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/ 'ti I VOL. 8, NO. 87, SEMI-W E DEATH AND DESTRUC' FOLLOW DI DISASTROUS WRECK ON Three Persons Killed and Many Inj Coaches Plunge Through Tr Many Injured Rushed to f of Whom B Ono of the most appalling railroad lo wrecks that veer happened In this fr' section occurred at Hooper's creek, seven miles eaBt of Chester, as the ca West bound combination passenger fo and freight train, which left Lan- ti< caster on schedule time, at 3:36 p. m. Wednesday, was approaching the 1? trestle a few minutes before 5 o'clock. The train was pulled by an P engine with Mr. John A. Stewman at 8e the throttle and Capt. D. E. Penny, ari conductor In charge. The three Pi passenger cars were crowded. In m front of these were two gondola iron fr cars loaded with coal and preceding ch these several ordinary freight cars. M The rear coach was an extra, put D' on to convey the partiea from this G place who were going over to wit- "1 neB8 the match game of ball between O. Chester and Dillon. Nearly all the 1? passengers In the coach were from f? Lancaster. The next coach to this lo was the regular passenger coach well filled. In front of this was the coach for colored people. The accident is supposed to have been caused by one of the cars, sup- Pa posedly a coal car, jumping from the rails about 150 feet from the trestle. At any rate the cross ties are scarred and cut all the way from the trestle i,r for this distance. The engine and several of the freight cars crossed Cu the trestle safely, but the Impact from the derailed cars when they jn struck the timbers caused the trestle Cl, to give way and the two iron coal cars were precipitated into the creek jn below, a distance of 52 feet and two of the pnssenger coaches fell in on jn top of them. The rear coach, containing the Lancaster people, went oh down but lodged on one of the lower benches, leaving the coach hanging Cu to the eastern embankment of the creek at an angle of something like forty-five degrees. Dr. R. C. Mc- iP Manus, Roach S. Stewart, Claude N. Sapp, Wayne Green, J. M. Madra, R, Dr. E. J. Hinson, Dr. C. V. Pratt, Thomas Beaty, Clyhurn Wilson, Dr. tu R. C. Brown, Frank Key, Foster Moore, Will Ross Moore, H. L. w Hagerman, T. L. Hilton and little Tom Funderhurk and others scram- eti hied out and aided in the rescue of their fellow passengers in the two ki other coaches in the creek. They found the regular passenger coach lo split almost into kindling wood and it was with extreme difficulty that se the Injured persons could he extricated from the dehris with which tu they were covered and carried up the steep embankment to the level fr ground above. The eye witnesses who aided in the rescue work say it hi was the most horrible experience they ever put through In their lives. si the heart-rending screams for help from the women and children mln- fr gled with prayers in which the mangled men Joined. Not a single per- cr son snowed ine wime m-huht, iiui men, both white and black, worked Jn nntll many of them fell in their tracks from sheer exhaustion. Amoi g w the ill-fated passengers who went ; down were Mr. Charlie Williams, ci son of the late E. M. L. Williams of this county, with his wife and fve ss children, who were returning to Corpus Christ!. Texas, after a two bj weeks' visit to relatives in this county. All sustaining serious in- in Juries excepting one daughter and a little bahv about a year old, which v< came through unscathed owing to its mother s watchfulness, putting her- cl self between her child and danger. M Mrs. Williams' leg was broken. T her shoulder dislocated and her head horribly bruised. m A negro brakeman by name of Elijah Heath was killed instantly, m Two more deaths have been since reported that of V. H. Craft, a travel- b< lng salesman from Anderson, and Itoy Clifton, a youth from Fort In Lawn. I Immediately on hearing of the accident Superintendent A. P. McLure ai directed Engineer Stewman to rush to Chester with his engine and bring hi back a relief train with all the doctors and nurses he could proem e A cc relief train from Lancaster, with Col. Leroy Springs, the president of Ja the road and his son Elliott, and Superintendent McLure on board, bi rushed to the scene of the wrecA The Chester special was there when J the Lancaster train arrived and the ei doctors and nurses were busily engaged doing everything In their b power to relieve the suffering of the unfortunates. a1 The scene presented beggars description. Men, women and children, c< torn, bleeding and mangled, were o lying all around, but