University of South Carolina Libraries
DROVED CLETEU89 8IBIED IT PHHCET1H; The ex-President Laid at Rest j With thp Simnlest of Rites. as He Had Wished. PRESIDENT AND GOVERNORS ATTEND AS PRIVATE CITIZENS Widow, Her Hand Clasped Tightly in Her Little Boy's, Stands Silently in Princeton Cemetery, Where There Are No Address of Praise, No Hymns, Xo Display, But a Brief Prayer. , Prinrpton. X .J. ? Attended by 1 scenes of solemnity, simple yet pro- , found, Grover Cleveland was laid at i rest at sundown in the unpretentious } cemetery in this quiet university } town. t While church bells throughout 1 New Jersey and Greater New York * were tolling a single bell in Prince- j ton soundM at intervals as the fun- r eral cortege passed through the gates { of Westland, the Cleveland home, at t 6.30 p. m. and moved toward the c cemetery where sleep other men of i universal fame. Salutes were fired a fii: over the land except in Princeton, i There was no sermon and no song "] at the house or at the grave. The j nhcenntHS tnnk nn little more than an I hour. Old friends said that Grover ? Cleveland was buried as he would \ Jiave wished?without eulogy and without song. It was the reauest of Mrs. Cleveland that the public's tribute be expressed by leaving her alone in her sorrow. This was done. Probably less than 200 persons were admitted to Westland. President Roosevelt, members of his Cabinet, Governors of States and other of the most distinguished men in the land, accompanied the body to the grave. Members of Grover Cleveland's two Cabinets made the occasion their first reunion. The desire for privacy was con- j served with scrupulous fidelity. None s except Mrs. Cleveland, her two chil- ( dren, Esther a,nd Kicnara, ana mree j or four blood kin were permitted to ] look upon the face of the dead. The g casket was sealed before it was car- \ ried into the reception room where s the services were held. Marion and ' Francis, the two children who re- r mamed/ at the Cleveland farm in New j Hampshire, will cherish as their last a picture of their father, a memory of his kindly countenance when he bade ( them good-bye a month ago. c Perhaps the most remarkable fea- c t.ure of the last services over Mr. j Cleveland was the remarkable forti- a tude and composure shown by Mrs. c Cleveland. Miss Esther, his fourteen- j year-old daughter, and little Richard j Cleveland, aged ten. Not a tear came d to any of them through the trying j, double service. X It is said the children learned their ( Toccon at their mother's knee when she told them that they must remem- f ber that their father would not have g them cry. . During the ceremony at r the grave she held "Dick" by the f hand, but he was a soldier to the last c moment. C Shortly after noon the military e force approved by Mrs. Cleveland ar- r rived and were assigned to stations, f There were four companies of the \ Second New Jersey Regiment, Na- j tional Guard, consisting of 300 men; sixty men of the Monmouth Mounted g Guard, Company I, of the Princeton g Guards, and twenty policemen p Mounted guards were stationed at t intervals of 100 yards from the rail- c road terminal to Westland, and along E the route traveled by the funeral cortege. A squad of militiamen was t; fViA nrofoe r\F Wncflunrl c< uidwu uij at tiic fetti-co v*. ?? vuvM-v*. c President Roosevelt and his party a were last of the notables to arrive. s They were ushered into the reception n room and were the only ones except the family and clergymen to take s places near the casket. t Mrs. Cleveland and her two children appeared on the landing of the t broad stairway at 5 o'clock. As the s widow advanced on the arm of Dr. ^ Joseph D. Bryant, Mr. Cleveland's v physician and friend, the company \ arose and remained standing through- p out the services. Mrs. Cleveland wore p a soft black gown and a short veil reaching little below the shoulders. s Esther, a beautiful girl, was in black. $ Richard wore a suit all of white ex- E fnt> hie Vilonir cr>n rf nnrl i?lnvPR + In the library were gathered the t National and State officials and clos- c est friends of the Clevelands. Two v other rooms opening from the centre -v hall accommodated the others. a The Rev. Sylvester W. Beach, of q the First Presbyterian Church, of t Princeton, began the services with a t brief prayer, which was followed by Scriptural reading by Rev. Maitland a V. Bartlett, of the West Farms Pres- -t byterian Church, New York. y r\i- Uor\ vv V.on T^vlrc? nno n f tho i few men whom Mr. Cleveland sum- [ moned to the house during the closing \ days, delivered an eloquent prayer. f At its conclusion he said that, accord- j ing to the request of one whose slightest wishes at this moment must f be respected, there would he no ad- j dress or sermon, but that there was , a poem written more than a hundred j years ago by William Wordsworth, < which was expressive of the character . of Mr. Cleveland: } "Who is the happy Warrior? Who I is hs ] That every man in arms should wish 1 to be?" 1 Killed by His Own Device. < Fred G. Engel. of New York City, inventor of a patent automatic fire- 1 escape, while giving a demonstration i of the mechanism before Fire Depart- i raent officials at Springfield, Mass., : fell six stories and was instantly < killed. Commits Suicide at 104. , Henry Miller, aged 104, grew tired , of life at HarroasDurg, Mercer toun- , ty, Kentucky, and committed suicide i by taking paris green. The National Game. The Cornell baseball team has elected Robert Caldwell, a pitcher, captain for 1909. Ernie Hjertberg is now known as the silent man. As a trainer of athletes he ranks next to the best, nevertheless. Walter East, late of Little Rock, has been appointed manager of the , Erie Club, of the Ohio-Pennsylvania League. The Chicago, National League, Club has loaned catcher Vincent Campbell to the Springfield Club, of the I.-I.-I. League. Dr. Van Dyhc rend Wordsworth's i>l "Character of the Happy Warrior" in P its entirety, and it served as the cc eulogy for Mr. Cleveland. This was followed by readings from Ihe Pres- R hyterian Book of Common Worship, tt Tho sfawicps at Wpstlniirl were con- 1? eluded with the following prayer, b: spoken by Dr. Van Dyke: th "0 God, Who art the strength of th Thy saints and Who redeemest the ol souls of Thy servants, we thank Thee for all who have died in the Lord and le who now rest from their labors, hav- la ing received the end of their faith, ca jven the salvation of their souls. Es- T1 fjecially we call to mind Thy loving le kindness and Thy tender mercy to :his Thy servant whose memory we is lonor and whose loss we mourn. For cl; rhy good hand upon him, leading ut iim through all the trials, toils and w conflicts of this mortal life to the M rtnal victory, blessed be Thy name, O 3od. For the great duties which d rhou didst give him to perform in A. K a CH-otA f r\i% + V* n Mo-K ^AnrQ(xf? Tn .UC Oiaic uuu xv/l uig UA&LJ. vvu.Mflv, u v visdom and success with which he Ti ivas enabled to serve the common- of vealth, blessed be Thy name, O God. Sr "For the largeness of the talents In vhich Thou didst commit to his hand vi ind the faithfulness with which he ar lsed them in Thy sight as Chief Mag- pr strate of the Republic, blessed be th Thy name, O God. For the warmth G< )f his friendship, for his constant de- Ei ight in the great out-of-doors, for Se ;he quiet joy and love of his home G< ind for the peace of his death in the m 'aith of Jesus Christ, blessed be Thy Se lame, 0 God. Continue forth Thy Cc joodness from generation to generaion and Thy grace unto the children M, )f the faithful. Let Thy blessing est upon the house of Thy servant ind his name abide in perpetual re- de nembrance, through Thy mercy and to nu" + in Trvono Phricf nnr T^nrri Pt L II > 11 utu A JUL UWUJ vui v^4. .. . _ . ^.men." I ch There were no hymnals or other Pa linging. The services were concluded ex it 5.30 o'clock. Those in the house V emained standing for five minutes vhile the casket was being trans- c^( 'erred to the hearse. Twenty-seven :arriages were waiting along the Hi Iriveway. Mrs. Cleveland came out, V{ ittended by Dr. Bryant, and there A.1 vas a short delay before the cortege mi noved slowly forward. The pallbearers, all close friends or Ca leighbors of the dead man?Mayor ed tfcClellan, of New York; Commodore 3. C. Benedict, Richard Watson Gil- w' ter, President Finley, of the College su >f the City of New York; Professor of 5aul van Dyke, of Princeton; Profesor Andrew F. West, Professor John he J. Hibben, Paul Morton, Junius S. dr a n t?hb5p11 Professor uvigaui ioward McClenahan and Bayard n0 Stockton?carried the coffin to the learse, and the funeral procession A-i tarted to the cemetery. to In the first coach were tbe clergy- ?r nen. The second was reserved for CI rtrs. Cleveland, Dr. Joseph D. Bryant md Richard Cleveland. . inl The third coach took Miss Rose Cleveland and Esther, the ex-Presi- w< tent's elder daughter and eldest 6.! liild. In the fourth were Cleveland dii \ Bacon, a nephew; Miss Hastings .nd Professor and Mrs. Wood. Next cl( ame Mr. and Mrs. Huddleston, of 'rinceton; Mrs. John H. Finley, of m( sTew York; Mrs. Richard Watson Gil- Ac er, George Shipley, Miss Annie Hecker, the Cleveland trained nurse; to jouis Yoemans, of Chicago, and "harles Rogers, of Brooklyn. its After the family and intimate de ? - - ? ix J HO riends came President Jttooseven. auu ? iecretary Loeb in the seventh car- so iage, followed by another containing c*( our Secret Service men, and in other ^h< arriages were Chief Justice Fuller, Jovernor Fort, of