Download - Washington Evening Times. (Washington, DC) 1901-08-21 [p 4]. · 2017. 12. 26. · 4 TIlE EVENING TIMES WASHINGTON WEDNESDAY AUGUST 21 1901 F WEDNESDAY AUGUST nMr t io Ofre- lH9 MVlVAMA

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Page 1: Washington Evening Times. (Washington, DC) 1901-08-21 [p 4]. · 2017. 12. 26. · 4 TIlE EVENING TIMES WASHINGTON WEDNESDAY AUGUST 21 1901 F WEDNESDAY AUGUST nMr t io Ofre- lH9 MVlVAMA

TIlE EVENING TIMES WASHINGTON WEDNESDAY AUGUST 21 19014

F

WEDNESDAY AUGUST

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The numerous requests and petitionsthat have been addressed to PresidentMcKintey and the Secretary of War Infavor of the retention of Captain Beacha Engineer CorAmissioner of the Dis-trict constitute a high compliment tothat industrious accomplished andcourteous officer but they are laborwasted It is a fact that the peopleof tide community have seldom beenprivileged to transact business with alocal department head a patientpainstaking or accommodating asCaptain Beach and what is true ofhim in this respect Is also true of hisentire office force But he has incurredthe enmity of one of the combinationswhich among them own the Adminis-tration and he has as much chance toremain in present position afterNovember 1 when the order relievinghim will go into effect as the sheep inthe shambles has to kill the butcher

The title of Captain Beach was sealedWhen the Asphalt Trust failed to getthe award of thi years paving contract and it went to the WarnerQuinlan syndicate of Syracuse New YorkNo doubt it a surprise tohim to learn that in the Capital ofthe Nation public officers cannot applythe rule of the lowest responsible bidder in connection with contracts soughtby any of Ute Administrations favoredtrusts without incurring displeasureand removal The asphalt episodeshould be a warning to his successorsfor a time while the country shall remain under the control of the trusts

The ConferenceThe battleship Iowa has left San

Francisco for Panama the Machtas isplowing the briny toward Colon andSecretary Hay has gone to Canton toconfer with President McKinley concerning our isthmian and South Ameri-can policy and the question of inter-vention The situation approaches acrisis and the attorney of the AsphaltTrust has hurried home from a visitto Caracas to be on hand when it shallarrive

In an interview published in a NewYork paper this morning the attorneyIn question Is reported as asserting thatPresident Castro is determined to bringon war with Colombia A the recentinva 4ofl of ACHesuels was effected byColombian regular troops commandedby General Valencia late ColombianMinister of War it would rather seemthat President Castro had but littlechoice in the matter It is natural forpeople connected with the trust tomake him appear at fault If they canFince is the lion of constitution andlaw that stands in the path of the trustmonopoly in South America

Judging from the past we fancy thatMr McKinley will strongly advocate-an opportunist policy and allowevents to drift a while beforepermitting the Administration to

itself to an overt act of Interven-tion between Colombia and VenezuelaShould the tide continue to run in favorof President Castro the moment mightspeedily come when action which wouldstrengthen the hands of his enemiesmight appear timely But it is possi-ble that Marroquin and Andradeplot to overturn present liberalGovernment at Caracas and erect adictatorship in its place friendly to theAsphalt Trust with some outside aidmight meet with success In such anevent It te apparent that no cause forIntervention would exist Whateverpolicy may be agreed upon at CantonIt may be taken for granted that it willnot be one complacent to the liberalmovement in Colombia and Venezuela

LetterAs the correspondence now stands

between Attorney General Knox andth oMcers of the AntiTrust Leaguethe former to have the better ofthe discussion The officers of theLeague appear to have taken too muchfor granted and assumed u tone whichthe Attorney General might fairly

oSTensive The communicationaddressed to him proceeded upon thetheory that he having been one of theattorneys for Carnegie Companyknew all about the Steel Trust its for-mation and agreements Had the At-torney General conceded this to be truewhHe he might perhaps have logi-cally taken the position that heunder no obligations to enlighten theAntiTrust League as to those mattershe might also have convicted himselfof laches in not having taken actionon behalf of the Government What-ever Ida personal knowledge may bebe te far too shrewd a man to placeblmseif in such a position and thecharacter of the letter to him enabledhint with tome show of justification tomake a somewhat cutting response

It te not likely that the officers of theAntiTrust League expected to getmuch information from the AttorneyGeaeral who had formerly been a trustlawyer It Sc perfectly understood thatthe Administration i controlled absolutely by the trusts There was nothing surprising In the selection of atrust lawyer for olftce of AttorneyGeneral except the boldness and

with which it was done AttorneyGeneral Griggs position with reference-to the trusts was well understood andnobody supposed that hi retirementand the selection of Mr Knox meantany change of the Administrationspolicy toward these monopolistic com-binations and when the otticers of theAntiTrust League addressed the At-torney General they should have knownthat he would be unlikely to do any-thing to aid them in the work of curb-Ing the trusts

There was of course nothing ATOII

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to him for iHforin tlo but Knowinglug attitude and that of the Atl mintstratton of which he is part theirletter to hint was not discreet In itstone Nor was it either wise or courteous for theta to make the letter anopen one It looked as if the thingwere being done for effect It wouldhave been soon enough to make thecorrespondence public after the lawollloer cf the Government hadto render any assistance which hewas morally certain to do

But after all the Attorney Generalsletter will hardly satisfactory tothose of the people at large who reallybelieve that the trust evil should bemade the subject of governmental actkn It rather assumes that the trustquestion te not one In which the Goveminent is In any way concerned thatit purely a matter for private Htlgation and there te not a line or a wordto suggest that the writer ever intendsto do anything whatever In the premtees The Attorney General contentshimself with replying literally to thespecific requests denying all personalknowledge of the affairs of the trustssharply rebuking the AntiTrustLeague oflicers for the tone of theirletter and intimating rather broadlythat interference with the trusts is outof the line of his official duties Heought to have taken higher ground butlie did not

