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Aotitist iK 1 r w TJi l1ft y rr1 iiioicny ioox MONDAY AUOTJWT II 101- MserlKIsM 7 Hall s a at- iaUltY in Weata a M- VAILY YwU- VDAY par Tsar BAILY AND 8UHDAT pet Yw v SUNDAY r Month rei Met ferUaa nttiisaddsir- v THB Btw Nrr Ytrt CHf- FABMBkMQM sllBSsr Orsnil sad Blast No 10 BouKrwd dM Ospustoss it i JMm r M rM sumuertsft- HHtsMss a to ass rijMrf srtfcUi nfurnrf- MM M a eM Hnt stamp Itr thai rwptu The of Labor Agitator interests at and the of have disturbed for a long time by a auc of itrikM for causes inntl- Cated by the Thla union is known aa the Reststencia and IU and spirit are Laat week it was reported that a vigi- lance committee the citizens of xaaperated by the ohronio moil prevailing there had adopted des f f t measures to relieve the town According to the eighteen of the principal the of La an organ of the unloo were seized and overpowered by the vigilantes and forcibly removed from There is no definite knowledge whereabouts A correspondent of the Tobacco ever intimates that a schooner was chartered for the purpose of convoying the kidnapped men to Honduras At the same time the vigilantes addressed to the anarchists and professional labor agitators a proclamation as follows We say that your day In Tampa are at an rnd We cannot and will not permit you to destroy thla prosperous city If you b T regard for your safety you will shake from your feet In conclusion we notify Uio manufacturers that this movement of citizens Dot In your Interests but In the Interest of the entire community An esteemed friend of Tax SUN him self greatly Interested in the prosperity of Florida invites our consideration of this method of disposing of of mischief and desires our fame He shall have it He can scarcely understand tho principles which this newspaper applies to tho discussion of such troubles if he supposes that THE RUN will be less swift to condemn law- lessness and tho invasion of personal rights when directed against strikers and the leaders and instigators of strikes than when the latter against employers righto and the Con- stitutional liberties of nonunion work ingmen- If the facts are as reported from the proceedings of the vigilance there are absolutely Indefen- sible pernicious and deplorable both specifically and in view of the general situation If the citizens resorting to lynch law had received either direct or support from the authorities of is no evidence so far as we know the municipal representatives of law in Tampa would be every whit as de- serving of condemnation us was the Mayor of McKeesport when he used tho authority of his office to encourage law- lessness of another kind make no distinctions when wo call upon public opinion to sustain tho en- forcement of law and the scrupulous protection of individual liberties against all of the same who may be one side or the other of labor disputes Such a public sentiment- is the only safeguard of society against anarchy and It cannot be in one quarter and called oT hope our position is clear Our Agricultural Imports There are some remarkable figures in the Department of Agricultures lost pamphlet on Sources of the Agricul- tural Imports of the United States The man who has only a knowl- edge of tho subject will them some surprises Most people are inclined to take it for as an agricultural country resources are equal to our demands with the exception of a few products which are to be found only beyond our borders As a matter of unprejudiced statistics however the annual average of our total for the lost four years shows over 50 per cent of them have been agricultural For instance last year 420139288 of imports were of this character out of a total import bill of 849041184 It probably would not occur to a man who knew little our South American neighbors to Brazil as the first on tho list of those supplying us with Agricultural imports She sent to us 39287000 worth of agri cultural products last year and more than 33000000 worth of this sum was paid for coffee The farm products of the United Kingdom come next amount ing to 32608000 largely reexports and the Dutch Kant Indies are a Rood third among our Hourcea of supply with a bill of 27500000 mostly for sugar Cuba drops Into fourth place by a very small margin her total Imports to tho States being valued at t726 falls behind Cuba by one million dollars From France wn bought 21052000 worth of agricultural imports last year and from Mexico products valued at 20000000 Wo re- ceived agricultural imports exceeding 20000000 in value from Hawaii and exceeding 5000000 from tho Philip- pine Islands We bought our tea from China and Japan our tobacco from Cuba and the Netherlands our wines from Franco Germany and and our wools in the British and from China and Russia Wherever any market In tho world has had anything to sell that vn could use this country has been a generous buyer In view of tho conditions prevailed In the Philippine Islands wo think that there Is a significant promise in the report that we purchased morn than 6000000 worth of agricultural products from them last year This ia I I l ltbe t1 I t 1 f T f f1 1 1 i 11 el I t1 BiD Tap I on tri leer attn Tar dept Tap Tap maker exercise Tap pIe We violator Invoke We ping grate import abut Unite Spin r 1- F4t i Dr S O I 4 4 LTD I NoW e faN or- V j I Ii D p seen II I It dust T I r 1 I I 1 z 1 I f tht have L L > ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ > presumptive evidwoo of the fact new of oars ire valuable in business way Undoubtedly we paid some part of Philippine bill In American manu factored goods And when Haw1 balances up books and enters on debtor column a charge against us 20998909 for goods purchased year she reasonably may congratulate herself on her hold upon our markets She was ninth among our sources of sup- ply and during the put four year Hawaiis agricultural exports to us in value Rico sent her products of soil to our markets last year and re wired in return either goods or money- to the value of 2090416 We must not overlook the tact that we have been a heavy seller of many agricultural prod- ucts for years Our new possessions promise a steady reduction In our coffee tobacco and sugar bills from other na Probably we must continue to from China and Japan for the last shipment of tea to this country from the Philippines was in 1890 and It was only 172 Our Warships at Colon and Panama The despatch of the gunboat Machiaa to Colon and the order to Admiral CASEY commanding the Pacific station to send the battleship Wisconsin from Bremerton in Puget Sound to San Fran cisco whence she can be sent to Panama show that the United States are on the alert to protect the interests of their citizens in Colombia and to out their duties as defined by Our interests there are considerable the most important of being the Panama Railroad from on the At- lantic to Panama on the Pacific coast By a treaty made with the Republic of New Granada now the Republic of Colombia some forty the latter country itself open the right of across the Isthmus and the United States bound themselves to maintain the sovereignty of New Granada over the same country The appearance of our warships at Colon and Panama therefore indicates that we are pre- pared at once to perform our duties toward Colombia and to see that Colom- bia performs hers toward us The presence of our warships In the principal ports of Colombia is nothing new Repeatedly wo have had to send them there to protect American inter- ests though we have never been called on to defend Colombias integrity of control over the isthmus During the building of the Panama Railroad our naval vessels were constant at Asplnwall now Colon and but the most Important visit made to those ports was that In 1835 when Colon was burned by the Insurgents under Gen AIZPURV The Galena Capt KANB landed men at Colon and the Iroquois Capt Snauso others at Pan ama on the threatened stoppage of transit across the isthmus The presence of our sailors practically put an AIZPUBUS chances of success In the autumn of the same year we increased our fleet in the Atlantic owing to the prospect of further troubles in Colombia but the step proved unnecessary In March 1895 the Atlanta landed marines and bluejackets at Bocas del Toro while the Raleigh at Colon and the Alert at Panama were ready to land others this was because of the insur- rection led by AVELINO ROSAS and In 1896 the American Minister ened to send for a war vessel unless the Colombian Government apologized for seizing an American vessel the George Whitford but the vessel was not sent us apology was forthcoming Again during 1900 we sent a warship to Pan ama during the insurrection begun by Gen SANTOS and protested against tho rebels proposed bombardment of Panama Our treaty with Colombia- has kept us In much closer touch with that country than with any other south of us but despite the expense to which it has put us proven valuable In- asmuch as without our right to inter fere the operations of the Panama Rail road would most certainly have been interrupted many times the a the her for double ton vane t car tem year bund visitor lade marine other that likely the last have the ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ Redistribution of Seats In Parliament The Spectator and other Unionist newspapers seem to have stirred up a hornet nest by their demand that Ire- lands representation in the House of Commons should bo strictly proportioned to tho population with which she is credited by the recent census They have been met with tho rejoinder Phy- sician heal thyself It Is pointed out that most glaring examples of dispro- portion between population and repre- sentation exist in England and that it would be Iniquitous to leave these grievance iinrexlretwd If the question of redistribution Is to be taken up at all The Conservative Government how- ever could not without alienating a great many of supporters apply rigorously to England tho principle that representation should he exactly portioned to population We therefore that tho demand for a ma terial curtailment of Irelands repre- sentation In Commons will remain unheeded for tome time to come When tho lost reform of tho suffrage and tho last redistribution of souLs were carried out In 188485 in pursuance of an agreement between Mr GLADSTONE and Lord SALISBURY the Radical pro- posals that one man should have only one voto and that santa should bo allotted as nearly as possible In propor- tion to population had some strenuous advocate in both the Conservative and Liberal partita but they met with only- a qualified acceptance Plural voting is still possible In England and a great boroughs retain seats not bo they deserve them by of their population but on of their historical claims It is admitted that in England several small boroughs- now returning ono member apiece ought to ho In the counties surrounding again thut other boroughs which now return two members ought to be content with a single member- In Scotland also where the boroughs collectively return thirtyone members pro the may reason merge its ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ i tfcer Is BO debt tkt setae of- I have ao dUe to separate representation i if the of their inhabitants can hardly call any o I