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\ Is W < F _ VOL. XII. 4'' MAY BF. NO WAR! A Settlement Between Russia and j Japan in Prospect JAPAN AGRrtS TO WAIT LONGLR ? Impossible to Embark in War With Kufs a Sinzle-ltnnd^d?Support of | England Mot Expected. London, By Onblo.?Japan has dc- j cided to observe the policy of waiting 1 i and watching Rusgjn. advocated by j Great Brltian. In the meantime she . will urge China to carry out the as- ; vurances given to the United States respecting Manchuria and will endeavor to obtain the opening of additional ports. At the Japanese legatX>n here the following statement was made by an official to the Associated Press: "I can assure you that, the talk of war betworn Russia and .7* pan is an invention. Japan has not the least intention of taking that course. She proposes tc wait and maintain her attitude of watchfulness. Japan and America are acting on ti?.e_samo lines and it would be difficult for any other power tp> withstand the pressure they and Great ilrftaiu oouH apply." It is said that Japan intends t? do nothict? till October, when the f nal evacuation of Manchuria must occur. The Aailure of Russia to withdraw frora Manchuria won Id be followed by a. serious niovo cm line part of Japan. Tlie Russian cirtbassy here regrets the-confusion which has. arisen in consequence of the publication </f the report that Prince Clilng. head of the Chinese Foreign "Office. had written to Minister Conger, refusing to open ports in Manchuria. The Rv.ssinn officials believe with Washington that nnta ??o -enn* ?TU: ? a a v a>\/ IV 4% nV II L I It I'll I" X I I 1 1 I i L ^ her assurances and they asserted positively thut Russia intends to -carry out to the letter the assurances she has given and that she will not interpose obstacles In the way of China observing her plcdgo to Secretary Hay. A dlspnvc'h to Renter's Telegram Company Irom St. Petersburg, dated July 20, savs: "The attitude of Japan and the warlike tone of xbe majority of the Japan se press have attracted much attention in official 'circles hereIt is declared by the htst informed people that there is n.? likelihood of war. certainly not upon Russia's initiative. It is stated that Russia has every motive for desiring peace, chiefly for financial reasons with which are wound up a desire tor extensive domestic reforms which the government considers to he the most otl'icarious ma.nner of disarming interna! discontent and nipping the revolutionary propaganda in the bud. "It is believed to he impossible from the Htusslan view point for Japan to embark in a conflict with Russia single-bunded, and it is thought she will seuure the material support of Great Britain and of the United States. Nevertheless, Russia is taking every precaution to strengthen her military and naval position in the Orient, believing this to ho the surest means of discouraging Japanese ag gression. "M. Lessor's Port Arthur conference is said to have dealt -chiefly with these measures, though they are declared to be entirely precautionary, war being the furthest thing from the wishes of the government of.Russia." Again Active. Kingstown, Island of St. Vlnvent. By Cable.?The Sonf: lore volcano has been slightljfljjBbMi^^ince Julv 19, emitting puf^^^^^^^^ptently which ojuised clcctrlfl^pi^ids and low rumbh 11ti?K. A SevrrA ?>nrihniin1.-r? cWI' $ felt at 1:40 a. m., Tuesday, accom' panted by a subterranean sound of cracking which shook the buildings here and threw the populace into a state of consternation. Pulling Out of Central Union. Philadelphia. Special.?A serious blow wa:< dealt to the Central Union of Textile Workers, whioh is directing the textile strike, v.-hen the I.oom Fixers* Protective and Beneficial Aso< iation withdrew from that organization. Similar action is said to he contemplated by the Reamers' and Twisters' Union, the Warpers' and Warp Dress ers' Union and the Power l.oom Fixers' Beneficial Union, all of which met tonight to consider the matter. The McOrann Mill granted the demands of the strikers. Killed Hl? WlfrCarrollton, Oa.. Speclnl.?News reaches here from WhitesburR that Robert Smith, a ycuinR farmer, 3h"*. j from ambush and billed his wife Thursday. They quarrelled nnd Smith whipped his wife. She left him and went to her fathe.-'s house. It is supposed her father persuaded her to return to her husband, who shot her as she was on the way. A posse Is hunting for Smith. 