The Tonp at SnutiiiKoThe man at the wheel of the Brook-

lyn when the famous loop was masticduring the sea battle oft Santiago isbecoming a dark mystery A sailornamed Adams has published a state-ment in which he declares that he wasliandling the spokes at the time andin his nervousness turned the ship con-

trariwise to the order given him by thenavigating officer Were his story truehe would remind us of one of the mili-

tary heroes of the civil war whose soulwas full of fight and still Is but whenthe bullets began to fly his legs inva-riably retrograded and refused to hold-up until they had landed him at Barnums Hotel in Baltimore

We fear that the Adams narrativewilt not be incorporated In our navalhistory except possibly by Dock Laborer Maclay According to the reportof Captain Cook commanding theBrooklyn the man at the wheel was

N Anderson quartermaster lirstclass and a particularly bright sea-man There is still another claimantfor the honor in the person of one Den-nis J OConnell who according to oneof his shipmates was the undoubtedand only genuine looper

Where there Is so much confusionhow shall we arrive at the rockbottomtruth We suggest that the whole mat-ter be left to Sampson to decide Hewas twelve or more miles away behind the horizon at the tine andtherefore ought to know

The LonlNlnna STiffrnjje

The decision In the case instituted atNew Orleans to teat the constitution-ality of the new suffrage law may cor-rectly foreshadow the principle to belaid down by the Supreme Court ifthese State acts are ever passedupon by that tribunal In the Louisiana case the constitutionality of theprovisions seems not to have been di-

rectly passed upon It was not

for the petitioner virtually argued himself out of his ease He sought a writof mandate to compel the supervisor toplace his name on the voting list at thesame time claiming that the law wasunconstitutional The judge held thatif the law was unconstitutional thesupervisor had no authority to regis-ter the petitioner for that was the only

which empowered him to act Asthe petitioner did not himselfwithin the provisions upon which thesupervisor must act if he acted at allthe registration could not be ordered

the courtBut in the course of reasoning

the court intimated rather stronglythat the socalled grandfather clausemight be held unconstitutional and theremainder of the law be allowed tostand This is a most important pointand it may be sound The rule is thatthe unconstitutional features of a lawwilt be singled out and declared invalidwithout affecting the rest of the lawif the connection i not so close as tomake a separation impossible That i-

to say if the parts are so interwovena to make it appear that one partwould not have been enacted withoutthe other or others then all muststand or fall together but if the un-constitutional provision can be elimi-nated and still leave a law complete initself which presumably would havebeen enacted anyway then the segre-gation will be made

This rule makes the question raisedby the grandfather clause a closeone we have a general disfran

illiterates This manifestsa purpose to deny the ballot to thosewho are too ignorant to cast it intelli

But there are exceptionswhich are those whose ancestors

were Now comes the querydisqualification have

been adopted without theThIs question may beerence to the primary object in viewWhat it To be entirely candidit was to deprive the great mass of il-

literate negroes of the ballot thusguarding against the political ascendency of that class But as a subordi-nate proposition it was desired to dis-franchise Just as few whites asble and hence the exceptions whichchiefly affect that class Such beingthe case the Supreme Court mighthold that the subordinate provisioncouki be invalidated and the primaryone stand

But it is by no means certain thatsuch will be the decision and the un-certainty increased by the circum-stance that there are so many different kinds of exceptions in the variouslaws For that reason the exceptions

the grandfather clause in particularare altogether unwise for they may

Jeopardise what would without theexceptions be good laws and clearlyconstitutional

Royal CooksA to the London Dt

ly there was a strike inthe kitchen of King Alfonso ofnot long ago and that theskill of the young sisters wasalt that saved the family fromhaving to fall bark upon tinned thingsand preserves went into thekitchen and supper

This sounds rather apocryphal hutit to certainly true that many damseland matrons of royal birth know more

cooking and other forms ofhold labor than the

American girl of the middle clauses

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Queen Alexandra who was one of thedaughters of a somewhat impecuniousroyal was taught to make herown her own bonnets anddo all sort of housework when a girland she has very sensibly brought upher own in much the sameway It that Queen Chris-tina who comes from the thirfty landof Austria has likewise hail her daugh-ters instructed in the arts of house-wifery Whether they actually didcook the supper on this occasion or notit is probable that they could have doneso if there had been any need

Then is no more nonsensical ideathan that which is current among someshamswell people a girl of birthmind education too good toknow anything about manual workingIf she is a superior young woman shecertainly will know how to work withher hands and do it In a manner whichwill prove her superiority There is agreat difference between ordinaryhousehold work performed with thedainty precision and deftness of an ar-

tist and the same work clumsilyby a badly trained servant

It is a mistake to suppose that be-

cause some women have acquiredgreat skill and perfection in the art ofcookery by lifelong practice it takeslifelong training to be a good cook Asgenerations of American women have

a woman can attain that emihave time to all

a lady needs to know Inthe girl can learn enough

to serve alt the purposesof an ordinary family In less time thanit would take her to learn French Ger-

man or music in the superficial wayin which they are usually taught andwhen domestic crisis by rea-son of the cooks or there isillness in the house and an invalidneeds daintily prepared food it isworth considerably more to know whatto do and how to do it than to be ableto read German or make lace Itwould be well for any girl who haseven the talent for cooking tospend enough to learn theart and let one accomplishment goThere is here and there a woman whocannot possibly be taught to cook butsuch a woman usually has some talentwhich makes it necessary to abrogate-all rules in favor of its development-A Rosa Bonheur or a George Eliot canafford to do without the domesticgraces though seme extraordinarilytalented women have been good house-keepers as well

At a meeting of the International LawAssociation now in progress in GlasgowScotland on yesterday Judge Lynde Har-rison of Connecticut made the amazingstatement that the American people arenow in favor of the terms of the HayPauncefote Treaty and expressed conS

would ratify a new convention constructed-on the lines of the one before rej tedSuch speech is pernicious and calculated-to mislead those to whom it te addressedThe Connecticut judge whose seine nowappears in the press for the flrat tmeprobably outside his village or countypaper ta without authority to speak forthe American people whose sentiment hecompletely and perhaps willfully