these boroughs rotten but they an i unjustly privileged- As It happens almost every one of the English seats which would be abol- ished were representation to be ap to population is now occu follower of Lord BAUBBUBY All of these seats would be Imperilled- If every underpeopled borough were merged In the adjoining county and If the Liberal should gain coherence and the ensuing general election Under the circumstances ono can easily perceive why the present Government is likely to be influenced- by the admonition quMa non movers or in our homely idiom to let sleeping dogs lie Not only do rainy English and some Scotch boroughs possess seats to which they are not fairly entitled but some of the great urban aggregations of people lack the weight In the House of Commons which they may justly claim Especially is this true of the London and Metropolitan boroughs which collectively contain a fifth of Englands population return sixtytwo members out of the 465 allotted to England When we bear in that the British metropolis is preponderant with respect to industry and wealth than it is with regard to popu- lation we cannot but recognize its in- adequate representation as a capital in tho existing system It is that the metropolis will deem the of the discrimination- from which it at present suffers a re- form even more urgently required than the reduction of Irelands representation in the House of Commons The Liberal party will not make the apportionment of members to popu- lation a plank in Its platform because- it has no intention of quarrelling with its Irish allies The Salisbury Govern- ment will be equally reluctant to raise the redistribution question because it will run the risk of losing its present hold upon boroughs- or of forfeiting its lately acquired in- fluence in the metropolis- Mr Vests Democratic Platform The Hon GEOJIOB GRAHAM VEST of Missouri has been found by an inter- viewer at Sweet has bubbled- a Democratic 1904 Senator VEST says that the main be those 1 Graduated mooms tax 2 Unrelenting opposition to Trusts a Declaration against Imperialism and the colonist syalcm Mr VEST thinks that it would be suicidal to thrust the silver issue forward again yet the sliver issuo is no less and no more valuable than the antiImperial Ism issue The Democrats angled for antiimperialism in 1900 and were few bites It is a stale and hopeless bait A declaration against the Louisiana purchase or against the annexation of Texas would bo as practical and as promising against Imperialism There are a great many Democratic Imperial- ists including some of the ablest men and newspapers In the South and reasonable Democratic antiimpcrinllsts understand that the game Is up They will not be eager to accept Mr VESTS gay Invitation to butt against the facts the decisions of the Supreme Court and public sentiment Antiimperialism is a dead goose Unrelenting opposition to Trusts hey Well all the parties are unrelen- tingly opposed to Trusts a fact which need not and does not glvo the Trusts much anxiety Unrelenting opposition to Trusts didnt do the Democrats any good in 1900 and there Is no probability that it will do them any more good in 1904 The public has become cynical about the antiTrust platforms AntiTrust laws are seen to amount to nothing Tho solid business reasons for Trusts are evi dent Farmers and laborers combine small capitalists as well as largo ones Tho antiTrust issue is another dead Dub I prone pry I abut mid dele ether Spring plank vote jut abut a removals I goose ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ We had supposed that Mr VERT was or wished to be considered as an old line Democrat He was to help thrust BRYAN and Brjanlsra away and glvo the Democrats something thoroughly Demo- cratic Yet from the the tax First the borrowed the income tax Now Mr VEST would have them the whole Popu- list notion Mr must be fishing for tho Missouri Populists who will not rise to Fusion as their Nebraska breth- ren have done Two dead Issues of 1900 and the Populist income taxi Reorganizatio- nisnt Mr VESTS strong suit of the statements lately published regarding the present unpopularity of the wheel In this country particularly in an far as they concern cycle racing am mis- leading Various reports have been cir- culated to effect that tho bicycle Is no longer an attraction on the d spite the Introduction of and ex- pensive motor cycles for pacing and that thorn U very little demand for the services of profetwlonal racing men One critlo averred a fuw days ago that whereas valu able cash prizes were given such riders a few years ago they wore not oven offered leather medals to race for now Presumably the author of this remark had in mind the cycle craze which existed four or five years ago when racing was an exceedingly prominent feature of the sport but nevertheless his assertion grouMy mis- represents tho fact A statement printed last wek In tho Philadelphia Retard gives the winnings of the cycle racers on the Eastern tracks since the opening of the present season on April 19 Of the profes- sional riders had won 4812 up to Aug 5 449150 McFAn LAND IJOS9SO Ross 228250 FGN- VIleo780 KRAMER 144350 CADWKU 1132500 and the purses by eight other cracks ranged from 500 to 900 Of the riders Nitwox had won 803975 HTJNBOV 718325 MORAN 475 MlCHAKI 1070- KLKEH 4410 WALTROVR 417850 while nine other In this class had won from 1000 to J The net rush receipts of the men depend of course upon the terms of the contract they have with th lr managers Seine riders re he brows Democrat tko the MORN capture Popu- lists middle distance riders ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ esfve tsvty 4faePer oast sf tMv- wfcfle the ysresnUfle received byotfcew mars or lea than that The balance COM to the managers who pay u will be seen howeverthsp- rtMS amounting to 70000 wr received up to the date WAJmotm from the fact that h participates In both sprint and paced events has won more money than any one else and NitsoN s far Is the winner among the followers The foregoing leave no doubt as the great has taken place cycle radnt this season aa compared with the status of the game last year and year before And It should be that the present season 1s only a little than half over Important races are sobed uled for almost every day from now until the middle of September and It U likely that close to 70AX more will be divided among the experts before the season ends It looks as U the wheels power of fascina- tion was still great The plumes of the Cincinnati are abased Those plumbers had resolved to lead the trades union procession Labor Day By right of wealth and the majesty and authority for whloh their profession Is famous the plumbers the first place Less patrician trade anything but a meek spirit that the plumbers wet no let than anybody else and must draw lots for a place in the plumbers found Fortune drew last place Instead of first But they be rather more than less conspicuous that account All the rest of the show will be but a harbinger and herald of the plumbers The best wine will b kept for the end of the feast We are glad to find evidence of the re- turning health of Mr E L OODBIN for- merly editor of the Svtning Peal but now resident of England in the tone of his let ters from that country concerning citizens of this who visit British business or for pleasure Mr nearly his old self again The baRb principle of rreun upon wblrb no man wh cilia tumult a can flnd ticuii tot Ml suntlni fpattA hut what those bulo principle are nobody can find out Indeed It would be dangerous to have them known fixed Are you for free silver Shut about it and roar for the basic principles of Democracy Are you for the gold standard Shut up about it and howl for the baslo principles of Democracy Are you In doubt Play the basic principles These are the true Democratic magical formula and Abracadabra Much of the popularity the Boulanger March was due to fact that it was the recognized the Fair the favorite air of the Paris Exhibition of 1889 Every fair has a song Visitors to Chicago during the 1893 Fair have a de- cidedly definite recollection of the per- ennial and persistent After the Ball and visitors to the Philadelphia Centennial recollect Marching Through Georgia The Buffalo Exposition has had to have a musical feature too and It la one which however melodious certainly doss not show to the from other places much sense This song is one which was popular In New York a seoHon ago and has for its theme the familiar and always engaging subject of a rural visitor or comeon who suffers from his casual acquaintance with the ways or rather the byways of the Great City A country cam to town lt othu Youte htird of Rirrsnts M Ilk thai before doilies iithtr sod hU whtakin long nd gray Youf heard of whliksrt Juit like that b fon The cabby that h ehoo es nowd that round him Socks rrouTltctri of eabMts like Uut before Only charff him flt dollars for a tide of i f en blocks Voute heard of chaifts uit like thtt before Neit morning with a wallet p kd with Juicy V Youre heard of wallets like that before anuses started for a saunter up Broadway tM- IfhU to M VouTC heard of aauntera usl that They had a lau of elder and the neit thlnr nausea knew VouM of rider just like that He was to come on bra gentleman In blue Youri heard of coraeona like that before Riuiuuf had an awful headache his mind was In a hue VeuTi heard of headaches like that before When the Judge remarkd neat mornlnc Its ten dollara or ten days Youre heard remark of jurt that son before Hi wired his wife for money wOk son fatty tale MCUM- Youre heard excuses like thtt before But the answered Not a penny If youre broke walk home you loose Yourt heard of answers Juat like that before The chorus of the song made more famil- iar by repetition than the the vari- ous aa follows cones to town hes sure to be brown Its really rrry shocking and the fact we ihould de- plore But II rant bit helped alaal When a chumps aa pe n- aa Hell meet the fate of hundreds who gone before There are numerous bands In Buffalo playing In the east and west esplanade al- ternately between tIm Electric Tower and the Transportation Building and along the main road of the Midway hut these hands sometimes one oftener two arid oftenest Hire play the same air of salutation to RKUBRX the typical unsophisticated REOBBM a salutation not well calculated- to give the newcomers to the Rainbow City a favorable notion of the hoopltablo treatment which really awaits The Cnlnnrli and Ore n lloren To Pnrron aux sir SNaking of the ability In hirsemanahlp permit me toadS tint no lIner iptclmenof a true horseman then the Colonel la to our bridle boulevards And tItle recoils Story Ill nf the Colonel on sn- occtalon famous White charier wag III and unable to make hU appearance In the 51 Patricks Day parade The Colaiel went to his ilablf keeper and him that he hli hours for the as his famous churner woull rot be In to All rlzht ieI dryly observed the rr TannIn what kind of a b rn do you want 1 want A the Ohrel Ih l h plenty of sell in and a got eteppr inc thatll make a flue appearance Yea I know sail the atihlnun but whet eilorl rtlieiillr knolat the C loins weikn it tot mlllc while charters whit clr he la he ticUlraed sa- line aa he It white Sirry I haint rt a while f r