New Jersey; Gov- c*? rnor Hughes, of New York, and Sec- CI etary Cortelyou; John G> Carlisle, As ormer Secretary of the Treasury; be Villiam F. Vilas, of Wisconsin, and Ci Irs. Daniel S. Lamont. Richard Olney, former Secretary of th tate; Charles S. Fairchild, former ecretary of the Treasury; David R. Gr 'rands, former Secretary of the Inerior, and Judson Harmon, of Cin- co innati, former United States Attor- ca ley-General. Hilary A. Herbert, former Secre- St ary of the Navy; Governor Hoke an mith, of Georgia; United States Sen- wc tors Kean and Briggs, of New Jerey, and many other distinguished ien. '?b As the funeral procession drove Cc lowly between lines of mounted na roopers and at the cemetery through anes of infantry standing at "attenion," hats were doffed and conveTation ceased. It was, in its simplicty and dignity, a fitting popular trib- w* ite to the man who, when his official TI ife ended, identified himself so comiletely and thoroughly with the peotie as did Mr. Cleveland. Business in Princeton had been *e< uspended at 1 p. m. Curtains were CI [rawn and flags were flying at half- h? oast. As the hearse left "Westland he bell in old Nassau's tower began Pl o toll. The route traversed by the ortege was the same as that over i'hich George Washington passed 138 rith the officials of the old Continentil Congress to Nassau Hall. Presi- CI lent James Madison had traversed mi he streets when a student at Prince- ^ on. The hearse entered the cemetery in it 6 o'clock. The sun was dipping l)r >ehind the trees and a softened light su jathed the sacred precincts where ex V.aron Burr, John McClean and JonaT> J Up han Edwards, presidents oi.rrince- ~on University, and other distinjuislied men of later days were bur- ?t ed. gt( The pallbearers, six on either sido ind led by Mayor George B. McClelan and Commodore E. C. Benedict, aised the casket and waited until VIrs. Cleveland had alighted. The P< :ofiin was covered with loose flowers w ?carnations, sweet peas, lilies of the te . alley and one wreath of ivy clipped w from that creeping over old Nassau be Hall. The procession moved slowly II ip the travel path. Within a few be feet of the open grave was the rest- P; Government "Waits" on Venezuela. F< The State Department, Washington, is marking time in the Venezue- II [an question. Little change is prom- ja ised for some time, and this Govern- C ment is merely "awaiting the coarse b< af events." oi F Opposition in Panama. tt One of the newspapers supporting in Senor Arias, Administration candidate for President of Tanama, declared the United States has. no right to intervene in the elections in that p] Republic next month. r About Noted People. King Alfonso Is twenty-two. The French Ambassador to Eng- G land, M. Cambron, gave a dinner in London to President Fallieres and b; King Edward. Baron Takahira, Japanese Am- tc bassador, was made Doctor of Laws B at the one hundred and sixty-first commencement of Princeton univer- ^ sity. Sj Ernest Thompson Seton, after his d< seven months' exploring expedition through the country north of the ni Hudson Bay, is again at his country m seat, WyndygQul. r< i? plrcp of little Ruth Cleveland, rim roses had been strewn over Its >verlet of ivy. Mrs. Cleveland, with Esther and ichard at her side, stood between le graves as the Rev. Dr. William . Richards, pastor of the Brick Presfterian Church, of New York, read le committal service ana pronounceu ie benediction. This concluded the jsequies. President Roosevelt and his party ft the cemetery before Mrs. Clevend and her children entered their irriage to be driven to Westland. tie services over the grave lasted ss than ten minutes. On two sides of the grave, which under the shadow of the mortuary lapel, were banked the floral tribes. Prominent among them was a reath of roses sent by President and rs. Roosevelt. Those of Grover Cleveland's two ibinets at the funeral were Hillary 4-Vi A XT o if if weroeri, secretary hn G. Carlisle, Secretary of the easurv; William F. Vilas, Secretary tho Interior, and Governor Hoke nith, of Georgia, Secretary of the tcrior. Others present were Melile W. Fuller, whom Mr. Cleveland (pointed Chief Justice of the Sueme Court; Judge George Gray, of e United States Supreme Court; meral John M. Wilson, Chief of ^gineers; Governor Hughes; ex(cretary of the Navy, Paul Morton; jvernor Fort, Secretary of Comerce and Labor Oscar Straus and scretary of the Treasury George B. >rtelyou. any Cities Pay Tribute to Mr. Cleveland's Memory. Washington, D. C.?The bell on In pendence Hall, in Philadelphia, was lied during the funeral services at inceton, and the chimes of many urches and the bells on all munici.1 buildings paid tribute. All the changes closed at 1 p. m. Flags erywhere were at half-mast. At Pittsburg the