Washington Evening Times. (Washington, DC) 1901-08-13 [p 4]. · 2017. 12. 26. · 4 TIIE EVEMXG...

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TIIE EVEMXG TIMES TUESDAY AUGUST 13 1901 4 W ASll fifO ir TUESDAY AUGUST 13 190- 1IfSVlVANIA AVKNUE- MORM Q EVEMNfl AM StISI AY SOOO- MORNlNfl ANt 4 1O- EVBMKO AND SUNDAY tH- SONIJAYOMY 1u Monthly by Carrier KVEXINO AXUSOMIAV PlftV C MOIIMNH AND S0NDAY 2Wtl r cent EVKMNG A D OXDAY ThirtgJive cents THE TIMES COMPANY WASIUXOTOX D C The cirekti j of The Tim tor Ute wee ended Augwt JO toOl wa a fallows SHxljy AugtMt 4 18738 AarwM t S3- T nJ Aunmt S JS- Wp i cs4av A ntMt 18- TttWMk 8 W- FrMay Mgt t 2r Saturday AHg t 19 J 8I- TU1 2StS9b Daily average StfMdar 187JO cxeepteJ l Tiie IroKreuM of the Strike The record of yesterday and this morning in the steel strike discloses some losses and gains on both sides At points like McKeespori and Wheel- ing conditions for the jtttst twentyfour hours have been symptomatic of early collisions At the former place the Hat refusal of Mayor Black to clear the streets around the tube works of the crowds which were obstructing the workmen renders It probable that the trust will appeal to the courts and perhaps invoke the military power of the State within a short time From siding strongly with the strikers the business community of McKeesjMjrt seems to have veered around and pub- lic sentiment is reported as turning against them largely as a result o President Shaters speech in which he called upon alt workingmen to with- draw their savings from the banks Should they act upon such advice local business interests would be badly in jured as the mill workers furnish the bulk of deposits in McKeesnort Estimates of the number of men who have struck first and last or who are rendered idle by Amalgamated strikes vary greatly Probably the aggregate now out is between fifty and sbcty thousand of which total not more than four or five thousand responded to the second call There are some indi cation that harmony does not exist at strike headquarters It is reported from Pittaburs that several leaders are striving to secure terms of surrenderS through three prominent Pittsburg manufacturers without reference to who Is to have no pit point these negotiators are trying to make is an agreement on the part of the trust that its component corpora- tions will permit the strikers to return an union men leaving the plants union or nonunion as they were on the last day of June It is to bo feared that much as such- a solution might be useful in preserv ing the organization of the Amalgamat- cd Association and in irniUng an end U W 1 r l amity Morgan and his associates voMld not consider It It I suspected that their purpo e te to compel the men to gi b c If at mil ms individuals and to make them sIgn individual contracts not to remain or become members of labor union Posetuty suck a policy might be motH political pressure and some sort peace b patched up on the line it te- net easy to believe that men as stub- born ae Morgan and Schwab would yield when they consider that precli- cully they won the light already But the Ohio approaching- and the National and State with good reason are anx loss to this strike out of way and forgotten before it can become a dangerous factor in Buckeye politico On that account w Jo not doubt that Mr McKinley Mr Henna are woik- ing to Wing their trust around to a state of mind which permit the of me concession The great difficulty in rendering effec- tive such pressure te that In the pres- ent case the trust controls the and the Republican party and the latter I the obeying and the former the comma mling Influence The NvKru Population The rapkl gain of the white popula- tion upon and over the colored in the South will In tend to a settle- ment of the in that re- gion The census show that Louisiana is no a State a majority of the people being now whites and In several other Southern States the negroes are ground numerically at a rate contin ued will soon make them a very insig- nificant minority This is ascribed In part to the Influx of whites In part to the high death rate among the blacks and In a lesser measure to an emi- gration of the negroes to the Northern States With each succeeding year the color- ed race becomes a smaller fraction of the population not merely of the coun try as a whole but of the Southern where the negroes chiefly re clearly indicates that the Southern are in no imminent danger of dominated politically- or otherwise by the blacks There In scarcely been a possibility of thing In any Southern State since the passing of the reconstruction period and the ascendency of the ne- groes In certain States at that time was in large degree owing to conditions which can scarcely arise again With the negroes constantly growing weaker OB a physical and political force there is but small chance of their ever gain- ing control of a single State In the Un- ion and there is very little upon which to base a cry against the horrors of negro domination With the exercise of just a modicum of good common en the people of the South are an safe on this score as they are most any other respect Absolutely all that is required to s cure the permanent ascendency of tne whites IB a reasonable restriction of the through an educational test a test will for a time dtofran- clitefc eighty and perhaps ninety per cont of the present voters and affect but a very of the white The education of the will necessarily be slow Very few of those who ar now and Illiterate will ever educate themselves even though it wuld require but little effort to do so For we know that it Is irtt tt1cnin iJll JuWkfttiM THE HUTCH z i31JLLDITG SibcrIptIoti hy Iallnc Year MOR ISo ITculnUon dar Z Amalga- mated Shafer sRi fie mint h eton the e frOM Ill return long State State fat abut blot cored I OjLee x SOY C taeiiienf AlIt 4 have get sad had hope Admin- Istration negro hasP ne- groes adults > ° > < > ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ > only in rare cases that illiterate adults become educated Disfranchieeinenl on account of ig- norance may spur up the negroes the education of their children but with the older generation pollticrly power- less it would he wholly inyp 8lble for the rising and subsequent generations ever to attain a power that would make them