bearing It all e: with the most heroic fortlUide The a Texas lady, Mrs, Williams, had but C one request, which was repeated at frequent Intervals. "Leave me and n see to my helpless children." It Is t< no disparagement to the heroic con- ii duct of the others to mention that of li little Tom FunderbUiV, son of Dr. t< ' Eugene Funderburk. Tie little fel- ci ' . .feu, rw /"V ^ i:k i .v. rioN BAILMENT 'J CAR L. & C. NEAR CHESTER jured When Three Passenger estle at Hooper's Creek? loxpital at Chester, Some iay uie. w was one of the first to emerge om the rear coach by a window, e, at once put off for the nearest ?use to 'phone for help from Lanster. On reaching the house he und there was no 'phone conneojn. He Inquired then If the man id a horse. Upon being answered the affirmative, he said: "Mister t on him and ride to the nearest hone and tell them at Lancaster to nd all the doctors In the town here id If you hurt your horse the peoe will pay you." Of course the an went at once. The relief train om Chester carried back to that ty those seriously injured to the agdalene, Dr. Proyer's sanitarium, rs. R. C. Brown, R. C. McManus, W. Poovey and J. D. Funderburk Ith the Chester doctors and Dr. \V. Stevens of Rock Hill, were tiroes In their efTorts to relieve the sufring of the injured ones. The folwing are the list of the casualties: DEAD. Elijah Ileath, Baseomvllle, negro akeman. V. H. Craft, Anderson, travelings lesman. Roy Clifton, youth, Fort Lawn. The injured are: C. L. Dunlap, Fort Lawn, eye uised and hand cut. L. W. McDaniel, Orr, head badly it and internal injuries. Louis Samuels, Chester, travelg salesman, head and face badly it. John Taylor, Richburg, internal Juries. C. M. Sibley, Richburg, Internal Juries. F. M. Simpson, Richburg, ear and lest badly cut. J. W. Dye, nascomvllle, hip badly it. S. J. Knox. Knox, bad cut on head W. A. Cureton, Fort Lawn, both gs broken and arms badly cut. Misses Maggie and Carrie Sadler, ark Hill, badly bruised. The Rev. S. It. Hope Mullins, consions of the body. David Ray, Shelby, N. C., bark renrhed. J. P. Yandle, Chester, back bruis1 and head severely cut. O. W. Brady, Kxum, N. C., arm, lee, leg and head cut. J. M. Jones, Chester, may have st eye, severe outs and bruises. Miss Martha Marion, Richblirg, rious injury to ankle. Mrs. J. O. Barber, Richburg, conisions of body and cuts. J. H. Hale, Atlanta, Ga., skull aetured. B. D. Phillips, Ninety-Six, jaw oken and internal injuries. T. J. Kelly, Kernersville, N. C., ight injuries. D. A. Cauthen, Richburg, skull aetured. jnmes uooawtn, Klchburg, skull ushed. E. W. Gibson, Rossville, knee inired. G. H. Dunlap, Fort Lawn, back ranched. W. T. Gladden, Fort Lawn, severe its. Oscar Cook, Lancaster, traveling ilesman. hip and arm badly hurt. C. H. Turner, Fort Lawn, head and tck cut. Carl Turner, Fort Lawn, Internal ju ries. Clifton Ferguson, Fort Lawn, se>re cuts on face and arms. Mr. and Mrs. C. O. Williams and lildren, Beatrice, Betty, Oscar, ildred and Infant. Corpus Christ!, exas. seriously Injured. A. B. Oxford. Edgemont, N, C., all clerk, leg Injured. K. W. Phillips, Chester, baggageaster, ankle Injured. Anna Young, Orr, contusion of >dy. Boss Mobley, Rlchburg, internal ijuries. The injured from Lancaster are: Tom Beaty, bruised and sprained fikle. Wayne Green, sprain in back and ruised. Clyburn Wilson, scratches and Hituslon. T. L. Hilton, bad contusion on iw. Fred Dathan. colored brakeman, nil\ shaken up. Dr. E. J. Hlnson, Dr. R. C. Rrown, M. Madra, Dr. C. V. Pratt scratch? and bruises. Dr. Frank Key, floating ribs roken and other painful Injuries. John Taylor, serious Injuries bout head. The coroner's Jury of Chester >unty held an Inquest yesterday ver the remains of Elijah Heath, xamlned the place of the disaster nd adjourned to meet today ^t heRter to make their findings. The (rains on the L. & C. road are ow being run to and from Ches*r by way of Rock Hill. A wrecklg crew are now engaded In brlngig order out of ohoas. It will be ?n days or two weeks before trains) nn cross the creek. A - -1 " \ LANCASTER, S. C., FRj "OEATII TO IM.VZ." Shouted by Cr(?