They are as much opposed to thedisgraceful conditions of the HayFaunce

Treaty and resent the attempt byof it to revive the CtaytonBulwer

convention as vigorously a ever

The news from Wellsrille and McKeesport indicates that the ugly feeling anongthe strikers which has been reported forseveral days as growing te liableto result in serious Wellsvilla the participants is the recent dis-turbance and their friends are greatlyangered because of the heavy im-

posed by the It J said that Presi-dent Shatter anxious concerningth situation realizing that riots andtheir consequences probably would bringthe strike to aa end in defeat and veryquickly

According to General Kitchener the Bo-ers are whipped but do not Know itHence he says their struggle whichsome may consider patriotic no longerdeserves that designation Nevertheless-the war goes on with an num-ber of eleven thousand Hoer in the heldIf British proclamations and opinions hadbeen with the Afrikander they

down their long agoBut they evidently believe that a war isnever over anti the lighting I over andregardless of what General Kitchener

they will probably go right onBritish posts and doing other

unpatriotic things for some time to come

It te reported that the Colombian Gov-ernment to enlisting American seamen inSan Francisco for service In it navyagainst Venezuela Of course we arefriendly to Colombia dictator Marroquin and inimical to Venezuela such

of the law respectingenlistments may be winked at ored on the ground that a state of wardoes not exist between the two countriesThe answer to such a contention wouldbe that the of Venezuela by Co-

lombian their defeat in apitched battle present all the essentialcharacteristics of a state of war to themilitary observer up a

M Worth and other celebrated manmilliners of Paris will have melancholiawhen they learn that Queen Alexandrahas requested the ladies of the Britisharistocracy to have their gowns for thecoronation ceremony made of British ma-terial as far as possible and embroider-ed by British workmen Her Majesty te-a patriotic lady and her Mea of patroniz-ing hosts industry i a worthy one but

will suffer for it

It IK H IltyProm tier Clevelaad llabt Peeler

When Uncle vanrfi r ich the thHMM their r p rUve crews taR t4 p acrcw anday Howdy oe U the nOne Ittee than a ad there are may MiUntwN

little 1anama What a pity tint aMBtit d acruM sad Wt

Prom the M xi n HeraldGens baBken continue to take the Baicid-

edrfaulttac banker goes tc pri o where he isted OOMM H ht job sad ia a seer or twohe aaUfe forth wih a rVeatdeatial aarduM ia AMpicket S e recent MMtawcm IB point

From the Chicago ViseIt ia ndmtG J that the striking msekiaixU of

Cfcieat are going to belt suit agaiart theirforMer eMBtorera OB charge uf import INK wotk

vioUtHjB of an liltlaw Th aooacr MM a law tested a

to it eoantitatkMMlMy tie better

1liw Vi of IronperltyProw the

So lung aa the other MatfcMn o the earth keepawre tem behind plow thee do Feel Sitetmt ao long will the United Slate have a rar

of Mod to tell to the bamgry peoplei wintill go OB tryitHC U delude thraxelve f

A If4 tiI MN rnrxProw the adi aar ln Nrwa-

MfMiUimn politic in rYwiwlvaHw fe-

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THE COPPER MINING INDUSTRY

Great Increase In the Anniu lOutput Since 1SSO

A report wilt won by GoSurvey on the copper mining Bad

smelting industry of the United States inW A TM Industry th report

proaperoue during the yearValues remained relatively hiph level

Hd while some ofthrough a variety of specific causes Hdnot contribute a tntvh metal ae in formeryears others largely increased their output There was srat activity in the open-ing of oM inline and the development ofnew properties only a few reachedthe productive trifeMe in KWft Onethe report says they will appear as setterin the cupper market in IStt and MKC

The repot t contains figures shoWing thegreat strides made in the mining of copper since inception an industry inthe United States In ISIS the total output of the entire country ly MO

tons in in JW5 12SWand in Mf 27WO

lM Montwno and Arizona have en-

tered the Meld ait J the yearly outputby Ami bounds In MR the

out ut was S1K4 tons in 1KW 1159 t M

in 1990 the Kr 0 total tonnage ofcopper S7MK

In the comparatively early stages of thecopper industry that is to say prior to1H when the new MHds in Montana andAriaona began tdmake themselves Impor-tant factors in thd output of the UnitedState by far the greatest percentage ofthe total output came from the Lake Su

region In 1M the percentage ofLake Superior product of the total

output was in ISSv W in 1S S 951 andin IM t S22 per cent With the discoveryof the Montana and Arizona mines however the percentage of the total productof copper mines in the Lake Superior re-gion began to decrease It was 3L7 percent in lies 134 per ceat In 1SW and 195per cent in 1MW

No exceptional activity was noted thereport states in foreign copper mines inmt

The exports of copper from the Unitedhave steadily Increased during the

past few years In IMS W3S2 of finecopper were exported In l 9f 12M6in MSB 145115 tons and in IsW W t2Th j heaviest exports took place in thefirst half of wee when M745 long tonswere shipped

The of Montana in tOO broke allrecords being 77vVSJ38 pounds while InArizona there a slight falling off duein large measure to interruptions to thefull supply

CUBAS CUSTOMS RECEIPTS

nOver for 14 t I

The Division of Insular Affairs of theWar Department gave out for publica-tion today the following statement con-cerning the receipts at the customin Cuba during the calendar years 109 and1SW respectively

Total receipts from customs10 Havana niOQ9443M Matanzas

SfMKM Santiago de Cubs tZt6ZlCardenas K4ffi4uX Cienfuego 5113S-2MM Trinidad J22S66 2 Sagua laGranite 14 1S Kuevitas 52M 4Manzanlllo 2tISSl Caibarien