ynu tail we had n carloart nf rrreit hirM come In from Vcr n Oct yestertiy llorll one of them sill you So much IU teller the Colonel lire me- a green nre JOHX UuiiHiir JOKM- nosTos Aug 10 will TtcKeftpnrt Change Its Name To mitt KntTon OK nix SUN sir After the r c eesWooJ pleat has been removed from MeKcri port why not change the name of the city to Plselir J II NUTTtrro- xrw MltPORt Cnnc Aui to Admission to Ik onenclalire- rlutt Uvula lamh T ijnn of Durham N C ate adrertlalnc their real HOnon e th reaoral Fuller Waters waa raonlr elected Chief Clerk of the City Council at nalimore Ud- Otlflaal huffing Sou Co ennllnu to sell eat p ls la lletard slieet Baltimore aid o- ft abut blat duI the on by howe They pleat on a the the Ill moer Doral up Snot visitor RIta tom e mar- a burl word ell don green theta u Wile nIl on or A hIs loll wsntej one of PAle h l doit tot hint for I Not may- be all I paced remembered more plumbers claimed bet The will efful- gent and the the ilLs wet seedy lbs lust just like before before Just lust Stat hoe Cern be seen paths when used Cob roe Sail COIn one eel I lie AppliCants sal a So ¬ > ¬ ¬ < < ¬ ¬ ¬ > > AMKKMA AND TJWf low eaiMKelal British Appeal te Fofell Sentiment to flu Ceuetry To THI EDITOR or Tn BcwSiV last English mall bring a letter from an of fleer very high la of tbe Brit lilt Government with regard to South Africa and although it waa not Intended for pub Ueatlon I think you will tee from Ite oon tents that the writer could not possibly ob- jsot to Its being made known In New York It runs thus I wish you would tell your proBoo American they are doing mud toward the struggle In South Africa Recent despatched from South the Government that a large of correspondence with the floor been recently seized in the fiber the fact that tho fleer political been deceived the possibility of obtaining support not from America but also from several Euro penn countries especially France many Wellmeaning men like our Mr Stead arid your Mr Van Slclen have carried on a lengthened correspondence with Boer assuring them that outside the British Domln ions ls In sympathy with their struggle liberty and that all they have to do hold out until the end when their nations liberty will bo secured- It appears that a very large sum money has been sent from the people of for the of supporting No be raised the citizens of your great Republic sending to Mr KrOger or Mr Steyn large sums money fur the of their cause Rut been misleading to the Boors Fur this recently discovered correspondence re veala the fact that when Mr South for Europe he had not receive both the moral and political support of France Germany States letter which the Emperor of wrote after the the Jameson Raid naturally encouraged this belief this letters come to light that Mr was encour- aged to believe that he would not only be as distinguished guest as honored President of a by J through country he would raise enormous sum and win the and of seventy millions o Englishspeaking Poor Mr The disappoint- ment has been ao great that com- pletely broken the man down and this with the death of his devoted wits makes him an object of pity and commis- eration I do not on the other side of the Atlantic to sympathize with as In our struggle for an should Yes as you England Is at her old busi- ness of grabbing rather think we aiming for a united South Africa very much as struggled for the Union your terrible ar People who live houses should not stones You have not been singularly phil- anthropic to tho red Indian or to negro- or to But no one In America who has watched the of events in South Africa can Britain Is determined to use all her resources In men and order to extinguish Boer rule South Africa Nothlng but tho complete annihilation of Great Britain can the condition of things Under thuso cir- cumstances not be wise anti even for the of America to advise the Roars to Inevitable You express that a small of men moro than 5WO can withstand tho British force of 1000000 If you knew tho conditions In South would not be In tho least cur South Africa Is largely a Dutch colony and the very men take our and eat our as dUrena and subjects of King Edward art at the of hearts proBoer Just aa you seem to be In America- It will all come out right In due time and If can by any means impress this upon your American friends you a great service In the cause humanity- I will agree with me that I am no confidence In asking you to public P II- NRW Aug 10 Americas Help to the lied Cross Work- In Soultt Africa To Tine Having noticed In your columns a few days ago an inquiry from a correspondent about the accounting of those who have received moneys for the suffering among the Boors I would state that tho undersignedTreasurer of the American committee to aid Red Cross work among the Roars made his accounting- and the saute was audited and sent to member of the committee of which William G Davies Augustus Van Wyck Edward lAuterbach John V L Pniyn and others are members on or About May 4 and the name was thereafter and copy thereof duly forwarded to THIS Suit mention made thereof In your columns TUNIS G BRROEN Treasurer Nrw You Aug 9 The Kingly lUcIonshllni To TUB EPITOR or Tim Surf sin I we sur- prised on reading In TIlE SiX of hsi Sunday about the principal clans of Ireland to nnd that J II McCarthy allot ether jnorel the name of one of the famous clans descended from the treat Mel I refer tn the ifacl uhllna In Ibe old Irish OMcloufhlln- Allhouih broken by the first treat Inrmlonbo- muae their country was a treat plain and cooar- quently hard to detent their Klnedon of Ueath yet They art today In this glorious repuhlleof outs second to none a the payroll of this can Ifsllty and as tonics InlbeUrealer Mew and Hudson county can piore They deserre rtonarible mention I know that some of our Irish historians can prone that there more ol Ihm Kin a of Ireland than of any other clan and they ira a kingly race yet NRW YORK Aui in Ocr or THRU Illll Manning Wh re Is he tone the queer Hill man Who made and mended boot sod shoes Who hammered the brojues and rushed Ihe And neter flnhhrd and never hetan While the hdi were dlacuwln the newt Itlll Manning Where Is he Mi f antI Ont nlthl at nine He put oit the gas end roved sway His trade wee f col for he patched an floe Yoi nerrr could tell vhrrr It was on He earned at lessl Uo dollars a Poor Mantnt Im sorry ics tone Ills HoleIn thrWslI- He main a sort of a Patriots Club Mtht alt r rltht hed lecture us all 10 tire enh or life at ouT countrys till And be barely cleared enoiif h fur ito nub Poor Manning He worked days and half of his nlthts nut manarrrt to forge The dead Vats knew poor Theyd orb to say they were Iarnelllf And hed rent Ihflr brotues and buy thorn bread Poor Manning The b jtlnif nter railed In vain Why h uieil I lip Salvation IXMI- He once br tiehl a sick nUter out of the rain And filleR him with b er to ejse his pain And Ie rr l at sit oclock mall poir Manrlni No w rde he bought hl leather rn lick If a xor child came dime or Hed aay and be Ihoiwhl II tlendld pul a Cork s Ie In your brnne aec As he slipped lllir x r Mention y Frr Patrick flay bed Ml hH- Th t to One tow for eu- H lalked of Kmmet weeks afl r that And woo proud that Sar nelda name was rat He ouldnt say Ireland cheer Pnor Mannlnr Sons aay hes gone fir a MIi lad Some say ins married the Wldw Mere II not true for sake bedadli dead thats nnl aa bad But wed or dead Id lire lie BUJ Manning Joacrnl o Cuuvi My fend Arc leer real to only and Oar the leer tue whole for to of Unit pUrl to of left Arc the The Dade the Mr McKinley but he would an KrO r n lad I curl proS Arc braying Yon or Tm SONSir mel ely min abed A IrsMe wan a hop hi hal the councils as is the that lecture MLIII V both EDITOn wets eon his flee ours deal 0 woo with Iwo a tric- kle n abe abe e ithiul has c ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ > > > A rormar MuMtwt r th W Deplore eatlaeat to Her To EOITOI o Tn BowSir I would seem that a good d l of powder L being wasted In defending th old Vermont from the attacks of tbe ship breaker a soft spot for th old snip myself having spent a very pleasant year In her Port Royal South In IMl 4 but when she U In of the Victory and Constitution it U enough I to make Nelson or Balnbridge turn over It- thnlr North Okrolina Pennsyl viola and Ohio wore all built between 18 and ISM The Ohio made one cruise up the Mediterranean and in 1818 was in the Pa ciflo as the of Commodore A- Cate Jones The Pennsylvania I think did make one cruise and was Norfolk In 1891 The North Carolina was receiving ship in New York when the writer was a In the summer used to be Ir the stream off the Battery and in winter at the Cob Dock The Carolina was them when the Civil War began and has since been broken up The Vermont I am quite sure never left the Mass navy until 1M when she was fitted out and started in tow of a steamer called the Kensington to to Port Royal This WM her active very active she made It for Baldwin officer for be- ing shorthanded she had 100 men her complement was nearly 800 she apt away with ran over cut her let Vermont She and She lay the end of the war then was towed to Now York and hu here ever since I do not know If she be full of germs not but It does seem to me that is per feet nonsense to uso these old re- celving are all not do aa the French do have the men in comfortable quarters on shore It does not make a sailor to have him sleep on the orlop deck of one of J A writes Tributes seems to think that if the Vermont la broken up there Is nothing left of the United States such is not my opinion JUttS DiEir MARION Mass Aug 10 APPALLING LETTSR FROM A WOMAN Wn Is te Determine er Innocence or toe Lynched f To TUB EDITOR or TUB Bun It gee without saying that I thoroughly approve of the burning of that black beast at the stake In my Southland the land of chivalry the other day If anything was needed to show the value and educational advantage of these burnings It Is the that a large number of colored persons a helping band In the glorious work of vengeance- But there was one feature wanting or st least not mentioned and unpleasant ni It may b to gIve prominence to It yet justice and demand the preliminary mutilation of these beasts In a way that brands Into the public mind the awful flondlsh devllhh char acter of the crime which they ore Inadequately expiating by being burned at th stake Let me hops that la future executions by burning there will he no uncertainty as to poetic as well as inexorable Justice MsLUsixa Fax PIIRCK Toss Aug 10 The Question of a Personal Devil To TUB KDIIOR or Tan BcjfSir1 If the KpUcopnllnn clergyman who as In TUK SUN of last Sunday searched the Scriptures In vain to find evi- dence of the eilstcnee of a personal devil will turn from the M of Biblical research and study deeply In the surrounding or human nature lie will find rainy fact tbst tend to show that there U some tremendous fore st work among men which certainly Indicates what we would call a devil The human mind hedged In with so many limitations It U not unusual for man- kind to cloth with personality those forces that He the ken of human formula and understanding Booauss ted at on Urns In worlds history for a rood and purpose chose to reveal himself In the form of human