\vd of Mexicans as U..A#.UI % 1 mi r.imij ;trnvrs. Los Angeles, Cal., July 31.?Shouting "Death to Diaz," a strong con- 1 | tingent of Mexican rebel sympathizers gave a riotous reception here j last night to Gen. Felix Diaz, leader of the revolution in Mexico City against President Madero. A pla- ; toon of police finally drove back the | excited crowd. Diaz, who arrived from San Liego on his way north to board a ship as j Mexico's special envoy to Japan, was greeted by Consul Penay Cuevas and a party of lluertaista partisans, but | their *'vivas" were drowned by the shouts of their opponents. The envoy was saved from possible attack when the platoon of police charged the shouting Constitutionalists and opened a path for Diaz. | "Viva Carranza" was the companion shout of "Mueto A. Diaz" and these cries rang in the ears of General Diaz until, escorted by police, he entered an automobile and was driven away. Chief of Police Sebastian kept guard over Diaz even after he and his suite of secretaries and attendants had arrived safely at ^ their hotel. IS REFERRED TO NORTHERN WOMEN Northern and Western Senators Object to Bledsoe Article Which Tillman Had 1'rinted. Washington Special to Charleston News and Courier, July SO.?An article on "The Mlsson of Woman," which Senator Tillman had printed in The Congressional Record caused a flurry of protest from Northern and Western .senators on the floor of the senate yesterday, i The article in question was by Dr. Albert Talvor Bledsoe, and appeared in DeBow's Review, which, before the war. Senator Tillman says, was the representative magazine of the South. It contained some reference to Northern woman and to the woman suffrage movement, which brought excited protests in the senate from senators (iallinger, of New Hampshire; Lodge, of Massachu setts; uristow, or Kansas; works of California; Thornton, of Colorado, and others. i Some of these senators complained particularly of the reference to Northern woman, and others, representing states where women have the ballot, were disturbed, especially by the criticisms of woman suffrage. Senator Tillman was not in his seat when these protests were registered. Senators Bacon and Bankhead said they felt sure he was not aware of any invidious references in the article when he obtained permission for its reproduction in The Congressional Record and its printing as a public document. The South Carolina senator later appeared upon the floor and confirmed this assumption of Senators Bacon and Bankhead. saying that he had been particularly struck by the historical passages with which the article opened, and had not noticed the paragraphs of which complaint, was made. Senator Tillman then asked that the article he withndraw from The Record and be not printed as a public document. Of course, it has gone all over the country in The Record and the protest will cause It to be more widely read than if there had been no public objection. LOSS OF NANKING CRUSHES REBELS Removes Cornerstone of Southern Revolt?Senate Confirms Nomination of listing Hsi Ling. Peking, July .10.?The return of Nanking to side of the Peking government is considered here as having taken away the cornerstone from the Southern rebellion. The Chinese senate today approved the nomina tion of listing Hsl King, former minister of finance, as premier and it is believed that a permanent cabinet will now be formed. Nanking Now Quiet, Shanghai, July 30.?The chamber of commerce of Nanking telegraphed today to the military governor of the province of Kiang Su and also to a number of high officials at Shanghai the following dispatch: "Oen. Huang Sing, the commander-in-chief of the Southern forces, has left Nanking. The proclamation of independence issued there has been canceled. The city is quiet." A naval wireless dispatch today confirms the return of the city of Nanking to its allegiance to the Northern government. Kel/.e llukow Forta. Hankow, China, July 30?Chinese Northern troops captured the Hukow forts on Friday after a fierce bombardment from a gunboat at Oliphants Island. The troops landed wt iwn in*- iui in ?iiitin a?vrr ui nit" bombardment and rushed the position at nightfall. The Northern troops will now advance on Nanchang. i Chester Defeats Dillon. In the game of baseball between Chester and Dillon to play off the tie between the teams took place at i Chester Wednesda> afternoon and i resulted in a victory for Chester by a score of 2 to 0. A r , ^ S'\ % lday, august 1.1913. storm /n Washington ItO-MILK \/lM>; ItAlX AM) HAIL. Tlirce Killed. Scores In'ured and .Many Thousands of Dollars' Worth of Properly Destro, ed. Washington, July 3ft.?Like a glnnt flail, a cyclone storm of wind. I rain and hail whipped hack and forth across the National Capital today, leaving death and ruin in Its wake. Three dead, scores injured and hundreds of thousands of dollars' worth of property destroyed was the toll rendered in the hurried canvass >piade when the city aroused Itself aft<^c an hour of helplessness in the grasp .of the elements. Out of a blazing