Stock Exchange ised at 1 p. m. The saluting battery at the St. slena training station at Norfolk, i., was fired every half hour all day. 1 naval officers at the station put on Durning badges. At Dallas, Texas, General W. L. ibe!, a Confederate veteran, presidover a memorial service. The residents of Marion, Mass., lere Mr. Cleveland formerly had a mmer home, united in a telegram condolence to the family. In Chicago a memorial service was Id at the Union League Club, adessed by Judge Kohlsaat and oths. The Board of Trade closed at on. In Detroit James Bryce, tne jtjriusn nbassador, on his way from Duluth Buffalo by the lakes, expressed reet at being unable to attend Mr. eveland's funeral. In St. Louis flags on public build5s were half-masted, the Merchants' xhange closed at noon, and salutes jre fired every half hour, noon till 20 p. m., when forty-five guns were 3charged. In Boston the Stock Exchange >sed at 1 p. m. In Annapolis thirty days of official turning were begun at the Naval :ademy, and salutes were fired at irty minute intervals from sunrise sunset. In New York City Wall Street paid . tribute to the memory of ex-Presint Cleveland by suspending busiss at 1 o'clock. The Stock, Conlidated and Produce Exchanges )sed their doors at that hour, and e streets were almost deserted by 2 :lock. Seth Low presided at a spell commemoration meeting of the tamber of Commerce held at noon, i the Mayor had requested, church lis were tolled all over New York ty between 5 and 5.30 p. m. In every part of the world where ere is a United States flag flowing bute was naid to the memory of over Cleveland. Several foreign governments acrded special honors for the ocsion. American embassies, lega>ns and consular agencies bore the ars and Stripes at half-mast, army d navy officers wherever located >re a badge of mourning, and battleips, cruisers and vessels of our navy every type rendered appropriate servance of the death of the former ?mmander in Chief of the army and vy. Beginning at daybreak salutes were ed by all ships and army posts, benning at military posts with a thunr of thirteen guns and winding up th forty-five guns at sunset, iroughout the world tribute in some rm, under either American or for ;n auspices, was rendered. In Latin America, Brazil, with its gling of debt of gratitude to Mr. eveland, paid the most signal nors. opose Monument to Cleveland at Birthplace. Trenton, N. J.?A movement has en started in Essex County, N. J.? e county which gave birth to Grover eveland, to raise a national monuent as a tribute to the memory of e ex-President. Already several of the most proment citizens of the State have exessed a desire to be among the bscribers. Within a few days it is pected that a committee to take urge of the f and in New Jersey will appointed. Among the members it will hf> fJnvprnnr Fort. United ates Senators Briggs and Kean, ex>vernors Murphy and Griggs and exaited States Senator Smith. Girl and Man Drown. That Dorothy N. Flagg, a visitor at soria, 111., from Galesburg, died bile struggling with William Patrson, and dragged him to death ith her, became evident when the idies of both were taken from the linois River. The tragedy ended a >at ride from A1 Fresco Park, where atterson was a concessionaire. eared Lynching, Pleaded by 'Phone. At Parkersburg, W. Va., about norcnnc o"at>iprprl nrrmnrl thp .il waiting for the appearance of harles Brown, a negro, who was to i taken to court to answer a chargc : attacking Myrtle Calb, a white girl, earing a lynching, however, the auLoritieB had the negro waive exainlation by telephone. Young Roosevelt Graduates. The Harvard commencement took lace at Cambridge, Mass. Theodore oosevelt, Jr., was graduated. Newsy Gleanings. The Earl of Derby, once Governoreneral of Canada, died in London. A crusade against the kissing of ibies is under way in England. Treasury agents found smuggled bacco valued at $1000 in a but in rooklyn. At the eighth annual convention of le German Navy League Prince zu lhn-Horstmar was re-elected presijnt. President Roosevelt appointed a itional commission of fifty-seven lembers ou conservation of natural isources. AFTER THi &J ^ J Shade of King George III.?"I Aiwa ?Cartoon I PRICE OF MEAT FORCE! Beef Trust is Really Reaching Out to Country, Dealers Declare?Higli Excuse-Advance of Fror Meat Forces Fish Dei New York City.?Without even the justification that the demand has increased or the supply fallen short, the advance in the price of meat by the powerful combination now reaching out to control the retail trade of the country has reached a point where hundreds of small butchers must be driven into bankruptcy because they are unable to sell at the j exorbitant rate forced upon them, j with the added burden of the exactions of the railroads in freight rates. In Washington Market, the most I ? *. - r 11- 1.