'. -.The most picturesque of the recen; arrests was that in which one of the House pages brought Cy Siilloway to the bar of the House. v nen a can ior a quorum was mau the chief page delegated erne of the tiniest of his youngsters to go forth and bring Mr. Sulloway. Cy Sulloway is the most remarkable piece of verti cal workmanship in the Hxrase of Rep resentatives. Nobody knows ust how high Cy is, but his elongateduess can't be much inferior to that of the late Chang, the Chinese Giant. The mite of a page, a boy something over three feet in stature, prowled around the committee rooms for quite a bit before he came upon the languid Cy, who, with an amiable breeze blow ing upon him from the open windows looking on the terrace, was cocked ack in a chair, with his legs wrapped yiLround each other two or three times and the feet resting on a table reading a newspaper "Mr. Sulloway," the three-foot page solemnly squeaked, "you're under ar-j rest and I am to conduct you to the bar of the House." The monolithic Sulloway unraveled his legs, grinned, stretched bis arms, and rose to his vast height. "Lead the way, mister," said he to. tlie boy, and the page led him to the main door of the House. Entering the door, the boy, with a! fine sense of the dramatic, grabbed liold of the up and down giant's hand to emphasize the fact that he had cactured his man. Thus the three- foot kid led the towering Cy down the main ailse. amid the laughter of the House. Arrived at the clerk's desk the high Cy suddenly reached down and taking the boy in his arms, lifted him tip and deposited him squarely on tjaej Speaker" desk, saying to the amused Cannon, "I give you my captor," and; the rest vas complete, TANKED AWAY FROM BALL. GAME The most irritating incident of the arresting business WP3 when some twenty-two members of the Lower House were incontinently yanked away from the Washington baseball grounds; right' at the critical point in the game. ilt was a very beautful day, and the -aie was a fine one. The Represen tatives, all of them most resolute fans, .were scandalously interested in the contest, and several of them were' rooting right out loud. They hadn't attended the game in a body, butj were scattered, aii over ine grana -dost of those who were present stand Jn the boxes. on that oocassion are now old men, Mr.and Mrs. Nicholas Longworth but they say that for utter pictures were up above in. the President's base- queaess, force, dutch, inventiveness, ball box they attended most of the and sheer, shriveling originality they games while the Washington' club was never expect to Haear tlie observations playing at home, Mrs Longworth was of Belford of Colorado as made upon keeping score, an3 keeping it in gen-, that occasion duplicated. Washington ulne baseball reporter's style a couple. Post of her baseball score ord3 were sold ior a tidy figure at a recent festival here. The Washington club hal the St. Louis outfit as opponents. The score was 3 to 0 in favor of the Nationals at the end of the sixth in ning. When the seventh inning be gan the St. Louis bunch immediately filled the sacks and Stone, the slugged, was next man up for St. Louis team. It was a fine looking situation ana, with all-the rest, the Representatives leaned forward eagerly to see how the thing was going to work out. Then there was a sudden chugging of au tomobiles pulling up in the space -back of the grand stand, and the assistant sergeant-at-arms sudde..i appeared in the stand and picked tut their men with unerring accuracy, "Well, let us see this inning out," Pleaded the Representatives. ' r WU1U"1 , was imperative. The "arrested" mem- ' bers must get into the throbbing au tomobiles and be conveyed to the House instantly. The Irritated phrase, ' dog gone the luck!" broke out all over the stand where the captured Representatives were, but it didn't help a bit. They "'ere corralled, and that's all there was to jt- They got up and filed out. The grand stand crowd bad got on to thv situation, and "Back to school fr you!" was the pleasantly derlHv hfut that greeted the Representatives DISLIKD BEING DRAGGD 2 arrest and required instantly at the Dar of the House this disturbed Rep- resentative fumed and stormed around. Jut n knew that the summons was not to oe denied ana ne started to