sky. under which the city was\ sweltering with the temperature ^.t lftft degress, came the storm roaring from the north, i driving a mass of clouds that cast a mantle of darkness over the city. The gale, reaching a velocity of almost seventy miles an hour, swept the streets clear, unroofed houses, I tore detached small structures from their foundations, wrecked one offino Kn liciin n- ? ? ?2m -v ..f,, mriiuiiim wiimins ann carriages In the streets and swept Washington's hundred parks, tear- i ing huge branches from trees, and even uprooting sturdy old elms, landmarks of a century. STREETS BARRICADED. Tonight Washington's well kept streets, with their wealth of tree?, were littered with broken foliage, roots and dead birds, as if a playful giant had carelessly swished his club up and down the city. As the wind wreaked its havoc the rain came, and in five minutes the temperature dropped from the hundred mark to between sixty and seventy. Then the rain turned to bail, and hail stones battered on roofs and crashed through skylights and windows. T.'~ r- . - V. !.. -I?- ' I ui M.Ill nil iiuui nit? 1-1 iv rowprnfl. paralyzed under the beating of the storm, every activity suspended. Trolley ears, street traffic and telephone service wore halted. Government departments suspended operations. The wind wrecked a threestorv brick office building occupied by the TV S. Saul Company, real estate denlers, and fifteen persons were carried down In the crash. W. F. Hilton, vice president of the real estate company: Thomas TV Fealy, n r ? ~i> - -i-?i- -_j - ??-cnn vim, ? i-itTK, arm an unidentified man, who entered the building to try to rescue those ranfcht In the wreck, were taken from the ruins dead. Half a dozen were taken to hospitals seriously Injured, and half a dozen more were treated for slight injuries. Tonight the police still were digging in the ruins, fearing other bodies might be recovered. WHITE HOUSE LAW am DAMAGED The neatly kept lawns of the White House were devastated. Three huge elm trees, uprooted l>v the wind, were thrown bodily across the lawn, and up to the very portico of the building, blocking the drives. President Wilson was seated in the executive offices when the wind crashed though several windows in the White House proper Secretary Tumulty hurried the President and Representative Korblv. of Indiana, with whom he was conferring, to a sheltered interior room nn-nt- from the searching lightning flashes. The Capitol, set high above the rltv, caught the brunt of the wind, rain, bail and lightning. The senate was in session when the hail swept down with a deafening roar, boatinp on the plass roof of thp chamber, tbp tnninlt madp further business impossible, and hnrrylnp to the Vice President's desk. Senator Kern mepapboned with bis bands a motion to reeess. The motion was put and although the senators could hear nothing, the senate quit work for fifteen minutes in confusion. ON' TITF CAPITOT, DOMIJ. When the storm broke, thirtyfive painters were at work on the dome of the Capitol, swarming over the curving surface or swinging nigh on shaky scaffolding. William Reese, the foreman, hurried to the dome and got most of his men to shelter inside the big inverted bowl Ttut Jim Boyle, John Ford. Noble Tlailey and rtruce Jones woro too late. Railey and Jones succeeded in scaling: the dome in the wind and rain, and pained a sheltered ledge, where they weathered the storm, after trying in vain to pet inside Ttoyle and Ford were caught on a swinging scaffold Just, under the eaves of the dome and there they swung, suffeted by the wind, beaten by the hail and soaked by the rain, while the flashes of hie lightning trickled around the dome, down from the platinum lightning points on the head of tne Goddess of Freedom that surmounts the structure. When the storm was over they crept, shaken and bruised to safety inside. Here and there throughout the city panic appeared. * Horses driven frantic by the wind ann hail, dashed through the streets in terror until they were stopped by collision with t.ome other wind-driven object. In nf tliA r* ffi r?r? hn111Hnon/l government buildings disastrous panics narrowly were averted. At tbe bureau of printing and engraving. where hundreds of women are employed, the wind, sweeping through a huge window, sent a storm of broken plate glass hurtlln through the big press room. ) I WOMEN FAINT, F\. Eight or ton women %. falling glass, and one prinu* ? 