dangerous There are two reasons why this should be so First the education of the negroes will broad en their minds and make them less dangerous as voters and secondly they will be a steadily diminishing quantity- In point of relative numbers Vith a sweeping of all illit- erates of both colors It Is doubtful if even in South Carolina the black vote would ever again be onehalf as large as white From all of this it follows that it Is altogether absurd for the people of any Southern State to lash themselves Into a ferment over the Imaginary danger of negro domination Equally absurd and mote unwise is it for them upon any feeling of perverted sentimentality to- make exceptions in their ballot laws in favor of men whose ancestors were As Senator Morgan suggests such exceptions rest upon no of reason or Justice They an hereditary class of who vote not because of any merits of their own but because their grandfathers voted before them A ballot cast by an ignorant White man is no more likely to be voted intelligently than it would be if the voter were black anti the ex- ception Is moreover in direct conflict with the spirit and genius of American institutions The exception Is more un just to the educated whites than It Is to the ignorant blacks anti there is literally nothing to be urged in its favor Short Croiin In Kurojie The reports from Europe indicate that the wheat crops of France Germany anti several other more or less ant countries of the Old World are far the normal and that more usual quantities must b im- ported in order to supply the deficiency- It is said that France alone will have to look to other countries for ilftyslx million bushels This tends to the advantage f those eons tries that have whet for sale of which countries the United heads the listIn this case though as in many oth- ers the mere of shortage taken at their face are quite likely to mislead For example while France Is flftysix millions short it by no means follows that she will buy any such quantity It must be remembered that crop failures either total or partial affect the general business conditions of the country in which the failures oc cur and in doing so they affect the buy- Ing power of the nation In brief a crop failure from the sum of national the less pros porous a country Is the less it can and will buy even of the necessaries of life With a considerable portion of the Ku ropettn population wheaten bread is al most a luxury to be in only when prosperity seasons when times are hard there te a ery considerable substitution of cheaper In thfe connection it must ateo be noted that there has during recent months been a marked subsidence of the prosperity wave In Europe and this Irrespective of crop condition If there te a marked shortage of the crops it will add to tne depression and it will certainly manifest itself In smaller purchases of foreign goods A weary physician declared not long ago that the talent of reading atom was one of the most valuable and one of the rarest in modern life He said that during convalescence or in cases of a tedious ailment it was often most beneficial to the patient to listen to some entertaining book rend aloud by a pteasantvoiced attendant but that It was almost impossible to get anyone to do the It te only to review the Mat of ones acquaintances to that this Is true In the first place the culUva of the voice i neglected nowadays it never has the attention which it should a time hcwever when a low gentle voice and careful enunciation were considered attributes of culture and when a gen- tleman or a lady could be distinguished- by the accent of the voice in speaking To sonic extent this is still true but there ar many people In what ia called good society who seem to think that careless pronunciation clip- ping of words or some trick of modula- tion Is a mark of smartness and that careful speaking Is pedantic and overprecise Of course this whimsical Interpretation of culture has its inllu once and the result is a carelessness in other grades of society which is not at all necessary cause of careless speaking is the diminished attention which ie paid to reading aloud In the schools In the oldfashioned school the reading class was as much a part of the days business as the class In arithmetic and the pupils were re- quired to read and to learn and recite extracts from the best authors until they were nearly grown Moreover this exercise occupied from an hour to an hour and a half of each day and was accompanied with careful instruc tion by the teacher on matters of in- flection pronunciaton and accent Of course there are some children who cannot be taught to read aloud proper- ly but their blunders only made clear to the brighter ones what were the faults to be most avoided and between the bright particular stars and the hor- rible example of the class the majority- of the pupils gained a fairly correct Idea of the art which they were study ingThe lessons In elocution which have been Introduced along with Gther mod era fads do not take the place of this drill It 1 not half as Important that the average child should be taught to recite Mabel with her face against the pane as that he should be able to read the newspaper or a good novel aloud with intelligence and intelligibility To anyone who loves books and it is to them people that reading aloud In time of illness is the greatest blessing It IB- IMMrftive torture to hear a passage In some favorite author rendered stum- blingly or with wrong inHectioiiH and that the way at least five people out of ten will read It Two or three simple things are abso- lutely necessary In the practice of this art One is an agreeable voice clear without being loud and penetrating without being shrill This can be cul to o- tter bass hnIH votersmen blow abut State figure detract Indulge Jcadll Aloud reading ton receive Anther the Import slow necessary see and ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ j tivated if the pupil is taken in time Another is precision of pronunciation which is also a matter of education A third Is general intelligence for ob vkmsly nobody read wen without understanding the subject matter of the book The last and perhaps the least important is the quick vision which enables the reader to take in two or three lines at a time so as to gather the