22 Glitters l SKnbO Baraeoa 54-

8b921 Zaza J6SS2Q Guantanamo7 5 Santa Cruz 131080 Batabano 21141 total JH43 3-

9mvIIavana J11W2 3J7 MatanzasJ45i77371 Santiago de Cuba H 3 757Cardenas J30193W37 Cienfuegos

b40 Trinidad rj271s Sagua la Grande2 e liiJ Nuevitas JlS 630fl ManzanilloJ-

17SUK7S Caibarlen C9H444ltt Gibara9Z8JT7Iil Baracoa J278S6SS Zaza J413873 Guantanamo H3SM151 Santa CruztSW801 Batabano J326l52 total J16USS-JT2252

Receipts from duties on Imports1S Havana ftt H65 3S Matanzas

KJfe71P5J Santiago de Cuba JS7C714-4Cardenas J3S7473S8 Cienfuegos 10777W59 Trinidad 2172281 Sagua laGrande J137 la7S Nuevita J3W LW-Manzanillo J149J5421 Caibarien 1531W17 Gibara J1517S658 Baracoa JS-7HS8 Zaza 617543 Guantanamo Jl 6-

letM Santa Cruz J357SJ BstatoaaoJMCn total

JW52IW6SC MatanzaJ4314K B Santiago rte Cuba JSW43S27Cardenas jaszjTWSS Jenfuegoe J11W

Grande S1W G Nuevita J1 3M3Manzanilio JI4SJ1S8B Calbarien J 4

o Gibara JZUl12073 Baracoa J25CS65C Zaza JZ372S3 Guantanamo J115423 Santa Cruz jr7 Batabano JlJ-

UU12 total 4WX14fO

Havana J7SZXtlS Matanzacents Santiago de Cuba J29257tt Cienfuegos Jlwu39 Sagua Ia Grande J14S7 Xu-evlta J142 Manzanillo J436C51 Caibarien J45 OibaraJlW477 Baracoa 437Zaza JK54 total J7W1 7

190 Havana JS9716IJS Matanzas J3K57-

J155501S SaliNa Ia Grande J33S56 Nuevita KM3 Manzaalllo J212 0aei CaibarienJ153iS Gihara J2114850 Baracoa J 7Zaza 43649 total JlOGGeu553

RIVALING FRENCH COGNAC

MnliiKn ApiirelicnMloit Inthe Old Channels of

Writing to the State Department con-cerning the cognac industry of MalagaBenjamin II Kldgeiy the United States

The rapid development of the cognacindustry of Malaga i attracting considerable attention For the first time the famona French cognac of commercemuch to fear in this competition Thatthe Malaga cognac many advantages

readily admitted According to expertopinion it it what the French cognacused to be before the great demand forthat famous article as Is alleged I

in the practice of blending and consequentdeterioration of quality The growth of

absolute purity of the product Nothingi so cheap in Spain KS the deliciousgrapes from which the brandy in distilledand the introduction of an foreign tomMMind such as alcohol ofinfinitely more expensive than the exclu-sive use of the snares themselves Theprocess of distillation is precisely thesame as that used In the manufacture ofthe French cognac The result a abovestated is a cheaper yet absolutely pureproduct which Is listing an exttnuivemarket not only in continental Europebut in nKland and Canada

The baste of the Malaga cognac differsvery slightly from that of the French production and is quite as agreeable

The French system of by thestar mark is also The three popular grades art those indicated by the ontstar twostar and threestar labels Theestar brandy must be at least twojtans old the twostar four years old andthe threestar eight years old

The prices In Malaga per case ofone dozen quarts are a follows Onestar J360 twostar J440 threestar J640These prices f o b Malaga are about 34per cent less than the French cognac ofSimla grades f o b at Cognac

THE ALASKAN GOLD OUTPUT

ItccelpfN nt the Seattle Annay Oltlcc-Sntnllc

The receipt of gob dust at the SeattleWash assay oilier since June 1 havebeen much smaller than during the same

in 1909 and as the greater part ofdust at that office conies from com-

paratively new diggings in AUska and theKlondike George E Roberts Director ofthe Mint thinks the Alaska gold outputthis year may be disappointing Mr Rob-erts returned Monday from a violt toStatUe where h awayoffice

Tke otttce was established only threeyearn but the rec ipUi ofgold dust amounted to about 24 0oe9the bulk of it coming in during the summen and fall The June receipts 4a tyear were U 1

title year were The July receipts

in WI were only J3748313 It isthought that the facing ff be

late but thereI some fear the inducements

by the authorities atamount of Klondike gold dust to thatpoint

lie Out Troublefrom Ihr lii J nwl

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HOPE TO RECOVER A MINE

Mystery nf the Yankee BonanzaLost Twenty Years Ago

SALT LAKE CITY Utah Aug 2LWhen Yankee Hoiman died suddenlyin Salt Lake bark in the seventies thesecret of the famous Yankee Boaaaangold mine died with him lost miMewhich i presumably possessed of fabu-lous riches te situated in the Wasatchrange of mountains skirting the easternside of the XTintah Indian Reservationand a systematic search will be made forit a soon as the reservation shall havefinally been thrown open for settlement

What its discovery would mesa to thelucky miner who sturaMc upon it secret

a matter of speculation butthere i little doubt that It te by far therichest gold mine within the borders ofthe State anti the only one in which nug-gets have been found in abundance aresult of the latter fact the theory hasbeen advanced that the Yankee

Is not a mine in the generally accept-ed but merely a cave in which animmense amount of gold nuggets beenstored

Yank e Helman the one time posses-sor of the secret said to have made theJtacovery by chance and in the monthsthat he lived thereafter refused all offersto share the secret with It te alsosaid that Brigham Young the great Morman leader labored with Hoiman alongthese