'Khodes, suffered severe sealp woirndvf i,. The crash of glass swept panic through the room. A hundred or more of the girls working ns printers' 1 01 assistants, fainted and fell to the j < floor and others dashed terror-stricken for the exits. For two hours the office was in an uproar. \ While the excitement was at its Nev height, the wind caught a bundle of sidt 1,000 one-dollar bills, half finished, tert and swept it through the broken Smi window . The bundle was ripped to /adr pieces and the bills scattered far and lisb wide. Gul Director Ralph hurried out a force the of scouts, and after combing Po- see torn a c Park and the grounds of the ly 1 Washington m r?n 11 rn on t for and fishing in the tidal basin near 1 by, all but $75 vortb of he bills stiff were recovered. has Another panic threatened at the ; Not pension office. where the lightning of i ripped a corner off the roof and ers in scores of windows. Another nov lightning bolt tore a hole in the he roof of the postoffice building and froi ripped open one face of the hig clock wee in the tower. wis STRAY TEAMS ROUNDED UP. bro The wind ripped fifteen heavy panels from the floor of the historic old aqueduct bridge, and a horse and wagon crossing the structure was , blown into the river. The driver mp) escaped. Tonight the police rounded inj] up scores of strayed horses and , wagons which had been deserted in p('M the streetF or had run away. jnv On the Potomac river water traffic . was demoralized. The tug Edith , Goddard Winship sank in the blow. , . 1 . , ? . rou and her crew was taken off by a jt v barge which she was towing The 11)t excursion steamer Phnrlec IT Win . er tonight is aground sovcral miles 'r,l~ up the river. with more than one ! '' hundred ? \ eursionists aboard. She P ? is reported in a safe position. James Stoddard, a regular soldier. ' J rescued three Washington physi- <r'~ clans from an overturned small boat * in the river. None of the men could swim, hut ? Stoddard brought them all in safety. _v towing the three at one time. PP Launches and small crafts along the lic< shores were swept from their moor- rm' ings and earried awav down the " river ahead of the gale. fnn Representative Flood, of Virginia. narrowly escaped death or seriotiF JJJ'" injury when, in the height of tiie jj10 storm, he was driving in an automobile through the White House ' ? ' grounds. A huge uprooted elm was rrr thrown by the wind directly in the 7.01 path, just missing the automobile. The weather bureau paid tonight _ that the storm was a purely local disturbance over the city, and that l!nr its path covered only a few miles. * n\ The official record? pave the velocity ',r>, of the wind at- F?4 miyles, though at ^ times it reached 60 miles an hour v n During the brief storm 2.02 inches ? 1 of rain fell. ^ DEFENDING MOTHER. KILLS BROTHER n far Walter Gailily of Union County Cuts pa? Throat of Will Caddy. Who Was t'bokinc Parent. ** <rn Monroe Special to Charlotte Observer. July 2 0 ?Twenty-year-old r'\ Walter Gadiiy, who cut the throat po' of ltis brother. Will Caddy, yester- th day afternoon was today placed in the county jail here. The killing or- , curred near the home of tlie mother of ttie two men. Mrs John Gaddv. " four miles east of Mar-hville. just this side of tlie Anson county line. ' Will Gaddv. who was 2!l vear? of age, married and was tho father of ' " two children. lived on his own farm, " , about a half mile from the home of his parents. Walter lived with his '"'J mother. The father is in the State |, s Hospital for the Insane at Morganton. ^vn A short while before lie was taken ' U( to the asylum the father pave Will W.1 permission to take a younper brother. who is a minor, to work with him for a year. However, it seetns that ~'f' the youngster was needed at home " Out of this, it it said the trouble ( rn arose. (> Yesterday afternoon the older J, brother, who is said to have been 'J'1 drunk, came to the home of his ! mother and younger brothers, and !ilC armed with a shotgun ordered his , mother and Walter to go to his home. When about half the dis- "r tunce had been covered. Will is snid to have attacked his mother, choking her until Walter Interfered. After having been knocked down. tb*> younger nia narose to his feet, aIu drew a pocket knife and literally cut his brother to pieces, stabbing him in the stoiuach end back and finally cutting his throat. Death resulted in a few minutes. T?n Walter then telephoned an officer and surrendered. lie was brought here today. Court is in session and an application will be made for bail ue< at once. J?f>r fro Drops l.ftOO Feet Into a Mine. Ttutte, Mont., July 31.?Although Mr he has cruised under the waters of lat the ocean in a submarine