person It by no reason follows that forces beyond mans range of vision working for his downfall art clothed with personality term Is a with limitations that unfit It to describe what la beyond In the larger stages of Into which wr all sooner or later with a degree of correspondence thereto which la- i a lucre Corning back to human nature and the manifest cohesive power which characterizes nil known fnnns n feather that exist In th underworld aa well HH typifies thn characteristics of the reform la- Hoclcty Influenced thu anti philosophy of Jeitu Christ Who that nature ever found an tlon for the suggestive toward evil the balance of his twofold nature the ques- tion Which shall find In acts th lowuril evil or triumph irulni of tiioilcil reietrcii Is a poor Held In which to find the devil L mlnMter of the his Muter deep Into th realms of human misery and gradation there he will find In to many forms ao cohesive so many multiple manifestation ha be forced the devil the impersonal force roost r In the world outbids of the Oo p l rind philosophy of Jesus Christ wblch alone leads tendency to laws nf Its primal God mode roan to follow the lAw of Hli being up to His own Divine Imss O XKWYOPK Mug a Sidewalk Bxhalatloni To ice Knrron OP nm Sux sin Your en respondent 0J O while aireelne with me that It Is unpleasant to have hot foul ate blown Into ones fare atpars to think the practice should be showed on the icround that It la more comfortable lot the occupants nf the Msemenl If this point la coo ceded It woitH eieuseercry Imr lHon that has been rractlie1 on s loiirJulTerlni public What with aklrta reckless Irucimca and trolleys the rdeatrlan has troubles enotuh of his own without baring to put up with aay more nulaanea The remedy for 0 J fis trouble lasorery obvious that II Is hardly worth whit to mntlin It Let him connect the flue of his aublerranesn apart- ment with the rentllatirl a llni to the toot It i only K dollars and cents and very few of them M that When he has done this he coo enjoy hlsundercMund habltatlin with out anrnyinz A Loves or PUHB Los NEW YORK to Pubic In Rrsgi- Jroni liu landl It mOOt he crfe scil with humllly thil there Is a- fashln Inirura which is comparable with lolhlnx much as with fashlnn In itress Drns which but yeileplsy ten used are today almost The snllpyiellu which were prescribed a freely fifteen years ace are tartly then tuna for their effect on terarerdure Irnurh the trace ImrorMnl members of the group art ilien still but for entirely lUerenl reisjns The druis whloh at the present moment cites it be at the hetchtef their popularity ate animal eitriets ant antltnlrn yst eye mAY even niw them hare pawil their sitollh and see will b tircoun or at most will be employed only In l lal 4 cane There Ls touch ti be made fr the mental ntmuJeof p luln ss with which we re guise tech rew n ettmme nt for there are till so many dl r and sirrapUima appealing for help and we hUt U aclcmwleilie that w can do but lime far them Vet U wool I b well If we iopi d a more csutliu alllttile In receUlne new diujs and new Delhiftsof to b tried and V br tried but we mint nol eipectto ouch soul mml sift eaiefully fr and Hatlnns for Royal Clergy Llttry- fttm IM rondel Ttnui The Iird Chamberlali has intimated lo the Hints chaplains of both thst his Uslesly baad- elded that all Ihe nervy atHchM to the houshold shall In the future wear the royal cipher embrol- deredal both end of the ordinary broad blae scarf belhr they ate In l r e or In dreas that the Ktnt has a LOtion tab worn In place of tie usual bUck button on sianlsg waJilcoal and on the Court sai I o at cnn the honor I at A town the haws lot six web In to noya or hulk The old tub who Navy AN fie Nsw re- ported held I tb a le the or we find It hm to the Dlnl nook tovether 1 for that to In lou thC or his I ne Oo men lon mOt b th w I of of Alf A dllfrolnc long neil elI they dUlru the nldm I of the TNX Li vJraN2tT Case rims have class the after about Port and been these Landsinan the Guilt re- tribution beyond wig largely type of we have devil vet describe the conditions b life often comes is eve matter elI the delihts his neihbors > were ely for lien cur the peJeeie that many of core Mud against them grad also Ordinaay > ¬ ¬ ¬ > ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ > < < > CAMftxairs TRUES The Heat Has Apparently Hurt the er Transplanted Giant The transplanted trees In Andrew Car- t negles embryo park around his manxlon on the highlands of Fifth avenue am bar a hard struggle for life these ener torrid days Although they care that the experience antI knowledge of the landscape arohitot could devise their foliage Is vaatly Inferior j In luxuriance and color to that of th trrv In Central Park across Fifth avenue At two of the trees the most noteworthy lot are apparently dead and the leaves of the others are small and of the two probably lifeless Is the one known to the workmen as Pet because so much care and eipenw has been lavished to preserve It The Pet is the only tree of the twentyclght In the prospective garden that grew on the site Mr Carnegie chose for his home Even it has been transplanted from Its original bed to a spot selected by the land other tree U the biggest of the elms and maples brought to garden from their grow bog near New Rochelle attempted In this citr an individual property owner Trees that were live planted thirty ago were taken root trunk and branch from their original soil on Des brow farm in and la an especially prepared soil on Mr Csrnf- gle s trees were carefully M and inolude were planted rather close together and that the reason been aa healthy and luxuriant this sum- mer The Pet a silver leaf poplar Is unique among Mr Carnegies others are fair to look The Pet has a crooked trunk with crooked limbs that branch out at that a lover of trained and controlled could not of It U more than proba ble that the landscape architect ordered it down a jiffy If Mr Carnegie had not determined u It was the tree on the site he had purchased Its life should ba spared no matter what the expense COMMERCE WITH GERMANY Immense Growth In Trade Figures ea Exports and Imports WASHINGTON Aug liHecpnt regarding the commerce between the United States and Germany lend especial interest to some figures just presented by the Treasury Bureau of Statistics which show the growth of commerce between the two countries In the last thirty years and In detail during the last ten years These figures show that Imports into the Inted States from Germany have Increased front 117000000 In 1870 to 100000000 in 1901 and that exports from the Unites States to that country have increased from la 000000 in 1870 to 181000000 in 1001 an In crease of 300 cent In Imports been during the last fivx years in which time our exports to Germany have doubled being In 1860 87837107 In iDol 191 07V2i This growth Is distributed among- a large number Comparing our exports to Germany In 1895 of 1801 corn hiss front I172MB lu 1884 to 17305278 In 1801 whwit front l522 78 to 7871573 lard from 801861 to 2838885 to 5743674 flour from JJ4n264 to 30112i9 agricultural front to 2177318 and copper from 1004 of all kinds Including steam engine in- creased from 11895134 In 1895 to not yet available side the articles whloh show the greatest growth during the lost decode are tar chcmlcttN laces and embroideries earthen ttono anil ohinaware and sugar Coal tarcolors soil have Increased from 1272274 In ISfll In 1800 other from 18889M to 3998110 stone and chinaware from to 2787183 and sugar from 348734 OLDEST PHOTOGRAPHER The Boston Dscuerrntyper to Hliora Daniel Webster and Kossutli Sat Prom Ac Button Kitning Tran cri l Josiah Johnson Hswes who was said to the oldest photographer In America n Wejdnesdsy He as born In FAst Stidburv Feb 20 1808 and was therefore In his ntnttv fourth year Hn received education in the common schools studied art wKhotit 1 teacher and painted mlnlaturus portrait and landscapes until Id At that unto lie liecsniH Interested In the Invention Dnjrucrrp Gouraud his demonstrator nod In compare with Albert J Southworth opened a dude on Tramont row For morn than bolt a century Mr Haws conducted buolnros in the same room which are today much th sauna as when he took possession H an ardent admirer of old lioston and it delight to hear him tell of inch bpnutlfut as the Gardiner Ore en relate on Square on whlih lila back wlndown looked out Among tIme who Mt before Mr Hawks canners were Dsnlnl Webster ChnrlcsSiunnir Rufus Choste KoMUdi Tliwiior- sIsrknr Emerson Charming lured siir Alcott Lyroin Ileechrr thorns Starr porntheo Dix Ijirront Oliver morn vhi o tonic rtlll lives Jenny Und stud hr lover Otto were taken while prx hand In hand nnd lin curried m her swuliili home many Ilkennawa of its llu now whirls then nllraitlne and Chance Dickens was a he never v d hut with Jinns I Fle Idt an lots companion lte oftott tt Md to fairs Thn Mtidlo nr saloon It was called then ix inperlne for all Boston anti many 1 bit of remlnliwncv could r Un- to an Interested listener Tti plrtur that most sironuly In his was the he Fanny Carlnr notion now Mr London this of Chief Hliaws dncni r often wen In taIls tan adorns the rtoston library Mr Hntrns wm when this first doa nf wits administered Dr Unrrnn In the MaMachil tti Cnnnral Hospital its pictures of Boston s It n have always b nu much iizltt- In nvlvnd th art of with marked niirro- Hn haul little sympathy with thn mod rn n of not ii T r destroying nil Indirlduallty and Dinn T proms an One MtutHii In was the Inventor of mnchsnlral devItT ns th swine T earners the reflorllnc Mnreiiiooiw Hi plying camcrn and the triple lena H Ilitnp poiMn the Av waf f rent nf rMr lotta Integrity H sluncli friend and nn iJe il iced n In art ant llterntlirn anti with hits poetic rnmp ra- mnnt w j Iomlilnnd a arn t nn- r and will llln Inmllnctttal ponnr diminished xllirhtly with death was very suiidnn Hn h J wen of Mount Vtrnon where until within a few months his hfsutlful llcurn- ihvays present on Sunday Platform nreaki at Cornerstone Isstng In the course of the ceremony of laying cornerstone yesterday of the new Roman Catholic Church of St Jerome t Xewkirk and Nontrand avenues Flat the platform on which were seated rlcarGftiersl MoNarnara and a number f gave way arid threw the clergy noon to the a distance nf i dozen wits a of sand indorrtesth and no ono was Injured Father of titus Church the Cvangrllst was delivering the sermon rear wall the now edifice whan craah came Tba su rest Illood PurlOet I DYING I GrOT nUn i let wi- ther to have a gr run Is the the lee elm and from Germany of 0 I to Germany I tend from to 7785496 StD in the for IDl In dye chemic IRC from 945185 to 31 iSo TiE died h i plates Louis Ill 1uc and dl l lag bat trees lbs Mr u his city mansion They discus- sions and nearly per cent experts in the greatest has 15700875 oil oil cake meal isis 390 In 1595 Machinery 1900 this 2402172 earthen 12 Pus his 11 rung sac u- sa Longfellow herself noes world- wide visitor os wow artistic spruce one niod hail Just are ether h genera ago ito yea re wes < nit fur r stunt k v lust vignette line tastes keen Tests for itenri so ruicrtilwr sac the bush ground feet from the the 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Transcript of Li CAMftxairs I t1 - Library of...