dress, while the assistant sergeant-at-arms waked for him in the hall out side. There is every reason to suppose that the Representative was greatly preoccupied witn his wrath while he was dressing in his cool, darkened room, for when 1k finally vanked open the door and announced to tne assistant sergeant-atsarms that he was ready his captor's face expressed the most acute astonishment. "Come on," said the Representative, strating astride down the hotel hall and not noticing his captor's express ion of countenance. "Got a wagon waiting?" "What's that?" said the Represen tative, turning around. "Er don't you think, sir thai you'd make a better appearance on ihe floor of the House if er you had em on?" , The Representative took a look at himself in the streaming light of the hall, and then he made two bouuds of it to regain his room. In his haste and in the dimness of his room ?the Representative had neg lected to don so important an item or" his apparel as his trousers. One-time employes of the Capitcl tell an incident of what befell an ' : r rested" member of the House who was one of that body's most famous characters many years ag. RED- HEADED ROOSTER OF ROCK IES. This famous character was Belford, of Colorado, the "red-headed rooszer of the Rockies.'' Belford, a big heaTt jongh decidely illiterate man, wis perhaps the most openly and per sistently convivial individual who ever occupied a seat in the Hous of Rep resentatives. Almost unbelievable Istories of his progress around the board are still current among the fogies down here, and when the red iheaded rooster of the Rockies felt in a convivial mood he regarded the Cap itol as just as good a place teD in dulge his mood as any other. One day while the horses were rac ing at the old and long-gone Ivy City race track near Washington there was !big business in the House, opposition demanding the presence of a quorum. Belford was known to. be out at the Ivy City track, for he had been full of a "good thing" upon his arrival at the House that forenoon. Speaker Carlisle sent an assistant sergeant at arms out to the Ivy City track in a -carriage to nail Belford. The scout found Belford swaying 'happily in a box in the stand. It was just before the fifth race, and Belford was hilariously confident, that his good thing was going to come home ralone. He had $50 on the cinch at $50 to 1, and was prepared to make the root of his life when the horses struck the stretch. But the scout told Belford that he'd have to get into the carriage Tight away. Belford, however, was stub born. He was going to see that good thing of his win. House or no House. The assistant sergeant-at-arms finally cajoled the red-headed rooster out of his box in tne stand, telling him that he could watch the finish of the race from the lawn below, and then hus tle into the waiting carriarge. Bel ford agreed to that, and, as the horses were already lining up, the scout was willing to permit the Colorado mem- j the final dressing for the ceremony it ber to wait and see the finish of his j Self, and almost every bride knows race. Belford let out a huge, trumpharrt yee-ow! and wow-ee! every minute j or so during the carriage's rapid pro- t gress into the city, and when he reach ed the Capitol he was flaming with victory and things. After reporting at the bar of the House, he leaped in to the House restaurant and yelled: "Wine! Baskets of itl everybody line up Those days were different from these. Everybody lined up. Represen tatives, employes, and all, Belford kept them lined up for hours, celebrat ing the triumph of his good thing. All of the wine was cleaned out and moie had to be hurriedly sent for. Belford's expenditure for. the wine item on the strength of his win had just totalled up a matter of $850. when an. employ of the House, who had been out at the races, remaining till the finish of the card, strolled in and informed the red-headed rooster of the Rockies that his good thing had been disquali fied for Intftrferfner m ihe. haclrfttritch and had been piaced THE MONTH Half of the acts of life are guided and guarded by ' folk-lore. Present day proclaimed skepticism to the con trary notwithstanding, this statement is ready of proof. Which being the fact, it becomes an of -course that so vastly important a matter