Yankee Hoiman a peculiar massOf taciturn disposition but a devout Mor-mon he lived the life of a recluse and un-til hte discovery of the bonanza verypoor Then came a sudden and perceptMe change in his fortunes His tithingwhich had previously been paid in manuallabor wa passed over the counter of thetithing house in gold nufcnuts and whilehe wa much disinclined to discuss thefind he dropped frequent to the ef-

fect that there were others where thoseearns from

The of Hoiman1 sudden acquisi-tion of wealth naturally spread with ra-pidity and men with means a well asthose rich in promises made numerous attempts to wrest his secret from him Theefforts however were fruitless and thenegotiations never beyond the in-cipient stage Hoiman told aH comersflatly that the secret was net for sale andthat settled it

On one occasion three mounted menwaylaid Hoiman a he was on the way tohis mine and assured him theywould kill him if he did not share se-cret with them He finally agreed to

then to the spot a close watch waskept upon him and captors threatenedrepeatedly that any attempt upon hispart to escape would result in his deathThe highwaymen were in high glee and

in a part of the country where therewere no settlers they had contidcnee intheir ability to force Hoimans valuablesecret from him As the party entered acanyon in the locality where the mine issupposed to be situated however Holmans features underwent a sudden andperceptible change much to the surpriseof his captors one of whom at leastscented danger and suggested that theparty cairp there for the night beforeproceeding to the mine The others laugh-ed at his fears and the party pushed onward A half mile further down the canyon and without the slightest warningIndians opened fire on captorsfrom behind the rocks and two of themiwH r fli from their saddles dead Thethird man was mortally wounded and dl u

IVH minutes Hoiman was nuhurt and it wa learned subsequentlythat he had purchased the friendship ofthe Indtea by making them various pres-ent

Within a month of thisdied and alone Beneath thehearthstone of his humble home wasfound a quart can almost tilled with nuggets and among his papers dtcovered a partial map of the region whichheld hits secret The situation of the minehowever was not marked and owing tothe unfriendly attitude of the Indians tothe whites at that time little searchmade for It Since then the Governmentsupported the Indians in their determination keep white men out of thecountry and for years no attempts so faras have been to discover thesecret

lly throwneared prospector will renew the searchand through the exercise of and pa

It te believed that the lost mine

A ROAD OFFERED AS A GIFTThe York Turnpike Tendered to Hn-

ltlinore CountyBALTIMORE Md Aug SLThe York

turnpike from Baltimore to the Pennsyl-vania line offered a a gift to

public highway The tender made tothe county commissioners by Col M WOffutt who said he had been instructed bythe directors of the road to offer H to thcounty It is owned by the United Railway and Electric Company which MrOffutt wished only to reserve a rightof way for an electric line which he saidthe company might wish to construct toCoek yvile or farther The company he-

M desiredboth the Belair and Harford turnpikesbut there might be a question at tills timea to their authority to do this The com-pany however by an act of UK wasgiven authority to sell the York road andthe company could sell it for 1 cent if itso desired

Mr Knox of the board said that if thecounty took one k should take alt theroads but Colonel Taylor suggested thatit might take all it could get now and takethe others later

Mr Kox thought that this could bedone but explained that some people ob-jected

Oh said Mr Offutt there would besome opposition if you were going to hangmeNot much remarked a bystander

This rejoinder created a hearty laughin which Colonel Offutt Joined

Mr Knox said that if the turnpikeswere made free public thoroughfaresthe time they were for there wouldbe nothing left for the other roads Thematter he said would require some tegte-

thorlze the Itvying of a road fundIf all the turnpikes were made free roads

Mr Offutt said that the of theFourth Fifth Sixth Seventh EighthNinth and Tenth districts and a portionof the Eleventh district the Yorkroad as the main road to the city

Mr Knox said he heartily favored theproposition to take all the toll roads in-cluding the Hookstown and Frederickreads To this Mr Offutt said the com-pany he represented had nothing to dowith the two lastnamed roads hut if thematter were started he felt sure alt wouldget under way

Finally on motion of Mr Knox thematter referred to Walter R Town-send who will give the boArd an opinion-as to the right of the York road dIrectorsto convey the road to thee county and theauthority of the county commissioners toaccept The same opinion it was statedwould hold good as to the other toll roads

AUCTION SALE OF QUININE

The State Department Receives QuotiitloiiH Batavia

The following report of the auctionof quinine at Batavia Java been

at the State Department from BS Rairden the UnKed States Consul atthat place

Editio II consisting of kIlogramssulphate of quinine in 99 each lot con-taining 2288 kilograms sold at andJw per kilogram

Editio II and III consisting of about754 kilograms sulphate of quinine packimc and weight at purchasers option inlots of not less than 2268 kIlograms andnot more than S kilograms sold at J4CSper kilogram

The average price of Edltto perkilogram equals the unit price of 3Sfor the bark at This not

i been considered very satisfactory as atthe last sale of the bark at Amsterdamheld on the 13th instant the unit price

was 42 centsThe next sale te advertised for the SKIt

of July next when some 4 U kilogramsor quinine wilt lie dispose of

The IleMt I reMoriii m for JInlurInfe ir i A ljile of Groves TasteieM

Chill Tunic It i snniIy iron and quinine in atattclete form Kg cure no pay Price SOc

This

Is merely

As

Bonan-za

has

Is

others

URea but without any promise ofsuccess

was

hints

news

passed

thathis

con-duct

his

lull 0

haso

Hut when country isopen for Settlement hundreds of xperlakiN

storehouse of wilt e rediscovered

was Balti-more county yesterday to he as a

said

also to give to the county

a

bcared

The Ltdlautre would have to

wag

salerec-

eived

OIL

S

I

hat

hills

sense

was

was

was

the

with riches

usedwas

lotion as

used

Prom

has

lots

111544cents

Amsterdam

and

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SUBSIDY BILL PROSPEGTS-

BiTorti by the Republicans to Reachnu Airreenient

NEW YORK Aug 2LTH r

prints the following fromWashington correspondent

Although the report that a conferencehad recently held hi Maine to

e prospects of Shipping Subsidy Mil i generally discredited here ttIs known that a somewhat formal con-ference some tiMe in fall i containplated It Is felt by Republicans re-gardless of their views on this questionthat an agreement should be reached oweof Congress before submitting any subMy Mil a a party measure over-

whelming Republican majorittee of bothSenate and House

It goes without saying that MM

which secures party trademark can

Congress That Met enforces theshy of caution and nose knows this better

party They have no desire to demon-strate to the country what they can dowith the excellent party discipline thatnow prevails in direction of subsidylegislation They prefer Instead to devisea measure which wilt be so generally

la Republican circles a toany break in the ranks either in

Congress or at the That will bethe purpose of

what Republican majoritie ableto pass but to decide what it would bewise and prudent to peas