Page 1: Li CAMftxairs I t1 - Library of Congresschroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83030272/1901-08-12/ed-1/seq-6.pdf · f f t measures to relieve the town ... l ltbe t1 I t 1 f f T f1 1 1

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The of Labor Agitatorinterests at and the

of havedisturbed for a long time by a auc

of itrikM for causes inntl-

Cated by the Thlaunion is known aa the Reststencia andIU and spirit are

Laat week it was reported that a vigi-

lance committee the citizens ofxaaperated by the ohronio

moil prevailing there had adopted des

f f t measures to relieve the townAccording to the eighteen ofthe principal the

of La an organ of theunloo were seized and overpowered bythe vigilantes and forcibly removed from

There is no definite knowledgewhereabouts A

correspondent of the Tobaccoever intimates that a schooner waschartered for the purpose of convoyingthe kidnapped men to Honduras At thesame time the vigilantes addressed to

the anarchists and professional laboragitators a proclamation as follows

We say that your day In Tampa are at anrnd We cannot and will not permit you todestroy thla prosperous city If you b T

regard for your safety you will shakefrom your feet In conclusion we notify Uiomanufacturers that this movement of citizens

Dot In your Interests but In the Interest ofthe entire community

An esteemed friend of Tax SUN himself greatly Interested in the prosperityof Florida invites our consideration ofthis method of disposing of ofmischief and desires ourfame He shall have it He can scarcelyunderstand tho principles which thisnewspaper applies to tho discussion ofsuch troubles if he supposes that THERUN will be less swift to condemn law-

lessness and tho invasion of personalrights when directed against strikers andthe leaders and instigators of strikesthan when the latter againstemployers righto and the Con-

stitutional liberties of nonunion workingmen-

If the facts are as reported fromthe proceedings of the vigilance

there are absolutely Indefen-sible pernicious and deplorable bothspecifically and in view of the generalsituation If the citizens resorting tolynch law had received either direct or

support from the authorities ofis no evidence so far as we

know the municipal representatives oflaw in Tampa would be every whit as de-

serving of condemnation us was theMayor of McKeesport when he used thoauthority of his office to encourage law-

lessness of another kindmake no distinctions when wo call

upon public opinion to sustain tho en-

forcement of law and the scrupulousprotection of individual liberties againstall of the same who may be

one side or the other oflabor disputes Such a public sentiment-is the only safeguard of society againstanarchy and It cannot be inone quarter and called oT

hope our position is clear

Our Agricultural ImportsThere are some remarkable figures

in the Department of Agricultures lostpamphlet on Sources of the Agricul-tural Imports of the United StatesThe man who has only a knowl-

edge of tho subject will themsome surprises

Most people are inclined to take it foras an agricultural country

resources are equal to ourdemands with the exception of a fewproducts which are to be found onlybeyond our borders As a matter ofunprejudiced statistics however theannual average of our totalfor the lost four years showsover 50 per cent of them have beenagricultural For instance last year420139288 of imports were of thischaracter out of a total import billof 849041184 It probably would notoccur to a man who knew littleour South American neighbors toBrazil as the first on tho list of thosesupplying us with Agricultural importsShe sent to us 39287000 worth of agricultural products last year and morethan 33000000 worth of this sum waspaid for coffee The farm products ofthe United Kingdom come next amounting to 32608000 largely reexportsand the Dutch Kant Indies are a Roodthird among our Hourcea of supplywith a bill of 27500000 mostly for sugarCuba drops Into fourth place by a verysmall margin her total Imports to tho

States being valued at t726falls behind Cuba by

one million dollars From France wnbought 21052000 worth of agriculturalimports last year and from Mexicoproducts valued at 20000000 Wo re-

ceived agricultural imports exceeding20000000 in value from Hawaii andexceeding 5000000 from tho Philip-pine Islands We bought our tea fromChina and Japan our tobacco fromCuba and the Netherlands our winesfrom Franco Germany and andour wools in the British andfrom China and Russia

Wherever any market In tho worldhas had anything to sell that vn coulduse this country has been a generousbuyer In view of tho conditionsprevailed In the Philippine Islands wothink that there Is a significant promisein the report that we purchased mornthan 6000000 worth of agriculturalproducts from them last year This ia

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presumptive evidwoo of the factnew of oars ire

valuable in business wayUndoubtedly we paid some part ofPhilippine bill In American manufactored goods And when Haw1balances up books and enters ondebtor column a charge against us20998909 for goods purchased

year she reasonably may congratulateherself on her hold upon our marketsShe was ninth among our sources of sup-

ply and during the put four yearHawaiis agricultural exports to us

in valueRico sent her products of

soil to our markets last year and re

wired in return either goods or money-

to the value of 2090416 We must notoverlook the tact that we have been aheavy seller of many agricultural prod-

ucts for years Our new possessionspromise a steady reduction In our coffee

tobacco and sugar bills from other naProbably we must continue to

from China and Japan forthe last shipment of tea to this countryfrom the Philippines was in 1890 and Itwas only 172

Our Warships at Colon and PanamaThe despatch of the gunboat Machiaa

to Colon and the order to AdmiralCASEY commanding the Pacific stationto send the battleship Wisconsin fromBremerton in Puget Sound to San Francisco whence she can be sent to Panamashow that the United States are on thealert to protect the interests of theircitizens in Colombia and to outtheir duties as defined by

Our interests there are considerablethe most important of being thePanama Railroad from on the At-

lantic to Panama on the Pacific coastBy a treaty made with the Republic ofNew Granada now the Republic ofColombia some forty the lattercountry itself open theright of across the Isthmus andthe United States bound themselves tomaintain the sovereignty of New Granadaover the same country The appearanceof our warships at Colon and Panamatherefore indicates that we are pre-

pared at once to perform our dutiestoward Colombia and to see that Colom-

bia performs hers toward usThe presence of our warships In the

principal ports of Colombia is nothingnew Repeatedly wo have had to sendthem there to protect American inter-

ests though we have never been calledon to defend Colombias integrity ofcontrol over the isthmus During thebuilding of the Panama Railroad ournaval vessels were constant atAsplnwall now Colon andbut the most Important visit made tothose ports was that In 1835 when Colon

was burned by the Insurgents underGen AIZPURV The Galena Capt KANB

landed men at Colon and the IroquoisCapt Snauso others at Panama on the threatenedstoppage of transit across the isthmusThe presence of our sailorspractically put an AIZPUBUS

chances of success In the autumn ofthe same year we increased our fleet inthe Atlantic owing to the prospect offurther troubles in Colombia but thestep proved unnecessary

In March 1895 the Atlanta landedmarines and bluejackets at Bocas delToro while the Raleigh at Colon andthe Alert at Panama were ready to landothers this was because of the insur-

rection led by AVELINO ROSAS andIn 1896 the American Ministerened to send for a war vessel unless theColombian Government apologized forseizing an American vessel the GeorgeWhitford but the vessel was not sentus apology was forthcoming Againduring 1900 we sent a warship to Panama during the insurrection begun byGen SANTOS and protested againsttho rebels proposed bombardment ofPanama Our treaty with Colombia-has kept us In much closer touch withthat country than with any other southof us but despite the expense to whichit has put us proven valuable In-

asmuch as without our right to interfere the operations of the Panama Railroad would most certainly have beeninterrupted many times

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Redistribution of Seats In ParliamentThe Spectator and other Unionist

newspapers seem to have stirred up ahornet nest by their demand that Ire-

lands representation in the House ofCommons should bo strictly proportionedto tho population with which she iscredited by the recent census Theyhave been met with tho rejoinder Phy-

sician heal thyself It Is pointed outthat most glaring examples of dispro-portion between population and repre-sentation exist in England and that itwould be Iniquitous to leave thesegrievance iinrexlretwd If the questionof redistribution Is to be taken up at allThe Conservative Government how-

ever could not without alienating agreat many of supporters applyrigorously to England tho principle thatrepresentation should he exactlyportioned to population Wetherefore that tho demand for a material curtailment of Irelands repre-sentation In Commons will remainunheeded for tome time to come

When tho lost reform of tho suffrageand tho last redistribution of souLs werecarried out In 188485 in pursuance of anagreement between Mr GLADSTONE

and Lord SALISBURY the Radical pro-

posals that one man should have onlyone voto and that santa should boallotted as nearly as possible In propor-tion to population had some strenuousadvocate in both the Conservative andLiberal partita but they met with only-

a qualified acceptance Plural votingis still possible In England and a great

boroughs retain seats not bothey deserve them by of

their population but on oftheir historical claims It is admittedthat in England several small boroughs-now returning ono member apieceought to ho In the countiessurrounding again thutother boroughs which now return twomembers ought to be content with asingle member-

In Scotland also where the boroughscollectively return thirtyone members

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i tfcer Is BO debt tkt setae of-I have ao dUe to separate representationi if the of their inhabitants

can hardly call any oI these boroughs rotten but they ani unjustly privileged-

As It happens almost every one ofthe English seats which would be abol-

ished were representation to be apto population is now occufollower of Lord BAUBBUBY