general tenor of the sentence or paragraph and give the right force to it but this is not necessary if the mat ter to be read is familiAr or has been read beforehand With these qualifica tions one may be able to read clearly ami give the sense and cause the hear- er to understand the reading Iorto ItivoK Coffee Interests Poto Rican coffee producers are com- plaining that Brazilian coffee can be shipped Into the Island and sold there for about onehalf the price of the honK product This may be true al- though it Is not easy to see why there should be such a difference But be that as it may the people of Porto Rico eagerly sought the sovereignty of the United States and bitterly resented the idea of not being regarded as American citizens Immediately upon the rendering of the insular decisions they petitioned for free trade with the United States and the petition was granted This cleared up the situation- to the extent of making the island a commercial if not a political part of the Republic Now it is said that the coffee men want a special duty for the exclusion of Brazilian coffee No one can tell what a Republican Congress may do with reference to the but It is plain that the status of Porto Rico hav ing been measurably cleared up it would be bad policy to cloud it again by the imposition of a special duty on cotton imported Into the island If the coiTee interests of the island suffer through Brazilian competition there are other interests which are- i greatly benefited by the changed com- mercial status Her tobacco and rum can now be sold freely in the American market so can any other product- of the plantations Besides the inter ests of the coffee producers are only one stole of the coffee question II Porto Rko is wise she will accept the situation just as it is She would better abandon coffee raising entirely and COnline herself to other staple products than to ask for legislation at tile hands of Oongre that would e tantamount to a declaration that the island is not a pert of the United States Ordinarily we should think that some thing was about to happen at the Boston Navy Yard since It te the Intention of the Navy Department to take Sampson away from that place Hut on reflection it would appear that it Is not Charlestown from which it nt desired to have him but Washington while the Schley Court of Enquiry shall be in sos skm Once on waiting orders the con dition of Sampsons health might make- a to Europe Imperative and there hi small reason for doubt that a leave of absence for the purpose and others not mentioned would be given without heM talton or delay The real point is that the- Navigation Bureau ring Is in terror for fear Sampson can be forced on the stand tloi o ner Enquiry would be next to farcical were tl e per son chiefly responsible for the bitter and unrelenting crusade against the Victor of Santiago excused from substantiating ehsrge and insinuations against Rear Schley in open court But so strong is the desire and determination to him from the ordeal and others from consequences arising from It that a naval gossip it the Department if driven to the wall will attempt to prove him mentally incapable of giving i testimony Probably Sampson friends may argue that us he wa absent from j the victory the glory of which he as- i Mimes he might remove himself to a distance from the Enquiry absurd I claims and conduct generally have made necessary with equal propriety j The movement Is on in earnest for the overthrow of the machine that o- i dominated the city of Philadelphia The franchise eal which lately shocked the moral sentiment of the country to a nonpartisan combination of the reform forces through which H to hoped that the corrupt machine may be effec- tually wiped out W should have pre- ferred to see the Philadelphia antiring I Republicans rally to the support of the j Democratic ticket But the Philadel- phians probably know their own busi- ness best At all vents they think they do and the present movement contem- plate a division of the ticket between reform Republicans and Democrats It would be hard to imagine a political com- bination that would not be Justifiable if necessary to break the power of the Quay machine in any of its component And still we are left la doubt to whether the Constitution or the Colum- bia is the better boat After smiling something like a dozen races the honors seem to be nearly oven Never before In our yachting history did two wouldbe Cup defenders seria to be so evenly matched The feature of the situation is that unless Shamrock II Is a considerably taster boat than Shamrock- I at the time of the last Cup races either the Constitution or the Columbia can beat her with ease But the proba bility is that Shamrock II IB a better boat than Shamrock I was or is How much better we do not know but we hope that the improvement I not enough to enable her to events cost their shadows be fore The leaders In the subsidy grab scheme are to meet shortly antI confer UIKHI the confected measure with which they expect to paralyze the Treasury be fore the end of the next session of Con gress Hanna will be on hand of course and so will Frye Groavenor and Little field It he can spare time from ida pre- paration to champion the anticanteen cause for the benefit of the hysterical sis tern and the wholesale whisky dealers The grabbers are hopeful that with Al- len Butler and Pettigrew out of the Senate the loot of a hundred and twenty million dollars or so of public money for the enrichment of a few transportation magnates may become an accomplished tact It may but not without a strong fight Fr M IHttaburg Deepak will ot t Admiral Howfcon UW itvpettire unfits of SaMpMMt SM tmkiM k fc asked by Admiral Scale M rather pwUiwl 1 sat tie Xivy ftejiwtMMat M MMM ittter Uri tr fcw Chicago CifcM v WaMcfKx m- OB aCfOimt of wait fln on the ttanni of reward tanner Monta sfcouM at boat be Ma4e Mimtr rf the hoist of Slat Frew the P4 wW ia Td r Columbia tie priil of tier navy a few yer- i now lnml a till rwcivinj ship Inmliia tilt pride of the yachumtn take waruicg an anti I I I I i i visit f t the his Admiral save has his I has I I parts as reassuring was In- Coming A Pertinent Query tIt The of thee Navy it tab so of tM rpwtod OR opisial sad It uprtial Ahi SIflJey ill Frets the tQ Ie a his itt egg let islandS