1 ' < *' * % ?.w w SOUTHERN INDUSTRIAL Price of Raw Cotton. The Fall River Daily Herald wouM not be astonished if it should be made plain that chenp raw cotton and cheap cotton apparel, as compared with values which have long obtained, are passing. It says: If the day of six-cent cotton or eightcent cotton has not gone by, we may realize before many years have been counted that it Is going by with a rush. This may not mean that coarse cotton cloth is a thing of the past, and it may not mean that the most expensive cotton fabrics will rival silk3 unci satins 1n price; it may mean, however, that I cotton as a commodity will command considerable more money than has been asked for it heretofore.tnd that 15-rent cotton will breed no curtailment or i irlVtf) rie? fn < hn ol 1 <?K ? ' * .-W ? .OX IV IUC nSlUUl^lIU'Ul. The Herald elaborates its theory as ! follows: Although considerably large quantities of cotton may be grown and mar* beted in the near future, it would not be surprising if nil concerned, and pt.rI ticulnrly spinners and Individual o??nj suiners. were forced to place a much I higher estimate upon the value o? cnt| ton as a staple. At any rate, a number of indications go to show that the drift I is in the direction of higher prices for i rotloa in the bah? and in the finished product. The alvanee which has been mailt' in weaving suggests thai the demand for rotton fabrics is going to be | heavier than it has ever been before i it is lighter. What are known as the i "fine-goods" ltills are in nit inlying, and for countless purposes their output is I to be preferred to silk or satin. They a."e rapidly coming to take the place of material which law Wing been lx*jyoud the reach of the average purchaser. and that ,r?>o. in the eyes of jjh?> mnre extravagant members of society. if this demand enhances the value *af dress fabrics, ix is clear that the value of the cotton of which they art I composed will be increased. Furtheri more apart from tire estimate pinrcd . an the finished product by those who spin a ad weave it and those who wear ' it. it is evident that the spinners and i wttu-% ers, the great mass of operati ves i in civilized countries, must he taken jlnte account. If progress is made, niul ' the cotton industry advances as it must ! IT it prospers, it follows that the- cost i uf production murrt be increased is the matter of wares. Whatever the effec t of improvements in machinery may have upon this enrst, it will hardly nfI ftid tlie additions which must ho made to tlie* cost of laivir. In the long run. lit is idle talk about paring down that o.st or substituting a cheaper class of ! help. The call will be lor skilled employes i rather than for a class that is lacking i in Intelligence and that is content with j low standards of In ing. And so, apart | from all considerations connected with ! the staple or the demand for the ont| put from the looms, manufacturers will f be forced to pay more for what they produce than they arc now paying. Rrvvin Cotton Mill. I The Krwln Cotton Mills Co. of DuvI ham, N. C., has extended its charter sixty years and filed notice with the i harlir authorities that its capital stock is increased from $500,000 to $h000,000, to be issued in Y>otli common and preferred slums. This company takes this action to cover the investment being made in mill and town near Dunn, N. C.. where it is building a plant of 70,000 spindles and 2030 looms, in accordance with announcements as detailed previously. Denims ami earn lets will he the product. Textile Notes. r><><iniuiiiijrK (n, \ rviiimng .vims, H. I). Wheate, receiver, will expend about $r?.000 for betterments, including the installation of twenty additional knitting machines and other equipment. Wampum Cotton Mills of Lincolnton. N. C., will build plant of 10.000 spindles. The company was reported last month ns incorporated with $160,000 capital. Worth Manufacturing Co., Worthville, N. C.. mentioned last week, will not erect additional buildings, but it merely discarding some old-style carets and replacing with more modern equipment; also installing new pickers, Edward Wolff, Mrs. Itleka Wclff and Miss Bertha E. Wolff have Incorporated the Edward Wolff Cotton Waste & Linter Co. of Macon, Oa., for ? ealing in cotton yarns, llnters. waste and other products. The capital stock if S5.000. Lumber Notes. The Bear Pond Lumber Co. of Hagerstown, Md., has been incorporated, with a capital of $250,000, to acquire timber, coal and oil lands. i v;.