|MJ i ~ 4-V.a I iamous III til l ui its MUU ijli LUC v;uuu| try, trade has been cut almost fifty | per cent, in a year. Butchers who | needed six or seven big ice boxes last I year get along now with two or three, j The stalls that handled thirty or forty i car-cases now handle from ten to twelve. Veterans in the business like Peter J. Hickey suddenly find themI selves confronted with agents of the j Beef Trust as rivals in attempting to gain hotel and steamship trade, offering the product at a lower price than it is sold to the butchers themselves. Deaf Ear Turned to Pleas. Pleas and demands for fair play | are futile. ' No notice of an advance j in price Ls given to any retail dealer : not controlled by the Meat Trust. He must pay up once a week or go on the j black list, and if unable to meet his obligations on the dot he locks up his ! ice box and goes out of business. The only explanation that the trust ' makes as to why the price of beef j should be increased at a season when the demand is smaller than at any - - *> - - I- 1V..4 4-1, ? ' omer time 01 toe year ia mat luc uigu price of corn has made it necessary. It has been asserted that in the fattening of what is known in the trade i as "finished beef" large quantities of j corn are required as fodder, and that I when the price of corn goes up the | price of beef must advance corre' spondingly. I It is asserted without qualification I by old-time butchers in the Washingi ton Market that there has not been a ! carcass of a corn-fed bullock in the I market for twenty years or more and TEXAS PRICES ARE ' Inffux of Population and < Respo Fort Worth, Texas.?The present ! prices of cattle on the hoof in Texas ! ?the highest in twenty years?are i due principally to the influx of a mill! ion settlers in the past two years, the ! occupation of ranch lands and the sale of cattle to clear off the big pas; tures. j Best meal and grass fed steers now ! sell on the hoof at Fort Worth from $5.75 to $6 a hundred pounds; corn; fed steers sold last week at $7.25 and | grass-fed steers have sold here this : spring at $6.75, the highest price . ever paid in the history of Tetas catj tie raising. A year ago the best steers brought I $4.70, and two years ago to-day nothj ing was offered that would bring as j high as $3 a hundred. In two years | the price of cows on the hoof here has HARD TIMES PRODI1 Dr. Frank Kraft Says Sex of Survival < Cleveland, Ohio.?Control of the I j sex of infants is a practical proposi- j : tion. according to Dr. Frank Kraft, ! secretary of the American Institute ! of Homeopathy. Dr. Krai't says he has discovered no new principle, but i has shown the practical application i of one originating with the evolution ; theory. The principle, he says, is , based on the law of the survival of ' the fittest. Dr. Kraft makes these j declarations in a book just off the i press. | Omaha Drinks Mud?Consumes Thirty-one Tons Each Day. i Omaha, Neb. ? That citizens of Omaha drink thirty-one tons of mud daily in the water from the Missouri !?,?= t-lr* tootlmnnv In the Fed ) rwivc; cicj tuv, y ? , eral Court in Omaha in a water works i case by the City Chemist. The city makes the charge that the water company does not furnish un! adulterated water and refuses pay! ment of the city bill on that account, i As drawn from a hydrant, a glass of Missouri River water cannot be seen through until it settles. Feminine Notes. At Byron, Me., Miss Agnes Thomas ' recently captured a thirty-pound ! turtle. j ^ean Reid's wedding presents made j one of the finest displays ever seen , in London. ? 1 in Parfs h n vp I nit?i iLetn w uiucu m * ??' formed a circle as an adjunct to the j Lyceum Club. Miss Lotta S. Rand, of Lynn, Mass., ! has been appointed deputy superinI tendent for the blind in Boston. She had been secretary of the Lynn As, sociated Charities for more than eleven years. e POURTS1. I III _ i v ; I HL' ]L, IP'SS^T ys Get Some Satisfaction Out of It." by De Mar, in the Philadelphia Record. v ] UP FORPROFITONLY Control tli? Retail Trade of Entire j i Price of Corn M Accepted as n 25 to 35 Per Cent, in ilers to Raise Prices. that the meat of corn-fed cattle is not i sold for general consumption, for the reason that when the price of corn is high the owner can make a greater profit by selling it in the graii; market instead of feeding it to stock. There is not a retail butcher who is able to explain why he has had to pay more for his beef and mutton and pork and charge his customers more. All he knows is that the price j is increased. The meat is ready for his inspection and purchase, and he can take it or leave it. The nearest to an explanation of the increase has been the price of corn, and next to that the shortage in