ab- sent himself Ion ha- led MSISUIIt Deprtsss SEat sotie ills a sqiry se htewarils Sew isade whice asw a Vu site ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ > < ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ < < JAPAN AFFECTED BY tH fcA- TroiiMe ot tit ntter fonntry tlortrd tlut vmerM Commerce Alfred E Hock Minister th United States to J n has forwarded to on trade in Japxr prepared by Arthur Hyde Lay for thj British Legation at Tokyo In this mater Mr Lay lameniahfe occurrences In China and the continual of an un tiled state rapidly trade of Japan her Industries have suffered in cous Mif He Moreover the silk crop upon wrrh this country in the main relics to adjst the balance of It commerce with feviKii countries was a disappointment th to the im- port trade the inflations in the autumn of 1SS9 were that te ensuinj year would offer 9 endtd optfrtnnities for business appeared in the r turns for 190 and the year orened witha feeling of overconfl in commoral circles It soon be- came apparent hcrever that the outflow of specie which hd already begun was likely to incrfea ehnd that the large ar rivals of expected would hind an increasingly stringent money market The ye are some factors which have operated unfavonbly upon the trade of Japnn The j aircitj money available for mercantile purpoes with th highs rate of interest was inch felt during the year under review It pay he iwintrd out here that or expedl ture on works oirjj remotely productive continues to bears abnormally large ra- tio to the wealth ad resources of Japan It is true a part of ex m wl li f within the Empires own larders The Japanese wage ner however probably saves at present Mry much less even In proK rtioii to the intount of his Income than the Eurojciniiwl American worker and but little of large wage expendi- ture In connect with the defence Hrmaint ntirhllwavM etc goes to form capital in aldof production these circumstance the tendency to an excess of Imports ver and Con e Jent drain of sjecie must continue to exist sod an ade te cash reserve curt be maintained onlyat a sacrifice of ease in the money by prudent limitation of the Government banknote circulation and of credit facllrien The flotation of foreign loans can Jnly afford temporary rrliel in this ec and bearing in mind bks of any but a quite gradual increase it wealth derived from resources at present undeveloped it is evident that the of borrowing is one which should b resorted to with the circun spe ion For the whole the excess of Im- ports amounted to the large sum of iS- 4K751 But evcotlinK points to M con- siderable dimlnutkti In Imports In MNH The Government Iron foundry at Yu wata Onga Wstrict Fukuoktt Pre- fecture in IClushud1d not commence op- erations at the coitemplated time name ly July 1SOO Ner has work yet been begun though the undertaking ia well on its way to compl lnn A trial working of the smelting funifce was made In Feb ruary with satisfactory results One rea- son given for the fostponement of initial operations Is the scarcity of workmen available In conscience of the great de- mand for labor in connection with the Chinese crisis ForeiRn food staffs are more and more becoming a necesiity for Japan The yield of agrrlcuUiual products while it ituctuates does much perma people are rowing In 1900 the land under cultivation for and barley less than In the preceding year but the har vest a good one owing to favorable weather ondUfbnsl Flour meal and fresh condensed milk were al imported in much larger quantities in 1SW than the preceding year Industries in languished in Practically no new Undertakings were set- on foot and from interested in al ready existing ones the complaint of lack r heard When as company has to pay a much asll per cent for money to carry on affairs it te small wonder that difficulty in continuing in existence is ex perienced ftt desideratum the investment of moderately cheap foreign In and many far however with owe or two exceptions nothing on a large scale been done in the matter Certain clauses of goods are now ex- empt from duty when imported for the purpose of improvement provided that they are reexported within one full year from the date of their importation The idea i said to be to import for example plates from France and have them decor ated so as to resemble Kutanl ware and watches from the United States to be en- ameled at Xagayo and reexported The United States continues to en croach on spheres of trade which were formerly considered under the exclusive contrcl of the Urlteei Kingdom or other JiatKH American competition is now a permanent feature of the import trade of Japan and is worthy of the careful at- tention of British manufacturers geographical situation of the United States with regard to Japan and the ea eerae with which American munufact urers are seeking a market In this coun more formidable a time goes on In 1900 Americans again secured a number of val uable contracts for the delivery of in 1901 including one for rails which estimated at 72wa Among the reasons for the very large figures to which the im- port trade from States into Ja- pan rose In l t was the fact that the ex- tensive orders the execution of which I wax undertaken there in the preceding I yr included SOfcw of rails which at the high price then prevailing would account for nay l large quantity of electrical machinery for tram- line and electric and bridge- work and wire as well a dour are also included in the returns Telephone cable at one tins a United States monopo- ly but now German makers are fulfilling large orders for it British manufactur owing to the high prices for have so far been unsuccessful in obtain any contracts for this material During the past few YeArs there been a remarkable growth ft the trade be- tween Japan and China occasioned for the most part by the opening up of mar- kets for Japanese manufactures in the neighboring empire One of the schemes whereby the Ja- panese are seeking to attract foreign capital is the granting to aliens of per- mission to hold shares in Japanese rail- way companies It has been deckled that there is no objection to the purchase by foreigners of such shares provided that there exist no proviso to the contrary in the bylaws of a railway company ami the Department of Communication on June 5 use informed eight