as love should be of all things richest in its literature of prediction and omens. The "Who?" and the "When?" and tne "How?" cf courtship and marriage all are foretold. Such changes, however, are to the outward seeming only. Love alters not with the passing centuries, nor has its lenghty creed lost materially of the ceremonial tenets of an older day. There is that old warning cou plet: i . Change the name and not the letter. Change for worse and not for better. Miss Brown may ignore it to become Mis. Bevers and Miss White may laugh at it while telling her intimates that she is to be Mrs. Wells; but do not both of them in that very laughing, doubting apology thereby prove this all-but-immortal folk-lore of marriage, even though, as daughters of the new est of the centuries, they decline whol- ly 10 be bound by it? To be sure, an elder and unmarried sister no longer feel it incumbent upon her to dance barefoot at the younger maiden's bridal, so to ward off the hideous threat of spinsterhood, nor has that venerable pronheev its one- time weight about "Thrice a bridesmaid, never a bride" but, for the rest, hymeneal superstitions are practically as abundant and as revered as ever they were. CUPID FIXES THE MONTH. i-or tne days ot engaged impatience and blissful planning, the well-obsrv- ed dictates of Dan Cupid are all but endless. First must be considered the month. To begin with, Lent, you'll barred; for "Married in Lentt, you'll li vo tr rcnont- " o n1 t Vm q verfl p rrlrl will decide such a question without hestitation, even at the cost of waiting forty days longer. May, too, is held unlucky. Perhaps this belief goes back to Ovid's time, for the Latin Ioet laid a ban upon the month as that in which fell the celehrations in honor of the great dead. Perhaps Plutarch laid his wiser finger on the root of the evil, in calling attention to the fact that a May wedding slighted Venus and Juno, whise months were, respectively, April and Junej Per haps the fifth month is really unlucky: for no other reason than that in it Mary Queen of Scots began her own much-married and none-too-fortunate career. The truth, though its origin is ohscur, comes down to this, that those four weeks of lavishly beautiful widowed you'll be before your prime stage settings are yet looked upon as kr.ii'.e. Not one of the months but it has its own prediction. Thus runs the best known of the formulae: Married in January's hoar and time, wodowed you'll be before pourt prime; Married in Febr'ys sleety weather, life you'll tread in tune together. Married when March winds shrill and roar, your home will lie on a for eign shore; Married , 'neath April's changeful s"kies, a checkered path before you lies; Married when bees o'er May-blooms flit, strangers around your board will sit; Married in queen-rose month of June, life will be one long honey moon; Married as July's flower-banks blaze bitter-sweet memories in after days; Married in August's heat and drowse lover and friend in your chosen 6pouse Married in gold September's glow, smooth and serene your life will flow; Married when leaves in October thin, toil and hardship for you begi; Married in veils of November, mist fortune your wedding ring has kissed. Married in days of December cheer. Love's star shines brighter from year to year. It mav be amusinelv evident from this that the seers at Cupid's shrine have tried hard to say nice things of j pretty nearly all the units that go to build up the year ("playing safe," would be the term used of their craft by the betting fraternity.) WORK FOR THE BRIDE-TO-BE. Ev ery single day of the preparation its own time-honored instructions'! has its own time-honored instructions s for the happy little woman in the case. If she is wise, she will add to her inward rejoicings, as well as sat- isfy the Fates, by doing herself a ; good part of the work upon her trous seau. And by all means should she not spoil it, ana sne cerxaimy win advance her chances for that joy of life, which (of course!) she deserves. Everyone knows it is bad lack to . - ., . . . put on the entire wedding-outfit befor that the color of her gown for that most momentous of all moments is a matter not to be settled merely by wat is becoming. What is written in the hymeneal law and prophets? Married in gray, you