\. , , 1 FORT MILL, S. C., WE] ! FIGHT IS ABANDONED" - The Assistant Foreman Reports For Work. | BOOK-BINDERS NOT TO STRIKE. ; ! Union Officials State Their Case to j Secretary Coitclyou and Public, Printer Palmer. Washington. Snecial.?The Bookj binders' Union which has heen fighting ; the re-iustatement of W. A. Miller, the ' assistant foreman in the government i j Printing Office. 1ms abandoned any in- J tent ion of walking out even though j Milier has resumed work. President I Tuttim, of the International Brotherhood of Book-Binders, is now en route j hi re from Chicago to advise with the i local leaders. The latter have decided to abide by the decision of the Public Printer and avtiid any dash with the government. Miller reported for duty about 10 o'clock Saturday morning and was assigned to duty. The union officials announced that there would he no a, t ion on their part for 30 days, during which time they anticipated that the question would bo solved by the Public ! Printer. It Is exported that a national j at bit rat ion council will moot to discuss i the situation. i ) The union officials rallo;l on Sccre| tary Cortelyou and Public Printer Palj nior and loft with tluem a statement j regarding what was done at the meetI Inp of the book-binilr rs. It stated that Miller would be permitted under pro- J test to continue in the position tn ; which he had been re-instated and that | there would he nothing done at pren] ent by the book-binders that would in! terfere with the work of the office. !t I .gives assurance that this action is inspired by a regard for the action of the : Piesulent and for the Federal statutes, j i and expresses the belief that the char- I g^s against Miller will be subsLanti- } stofi on invof igation. A similar ?tate- 1 irent was filed with the 'Civil Service Commission. The Charlotte Evening News gives this summary of the affair: A man by the name of W. A- Miller, assistant foreman in the Government Printing Office, was expelled from a local organization of book-binders and his name was subsequently dropped fiom the mil of employes of the Government. Recently he was restored 1c. his place in the Government <wnploy. by a special order froat President Kooae\? lt. which reads as follows: Wm. A. Miller on May IK last was icmoved by 1iu? public printer frxim his position of assistant foreman in the Government printing offire. because lie bad been expelled from the local union of the National Brotherhood of Bookbinders. Mr. Miller complained to the civil service onmmission, and on July (' it. requested Mr. Miller's reassign nient jo duty, his removal being con- j t:ary to the civil rules. Complaint also had been niafie to tit" President aad by his direction Secretary Oortelyou investigated the matter. Cn .1 txly 13 President Roosevelt w 11,to as follows: ' "My Dear Secretary Cortelyon: In accordance with the letter of the civil rcrvice commission of July t?, the pul>iic ]>rinter will reinstate ilr. \V. A. i Miller in his position. "On the face of the papers presented | Miller would appear to have been removed iu violation of law. There is no j objection to the employees of the Gov(innient printing office constituting I themselves into a union if they so desire, but no rules or resolutions of the t.jtion can be permitted to override the laws of the United States, which it if my sworn duty to enforce. " "Please communicate a copy of this letter to the public printer for his Information and that of his subordinates." ' Newspaper Change. Philadelphia. Special.?George McCain. for 14 years connected with the editorial staff of The Philadelphia Press, has purchased The Colorado Springs Gazette. Mr. McCnin will sever his connection with The Press August 1. and take charge of The Gazette August 1!>. After the latter date The Gr.z?tte will bo issued as a Republican instead of a Democratic daily. Whit siil Wlil Cu e Chattanooga, Special.?After being on trial for thirteen day3 and being the hardest fought civil case In the history of this section, the contest over the Whiteside will came to an end late last week when Judge Allison charged the jury. A decision will be rendered tomorrow though a mistrial seems probable. This is a contest made by the sons of the late Mrs. Harriet Whiteside, who was the richest woman in the rotate and who left her property to her 'wo daughters and her grandchildren. Cnder influence, especially by the use of Christian science, was the ground for the contest. IK -V DNKSDAY, JULY 21*. i THE LIFE i/E (.CO THIRTEENTH. ! Sketch of the ."Ian Who is Mourned I Bv the Catholic World. In 1837 Joachim Pccut received the j eub-diaeonate and in the same year Gn^ory XVI made him a domestic prelate. li>.; first promotion, with the title o! onsignor. On December 23. 