All of these seats would be Imperilled-

If every underpeopled borough weremerged In the adjoining county and Ifthe Liberal should gain coherenceand the ensuing generalelection Under the circumstances onocan easily perceive why the presentGovernment is likely to be influenced-by the admonition quMa non movers

or in our homely idiom to let sleepingdogs lie

Not only do rainy English and someScotch boroughs possess seats to whichthey are not fairly entitled but someof the great urban aggregations ofpeople lack the weight In the House ofCommons which they may justly claim

Especially is this true of the Londonand Metropolitan boroughs whichcollectively contain a fifth ofEnglands population returnsixtytwo members out of the 465 allottedto England When we bear in thatthe British metropolis ispreponderant with respect to industryand wealth than it is with regard to popu-

lation we cannot but recognize its in-

adequate representation as a capitalin tho existing system It isthat the metropolis will deem

the of the discrimination-from which it at present suffers a re-

form even more urgently required thanthe reduction of Irelands representationin the House of Commons

The Liberal party will not make theapportionment of members to popu-

lation a plank in Its platform because-

it has no intention of quarrelling withits Irish allies The Salisbury Govern-ment will be equally reluctant to raisethe redistribution question because itwill run the risk of losing itspresent hold upon boroughs-

or of forfeiting its lately acquired in-

fluence in the metropolis-

Mr Vests Democratic PlatformThe Hon GEOJIOB GRAHAM VEST of

Missouri has been found by an inter-viewer at Sweet has bubbled-

a Democratic 1904 SenatorVEST says that the mainbe those

1 Graduated mooms tax2 Unrelenting opposition to Trustsa Declaration against Imperialism and

the colonist syalcmMr VEST thinks that it would be

suicidal to thrust the silver issue forwardagain yet the sliver issuo is no less andno more valuable than the antiImperialIsm issue The Democrats angled for

antiimperialism in 1900 andwere few bites It is a stale and

hopeless bait A declaration againstthe Louisiana purchase or against theannexation of Texas would bo

as practical and as promisingagainst Imperialism There

are a great many Democratic Imperial-ists including some of the ablest menand newspapers In the South andreasonable Democratic antiimpcrinllstsunderstand that the game Is up Theywill not be eager to accept Mr VESTSgay Invitation to butt against the factsthe decisions of the Supreme Court andpublic sentiment Antiimperialism is adead goose

Unrelenting opposition to Trustshey Well all the parties are unrelen-tingly opposed to Trusts a fact whichneed not and does not glvo the Trustsmuch anxiety Unrelenting opposition toTrusts didnt do the Democrats any goodin 1900 and there Is no probability thatit will do them any more good in 1904

The public has become cynical about theantiTrust platforms AntiTrust lawsare seen to amount to nothing Thosolid business reasons for Trusts are evident Farmers and laborers combinesmall capitalists as well as largo onesTho antiTrust issue is another dead

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We had supposed that Mr VERT wasor wished to be considered as an oldline Democrat He was to help thrustBRYAN and Brjanlsra away and glvo theDemocrats something thoroughly Demo-cratic Yet from the

the tax Firstthe borrowed the income tax

Now Mr VEST

would have them the whole Popu-list notion Mr must be fishingfor tho Missouri Populists who will notrise to Fusion as their Nebraska breth-ren have done

Two dead Issues of 1900 and thePopulist income taxi Reorganizatio-nisnt Mr VESTS strong suit

of the statements lately publishedregarding the present unpopularity of thewheel In this country particularly inan far as they concern cycle racing am mis-leading Various reports have been cir-

culated to effect that tho bicycle Is nolonger an attraction on the dspite the Introduction of and ex-pensive motor cycles for pacing and thatthorn U very little demand for the servicesof profetwlonal racing men One critloaverred a fuw days ago that whereas valuable cash prizes were given such riders afew years ago they wore not oven offeredleather medals to race for now

Presumably the author of this remarkhad in mind the cycle craze which existedfour or five years ago when racing was anexceedingly prominent feature of the sportbut nevertheless his assertion grouMy mis-represents tho fact A statement printedlast wek In tho Philadelphia Retard givesthe winnings of the cycle racers on theEastern tracks since the opening of thepresent season on April 19 Of the profes-sional riders had won 4812 upto Aug 5 449150 McFAnLAND IJOS9SO Ross 228250 FGN-VIleo780 KRAMER 144350 CADWKU

1132500 and the purses by eightother cracks rangedfrom 500 to 900 Of theriders Nitwox had won 803975 HTJNBOV

718325 MORAN 475 MlCHAKI 1070-KLKEH 4410 WALTROVR 417850 whilenine other In this class had won from

1000 to JThe net rush receipts of the men depend of

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esfve tsvty 4faePer oast sf tMv-wfcfle the ysresnUfle received byotfcew

mars or lea than that The balanceCOM to the managers who payu will be seen howeverthsp-

rtMS amounting to 70000 wrreceived up to the date WAJmotmfrom the fact that h participates In both

sprint and paced events has won moremoney than any one else and NitsoN sfar Is the winner among thefollowers

The foregoing leave no doubt asthe great has taken placecycle radnt this season aa compared withthe status of the game last year andyear before And It should bethat the present season 1s only a littlethan half over Important races are sobeduled for almost every day from now untilthe middle of September and It U likelythat close to 70AX more will be dividedamong the experts before the season endsIt looks as U the wheels power of fascina-tion was still great

The plumes of the Cincinnatiare abased Those plumbers had resolvedto lead the trades union processionLabor Day By right of wealth andthe majesty and authority for whloh theirprofession Is famous the plumbersthe first place Less patrician trade

anything but a meek spiritthat the plumbers wet no

let than anybody else and must drawlots for a place in theplumbers found Fortune drewlast place Instead of first But theybe rather more than less conspicuousthat account All the rest of the show willbe but a harbinger and herald of the

plumbers The best wine will bkept for the end of the feast

We are glad to find evidence of the re-

turning health of Mr E L OODBIN for-merly editor of the Svtning Peal but nowresident of England in the tone of his letters from that country concerningcitizens of this who visitBritish business or for pleasure Mr

nearly his old self again

The baRb principle of rreunupon wblrb no man wh cilia tumult acan flnd ticuii tot Ml suntlnifpattA

hut what those bulo principle arenobody can find out Indeed It wouldbe dangerous to have them knownfixed Are you for free silver Shutabout it and roar for the basic principlesof Democracy Are you for the goldstandard Shut up about it and howl forthe baslo principles of Democracy Areyou In doubt Play the basic principlesThese are the true Democratic magicalformula and Abracadabra

Much of the popularity the BoulangerMarch was due to fact that it was therecognized the Fair the favoriteair of the Paris Exhibition of1889 Every fair has a song Visitors toChicago during the 1893 Fair have a de-

cidedly definite recollection of the per-ennial and persistent After the Balland visitors to the Philadelphia Centennialrecollect Marching Through GeorgiaThe Buffalo Exposition has had to have a

musical feature too and It la one whichhowever melodious certainly doss not showto the from other places muchsense This song is onewhich was popular In New York a seoHonago and has for its theme the familiarand always engaging subject of a ruralvisitor or comeon who suffers from hiscasual acquaintance with the ways orrather the byways of the Great City

A country cam to town lt othu

Youte htird of Rirrsnts M Ilk thai beforedoilies iithtr sod hU whtakin long

nd grayYouf heard of whliksrt Juit like that b fon

The cabby that h ehoo es nowd that roundhim Socks

rrouTltctri of eabMts like Uut beforeOnly charff him flt dollars for a tide of i f en blocks

Voute heard of chaifts uit like thtt before

Neit morning with a wallet p kd withJuicy V

Youre heard of wallets like that beforeanuses started for a saunter up Broadway tM-

IfhU to M

VouTC heard of aauntera usl thatThey had a lau of elder and the neit thlnr nausea

knewVouM of rider just like that

He was to come on bra gentleman In blueYouri heard of coraeona like that before

Riuiuuf had an awful headache his mind was Ina hue

VeuTi heard of headaches like that beforeWhen the Judge remarkd neat mornlnc Its ten

dollara or ten daysYoure heard remark of jurt that son before

Hi wired his wife for money wOk son fatty taleMCUM-

Youre heard excuses like thtt beforeBut the answered Not a penny If youre broke walk

home you looseYourt heard of answers Juat like that before

The chorus of the song made more famil-iar by repetition than the the vari-ous aa follows

cones to town hes sure to bebrown

Its really rrry shocking and the fact we ihould de-

ploreBut II rant bit helped alaal When a chumps aa pe n-

aaHell meet the fate of hundreds who gone before

There are numerous bands In Buffaloplaying In the east and west esplanade al-

ternately between tIm Electric Tower andthe Transportation Building and along themain road of the Midway hut these handssometimes one oftener two arid oftenestHire play the same air of salutationto RKUBRX the typical unsophisticatedREOBBM a salutation not well calculated-to give the newcomers to the RainbowCity a favorable notion of the hoopltablotreatment which really awaits

The Cnlnnrli and Ore n llorenTo Pnrron aux sir SNaking

of the ability In hirsemanahlp permit metoadS tint no lIner iptclmenof a true horsemanthen the Colonel la to our bridle

boulevardsAnd tItle recoils Story Ill nf the Colonel on sn-

occtalon famous White charier wag III andunable to make hU appearance In the 51 PatricksDay parade

The Colaiel went to his ilablf keeper and himthat he hli hours for the ashis famous churner woull rot be In to

All rlzht ieI dryly observed the rr TannInwhat kind of a b rn do you want

1 want A the Ohrel Ih l h

plenty of sell in and a got eteppr inc thatllmake a flue appearance

Yea I know sail the atihlnun but wheteilorl rtlieiillr knolat the C loins weikn ittot mlllc while charters

whit c l r he la he ticUlraed sa-

line aa he It whiteSirry I haint rt a while f r ynu tail we

had n carloart nf rrreit hirM come In from Vcrn Oct yestertiy llorll one of them sill you