will go far away; .Married in ,black, you will wish yourself back. Married in brown, you will live out town ; Married in red, you will wish your self dead; Married in peart you will live in a whirl ; Married in green, ashamed to bo seen; Married in yellow, ashamed of your fellow; Married in blue, he will always be - true; Married in pink, your spirits will sink; Married in white, you have chosen aright Then, arise thequestion of tne day of the week, where tne jingle is per haps widest known, of all: - Monday for health, Tuesday for wealth, , "Wednesday the best day of all; Thursday for lossees, Friday for crosses, Saturday no luck at alL So comes at lasst the dayand OF MARRIAGES is is safe predicting that Lt least iW she of the "high-eontractin parties i will, first thing of all, fly to the win- i dow for a loot at the weather; fori "Happy the biide the sun shines on." And when she begins to don those; pretty things that represent the busy j labors of happy hours, what then ; Well, she will put n her right shos : oexore ner ien; tnat points to success in life. She will use no p;n.; thev T, A . 1 r i f- Til ? wiohenspiie. ane win taKe good, care doesn't see her till she comes at last I ake illL,m ryan the to be joined to him for life; for there's i demoratic nominee for president in a saying abaut the ill luck of thai, j 1?os- In fact Mr- Simmons today de too t clared himself in favor of Bryan and Mr. Bridegroom (of whom scant no- i ?T, ! a""rn. menains :ne rose and Guffey. Th outlook for tke is taken by the originators of all Jrh".:hC..v'IY. "liveliest and larges: Uiwn politicians and vote hu. kter this mass of sage advice) hre com j T.North Carolina senator b .i 1 , n" in for a single warning: Hh is n-u I?lied with faVOr UIK)n the candidacy j and dt-a a. re- to stand at the junction oi a cro;s- of 3u& Parker when the campaign j ""s wm fmra different M.tioo roads or besides a Lajred srate oel- ?Jn" oT1 lwo J'far!: bu today he of the keystone state. The real cttJ this wedding-morn. If he dees, look j authorized a statement of his belief ns of th. oommonwnfl,.h nrt r.rtl. OUt! Of the march to the church there is much to say. The fairies of ill omen announce that no funeral must be ur.e: on the way, and they forull dire re sults if the steeple clock should per- chance strike while the ceremony is going on. The fairies of promise le- clare that the attending maid who catches the bride's boquet thrown among the guests when Miss has be come Mrs., will be first married, and that, she who eets the rinsr. der-bu..ed j v)cdaietiuvlvytfidfflsl;htsogk wwawi,. in the great cake, will join for life the 1 man of her heart's own choice before the year is out. THE BEST MAN OF OLD-TIME Those same bridesmaids, it is re levant to remark, were m the "one1 : upon a time" regarded as no more ' and no less than pretty scapegoats, whose very presence should attrac: the evil eye, and so divert from the bridal pair the ill omens in the air A T'Vi M-ioritinl licet m o n )rn was far from the purely ornamental! creature into which he has degener- ated today. He seems to have made his debut when weddimgs wtre strea- UOus affairs; when the groom, more likely than not. carried off his chosen one by force or craft, and made his peace with the "old folks" afterward if he could. In those days the best ,man had to be just that. Sundap Magazine. ji'st now HOLlY MAY PEEK-A-BOOBK When' Congress has disposed of the beef scandals it may be called upon to consider the peek-aboo waist. The ,Rev. Father George M. A. Schoerner, ot Rochester, Pa., who in terrupted the sermon at St. Cecelia's Roman Catholic Church last Sunday to order two women in peek-a-boo waists from the building, has created a precedent. He told his parisjhoner to go home and take off those "bath ing suits," adding: "This is a church, not a bathing house.' The attention of purity organi zations is thus pointedly directed to a threatening evil, and legislation may presently be demanded to prescribe the number and size of the holes in the "lingerie" waists, which shall ad mit the breezes and incidentally af ford tantalizing views of the shoulders of the wearer. Since the hue and cry over open work hosiery, which began with the merest pin-pricks and has now come to a finish no thicker than a face veil