of the private railway companies by whom it had been approached on the subject that might if necessary alter their bylaws w as to open the to foreign coopera tion Many of the Japanese railways have been built in sparsely populated districts more apparently a view to military contingencies than with e prospect of adequate return for the In of raIlwayS however as traverse populous areas awl conn t towns of com- mercial Importance the Investment of for- eign capital would be mutually beneficial more especially if the foreign sharehold- er were able to exercise their influence In the direction of greater efficiency of serv- ice and the reduction useless expendi- ture One Theory From the New York WvrM- Pethape that mile irtmport wawit at Sot of the wrs may tare kicked Anierviiii Iloxcrw From the Mexk HertkL- Ow m mm Hniy tie n are teUwg abort the lyftctuwg MiaiMaifpu Slid From the Norfolk Pilot fad sew to the ismasiteea will he tit a aouttrrmefrt of aaother 12 erat quarterly dIvidend hy the Stondwa Oil CMaajr the CHMiiMtati CuMmxrcialTril- JU y yeses in a vilbxe sag twenty Milw kola lToviaV re i l m pngram A ko had we ioiMl be i obMrred as wa- d hi M tt rti attiiwie at tilt mect- HMB rowe tef pray waNted the awxiow ear and and maaaed to Mraotr that Jew were he WMJJM the high v tt wxt owh m the look yaol kame cboMMNc- wnaii swearing pawwiilly at a nfrartnrv I When renw iiraritl with for MuldVn tjkniiilI- IIK h snarl iJ th brvtlitr Jim ouUlit- K t the are lt nijtlit so I u And huilvTcJ fur tim He- I It from the sf a report of ata1rtt have alt IU a cheek upon the port arid manua irin The result was t large quantities o goods ruin slroad which comniothlies C pelldlturt that takes form f wages paid exports I mark I I improbability aider the most favors I I I nent change and t6 requirements the was was starch durill J cheap capital f frequently h a capital eenterprJ e JPd1t has The try will oak hr a eempetltor more and i was I tons I er lag door suck blew f all itt lvef Starr of e thico ad VM ihat c8IIt oil ll L A- it ill titt KIt U Whit is i Itad M the isaset IS eINIf of to RIO the mad t a TWo be ill at his till e Secreutry ofStte a copy sca- The regard were ordt4 thence gc such t works I thee greatest par of egge b5i as ecor I goods was asked has iso hieo loses News ser iint Is Vnittei Few Uiiimi4ty u good or- St kviastt roispisisa sad iea seeded jjuwtbj lrxyF- iusi Ike Pisii4tce Joweiwi ago a ass iisdietkgab atd twia leofl there goal sue key was anti > ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ > ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ > ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ > > i j i j GOLD MINING IN KOREA A Krciiclimaii Secures n Vnlunblc Concession Frosts the Gevernmcnt Horace M Allen the United States Con- sul General at Seoul reports o the State Department that the Govern- ment hiss granted to a French subject a concession covering a gold seining dis- trict Commenting on the matter Mr Al- ien says ready granted to Americans Russians Germans British and Japanese It is for a period of twentyJive years from the date of Commencement of operations which must be made within two years A t paid to the Korean Government after the ex Pease of development has been recov- ered No import tax on necessary mate- rials will be levied the products of the mine will be exported free of duty Other minerals besides gold may be minetl within the district The district hiss not yet been Posted but it cannot in- clude any of the fortythree districts re- served for the Crown and kKuwn as the Household mine The district not exceed iu extent thirteen and a third by twenty miles The concession hi said to have HO connection with a recently dis cussed project of a French subject to make a loan to the European Govern ment Gold mining in Korea is now assum- ing considerable importance since it has been successfully prosecuted by the Ori- ental Cootisolidated Mining Company an American concern which the Woonsan nines of Korea This company has a d irct some twentylive or thirty miles in txient in the richest known gold regivn in Korea The company disposed of ttt 2T per cent royalty by paying a largv cm in cash and agreeing to pay a ilxed inual amount It is now success- fully operating two milk of twenty JMMrrps each and one of forty stamps whilv another fortystanH mill is in cons of erection The managers have their own cyanide plant as well The operations at present are confined to quartz work but the extensive placer deposits will soon be worked Some seventy foreigners are employed at these mines with over 39W natives on the pay roll or indirectly in the pay of the company The natives are said to be satisfactory as miners anti they are content on a wage of 3D cents gold per day The output and prospects are I ronounced to be entirely satisfactory Tiie British mines are at present the text in importance to the American mines They lie not very far from the district occupied by the Americans and have long enjoyed a good reputation Much money is being expended in exploitation but they period The Germans are actively engaged in working their district which lies to the east of Seoul The Japanese ate opening up their mining district to the south of this The Russians seem not to have begun work upon their mining conces stone as yet TO GREET SCHOOL TEACHEBS A Splendid Welcome Now Being Prc pared In Manila MANILA Aug 13 Mr Atkinson Su- perintendent of Schools Is preparing a splendid reception for the six hundred American school teachers who are ex peeled to arrive here within a week When the transport arrives fifteen launches will convey the teachers to the Lwneta landing Then they will be driven to the Spa ish Exposition buildings which will become a temporary educational I colony The teachers will their board for Jl a day The buildings have been com- pletely furnished by the army with cots ehairs etc which have been loaned by the quartermasters department ar rangements for the comfort of the are complete in every details They Include contracts with and laundrymen and the teachers will be fur nisned with booklets containing taforma- j TOe Vparfmenl wRl se d StMe in tak- ing ca pie for half rates It that the teachers will be distributed in the prov fortnight Four hundred i fifty of already been as sigped to their post the