supply. Increase Instead of Shortage. The organ of the Meat Trust in New York does not bear out the shortage theory. In its last issue the receipts of live stock in Chicago were recorded as "336,180 head for the week, an increase of 60,573. Deliveries of cattle were 8911 in excess of the receipts of the previous week, and 11,372 head greater than the same week last year." As the demand for the choicest cuts of beef falls off the price of the cheaper parts is increased by the butcher so that he can come somewhere near getting even with the wholesaler. In the populous east side, where a half cent in the price of meat means much, the cut for which there is the greatest demand is the brisket, which is divested of its bone before it Is sold to the customer. One year ago the brisket was sold at from thirteen to fourteen cents a pound. This week the lowest price was twenty cents. Corned beef that sold for sixteen and fifteen cents a pound in June, 1907, now sells for twenty j cents. Soup meat has gone up to i twelve cents a pound on the east side and fourteen and fifteen cents a pound in Jefferson Market, an increase greater in proportion than for any other meat. Last January the price of soup meat was from ten to +Ti'?iira oonto q nnnnrl and a vear aero the highest price for the best quality was ten cents. HIGHEST IN YEARS. Occupation of Land Chiefly nslble. advanced practically two cents a pound. Last year's receipts of cattle at Fort Worth exceeded 1,000,000, the majority calves and heifers, which presages a shortage for probably two years to come. Yearlings and twoyear-olds sold this spring to feeders have been bringing from $3 to $5 a 1 loo* t.'oq r onH it i a ho. I If till LilU It' uiau laOL j tai , auu lb 1/v lieved they will go higher. The past two seasons have been unusually favorable, the open range season much longer than usual. The loss from storms last winter was insignificant and the calf crop this spring unusually large. This may Improve conditions within two years, but neither packers nor cattlemen anticipate much change in conditions before that time. CE MALE CHILDREN. Infants is Based on Law of | if Fittest. It is well known to scientists, asserts the author, that savage races and races which exist where the conditions of life are hardest produce a preponderanceof malechildren. From this fact he deduces that nature recnirnirps in the female the weaker ssx. Thus, he says, in times of plenty fe- j males are likely to predominate, j Some thinkers on the subject even go J so far as to assert that hard times ! | produce male children because the struggle for life is harder. i Market Price of Fingers Fixed at $300 Each, j Columbus. Ohio.?Four Columbus men have offered a finger each for $300 to A. C. Balloux. of Wheeling. \V. Va., who lost his fingers in an ice cream freezer recently. He is in the hospital at East Liverpool, Ohio, and his brother, Joseph Balloux, made the offer of $300 a finger o.i the suggesI tion of the surgeons. The men who have offered to nave tneir nngers cut i off are Robert E. Robbins, W. E. Thompson. O. E. Mansperger and a man signing himseli: "D." The Labor World. Painters at Manchester, N. H., recently formed a union. Oakland CCal.) unions have taken steps to form a union labol league. National Brotherhood of Operative Potters will meet next month in Atlantic City, N. J. In England the metal, engineering - -t.:..Kuilrl5nor + A nn ? r\ *. mn 1 1 V nTTl UTICI Siill'umiuiiifj ti auco uui uiuiij i ploy 1,500,000 workers. Walla Walla (Wash.) trade unions i have shown themselves to be public spirited through their activity in several public enterprises, particularly the city Dark camDaicn. i I MISTAKES Sffl FOR HiVAL Wife Shot Down With Her Boy by Jealous Husband, Julius Turner, of Illinois, Who fs n Civil War Veteran, Attempts Suicide, Seeing His Error. St. Louis.?Julius Turner, a Civil War veteran and wealthy farmer of Clay City, 111., shot his wife to death from ambuch, seriously wounded his fifteen-year-old son, and attempted to commit sucide near Sailor Springs, 111. He is under arrest and refuses to partake of food, declaring he will starve himself to death. Turner and his wife had been separated four years. She was twenty years his junior, and he was jealous of her. The tragedy was caused by him mistaking his own son for an admirer of Mrs. Turner, whom he had been shadowing. Turner is sixty-nine years old and his wife was forty-nine. Mrs. Turner attended a church sociable iu the village church and had made arrangements to meet her son there. Turner took a position in a grove nearby where he could observe all that went on. From his ambush he had a dis tinct look at his wife as she left the church door, but the face of his son was obscured. He saw only vaguely the form of a man