the matter of our national modesty has had some fearful shocks in wo man's wear. Mere man might have worn open-work eocks and peek-a-boo shirts till the crack of doom, and no oae would have credited him with more than an ingenious desare to keep cool. But the vision of pink plumj ness throgh these ride-and-seek ar rangements which meet you on all types of the female form divine is "a horse of a different color." Had Father Schoerner been con versant with present-day fashions he would have realized that, as a matter of fact, he was casting an undeserved aspersion on the bathing suit m com- paring it with the peek-a-boo. The bathing dress of today is infinitely more discreet than woman's street garb. Of silk or mohair, it exposes only the throat. It reaches below the knee, the "black stockings are without an aperture, and the arms are ov- an aperture, ered half way quite to the elbow, Set this demure figure of a, girl in cut out embroidery waist and mark the difference. LARGE CHUNKS CUT OUT. The linen is cut out in large chunks to accomodate the design and the ef fect is luminous. A large leaf of warm ly tinted flesh is charmingly outlined in eyelet embroidery, or a piece of satin skin looms up as the center of a rose. If it. is a conventional pattern, yon have flesh formed in squares f.ni angles. More often and by far ihe most piquant it is just holes; holes that have increased in dimensions through the seasons; holes that gi.e you kaleidoscopic and embarrassing j visions. You gasp at impending rev- elations. At first the excursions into the peek-1 a-boo were as mild as the first open- j work stockings. In the summer of liJoO j it was confined to a modest little yoke ; which outlined a pretty girl's neck and gave such fleeting glimpses of the in-1 terior decoration that it was hailed as j n oosdrive insniration. Our descent ha3 i been rapid: By 1902 we had adopted eraDhic onenwork border to the yoke j which left in a Question no flight. The I j year 1904 found us with Vs that stray- j ed to unaccustomed depths and a polo - Barrenness oi aai suen promisw. gized for themselves with large blue "And one night, when he was set bows on the lingerie beneath. By 1905 ting to be an old man a prematurely we had arrived at "panels," with is- lands of modesty between, and in the present year of grace we have "all overs" an occasional dot on the open work to save the situation. The-sleeves have risen from elbow length half way 10 the shoulder. N037j THE OPENWORK CORSET. Thit tlite is not nil! Some sreniu? doubtless to keep pace with the ttme3 j has introduced the open-work corset. We now only await shredded lingerie before the fashions of the Fiji Islands belle are accurately followed. Law or the brown-tailed moth alone can save its! New York World. . 3IR. SIMMON'S A BRYAN MAX Official HeaI 0f Old North State Democracy A u t horizon S ta t einen tor HiU nelief That Condition Now Pofnt to .the Wisdom of Nominating the Former Candidate Mr, sim- jmons Pleaxil With Committer Ap loint!iietits. Senator Simmons, the official heal the democracy in the 01 i Nor:j oi State by reason of his position as state I chairman, is watching with keen intv- n the rising tide that nromIs j tnat conditions now point to the wis- Arm 0f nominating the Xebrasban. He says that Bryan and Aycock would be about the right thing, and he believes mai .ur. oryan ana Mnii tarouius combination that would appeal power- ; h A PORTRAYAL OF THE SITUATION A iKditical writer recently siid "With the democratic national con vention two years off, Mr. Bryan, wrapped in contemplation of Old World wonders, has stamped his par ty more effectively than he did in 1 SOC and 1900. Democracy now dods a truth in the old song 'Absence Makes the Heart Grow Fonder.' Democrats of half a dozen states, Arkansas, Mis souri, Iowa, Indiana, Ohio and South Dakota, have formally proclaimed Lin their choice for th preidency m IOCS. Wisconsin, Minnesota and New York and nearly all of the southern states are expected to fall in line in the Bryan pro-ession." This, pernsps, may b regarded as a true portray -al of the situation, onlv Ohio hus not formally declared for Mr. Bryan. The democrats of the Buckeye state may be depended upon to do .Lo. however. HAVE CONFIDENCE IN BRYAN. Representative Charles