1S37, ho was ordained priest by Cardinal Odescalehi, Eaying his first mass in the chapel of m. Anis'.uus at tho Jesuit Noviciate of St. Andrew. Early In 1S38 Mgr. Peccl was named governor of tho papal province of Benevmto. and, like Sixtus V. busied himself with the suppression of brigandage. Ho was called to exercise his talents in a more important post, in 1818. being consecrated bishop of Dainietta in partibus and sent to Brussels as papal nuncio. It was as representative of the Vatican in the Belgian capital that he first gained the political insight and experience which have been one iff the principal characteristics of his tenure oT the pontificial throne. Mgr. Pecci remained over three years ill Belgium and on his reeall to Italy was decorated with the grand cordon of the order of Leopold. After leaving Brussels the nueio paid a visit to London. This was in February, 184t>, and ... v... smur tin; ii*- v. as ronscrraidi airhblshop of I'erugia. Me i-nntinued in this position '<>r the thirty-two years which intervene;] before his election to the liighett position in the Church his tenure of tho episcopate coinciding exactly with the years of the reign of Pius IX. On the death of Pies IX he was elevated to the Popncy and his reign which closed with 1>is death was one of the most famous periods in the world's history, great progress in the church being made. His successor will he elected within a short while, l.ittle idea can Ik- given ns to tho successor. Danger of War. Pel; in. Special.?According to diplomat.-. tore the gieatest factor in the Eastern situation is the Increasing danger of war between Russia and Japan. They believe it is becoming plain that Russia is willing to light .Tay.an if ensnvinocd that no other power will assist her. The Russians are confident of th< lr ability to easily defeat Japan and are said to he anxious te settle definitely" her position iu Eastern polities and end her amliitiona to oppose Russia's progress in Manchuria. The belief is attributed to th*- Japanese that the Russian policy is to attempt to placate Or oat Britain and America and provoke Japan into beginning hostilities. They regard Russia's consent to opening ports in Manchuria, the Czar's prnnt Isefl visit, to England and the oecupatic*T? of tlie Corean border as parts of that policy. Russia's activity on the Yalu riv.r is more irritating to Japan than the retention of Manchuria and fill Iiimi.i-.-a r?ut ? - - .... m v>iini.t hi war a.i a "probability." Ptinishnbl* By l)en?h. Chatttanooga. Special.?A special to the Times from Huntsville, Ala., says: "Henry Ford. Arthur Steger, James Lawter anil Forest Smith. negroes, aro In jail for attempting to wreck a pasBrnger 1 ain on the Southern Railway near Iirownsboro. A crosstie was placed on tlie track of a 30-foot embankment and was struck by a passenger train running thirty-five miles an hour. The engine was stripped of ail running gear and trainmen say it was a miracle that the train was not wrecked and many people killed. The officers have wrung a confession from the negroes, who were planning to again attempt to wreck a train for the purpose of robbery. This offence is punishable by death. Negro Lynched by Negroes. T^ahe Butler, Fla.. Special.? \ negro tramp named Adams, who assaulted a negro women near mis piaco a clay or 80 agn, was captured by a mob of negroes and lynched in Santa Fo swamp. The body was cut into shreds by the mob. and severely disfigured. The lynching was carried out by the negroes entirely and there was no whit' man in the crowd. K II- d and Injured. Cleveland, Special.?As the result of a collision between electric cars on tho Oherlin branch of tho Cleveland & Southeastern Railway Sunday nipht. E. L. Garvin, of Oberlln, Is dead and a number of persons more or less seriously lnjrt. The Injured are: D. C. Whcelock, Oherlin. leg crushed. Internal injuries; Wm. O'Brien, motorman Cleveland, leg crushed and otherwise hurt; Charles Farr, Oberlln. cut about the head; J. Harris, Pittsfleld, injured about head; Dallas Gordon. Colombia, severe injuries about head; Robert Stah), Columbus, leg gashed; Patrick Kowark, Lorain, shoulder Injured. ' v. / Bftbfer WmL. riME 1903. j LIVE ITEMS OF NEWS. Atany Matters of General Interest lc Short Paragraphs. Down in D'xlc. A contract was let at Greensboro. N. j C.. last, week for the erection of 000 l two-story houses. IS store building'.; and a modern hotel. I A wreck at