standing closc to his wife in earnest conversation. Drawing a revolver, he glided to within a few feet of the couple and opened fire on them. The first bullet struck Mrs. Turner in the back, and as she started to run away, another struck her in the head. Then the weapon was turned on her companion and two more shots rang out. One of the bullets struck the son in the groin, and he fell unconscious beside the bleeding figure of his mother The shots attracted the merry-makers in the church and the farmers hurried to the scene. Turner was standing over the bodies of his victims, smoking revolver in hand. As he stooped down to look at the face of the man whom he suspected ^to be his wife's admirer, he recognized his son, and with a cry of anguish straightened up and staggered back. Then, placing the muzzle of the revolver against his temple, he pulled the trigger and dropped across the body of his son. The farmers carried the three bod' ? Art/? rfrot/iliflH l?3 iULU LUC lUUltU UlilX OUCUUCU them on the floor, while two physicians who were present hurriedly examined their injuries. WHAT TRACKS SPENT IX ALBANY Two Racing Associations Expended Over $12,000 to Kih" Bills. Albany, N. Y.?Two of ihe racing associations have filed statements of expenses in connection with the unsuccessful attempt made to defeat the race track anti - betting bills. The Coney Island Jockey Club and the Saratoga Association, by F. R. Hitchcock, president, filed statements of legislative expenses with the Secretary of State. Secretary C. Fellowes, of the former organization, certifies that it expended $7538.53 for counsel retainers, fees and disbursements as follows: Davies, Stone & Auerbach, S2570.15: Frahk S. Black. $1443.30; W. C. Percy, $ 180.41; E. H. Coyne, $2298.28, and R. C. Cumming, $1046.39. The Saratoga Association, in a similarly worded statement, certifies to the expenditure of $5653.31, divided as follows: Davies, Stone & Auerbach, $1927.62; Frank S. Black, $1082.47; W. C. Percy, $135.31; E. H. Coyne, $1723.72, an<J R. C. Cumming, $784 79. SENATOR CARMACK DEFEATED. Tennessee Governor Wins Renomination in Race Against Senator. Memphis, Tenn.?Further returns received from the Democratic primary election in this State indicate the certain nomination of Governor M. R. Patterson for Governor over Edward W. Carmack, formerly United States Senator. Latest returns give Patterson 734 delegated votes and Carmack 584. Carmack followers, it is stated, will probably contest the election in two small interior counties, charging fraud. The los3 of the delegates involved would not affect the result. Governor Patterson's popular majority is about 9000 votes. The election was held on the county unit plan, Senator Carmack favoring State wide prohibition and Governor Patterson announcing for local option. TELLER ADMITS $20,000 THEFT. Atlantic City Man Confesses He Lost Trust Company Funds. Atlantic City, N. J.?Discovery that $20,000 had been taken from the vaults of the Marine Trust Company by Robert Ohnmeiss, paying teller, "inroH i ntn hnnrriwalk bucket shops, caused a sensation here. With his young wife Ohnmeiss occupied a conspicuous place in society, and the shock to those who have known th > young couple intimately was great. The thefty have been going on for months. Ohnn: :iss several years ago married the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry S. Scull, who aro socially prominent here. The teller was arrested and made his confession in jail. He is under $11,000 bail for trial jr. October. CLERK ARRESTED FOR THEFT. Harry T. Tiers, of Pittsburg, Charged With Embezzling: $51,000. Pittsburg.?Although he gave up his position two years ago, Harry T. Tiers, a well known real estate man, of Pittsburg, is under 510,000 bail charged with embezzling fsi.vw from the First National Bank, of Pittsburg. Tiers was arrested by United States authorities at the request of the bank officials. HIGH LICENSE IN LOUISIANA. Legislature Passes the Shattuck-Gay Liquor Dili. Baton Rouge, La.?That Louisiana shall be a high license State for the next two years at least was decided by the Assembly wben the Senate passed the Shattuck-Gay Liquor bill by a vote or za to i. This measure has passed the House and is known to have the Governor's approval. It fixes the minimum parish (county) license at $500, minimum State at $200, with maximum licenses running up to several thousand dollars each. }. ; v.'- v."-Vv; -..'