So much IU teller the Colonel lire me-

a green nreJOHX UuiiHiir JOKM-

nosTos Aug 10

will TtcKeftpnrt Change Its Name

To mitt KntTon OK nix SUN sir After ther c eesWooJ pleat has been removed from MeKcriport why not change the name of the city toPlselir J II NUTTtrro-xrw MltPORt Cnnc Aui to

Admission to Ik onenclalire-rlutt

Uvula lamh T ijnn of Durham N C ateadrertlalnc their real HOnon e th reaoral

Fuller Waters waa raonlr elected Chief Clerk ofthe City Council at nalimore Ud-

Otlflaal huffing Sou Co ennllnu to sell eatp ls la lletard slieet Baltimore aid

o-

ftabut

blatduI

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AMKKMA AND TJWf loweaiMKelal British Appeal te Fofell

Sentiment to flu CeuetryTo THI EDITOR or Tn BcwSiV

last English mall bring a letter from an offleer very high la of tbe Britlilt Government with regard to South Africaand although it waa not Intended for pubUeatlon I think you will tee from Ite oontents that the writer could not possibly ob-

jsot to Its being made known In New YorkIt runs thus

I wish you would tell your proBooAmerican they are doing mudtoward the struggle In SouthAfrica Recent despatched from South

the Government that a largeof correspondence with the floor

been recently seized in the fiberthe fact that tho fleer

political been deceivedthe possibility of obtaining support notfrom America but also from several Europenn countries especially Francemany Wellmeaning men like our MrStead arid your Mr Van Slclen have carriedon a lengthened correspondence withBoer assuring them that

outside the British Domlnions ls In sympathy with their struggleliberty and that all they have to dohold out until the end when their nationsliberty will bo secured-

It appears that a very large summoney has been sent from the people of

for the of supportingNo be raised

the citizens of your great Republic sendingto Mr KrOger or Mr Steyn large sumsmoney fur the of their cause Rut

been misleading to the Boors Furthis recently discovered correspondence reveala the fact that when MrSouth for Europe he had not

receive boththe moral and political support of FranceGermany States

letter which the Emperor ofwrote after the the JamesonRaid naturally encouraged this belief

this letters come to lightthat Mr was encour-

aged to believe that he would not only beas distinguished guest as

honored President of a byJ

through country he would raiseenormous sum and win the

and of seventy millions oEnglishspeaking Poor Mr

The disappoint-ment has been ao great that com-pletely broken the man down and this

with the death of his devoted witsmakes him an object of pity and commis-eration

I do not on the other side ofthe Atlantic to sympathize with as In ourstruggle for an shouldYes as you England Is at her old busi-ness of grabbing rather thinkwe aiming for a united SouthAfrica very much as struggled for theUnion your terrible ar Peoplewho live houses should notstones You have not been singularly phil-anthropic to tho red Indian or to negro-or to

But no one In America who has watchedthe of events in South Africa can

Britain Is determined touse all her resources In men and

order to extinguish Boer ruleSouth Africa Nothlng but tho completeannihilation of Great Britain canthe condition of things Under thuso cir-cumstances not be wise anti even

for the of America toadvise the Roars to Inevitable

You express that a smallof men moro than 5WO can

withstand tho British force of 1000000If you knew tho conditions In South

would not be In tho least curSouth Africa Is largely a Dutch

colony and the very men take ourand eat our as dUrena

and subjects of King Edward art at theof hearts proBoer Just aa you

seem to be In America-It will all come out right In due time and

If can by any means impress this uponyour American friends you agreat service In the cause humanity-

I will agree with me that I amno confidence In asking you to

public P II-NRW Aug 10

Americas Help to the lied Cross Work-In Soultt Africa

To Tine Havingnoticed In your columns a few days ago aninquiry from a correspondent about theaccounting of those who have receivedmoneys for the suffering among the BoorsI would state that tho undersignedTreasurerof the American committee to aid Red Crosswork among the Roars made his accounting-and the saute was audited and sent tomember of the committee of which WilliamG Davies Augustus Van Wyck EdwardlAuterbach John V L Pniyn and othersare members on or About May 4 and thename was thereafter and copythereof duly forwarded to THIS Suitmention made thereof In your columns

TUNIS G BRROEN TreasurerNrw You Aug 9

The Kingly lUcIonshllniTo TUB EPITOR or Tim Surf sin I we sur-

prised on reading In TIlE SiX of hsi Sunday aboutthe principal clans of Ireland to nnd that J IIMcCarthy allot ether jnorel the name of one of the

famous clans descended from the treat MelI refer tn the ifacl uhllna In Ibe old

Irish OMcloufhlln-Allhouih broken by the first treat Inrmlonbo-

muae their country was a treat plain and cooar-

quently hard to detent their Klnedon of Ueathyet

They art today In this glorious repuhlleofouts second to none a the payroll of this canIfsllty and as tonics InlbeUrealer Mew andHudson county can piore

They deserre rtonarible mention I know thatsome of our Irish historians can prone that there

more ol Ihm Kin a of Ireland than of anyother clan and they ira a kingly race yet

NRW YORK Aui in Ocr or THRU

Illll ManningWh re Is he tone the queer Hill man

Who made and mended boot sod shoesWho hammered the brojues and rushed Ihe

And neter flnhhrd and never hetanWhile the hdi were dlacuwln the newt

Itlll Manning

Where Is he Mi f antI Ont nlthl at nineHe put oit the gas end roved sway

His trade wee fcol for he patched an floe

Yoi nerrr could tell vhrrr It was onHe earned at lessl Uo dollars a

Poor MantntIm sorry ics tone Ills HoleIn thrWslI-

He main a sort of a Patriots Club

Mtht alt r rltht hed lecture us all

10 tire enh or life at ouT countrys tillAnd be barely cleared enoiif h fur ito nub

Poor Manning

He worked days and half of his nlthtsnut manarrrt to forge

The dead Vats knew poor

Theyd orb to say they were IarnelllfAnd hed rent Ihflr brotues and buy thorn

breadPoor Manning

The b jtlnif nter railed In vainWhy h uieil I lip Salvation IXMI-

He once br tiehl a sick nUter out of the rainAnd filleR him with b er to ejse his pain

And Ie rr l at sit oclock mallpoir Manrlni

No w rde he bought hl leather rn lick

If a xor child came dime or

Hed aay and be Ihoiwhl II tlendldpul a Cork s Ie In your brnne aec

As he slipped lllirx r Mention y

Frr Patrick flay bed Ml hH-

Th t to One tow for eu-

H lalked of Kmmet weeks afl r thatAnd woo proud that Sar nelda name was rat

He ouldnt say Ireland cheerPnor Mannlnr

Sons aay hes gone fir a MIi ladSome say ins married the Wldw Mere

II not true for sake bedadlidead thats nnl aa bad

But wed or dead Id lire lieBUJ Manning

Joacrnl o Cuuvi

My

fend

Arcleer

real toonly

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A rormar MuMtwt r th W

Deplore eatlaeat to HerTo EOITOI o Tn BowSir I

would seem that a good d l of powder L

being wasted In defending th old Vermontfrom the attacks of tbe ship breaker

a soft spot for th old snip myselfhaving spent a very pleasant year In herPort Royal South In IMl 4 butwhen she U Inof the Victory and Constitution it U enough

I to make Nelson or Balnbridge turn over It-

thnlrNorth Okrolina Pennsyl

viola and Ohio wore all built between 18

and ISM The Ohio made one cruise up theMediterranean and in 1818 was in the Paciflo as the of Commodore A-

Cate Jones The Pennsylvania I thinkdid make one cruise and wasNorfolk In 1891 The North Carolina wasreceiving ship in New York when the writerwas a In the summer used to be Irthe stream off the Battery and in winter atthe Cob Dock The Carolina wasthem when the Civil War began and hassince been broken up

The Vermont I am quite sure never leftthe Mass navy until1M when she was fitted out and startedin tow of a steamer called the Kensingtonto to Port Royal This WM her

active very active she madeIt for Baldwin officer for be-

ing shorthanded she had 100 menher complement was nearly 800 she

apt away with ran overcut her let

Vermont She and

She lay the end of the warthen was towed to Now York and huhere ever since

I do not know If she be full of germsnot but It does seem to me that is perfeet nonsense to uso these old re-celving are all

not do aa the French do have the menin comfortable quarters on shore

It does not make a sailor to have himsleep on the orlop deck of one of

JA writes Tributes

seems to think that if the Vermont la brokenup there Is nothing left of the United States

such is not my opinionJUttS DiEir

MARION Mass Aug 10

APPALLING LETTSR FROM AWOMAN

Wn Is te Determine er Innocenceor toe Lynched f

To TUB EDITOR or TUB Bun It geewithout saying that I thoroughly approve ofthe burning of that black beast at the stake Inmy Southland the land of chivalry the otherday If anything was needed to show thevalue and educational advantage of theseburnings It Is the that a large numberof colored persons a helping band In theglorious work of vengeance-

But there was one feature wanting or stleast not mentioned and unpleasant ni It mayb to gIve prominence to It yet justice and

demand the preliminary mutilationof these beasts In a way that brands Into thepublic mind the awful flondlsh devllhh character of the crime which they ore Inadequatelyexpiating by being burned at th stake

Let me hops that la future executions byburning there will he no uncertainty as topoetic as well as inexorable Justice

MsLUsixa Fax PIIRCKToss Aug 10

The Question of a Personal DevilTo TUB KDIIOR or Tan BcjfSir1 If

the KpUcopnllnn clergyman who asIn TUK SUN of last Sunday

searched the Scriptures In vain to find evi-dence of the eilstcnee of a personal devil willturn from the M of Biblical research andstudy deeply In the surrounding orhuman nature lie will find rainy fact tbsttend to show that there U some tremendousfore st work among men which certainlyIndicates what we would call a devil