Coneville. Va.. Sunday J piled a passenger train upon two ! freights and four people were seriously hint. A negro was brutally murdered by his wile in Greensboro. N. C.. last week. His head was chopped to pieces and he wna dragged several hundred yards from the house and his ; body left. At The National Capital. Representative Cannon h?u n oon. I I fereneo with President Roosevelt on | financial legislation. In the burning of a panor mill near i Hartford. Conn.. Fireman William : Haskins lost his life. Charles Hedges was removed from i the position of Superintendent of I Five Delivery of the Postofflco Do j pnrtment. At The Norttl. lleeause his son would not rise. William Ll&rd. of Knoxville, Iowa, shot him and committed suicide. At a meeting of creditors it was dej ridcd not to attempt the operation of [ the Harlan & Holllngsworth Works, i at Wilmington. Del. live persons wore seriously injured in a collision between the Norfolk express and a freight train near Wit mlngtou, Del. Throe men and one woman wore wouudfd in a light between horse traders and an officer at Eddyville. 1...... r. The battleship Kearsarge arrived :u liar Harbor Sunday nfter malting a :ecord for war Tfssels in the way o>* Hat travel. From Across The 5ca. Pope l^co was buried temporarily on Saturday. It wae decided by the cardinals to . hold the conclave in Rome. I The London Times reports that Premier Balfour is for protection. The visit of Kins Edward and the Royal family to Dublin was again marked by great cordiality. Prince Chlng, head of the Chinese Foreign Ofllce, informed Minister Conger that the ports of Manchuria would i not be opened. The United States Government lias been granted leave by the Privy Council of England t? appeal from the decision of the Canadian Court in the extradition coses of John F. Gaynor *nd W. 1J. Greene. Miscellaneous flatters. The formation of the new $12,000,000 Htogie trust is completed. F. V. I at Bonn lie. n Buffalo law chirk. is alleged to have embez/.k ;1 hundreds of thousands of dollars. The body of James McNeill Whistler. the famous American artist, was Interred nt Clilswick. Steel stocks were forced down in another hear attack on the market and Steel common touched 22. Fights occurred between white and black sailors on the United States war 1 vessels at Bar Harbor. Miss Lillian Joven, of New York, claims that James P. Fairman hypno tized her and made her marry him, if she is married. Mgr. Merry del Val was provisionally appointed Secretary to the Consistorial Congregation, to succeed the late Mgr. Volpini. Unofficial advices state the Venezuelan troops have captured Cludad Bolivar. King Edward XII and Queen Alexandra entered Dublin amid the cheers of thousands of Irishmen. The Duke of Marlborough has been appointed Secretary of State for the , Colonies. The Administration, finding the | extra session is apt to bring on a ! tariff debate, is said to have raised 1 the currency question as an offset. A Fatal Row. i Atlanta, (la.. Special?A Constitution i special from Camakga, Oa., says: Two ' killed and six wounded, four of them, ; it is believed fatally. Is the result of a i row at negro church hero in which pis- | ii,ia ?iuu razors pinyoa a deadly part. The entire negro population of the town is terrorized as a result of the af.ray and It is impossible to learn the t ea I cause of the trouble. Plot Against Empero*. St, Petersburg. Special.?The Novoe Vreyma published a dispatch from Vladlvostock which says that several Ccrcan ministers and high dignitaries nio suspected of being cooeerueU in a plot against the Kmpresa of Corea. and it is expected that they will be dismissed and arrestod. Postoff c: fobbed. Ashcville, N. C.t Special.?A telephone message from Wnynesvllie Sun| day states thnt the potjtoffice at that. | plaee was robbed Saturday night. The I thieves got about everything in the office. and the p^stmasterint Wayncavillc hr.s sent to the Ash^Ule office f? 1 NO. 111. SERIOUS RACE AVAR Wiid Work of Infiriatcd Mob in Am iliiuois Town A WREAKID VENGEANCE ON NEGROES " ~ .. ? ... An li.fu: iated Crow 0 L'.tera.ly ITuttl(atcd 1 wo Colored M.ii and Pro ? posed to l.vi t!i ihc Jaii Keeper. Danville, Ill Special.?This city ir in the throes el a. r?xo war. One u> pro, mi uuhiiuwii ri.in inmj i^vnu-?ville. Iti<1 .. who shot n:i:l killed Hour*. Gattcrinan, whito. lias already lynched by n mob of tid<t no n. wtv? wore Inter fired upon by the jjlv?ritt three men being wounded. The moTi were clamoring for the life of anotlo-r negro named .lnir.es