A. Towne, who left the republican party in to follow the Bryan banner, receatly "expressed the sentiments of numerous democrats in Washington, when he said: "The spontaneity and sincerity of the demand for Mr. Bryan's nomi nation in 1908 are only the natural fre quences of the political history of '.he past ten years. The people of the United States want progress with satV ty and reform with justice. They do not propose, in correcting the evils of monopoly, to run the excesses of either socialism or benevolent desjiotism. They have implicit confidence in the self-poise, the courage, the sincerity, the honesty and "the ability of Mr. Bryan. No man in our j)olitical his tory has ever run the gauntlet of crit icism and come out of it with such in creased prestige. I look upon his nom ination as already practically assured and upon his election as little less certain. Much will depend upon the result of congressional elections this fall. Should they give the democratic party a majority in the house, a task of the utmost difficulty will confront the legislative leaders of that party. They would have the responsibility without the power, and, under circum stances where false steps would b? both easy and costly, should the re publicans carry the house by a narrow margin, their task would be only less troubiesome. PLEASED WITH COMMITTEE AS- SIGNMENT. Senator Simmons says he is very much, pleased with his assignment to membership on the committee on com- merce, as it is the committee that deals with the rivers and harfcnr ap- propriations. He had, he said, voiun- tarily given up the position he held on the committee on postoffices and was to De succeeaea oy senator uver man. He said the present arrange ment he regarded as most fortunate for the material interests of the state. The state is now represented by Sena tor "Overman on the committees of public buildings and grounds, elec tions, military claim and forest res ervations, and by himself on jostof- lice, agncuiiuie, iui-orcauie ; 1la( of ErmTV fn Allegheny OOUIltV and commerce. Senator Overman is m . William T. Creaky wan indorsed for a position to give attention to the for- : p0Vrnor by Columbia oountv; Mer est reserve bill, while the inland wat Keaflt Emery's home county, Inrtrurte erway scheme and the other river and its cemocratic delegate for lt8 fel(o harbor works, Including . the canal on : citizen. Crawford was for Kmeryr the Cape Fear from Wilmington to : LycomIng nasgf.(1 a vote of confidcn A- . ; . 1.. jayeitevine. can oe iooeu aner u , in the Linoolnite; Chester left its del h.mse f as a member of the commerce ; gates free fo act as d committee. e can look after, said . the A of Buck Senator Simmons, by virtue of our Norlnamptonf ihfghf Schuylkill and position on these committees, postal ; Carbon ( (leIeKa(P8 WJH form matters clatos, pensions, the great in-;for E convention Ik two teiests of agriculture, and the south s weeks fff The fon miment1 1 n MONMVwiLL BE PUILT ' '' 8lTOnwr daSlj' the -MONLME.iT WILL UL LL1LI. vent:on may be taken out of Gnffey'e Senator Overman brought up m the jjan(g 3 senate today and secured the passage ? of the bill anoroDriatinir $30,000 for the erection of a monument on King's 'Mountain battlefield. Washington Special to Charlotte Observer. A Wife's lieproach. Admiral Capis, in an address u a temperane society, told how drink had onoe caused the downfall of a brave soldier. In the course of the sad story said: he "Sometimes, after a debauch, the j man would be repentantly humble. He j would promise his wife to do betler. But, alas, the years taught her the old man, thin-limbed, stoop-shoulder ed, with red-rimmed eyes he said to his wife sadly: "'You're a clever woman, Jenny; a courageous, active, good wcr.an. fou should have married a better man tl:an I am, dear.' "She looked at him, and, thinking of what he once bad been, she answsre-d in a Qt voice: "'I. did, James. News from San Francisco is rather scarce, but it is understood the burnt city is struggling to get back on the map. Philadelphia Inquirer. ' I OUTLOOK BLUE FOR THE BOSSE Slum Kings of Pennsylvania Ha be Dethroned. CitUcn- are AnUM, nnd Up Again Ijrmtcr of are UnMg tle Gang. I in! ic tuition at IVn nr Not Able to Control tin Partj-. IVnmcratic The anti-oos tide f rising in l'ean- svlvania and promi-g to drown Pea- . t. , lu lutulifnes an1 wnn UiIr happens "ne gam of iolitics the trickst.