The human mind hedged In with somany limitations It U not unusual for man-kind to cloth with personality those forcesthat He the ken of human formula andunderstanding Booauss ted at on UrnsIn worlds history for a rood andpurpose chose to reveal himself In the form of

human person It by no reason follows thatforces beyond mans range of vision

working for his downfall art clothed withpersonality

term Is a withlimitations that unfit It to describe what labeyond In the larger stages of Intowhich wr all sooner or later with adegree of correspondence thereto which la-

i a lucreCorning back to human nature and the

manifest cohesive power which characterizesnil known fnnns n feather

that exist In th underworld aa well HH typifiesthn characteristics of the reform la-Hoclcty Influenced thu anti philosophyof Jeitu Christ Who thatnature ever found antlon for the suggestive toward evil

the balance of his twofold nature the ques-tion Which shall find In actsth lowuril evil or triumph

irulni of tiioilcil reietrcii Is a poorHeld In which to find the devil LmlnMter of the his Muterdeep Into th realms of human misery andgradation there he will find In tomany forms ao cohesive

so many multiple manifestation habe forced the devil theimpersonal force roost r

In the world outbids of theOo p l rind philosophy of Jesus Christ wblchalone leads tendency to

laws nf Its primal Godmode roan to follow the lAw of Hli being up toHis own Divine Imss O

XKWYOPK Mug a

Sidewalk BxhalatloniTo ice Knrron OP nm Sux sin Your en

respondent 0 J O while aireelne with me thatIt Is unpleasant to have hot foul ate blown Intoones fare atpars to think the practice should beshowed on the icround that It la more comfortable lotthe occupants nf the Msemenl If this point la cooceded It woitH eieuseercry Imr lHon that hasbeen rractlie1 on s loiirJulTerlni public Whatwith aklrta reckless Irucimca and trolleys therdeatrlan has troubles enotuh of his own withoutbaring to put up with aay more nulaanea

The remedy for 0 J fis trouble lasoreryobvious that II Is hardly worth whit to mntlin ItLet him connect the flue of his aublerranesn apart-ment with the rentllatirl a llni to the toot It ionly K dollars and cents and very few ofthem M that When he has done this he coo enjoy

hlsundercMund habltatlin without anrnyinz

A Loves or PUHB LosNEW YORK to

Pubic In Rrsgi-

Jroni liu landlIt mOOt he crfe scil with humllly thil there Is a-

fashln Inirura which is comparable with lolhlnxmuch as with fashlnn In itress Drns which but

yeileplsy ten used are today almostThe snllpyiellu which were prescribed

a freely fifteen years ace are tartly thentuna for their effect on terarerdure Irnurh the traceImrorMnl members of the group art ilien still butfor entirely lUerenl reisjns The druis whloh atthe present moment cites it be at the hetchteftheir popularity ate animal eitriets ant antltnlrnyst eye mAY even niw

them hare pawil their sitollh and seewill b tircoun or at most will be employed only In

l lal 4 caneThere Ls touch ti be made fr the mental

ntmuJeof p luln ss with which we reguise tech rew n ettmme nt for there are till somany dl r and sirrapUima appealing for help andwe hUt U aclcmwleilie that w can do but lime farthem Vet U wool I b well If we iopi d a morecsutliu alllttile In receUlne new diujs and newDelhiftsof to b tried andV br tried but we mint nol eipecttoouch soul mml sift eaiefully fr and

Hatlnns for Royal Clergy Llttry-fttm IM rondel Ttnui

The Iird Chamberlali has intimated lo the Hintschaplains of both thst his Uslesly baad-elded that all Ihe nervy atHchM to the housholdshall In the future wear the royal cipher embrol-deredal both end of the ordinary broad blae scarfbelhr they ate In l r e or In dreasthat the Ktnt has a LOtion tab wornIn place of tie usual bUck button onsianlsg waJilcoal and on the Court sai

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CAMftxairs TRUES

The Heat Has Apparently Hurt theer Transplanted Giant

The transplanted trees In Andrew Car-

tnegles embryo park around his manxlonon the highlands of Fifth avenue am bar

a hard struggle for life these enertorrid days Although they

care that the experience antIknowledge of the landscape arohitotcould devise their foliage Is vaatly Inferior

j In luxuriance and color to that of th trrvIn Central Park across Fifth avenue At

two of the trees the most noteworthylot are apparently dead and the

leaves of the others are small and

of the two probably lifelessIs the one known to the workmen asPet because so much care and eipenw

has been lavished to preserve It ThePet is the only tree of the twentyclghtIn the prospective garden that grew onthe site Mr Carnegie chose for his homeEven it has been transplanted from Itsoriginal bed to a spot selected by the land

other tree U thebiggest of the elms and maples broughtto garden from their growbog near New Rochelle

attempted In this citran individual property owner Treesthat were live planted thirty

ago were taken root trunk andbranch from their original soil on Desbrow farm in and laan especially prepared soil on Mr Csrnf-gle s trees were carefully M

and inolude

were planted rather close together andthat the reasonbeen aa healthy and luxuriant this sum-mer

The Pet a silver leaf poplar Is uniqueamong Mr Carnegies othersare fair to lookThe Pet has a crooked trunk with crookedlimbs that branch out at that alover of trained and controlledcould not of It U more than probable that the landscape architectordered it down a jiffy If MrCarnegie had not determined u It wasthe tree on the site he had purchasedIts life should ba spared no matter whatthe expense

COMMERCE WITH GERMANY

Immense Growth In Trade Figures eaExports and Imports

WASHINGTON Aug liHecpntregarding the commerce between the

United States and Germany lend especialinterest to some figures just presented bythe Treasury Bureau of Statistics whichshow the growth of commerce between thetwo countries In the last thirty years andIn detail during the last ten years Thesefigures show that Imports into the IntedStates from Germany have Increased front117000000 In 1870 to 100000000 in 1901

and that exports from the Unites Statesto that country have increased from la000000 in 1870 to 181000000 in 1001 an Increase of 300 cent In Imports

been during the last fivx years in whichtime our exports to Germany have doubledbeing In 1860 87837107 In iDol 191

07V2i This growth Is distributed among-a large number Comparing ourexports to Germany In 1895 of1801 corn hiss front I172MB lu1884 to 17305278 In 1801 whwit front l52278 to 7871573 lard from 801861 to

2838885 to 5743674 flour from JJ4n264to 30112i9 agricultural front

to 2177318 and copper from 1004

of all kinds Including steam engine in-

creased from 11895134 In 1895 to

not yet availableside the articles whloh show

the greatest growth during the lost decodeare tar chcmlcttNlaces and embroideries earthen ttono anilohinaware and sugar Coal tarcolors soil

have Increased from 1272274 In ISfllIn 1800 other from

18889M to 3998110

stone and chinaware from to2787183 and sugar from

348734

OLDEST PHOTOGRAPHER

The Boston Dscuerrntyper to HlioraDaniel Webster and Kossutli SatProm Ac Button Kitning Tran cri l

Josiah Johnson Hswes who was said tothe oldest photographer In America nWejdnesdsy He as born In FAst StidburvFeb 20 1808 and was therefore In his ntnttvfourth year Hn received education inthe common schools studied art wKhotit 1

teacher and painted mlnlaturus portrait andlandscapes until Id At that unto lie liecsniHInterested In the Invention DnjrucrrpGouraud his demonstrator nod In comparewith Albert J Southworth opened a dudeon Tramont row For morn than bolt acentury Mr Haws conducted buolnros inthe same room which are today much thsauna as when he took possession Han ardent admirer of old lioston and it

delight to hear him tell of inch bpnutlfutas the Gardiner Ore en relate on

Square on whlih lila back wlndownlooked out

Among tIme who Mt before Mr Hawkscanners were Dsnlnl Webster ChnrlcsSiunnirRufus Choste KoMUdi Tliwiior-sIsrknr Emerson Charming lured siirAlcott Lyroin Ileechrr thorns Starrporntheo Dix Ijirront Oliver

morn vhi otonic rtlll lives Jenny Und stud hr loverOtto were taken while prx

hand In hand nnd lin curried m her swuliilihome many Ilkennawa of its llu now

whirls then nllraitlneand

Chance Dickens was ahe never v d hut with Jinns I

Fle Idt an lots companion lte oftott tt Md tofairs Thn Mtidlo nr

saloon It was called then ix inperlnefor all Boston anti many 1

bit of remlnliwncv could r Un-to an Interested listener Tti plrtur that

most sironuly In hiswas the he Fanny Carlnr notion

now Mr London thisof Chief Hliaws dncni r

often wen In taIlstan adorns the rtoston library MrHntrns wm when this first doa nf

wits administered Dr Unrrnn Inthe MaMachil tti Cnnnral Hospital itspictures of Boston s It n

have always b nu much iizltt-In nvlvnd th art

of with marked niirro-Hn haul little sympathy with thn mod rn n

of not ii T rdestroying nil Indirlduallty and Dinn Tproms an One MtutHii In

was the Inventor ofmnchsnlral devItT ns th swine Tearners the reflorllnc Mnreiiiooiw Hiplying camcrn and the

triple lena H Ilitnp poiMnthe Av waf f rent nf rMrlotta Integrity H sluncli friend and nn iJe iliced n In artant llterntlirn anti with hits poetic rnmp ra-mnnt w j Iomlilnnd a arn t nn-r and will llln Inmllnctttal ponnr

diminished xllirhtly withdeath was very suiidnn Hn h J

wen of MountVtrnon where until within a fewmonths his hfsutlful llcurn-ihvays present on Sunday

Platform nreaki at Cornerstone IsstngIn the course of the ceremony of laying

cornerstone yesterday of the newRoman Catholic Church of St Jerome

t Xewkirk and Nontrand avenues Flatthe platform on which were seated

rlcarGftiersl MoNarnara and a numberf gave way arid threw the clergy

noon to the a distance nfi dozen wits a of sand

indorrtesth and no ono was Injured Fatherof titus Church the

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