Wiruin, who has confoeied to a brutal assault on flu. wife of si farmer at Alvon, 111., to**' north of here. The unknown negn, met his fate while the mob was the way to lynching Wilson. Tii* atufry throng wa passing down H-in* Main street when the negro bccuiixr ' Involved in an altcrcation with mmicf its niemhers. They started after him. and he pulle;! a pistol, llrluy, iatc the crowd. Henry G.tttcru.an, n youw hutcher. who has recently returiifrt from Fort Monroe, f"ll tnoef,i.ltv wounded and expired in a. few seeciwh* The negro turned ntxd fled, but caught by the oflleers within it bl'.rjfc of the scent of tin tia.ro.ty and hiirrhici to tin* police station with the mob iiv hot pursuit temporarily diverted frr>u? their march to the co inly Jail Tfn {officers with thoii prisoner took refugeIn the city building, I unending them J selvt i hthii.d the .'our tf <mo of tinsi olfices. Thej ouil.l nut <' eek the mob I hflUi'Vi 1 f ' li . I ?? mmKw I mid tried to b:?!t r lown a uoeticu of" j the wal ami the ioor, hotli of w->iit-f? ! were very thin '.hi account ef the ! overwhelming number of the molt it was useless f?n the o(lieera to ruslst The negro was : k'.ed and rushed to. the spot where he had shot tin wot Gatterman. It way the work of an I?* slant to throw a rope around hL; u?efc and swing hint up to the nearest tote phone pole. The mob did not delay * long, but waited to see that their 'jrtrtint was dead. Tho life wan slowly strangled < nr. and he was left hauer lug. while the mob proceeded cox the county jail Tho officers Ttcpo &o? save the se? otu! negro hy some rimx.. Wilson, it is charged. wont to tho farm house while the woman vi:i". alone and told her he was hungiv While she was getting him something to eat lie entered the kitchen door .'iter seizes her. He he.1, leaving hoc halt' dead. Aft 1 ward uhtl Vda^agSd U. trawl to the nearest farm feo?(.s? where she told the .lory. A posie officers started in nursuit. of the negro and wnen Wilson was c.iptur?*t ho was hurried t;< iIt county jail ttr prevent Ivin iiiny Tito e the ncgrrt i inn t* Three other ii< ;.?? : have been attaek (1 by members i f tlio inob end, sen rely beaten. One of them i ,T?c; Kieh. and tl.e otic, two arc- iaid tbo refugees from Kvansville. 't? Some negroes ar 1 arr.il eg tho:n::oIv?~ and others are tuepaiing for iiig'.>s | The victim ( f the ronli later 'K?_i i r ?'ttilled as J. M May field. The muT changed its mind before attacking the jail .ind went i a< !; tad cut. down Ma.vfl Id's body. They rur.hcd it t . the public square and burned it in- a bonfire, backing it to piece.i wi/.Tk knives as it burned. Then they charged th< jail and tbo sheriff ami deputies llred, wounding stveraf Ti f tubers of the mob, some fataltyAniong the wounded ore Adam Merry, fatally shot through the heal; It Hine.-. shot in neck ar;*l shoulder, may die: Otto >]'infce shot in the ami, will k < over. The mob repulsed, sent to a neigh boring mining cam;) for dynamite ami probably will attach the jail. The mot is infuriated and threatens to lynch the sheriff and his deputies, also th negro turnkey in the jail. After securing battering ranis, ti. took the mob abort half an hour ti> wreck the city prison, the negro be lug found bid in a safe. Ho was purl <1 from the safe, struck with sledges, knocked down, jumped upon awl stamped to death. A rope was plftc>l flllflllt ^"1' ""%*1 LJ .? irciK asm III* iiicic3s UOfty t/us dragged about. three block-?. An effort was made to hang the body a telegraph polo but the rope brcko. Tho mob, which Ihla time numixjrc.l 6,000. then dragged! tho ho ly to (ho Jail and burned it. i Company K, a. colored troop, ha*- 'o* ? <?t quarters here, and the ofiic lata Imvts prepared to call iL out Leaderr. < f t',0 mob declare they will try to kill lib entire company, if .1 rorao3 'jj M itiil Prrtly Uurnt il Nashville, Special. Tho Commercial' Hotel was badly damaged i?y Are, at u.i early hour Sunday morning, an.I t!i?* rear end of the building v/ j:j compi etc? ly wrecked. All of the guentn w:>v r( srm (i iukI some of them with d!:.l mf ty. The fire is supposed :o have static^ ; f.on) a lighted cigar. or pipe, that \/. i 3Etm left In a < at belonging to a wait . ."JmJM The damage ik otirnate.i at $7,OOJ r..?.l is fully covered by jr.".;r ir.ee. TJ?j ?& building was occupied nlr' rmttelv eTu".'Ing the war by Confeile ;;fu and Fc:!rr- ^ r-'-?* al soldiers and v an a' ->.:< time Vt*i headquarters of Central J. <L Davie, at Indiana, win, killed c;? "fljll" Nelson, in Louisville J rCSE II'lHllI