rains may Prevent many from reaching their lions for some time The reports of the health officials for the last month show that the death rate was i American occupation The Philippine Commission will salt for i the north tomorrow but there are numer OWl reports of Hoods and storms and the members may have to change their itin erary These Hoods may also prevent the fa various capi jQT AGED PHYSICIAN DEAD Dr Sapplncton of Mitr Innd Sue cumliM ut Forest Park BALTIJrfORE Aug 13Dr Thomas Sappington one of the oldest physicians- in this State died at the residence of his soninlaw M S Breams 36 North Cal I vert Street early yesterday He became- I seriously ill about two weeks ago at For- est Inn Forest Park where he I spending the summer and removed- to Mr Brenans residence Death remitt from a complication of diseases Sappington wa born at Liberty Frederick county Md October 2 and was nearly eightylive years old Ills father was Col Thomas Sappington who an omcer in the array during the war with Great Britain in M12 and afterward served live terms as State Sen- ator front Frederick county During one Sapfrfngtons grandfather Dr Brown Sappington one of the incor Three brothers of Dr Sappington all dead were physicians in Frederick coun j ty Drs Sidney Gree bury and Angus tin Sappington Dr Thomas P Sapping tots and Dr James Conic Sappington twe of isis nephews are now practicing phy sicians in Frederick county Dr Sappington was educated at St j Johns College Frederick and started the study of medicine in Baltimore On ac- count of certain differences among the faculty of the of Maryland School of Medicine he and a number of other students left and went to Phlladel phia He entered the University of and graduated in 1839 After practicing shout twelve years in county he removed to Baltimore He retired fron practice about twenty years ago He was a gentleman of the old school and was noted for his courtesy and politeness and had many friends He was a member of the Medical and Chirur I gical Society AMERICAS OLDEST RACE DlNCovvrlcM Itriorted I j n German HtlinoIoKlNt in Mexico MBW ORLEANS Aug 13 Dr Giwtav- Lcbstein of Berlin connected with the Bureau of Ethnology of Germany passed through here today on his way to Berlin after a six months ethnological investi- gation In Sonora Mexico Dr Lebstem- wouM Rot give the result of his discover- ies in advance of his report to the Ger- man Ethnological Bureau but declared indicated that he had discovered traces tedatiag the Italians He visited the mot t mountainous por- tions of Sonora believing it the oldest inhabited portion of America He found in aa almost Inaccessible mountain gorge the remnant of a road broad stab well defined showing the work of the graders awl some evidences of having at one time been paved It IB almost certain from the clear in dications saW Dr Lebstein that the road built before the gorge formed stat the gorge was Rot a sudden formation but evidently the product of erosion that must have continued through several thousand years At the end of this was a high hill of de from rich unities the ore being ob- tained from the mountains by means of There were evidences here that the people that worked the mines from which the ore in question was taken were much further advanced in the arts of metallur- gy than tilt old Spaniards or In fact than any ncient people of whom there IH any rcccrd Korean nH It to at royalty ot cent wt cad must I I I I I j are too new to be out of development elt I The t ur the and has arranged with the railroad and the peo I I laces within a and have i sta- t the the I from reaching the was led I ills was term he was President or the Senate Dr I poratorz of the University of Maryland I that were of a startling nature and of the race in America long an was road briM Wtrkiga that yet Ic traetCl conecssio stmfiar those S per will operates the get school- teachers tailors teachers I lowest since delegates was was Fran- cis Penn- sylvania Freder- Ick they earliest was was can Tier ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ > > ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ADDITIONS TO THE NAVY Three Torpedo Hunt Destroyers to He Launched Thursday BALTI3HORC A s I3A at launching i to take land Steel CoMpany Sparrows Point I Three torpedo bout destroyers the larg and the heaviest and the heavily armed now under conecrwetto for the United Government are to leave the ways and enter the element which Is to be their home The occasion will be a brilliant event in the history of the e- Itoament Special cars will come VhltadeJphla and New York J oWcer of the navy and other invited guests wen as the fair sors for the craft The Is to take place at 2 p w These vessels oMclaliy known as Now 14 M antI K wW fce named respectively Truxtun VWp e and Vorden after the noted naval off- icer of those names They are aN alike Each to 2U feet 6 inches long over all and MC feet on trial load liRe They are of a feet X inches molded beam at the deck and 22 feet lashes at the water line The depth amidships hi 14 fe t 8 inches and the apeeMed trial displace meat is about 431 torn with a draft of C feetThe greater portion of these boats in taken up by the machinery and coal honkers the machinery of neeeaoi ty extremely powerful In order to give the vessels the great which the contract calls for and the bankers to carry a big coal supply The hour and they have power 12 times as j They are propelled by two screws and two tripleexpansion engines which will develop 8SW indicated horsepower Th fl engines have one Wghpresmire cylinder of 23 inches diameter 1 intermediate cy- linder of 34 inches diameter anti 2 low pressure cylinders 37 inches In diame- ter all with 22 Inches stroke They will make at full power about 34 revolutions- a minute working with a steam pressure of 246 pounds The steam pressure te something being 3 pounds to the inch greater than that of the most powerful I locomotives The engines are as perfect- ly balanced a possible to avoid vibration and each te m its own engineroom to- Ktther with its own auxiliary machinery These are situated about the middle of the vessel and forward and aft are the 4 Thornycroft watertube boilers 2 at each end in a separate compartment These boilers have a total grate surface of 315 square feet and a heating surface of 177 square