-r is . usually beaten. Th outcrv over the ;nmv(1 .. fd i k i nil: h 1 1 1 ii i iiir w ry u . I " " general pu lic indignation against IVnnace. Penny- packer and others. When th dori were teceivtd from the foundry It was seen that in the ho: dor. componvl of the heads of distinguished IVnnsyl vanians there had b-n moulded the heads of Penrose, Quay ;,nd IVnny jacker. The demand is now made that these favs shall be remoed Iron? the doors and in the Information is giv en out that the offensive heads will be replaced with bronze rosette GnfTey, so-called demH-rati- Uadtr and friend of the republican macnino. is in the run. The Philadelphia North Annrican today says: "Angered in the superlative degree by the revolt of democrats through out the tate again-;! the dictatorship, Janus M. Guffey, democratic tate Uks admitted ;.ete:day in Pittsburg that ho was 'entirely out of the fight.' Those danw i-rats, including a score of leader and workers in hlw own Allegheny county, who have had th temerity to oppose Guffey, were roundly abu.se.l by the millonaire oil producer, whoso words of condemnation, according to a dispatch from Pittsburg, were too hot for publication. "Boss" Guffey at first announced Unit the democratic convention should not indorse Emery, the Lincoln candidate, but that it must nominate a straight out democratic ticket. That would play into the hands of the Penrose machine by withholding -upiort from the ticket of the Lincoln party, tin if ey now says the convention may do as it pleases, but that he Is still op Iosed to Emery on pertonal ground. GUFFEY BACKS DOWN. The Philadelphia Ledger today pays:! "Col. Guffey, the democratic Btatd leader, has taken a positive oeltlOtt that he will not accept ox-Seaatojl Emery as the democratic candidate" for governor. The feeling between Guffey and Emery Is personal and oil many years .standing. Guffey has nd hestitation in declaring that his position to Emery's nomination by tho democratic convention's 3s personal, and he has repeately said bo to del gations of Lincoln party men who ask ed him to be for Emery for governor. "When Col. Guffey declared for a democrat for governor he did not ex- pect the storm of protest that would j arouse in his party because of his oppo- sition to Emery. He and his friends j now realize that the storm has grown . to such dimensions as tr threaten his ; leadership. While his followers aro ; confident that he can control the state j convention and fore the nominations , of a democrat for governor, they feel ! that it would be disasterous to tho : party. They are, therefore, seekins for a loophole by which tho colonel j may recede from his position without g to far as to consent to Em- ery s nomonation." Tbe Philadelphia Inquirer t.oijay says: LINING UP FOR TUP ENEMV. "Most interring in nui develop ments over the state yesterday in the gubernatorial contest in the democra tic party was the desertion of more dfmnrrats fmm flnffov's ctomhrit n. i v... j a IV A uivkxu ironi niwours lasi nignt says The revolt asralnst the leader ship of Col. James M. Guffey l be coming more marked daily. The in surgent democrats of Allegheny county declare that they have him defeated in the fight for delegates and they, will announce their list tomorrow or next day. Today a dozen or more of noted democratic workers declared themselves aligned against the colonel and In favor of a fusion ticket with Lewis Emery .Jr., at Its head. Among those who declared for Emery were G. W. McNeil, Attorney James E. ODonnelJ, Joseph B. Howley, form er democratic chairman; Frank B. Baloy, Alderman Festna M. King, At torney Charles B. Payne, William Dil lon, John B. Doyle, Frank Thompson, John D. Hughes and Thomas O'Brien. These men represent all sections of the city and county, showing the spread of the revolt William J. Brennen, the chief, lieutenant of the Guffey forces, declares the fight is not being made for Emery so much aa it Is against Col.. Guffey. The insurgents admit this and say that it la purely a fight for independence and against a one-man-power . state convention. They object to being delivered as thej; claim Col. Guffey intended to delivea them" WasfcSnftoo Ctarv