On this point there 1 a wide differenceof opinion A group of Western Senatorswhose views are entitled to great weighthad made up their minds beforeadjourned that no subsidy bill likewhich then failed to reach action shouldagain become a part of their party policyThey were willing to do something for themerchant marine in eatennina of the malt contracts or In the authorization of special subsidies for the establishment of new lines for Southcan and other which privateflees would not Justify But a generalsubsidy bill of theGrosvenor variety they did not believewould be expedient

The reconciliation of the interests ofthe East and the West will be no slighttask Each side will claim the supportof President McKInley although heheretofore declined to take part in thecontroversy It and prOwith good reason that the Americanpublic i much less afraid of subsidies orpublic aid to private enterprise than itused to be There wa a time for ex-ample when it would have been neces-sary to do something more in providinga Federal subsidy for a few Americanfruit exporters than to have designatedit a pomological the brandstamped on the latest undertaking of theDepartment of Agriculture

EMIGRATING TO

IIIlnolN BnjInff LargeTracts of Lund

UPPER MARLBORO lid Aug 2LFarmer of WhltesWe county lit seemto be desirous of making purchases inPrince George county Within the test

locality known the Forest have paeeedinto the hands of Western men at re-munerative prices to the landowners ofsouthern Maryland Late E PGlbbs of Morrison bought tk I rGeorge farm of 5W acres on the lIne ofthe Popes Creek Railroad and at oncebegan a correspondence with hi friendsin the West

A few mouths passed and W D Headthof the same county purchased a trackof 37 acres from the Franklin Davis Nur-sery Company Yesterday in MarlboroKit Harrison and C Boles of WMtcounty bought ft9 acres Richard

and brother Frauds W HIH forJ1SM4 These Western men will cometo Prince George in January next andwill stock their farms for the raising ofearly lambs beef cattle and

On some of the adjacent farms thegrass neMs are considered

the crops of tobacco and whe it Lastweek a herd of Hftytwo twoyearoldcattle from Chicago purchased bythe Greenwood Stock Farm W Holmead and Eugene Roberts and Alice Bowie also made large purchases andyesterday an order was sent to the cornmission men of Washington for a herd of386 to be wintered m adjoining sections

The late Gov Oden Bowie gave great

was very successful He was always rep-resented on the turf by wellbred Mazyland horses Other planters of iTlnceGeorge were noted for the linewhichOne great aid to enterprise In the farm-ing community of this part of Marylandthe Agricultural College situated inPrince George county Settlers from theWest will find greet help from the fac-ulty of this institution and the experimentstation as well as front the large body ofIntelligent agriculturists who are organ-ized into farmers These collect-ively college and clubs make an 1

tial and publicspirited body of menare doing all in their power to make desi-rable white settlers from other parts ofthe Union feel at home hone They havemoved earnestly and determInedly to takethe control of the public road out of thehands of the politicians They have someof the best land to be found anywhereand they are Judiciously putting It on themarket

By combined effort for a common purthey will do what the Immigration

Bureau wa expected to do Land ischeap In Prince George Charles Calvertand Marys The climate i delightfuland markets are easily accessible

CURRENT RUMOR

Kroot the Patadwder

Tat set we MMMB replied the cf M doBtwttic I think theyve in the wash

Hove ever reedthe RootOB wan

Oh Ive some of hfe st thegirt from St LUUH and all Ive to mr is-

r M soriaitMog ia topHalletters k towrtratd but hale the time hi BOMi it at alt fanny