feet They are worked under forced draft there being two large blowErs in each Hreroom vessel carries IK tons of coal against 15 toss on the next largest of the destroyer Forward of the machinery and holler are the gallery quarters for the seamen various storerooms and a corn j partment for the steam windlass Aft of j the machinery space are quarters for the machinists and petty otfleers and alt of this again are the officers quarters and the wardroom A noticeable feature of these craft will be the almost entire ab- sence of wood metal asbestos or other materials being substituted nearly every where On deck there will be two conning tow- ers one forward and one aft Upon sack deck will be mounted a gun The forward part of the boat will be covered by a turtleback deck extending- to the conning tower Immediately aft of this i an enclosed space for a short dis- tance affording protection in bad weath- er and forming also the forward bridge of the vessel Between the conning are the four smokestacks and la vari- ous places are six Spounder rapidAre guns and the two torpedo tubes The vessels are not armored In any way and the heaviest plates used In their construc- tion excepting the conning towers are hut fivesixteenths of an inch in thick- ness The only projections above the are the conning towers the oh- w M house The destroyer are Vr r tIle lights and are also equipped with electric searchlights steam and hand string gear and as before stated steam windlasses The quarters are of good fifecers staterooms being larger than tho e on an ordinary passenger boat Th wardroom is 9 by 15 feet which gives ample space for dining Both the officers and the crew are provided with bathrooms equipped with shower and other baths Miss Isabella Truxtnn of Norfolk is to act as sponsor for the Truxtun She is a granddaughter of Commodore Truxtun after whom the boat is named Mrs End lit B X Worden of New York who to related by marriage to Admiral WoMen will be sponsor for the vessel which is to bear name The for the Paul Mine names indicate are built for the of destroying the smaller torpedo boats of an enemy which seek to Mow up bat- tleships and cruisers They are there- fore given great speed and are furnish- ed In addition to torpedo tubes with ef- ficient batteries of rapidfire TUBERCULOSIS IN ARIZONA Phoenix Health Officers Aroused to Prevent n- PHOEXIX Aria Aua M Ariaona begun a campaign against tuberculosis which may Anally result la a strict quar antine victims of pulmonary trou- ble Today th city council of Phoenix passed ordinances intended to provide pro tection against infection front thou- sand of healthseekers who come to Ari- zona each year The plans submitted by the health board call for the providing of cuspidors or proper receptacles oa the street crossings and in public parks most important measure is the fumigation of rooms by invalids In its the board says The danger of infection to natives here- of adopting stringent safety precautions more urgent Annually the number of in- valids suffering from consumption come to Arizona In greater numbers The taste of spreading all over the country and fu- ture influxes of consumptives will grow larger in cons iuei ce The Arizona Medical Association at its meeting two months ago adopted a reso- lution railing upon the councils of the cities and towns throughout the Territo- ry to take precautionary measures against the spread of the disease Nearly every city in the Territory Is preparing to take up the fight on the disease and a bill has been prepared for the next Legisla- ture barring from entrance into the Ter- ritory alt persons showing the germs of CURRENT HUMOR Prom the New York Werfclr New Bi MiT Ktntlir Haont this Matt MK SKMMfet That Thats ktttter sfc- IIIH cliriiii- iPton He No 1 MtteMl U pfcad infinity The Keel Were Xnti the Mttfelo C There is a nan at acial kg by wailing shotS a expose t view leases the knee down The other curi Did yea nit oil your kg a I esaibtt theta thta she t fi worth stark to bliss as hw own legs would be Then tartan cricat exainNMtwi fhr W l 1 JohMW On the Mace when a Why V H- ia j pr behind or way b handy with his Mot Pram the Chicago Poet What the e catio I in wield k l pn ror With yoke uttC jpl The seashore summit resort place on ThurMa at the department of the Marl nest States as launching which are speed vessels are to travel at the rate or I knots an great as that of the bay steamer re- markable Inch tow- ers decks size I I I Those torpedo boat their ContR has against the The re- port Is growing more apparent and the need the Salt River as a health resort Is tuberculosis nulled muse ne S 1 Mat Sewed of peonie deny that IAIIMJriIi tIN art lilt oW lady th The pave MIew Mr tW I Job so alter sail the lost losh rite lleltO- I1r EJidtHtte Ks oat baskanid list i ill allait use Kiss The is the one the I marine front Washington bringing span the C being have average class Space 1 th his sponsor Whippk wilt be Miss Elsie Pope of it destroyersas purpose guns valley fra peodlo iete call Seer ibasderYtoer suspote is wbecc bay they been railing it Fan- s lthesi aitPy- mt attend ho air yes In ate Fran Pan nba adeti pale diy a Sw antI sympathetic iswtkgaled ss atmeni watnt spoe see miami They so I pimento he always son pa teamed Is Isernue isis rssepe repair he Greatest gresiest iasitat the iWWtrti ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ > ¬ ¬ > ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ < ¬ ¬ ¬ ¬ > > < > > NOTES OF THE DAY The unartir of eh tint mtwd Mexf- har ir hi MOO w three thaw the of 2 big the last twenty of ht Mb attain Rroat ow Ow MM- A W w- and Ute locked key usage te a mm rutee Mjr- nMre EaglMil live ia a tottered pMfefc eiVnri- K a wide aw To enable than ta attend trine w na a cawrca in atsmc the meiMiv caaal rn of MM ktffat Map The night attracts the hmcts ciMrtry the of hharm sear A g U his mime RM A orzMfea the ctab MCMfwd m the A lady te anti take of a to- M the caantrjr- va U ass heat Only write1 and ate ht MohamtBoAia onmtriet- ofcwe tire of the uteMO e nt rr- TorkMi rnoM supply wile with cameo as inflltiiat sad AbtbaMa Increased between 16M aad tOO fa- JTl B te 186 thee were hat 7MJU ra ciJ ia D nWSmrth Ot tide amiaat hunk Caralwa laM SB Ma te M 9 one Ala total thca aracored TIle rapid iyaa iaa of the Amtoallsa iMnjlii