-'if ' : 11 "" Latest News BY WJRE. I] Oil Trust Property Seized. Galveston, Texas. ? For penalties due the State for violation of the an ti-trust laws tne state nas seizea property and garnisheed funds of the Security Oil Company, the National Oil Company, the Waters-Pierce Oil Company and the Navarro Refining Company. Judgment has been rendered against the Standard for violation of the anti-trust laws, and penalties aggregating $6,016,250 imposed. Westinghouse to Pny $080,000. Pittsburg.?Judge James S. Young, of the United States District Court, directed the receivers of the Westlnghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company to pay $500,000 interest due on bonds and notes of the above company. $1,000,000 Grain Fire in Dulath. Duluth, Minn.?Fire destroyed elevator "D," of the Consolidated Elevator Company, No. 1 dock and sheds nf thp Northern Pacific Railroad Com pany at Rice's Point, causing a loss of more than $1,000,000. Full Time in Railroad Shops. Chicago.?Officials of the Illinois ^ Central Railroad issued a notice that | the shops of the system at Burnside, 111.; Waterloo.Iowa; Memphis, Tenn., and Water Valley and Vicksburg, Miss., will be restored to full time. , United States to Find Jobs. Washington, D. C. ? The Government Employment Agency has sent to postmasters a million and a quarter reply postal cards to be distributed by rural delivery carriers to those who need laborers. U. S. Sues For Mineral Lands. Carson, Nev, ? The Government Med suit in the Circuit Court here to set aside land patents obtained by '.he Central Pacific Railroad by alleged fraudulent methods. The land Involved is mineral land and means nuch to Nevada miners. Steel Corporation Bays Stone Lands. Bloomington, Ind. ? The United States Steel Corporation has taken up Its option on 361 acres of stone land it Stinesville, and has formally announced it will establish a plant there worth $1,500,000. Stevenson For Governor. Springfield, 111. ? Former VicePresident Adlal Stevenson, of Bloomington, will make the contest for the Democratic nomination for Governor it the primaries on August 8. Vermont Refuses to Instruct. Burlington, Vt.?By a vote of 193 to 37 the Vermont Democratic Convention laid on the table after a lively debate a resolution instructing the delegates to vote for William J. Bryan for nomination for President Postal Receipts Drop. Washington, D. C.?Postal receipts at fifty of the largest postofilces in the United States for May, as com pared with the same month of last year, show a decrease of 4.79 per cent. Bullets in Blanks. Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ont. ? Just before the Fifth Brigade left to take up its position for a sham battle la the military training' camp maneuvres the ammuniti'- ^f the men was , inspected, and ban cartridges were found in some bandoliers. BY CABLE. , ' Submarines Reach Mar ' . Manila, P. I.?The collier Caesar has arrived with the submarines for this station. French Senate Railway Vote. Paris.?The Senate, by a vote of i 155 to 118, adopted in its entirety the ! Western Railroad measure, t'ne object i of which is to take over and nationalj ize the Western Railroad. j Leaves With King's Gifts. Lisbon.?Queen Amelie, widow of I the late King Carlos, who was assasj sinated last February, left here for | Rio Janeiro, Brazil. Her Majesty is j taking with her the gifts which King Carlos had intended to present to President Penna on the visit which he had planned to make to Brazil this year. Order For Mrs. Roosevelt. Constantinople.?The Sultan of j Turkey has conferred the Order of j Chefakat on Mrs. Theodore Roosevelt i and Mrs. Nicholas Lon'gworth, the ; President's eldest daughter. j China to Pay Indemnity. I Shanghai.?China agrees to inI demnify the families of the officers i and soldiers who were killed in the Franco-Yunnan frontier, but declines as to other demands. Garfield Opens Campaign. Honolulu, Hawaii.?Secretary of the Interior Garfield opened the Republican campaign in the Hawaiian Islands, when he spoke here on the j issues involved in the coming battle party supremacy. $80,000 For Trip. Paris.?The Government has asked Parliament to authorize a credit of i $80,000 to meet the expenses of Presj ident Falliere's forthcoming visit to I Russia and other foreign countries. i j Princess to Wed Auto Agent. [ Vienna.?Prince Emile von Fuerstenburg-Koenigsnof and the other I members of the family have withI drawn their opposition to the mar| riage of Princess Amelie, sister of i Prince Emile to Gustav Koczian, I agent of a German automobile firm, j with whom the Princess eloped lately. i Death Penalty in France. Paris.?Owing to the recent great increase in the number of murders in France the Parliamentary Commisi sion, which originally reported in I favor of the Government's bill abol1 ishing the death penalty, has recon: sidered its action and by a vote of 8 | to 2 has revoked its decision. ; Hoist Lafayette Statue. Paris.?The bronze statue of Lafayette, the gift of American school children to France, was hoisted on its pedestal in the Place du Louvre in the presence of Paul Bartlett, the sculp' tor.