Xo Use for ItFrom the Chicago Tribune

oMO sunny the Eafcixiu I wMi youtell these yecplu their taeeg are dirty and

Iwteroretcr reaXrtinK aI cant do that m-

rrUV HottThere it t Jor dirtjr

Frees tW B khwirc ABMIWMBWhile M h i ojt smIle wo miiuJBC hn

the city W a aagM M a aislesMhwk read

Wwntft Winks lee S-

CowtnKy io aN fntimt a d eJEpedotfo tWhoned sadie did sot get oK his sad o

Foe the htatot nvue had ooce been hoed toa city Job

Getting Kveii

The Ladykwkiaic old fellow oa-

M r HBbbv V v r r turnHe a IrohwjttioBiat and IM dma B kim

H i i id at Me M a vicMwaB t get e

HowT-Mff A awwMwt ago I bit a leSsee who i

aMicted with a chmwic jag Xmr wa ch lae ineewbrte the

fYMN the HuUdelphfai ThBeIBM Mid tile drwAMta iiThdiBt fa a

Most iiowttM hair leaewer Its oar Btaya-

WeH sive me butte the ValdhiidtdSet I tome t thMc of it why

Idont you MM KT Voare pretty laId yownett

cant BW K YOB M l the SetteeB amHawt The Alter Vm K snidest is

lunch You huuM hiss

stem healthful ruou and hvrtts teatxd for its Oriukcn Krerjo11 JUK

hvw Delicious it in

Post kit

beesCUSS tile

this

to Ute

tilebe passed at the coming long session of

neeeUtaH the real leaders or the RtJtr1kA

the

acc-eptable pre-vent

pollsthe de-

cide are

Congressthe

Ute

Amenports bust

banIs

MARYLAND

Farmers From

year more than acres of hand Ja theas

In ISISIlL

ldemesa

his

hogs

tt mbetter results In feeding than In

Mrs

attention to horses and cattle and

horseasouthern Maryland ex ild produce

who

pose

A win loikiaga lie

of wIIae

Xu Comparisonthe

Walt Whitman treplied

to an right

woolSMtII sashlag

aSsail

Wis their

Ilirn

MW

sagestill and aM if wM uethe ct Ie-tIIII sell

l hope Iw it

the hassee thee

tile heath

aL-

I with

Ian

raI

l

1

die

any

conferenceant ta

one

L545

S-

Hill

bringcattle

was

raising

clubs

Where They Vere

14 toe bce budand 5juliet aaiioud 1 hoteemaid yes happm to heoa yac tetetSr

but

Fren Chicag nosordlieraidyou

askedwee

getlust Geore Ade bra hi beaten to deethamen in

msmatlm

any saidMape-Couldnt Pool

washed by week ac bymonth Xe isleel he h beset

set

Prose CkveiaL Smiteoi4rho yew eeisue

seer theei

reel wannereait bIn

teetotaler

lIis Wrong

assa said

sun may

out are

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NOTES OF THE DAY

aMw j3 la Cent Mtafat-mjooa

anasujChaffer

reverted t rfgi Ai

The City cannel f Itafttttoa Qatar Oada-i Mf eta be MtMhUd

weak fee i-Brglia HB el the Sabbath

Its wager cerrce Jar M Mwte a year Mdwa Be-

wfctfcNt f 4004 sad Miaamt water supply

all rfsbt-Onterta dtk MM T ttMOO rafe-

fa larger tbsa aCaSes New York cqaare W

8 CMNHWtiewt Yew Jeney7SM MMM MW F-

xukshamilton JOB OMMrf tile TMled

fates IB MJ-

d WHIt dM Chratfaa wHshm They arc

af CbriaUMUtr and Mkatwurr

a tense to we The Si-

rlKHM white Bederabirtbite taw r eJatfu-

7W h 1

art always aa sWeet f iwtcrwt tathit le mot W gaits a feature of the

t mtiewMI entirety saw land 1C i MM tw afleslong sad Ol tIeB wed several Meta agsidfag Rd aadMno-H hac been BMatd Task and Jonasaaal hate to Japan OB C kirU

A assured m the baakraatajr inset la-

Loadaa the other daJcscM i t ol Phwaofts MM iNrc t r-

Hte

called The of Chaoi-koo n a 4-

IHW written a

Artttetel wool boat t rt is BOW om-

plojrea at DwHtMorf G nBMty for nunelactttnsgcloth bowbpa bets rugs ad tenthygfB h tfctfaiJ date the ftrst aUes tt to

tad wool Md It fe av fMd th t reeeaC-

w wiow textile Q riM

i ed a w wader

ml O ce Thernwt st w d ee with animks ta

wore r eaa gr

while lirfar aa trees

of the a at

A blades ta tile Kansas whist Sells wilt cutSheen a day aW the 4

Therefore a

MX awry dar The east of har-

a crop of wheatIE ar d s-

Ul JJ-npeet d to te WBthi-

JW

The L dom X ws

County Tipoeraf The

pay Ot ot exeitewMOX theexpreonK wr besIDe apd-

leeltec aomot the

Hiioiihlr apcokiomounted every Sour

MWJMU hi a little

the of the Hairy praved thtnrN Ae best

work set of theirSlid There win e e see

twmhv ftt sad weB to ttrioMii

of oldwhich te

om art alaatiio iMii hi pietaMft

that the

Fewer and of the wilt oppcorsaid they

there are otillwidows of Ktulwtiaaafy oidien OB the no-

AvcottK to the same lurtiawariMi and eon

lidrriwr the aveiace of Mat Is iacnaoh that Oosternest wy be payIng pe f a wei

war M late OK i k wlher 44iA of which Beartjr tV ha e

of HIS aod-j added o tw

their a the We iirtli tnif-kcn with which the road

lii with air brakes and air wfckMfcs e-

bmrr beioK by their hat The airwhtMSes ate ptee d-

i rfj r under life met ac-

pttees of i

af rotation Alter the

pnapr it W tekes out of the ptaoad

k again taken test

e e lees Inertone apes hi tool

of hose M0 to l 0ft and put te a VfdraowcStan to menses all wniiture The article is

and nltaMr a d tall be prossfd orkiwds of w aB awd pattern

P T aniw was not the lather of the AwXW

cirew bat tersely tin kadis expowaot TIlerest father Seth B

died aC Bfewrter X Y lately ateightyoix ta lint whem hilt a mere lad withhis oU r brother the Isle Nathan A