and soared ma above the clouds in an aeronlane. it remained for TDitte to Rive Secretary- Mr of th^ Navy Josephus Daniels the a ! thrill of his life when he dropped its yer ' Ylay almost In the twlnklinR of sto ar 11,*00 feet into the depths of su< t \nard copper mine. The sec- est \shook hands with all the Jo\ Ynd accepted all the speet- go lore they offered until his sol were filled. ba / CO'l i . J.. isiderahle Opposition to South 'arolinn Senator's Plan to Stop Progress of Inse<'t. Vashinpton Special to Charleston k-s and Courier, July 31.?ConTable opposition has been encoun d by the proposition of Senator ith. of South Carolina, to stop tho ance of the boll weevil by estabinp a cottonless zone from tho r of Mexico northward through state of A'abama to the Tenneariver, but the idea is undoubted1 big one and is arousing incra?? interest as it is discussed. "he mail of Senator Smith is alono icient to prove that his suggestion made a profound impression, only is he receiving many letters commendation from cotton growand cotton factors in the stato r uninfected by the weevil, but has in his flies communications m farmers in the region which the >vil has over-run, saying that the* h the "heroic defence" of th' ad cottonless barrier had beedied in time to nave their ritorv from the terrible sr SUGGESTED YEARS ' ^s a matter of fact. th< at of a cottonless zone 50 o, es wide along thp Tnvie = suppested years n.go by tho ith Carolnna senator, when tho asion of the Mexican Insect was ninent and before If had actually urred. There nobody In this ntry today who will contend that vonld not have been a blessing If zone had been created. Tho t of the cotton usually rrown In area of the zone would havo n as nothinc to the loss which been sustained since the w.-ev'* 1e his way across the border a' an an advance which the nr. noons efforts of the scientists department of agriculture ba for an instant been able to st ever, the extent of the insect aces may have been reduced tory of the weevil in the cotton ntry thus far demonstrates the ess the experts of the prtvernme find some new and mor^ effec' hod of eomhatlnc the {rest y have discovered up to bis propress of the h ouph the southeast* (on states to the Atlantic (ain within the next few yen. S'E WOULD BE MOVABLE?ITS COST. "ho natural tendency of the npweer reader is to think of Senator ith's suggested ^r,nc as a station- , affair. On the contrary his idea to carry the /one steadily westrd as fast as it pets in its work, I thus diive the weevil by degrees k into the country whence it * io. When the zone reached the vican border, it would be mainied permanently, of course, in er that there should he no repetii of the costly experience which mers have been having for the t twelve or thirteen years. \ statement o fthe value of the ton which would be cut out of the p b\ the establishment of a /one I mile* wide from the Tennessee er to the U.ulf of Mexico has been ne the rounds. v. E ? 'OST OF ZONE NOP SO CI It EAT. [t i? an estimate made by officials the department of agriculture. 1 puts the amount at $1 08,000,> Thb is mistaken by some for cost of establishing the cotton- i s zone itself This would probably \ about $20,000,000. [t stands to reason that a large eontage of the $108,000.0(10 rejventod hv the rotton which could crown in the rottonless area old ho at onco offset by the prods of the diversified farming lch would be practiced in the zone h the aid of agricultural departnt experts. Tt is altogether poslo .if not probable, that the results the enforced diversification of ps in the 100-milI cottonless zone uld be so agreeable to the farmers rein that they would gladly rein from going back to cotton after v had been released by the pushof the zone to the westward in c with Senator Smith's plan. T'ho senator is not at nil sorn-rtcnid discouraged by the opposition ich bis idea has encountered. Ho laros that no proposition of such gnitude ever failed to meet with orous antagonism and that a '".11 1 free discussion of its mori ogether desirable. RlfJ JEWELRY HAUI,. ugbtcr of Late E. II. Ha Loses Rope of Pearls. S'ew York. July 30.?Jev 1 at ST.I.OOrt, including a iris worth $60,000, wore ni the home of C. 0. Run. rragansett pier during th" ir hours ending Suns. Rumsey was a daur e E. H. Harrisan. Tlu de known yesterday. The rope of pearlR was s. Rumsey by her moth* lentimental value far In intrinsic worth. Oth den, according to a stat ?d at the office of the ate In this city, includ ving: Ruby and pearl Id pin set with magnif ltaire, diamond brooch, g. " 1* ?' . ' !