the Alkfthawy Maiiwlaiaa with a BMThey w ot Svwth and oo arrMo at

they were tortwawte eaanpht to pet atwo rubs which

I wiawt lime to W exhibited to Aanrio MO-

i iiatatiom use he

j priettr of a rr t bippcdtoaM

JMW opened OB

aoBMthippodrcHM to be exbfeited hi A-

laeiwe hoc K d the arrtiltai of pve

the Kocky Miwataiaa sad throw the Hodthe alkali toodk The tafria irhn tao of

te wed OB the 3

Far a ofwater tar atraathat i Mtroavlr aaturated with M ww-

ihort M tW We of a lee box wntctiaQy Therwcrroto win be tiled trom

1 hick water titer and the wthe varies taok aktaw the rovte The tat

Mir to be completed at Letup lentInlet wett of UraBcer Vyo TW area

tw wtyaine acres ad tM om

supply of 177Mo00 paHom

Tile Prescription for MalarianU U a l ottl of Ciwrea Ta telej

lull Tnc It is nimply iron sad quirt IB aittleiS tern So cureao PT Price SOc

and knead

JtIK hew ill leadenthetM hd

tow rsiued to sUes tieeta shot K

tutklite-

r I e far u elLa In the It has

and arelIT

HI

411354oM

temansice II

Generalthe ph tqnot

WieftN tM iitheir sta el ueq

the XiIIItr wtUitttr that they kissweeky Ja Same met

wwtItwavy

rM arisad the lteare lit this lIeI-ras

A 11M rsceatiy Inthe JapIHI It tIIGctItt to that

ymeised to thatbut tk Is act

pIII

who weIftile

the serieSto fene are that M 11M

isemW el eritda reallysad that lie

One Thoessad U Oril MeldbanSkein

so

the basea edlt sac

Tindiy aM-exftllfttt

capable el and be me

TIte Sere el triemrntilt tIInetiea the

Land slurred lie S tIteof ridrt

Apachelit

asS it kbeen by atIe wweed tI so 1M-

piMs Ute HtIdIpIIrre

tint NRIIIrg Itit 44 as acre

isatzpee aIMt8tveettag thesn1 slid

15 975 hastier tiJa titnIe Jar Jodp paW e a ill

double pay aiPM orws tI te

the sneak e w A-

III agiieahiteal tritle prewwIII

in lIeN a andions with tk

their r to west at lea awhack tile

taB

KaVa lan

a creone IIu-

r the sa a LeatRaIt tt sal c

pt H mathM eassisy

aue

isLoIMIecI

e ecertaIn tW In aekInd el Mt

is In ftIIIIIIIcstime things mil

toted K Isof

etsusndy in widen a JIIIIis

CII-

Jc beer 1mg peadoss IIby the tact tMt

eta at-

tM atI-IIQ lack 01 which

wJ the u roeosty with

widows el-el tile ww

the sad CIirIIMa-

YiaMa of tile 0e-l their

sacktlte Ilk lest a jR-

t1III sad relesees air

wWe Airnn e bees ill

JMllIiDg a cord is ale andtile whittle

a xdldat iM1-

Iy a Jt ithides Nt

which are vat11IM

and ale-rtrMtt

and put tIN Thereetttsg u cut

which tee tau

t-

aU

Bowel it Ie kneeUte el

limes

reritthe

In went PwN 8ew-ida JIIfHeedtile 01 it 1oAlay 1 1851 sad

the IOptOG tilel

fat its

dI iaat-wl wileseveral

tear wr tIf

KiT W

dutch all l-iterwill piped

itwI

U800fAn With etherlft4tl tM will ata

hill freer

teesA ea ibe ee-

Is sad thispostew 1 Wtelihatir

on henley the paved

Hiepintos IlL repeeetiut attendee

half Theremites pitce theagh sate a me

psvme litpublic sushi sin

arethe Isliswlag thaler et the

isihatests

Meeplead 21516 hadkaa 363W

meet tankieg a total 96405

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Slate of that

In the IludleInir hub iaMbtheir iis and 1

sue it ehauldpass en an-

A psiads the idsadsbe elitebiagImps wear red

lessees boa breechwith two striperasS feet bet eectry siena-iwa

me ideal been diemeesidSee it InaIne

asythiny be Ikesoered In high-

way Ideal doseethedlobe

wWsh weeded sad5

maSker< Eases

sunleersthai an-

a

hieret of mysteries twotitian Ibeseered that

is Egyn beIngIstieg tress Mauerns

Seen1 Verse

and

Ten

tealiisswteeats Is proceme rouked In-

etise of t tSuS wilthbe spun an in sheeps sect sch-b paseSSn ahaaibml pupert4e-is haag blesehed missed

petreJat Cm

kitsares

seaMy In mae plates thetetee lbas they soulS deed

tInuqIs thsg-tend have earded there sulk memsat-Sf Salem iii age SaneIitd wan masuble aissiterka

1 Sosthera

steincents nsa sha it-

rimmiag teea bSnder ressideabte sa

Scm sia8e-gtbenieg Issisg sitS-

hanmeinn seeding Stifling 5 eattbraSkiste

week ken dear

esstrudescmussmtes er

at Nmskames who babiiun-

asdit the hanseL pSkik aettagysleidey paraded the bsnns-nemnen nSerieS doily wee itmess dsene to

wa sailIsismiest

me 01 unshisetyceissiabubry farces tee beIng asked

seeps ismet but

regiment staggering Ire otyen

newspaper was ps 1 sapreSs that teitehtes

carCIshetSSeepite their henry weIghts

m say Inbslaae US help

b sseri it s mledea

Jopeuse wash m-

an Ineseimeot asl gto be Msbk than

psdsa Lr4se tois-

beebe psisis issss5 beestimelly Sat 5

hat ess c met aSI-nctena anise

lanes Ike-ket and te bet been bt in

y emliseailisleated

Spssisk a beion aadsss abee4

berned math saL

the me hog thee for wlth Ike-pset yter two the warwidows Maxims we

hame sa IsossimlenOseedileted ShzstJ4a5rp-

eny Wmeat note Ia isetC sihat sew apsa

bess cqdpA ate

oedme under sd 5 ikecar teottea an bela

be 15rmer iasme 5 ii 4

widek manSe the ailudee rn isp01 me is istet piasin lbsnet ttean melissa Ikt

wadPibsekuss sew keiker bu

its boseted Frmeha meeleisshIne and exseedhaig

ash ills ted with an-

iastmely wonberate vata a igecielly eaitraeted mends an-

deegoter thereina peperteakisir teabise

psprriSiedsrel laid

sassisis

wanreported

ae

In tweed

nailisme briny lest

In andtea oted kary Yname6

iSta bieaiecr The bigant Ike t

Is eapeadituer St meaim

water inieet while runnIng seerSweet

sad sasy wetk apea a ssl of Seceteme iseevsits c 1 aS-iv the tusspsay btd tissiand jeer-

is dnrinsd win sad andlv

oer 154 teilee ssaypsipeuse has bees waite

aWait

anistesls stemetbe

tIc reservoIr Icity the miner

airs tees barna Sipeni

nest

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