trade Mstinnti wadMMaiiao la Ksw Wales it was larger in Wi than hi r BreraMB total of VB afc missed awl WM 72 ataat C4 9 in Of the MUS sadie the British flag aad 79 aavw those of other eaoatrit Status hosIng tower f Pies ha a rim hi tile Ttmflt tower of Bristol hi Kefaad It i a tqmre tower of Qott Alt it parts still preserve their i or awtrea The liner A that the church cotlwtioM wore ia Oa a Sabbath he iaianaaa1 round that the aM abu who were m wcht w f to contribute Ta hat Might he hemmed that the talkttiaa was uMe The Aatmerp ivory aairlrpr Trfcarh IMS ctetted a uttm toss Mfcet use awi the L a aMthet M The Aarar i rjr our matt napifwiat hi are held there M k K Bticfa- hhthja of Ttttnmm f hot abort a4 hi H h- Mt thirty slaves A TopahaM Me tilde trick fa- of powder aad aaiahcJ it with tar a then aake ratfwM 1 paw it the owe whom it wac for Wt aa too la e a a Ma side of his lace waa horsed badry coal prodncia aaaictj Al Georgia Kevtncky North YitgiaJa sad ac a ach cowl bolos hi 1W West 44757785 aad hi 1 417SS4 OB the BW statue railways ia I naJia and Ioria i ahoat tire The total bet of pa nt gUB aatttt Jury to Deceaahcr n MM wai lfiE4 the London road sad USML5S6 far the Pass gijii t ornwc m T per weaa French road cost only lM8 u per nile While a Meanter wt oa the way lean Port- land to New York the other day lose mhnlut wore sighted about thirty sank of Cap Quabeth The bix lob were but a nhort t mtt ahead when Men the pilot and they fephuwi- ilwnBjitian to et out at the conn at the whal s but this wx sit M- withowt contact with sue of Ihrai gteaamr an if a sashes The aaakerc of otor fchides are JHoAaat re- KarwiBi the eaperiaieatg yiiiit as t the eaawey ace of trait and net garwea praises Oa at Garden item Middlesex sad Kent hy vaa says aa acricwNMna paper One kept grower at EaaVM H hway- fhan a lorry toad to the Otter Meek OB It will have n tees Two large gathaMers mch KK as win lisle the htate- ao tt e The gcapiac the Issuers will optratc placed oa a deck WIry vessel wM set a gOMg Otter Hw k swains a parti raatrrj- of the west eotuit end the aew of Eves teeth k one of the aaaay hotaaieal wfioste- O The oa which it grows is hy the Kuicart name of the torhiddea r Eves apple tree The alenom has a veex- pl w t W tire rotllr rewMfkaMe featwrc of the tree the owe to which it own Its seem K the trait k is iMMKtfwl haag from hi a p cwMar aaiaacr Oraafw oa the aajtriaa and dV p crimwMl within each fruit the aa- p r ie 4 having had a piece bitten owt of it This lost with te poimaim f ky hid the MohamiieoaM to Morawwt it the chiiiw ii agitmet W proaertwa- Onwre M iirille H the pOH or ot a which had it babitatioa for years cello it OWN tale M- rrroa Nat M Mr DichcK caaaat that jrtniiiii t hiataeU aimS hat with thank I T aee- Jw ie JS4S There is a visible mile the paper T Mr Fee hat to he oae playIng we caneS heb rhintiinc that when M have availed a cvrtaam a- Mr Tujtent Cowatercial written b bus ht the Philadelphia Mccord- Ae nay she he baud atoa FouL St e r Second Street M the Norrhera g She an- At haoket hi which the anile raaoae OB annatrt- wiwUtd k Them are not oh- m idr of window poetic still in vna ie in Kem K on Th eeara Matter the pain M bright sad a cr Mal Their ass old mtaMMied places in Kcmmrfon where the t w when at all are always ctvMwd nails There ski a fine nurici Jut antis the twnerK f as they tU U 8riIWIo g tI- Ne sews is ild- rne tM She sc lit ill pendre 4iM is M ill The U OIl meisued ill 1M- Ie a tt of lest The Ji is 1S tee t- J lS The fIl tiduias Ce lie apt t- w pp- n it bidet a law use last aU Ite- the psiusus bat The Cat of HohBtt is ping II a tlWHtfIIt I lio- ltuI of Is 4 a- pr ol wet W St and day t ibe I she Na trilNrfIIJ them A started ill St Eli iMo dish his Ire toe a charter ler WIowilllt the LoiI4eR Past tare snit I the of a sushi e file mob a Wy sad gMt reached about It it that low a I- to his her da a tire coal smSII SUe bad IIOdIIet of drNe chased lEIf were wttbnd which ill about 11S lt iI See led of at the tt ill a Xmas tens M4 Wag recast Ilk cosregsticn heists the west not expected OIl July II JEi sale tile is bet Is today lit lbs lbs maid F great sury at of F7- ill They tI tit L h- wiIeft than k ill a londy IIl trg a a it Ie- ue until Ire aU kInk ed ell In 1M the t Status T M- 4U tbsp MIll yom tcIM IIIIt 1Z51M i aeI- Qtal of tW Seat pimiset ill 1 are t lor the the x rt to nibs by JIG it so gate ill The collision jMft4 wreck bed t F wile pus twice half tGM a six t St a I Jrr el site the its Ian tane would ue flilfMe A suet of k Ite will lie by the gas will Jar lite the deppec a MIl the Mdt of the M The put plea will to a fruit supposed to Me the ioIL tree Ink sod tree tog of tt ot et W wire tie ol tile it k Didtc- witc to Me lee tile Lund ilde JaY ca a tile sd lie W Sot the ate at H- oW eGIeftd uspi her ia South ill the tie M tit bst tr the toW ssil pined tk it- t all iII win ill a aquariums IUd brbt rourton hebude Pdsss Wsls casupide sensim at eamms issud- in Siberia sew m oug I Priing ass- M nit nsS- hikisel ngeisi hsse 5 speot uses and Is Russ down anise so the mm eucalyptan the idiud at- aM mawOme b bent lad h sad mma am mid attln 15 Iwe ditry ndseusis 1 Dnt ass eat apes eon ue lab expasled suutd to IZ141d411 psnds to 4lS3N psudt and is Is 1 editor u AdTIntt mad whus- ttbsp e4sick gga tbu disku geese apples bad baron 4- asous and sown us shasr4pdusa- In Melbeurae rgulsdg sale 1 q- ases dtcbss talus atuet dseud us- iunds dma belted ThISg down a sanest gloss they hid Manes llustIsus seer lusting lowed useb flusdip- A sh saptasing bulledles avs- Is adopted 1ps Trent ass adib h mt sad lust 1 iumuuusind bowgbi toilettoe remsee meesuat bait bees Its Ousrga perpetuate the ususey Wheney ecu a- vstIag tispust some wines pedsosmt has bus per and The adssrtheest spowred tbsr day Messing Wasted resets s- and hassewark is so sot seed clog CanisMinspis lb was at muv close emendal was deemed to demastic lappisota a nuns Ie disoses etios 1 frees tan as- Ian loss bums a ausdy these e stb a year The number i lbs s early aseldisetme mmml Msdsp- osILiss blab sat perpendicular minister eugrethiuly antoust plalsa panel later was the sisal with 1 empamed ZAeew lat lor plbiie tuba just tSr begInning lisp tupsi5 sod SevsTbu- rTheoatballi there are so stases Is ikssg- Qsiy but susilig the them are Sb mel4emn t- neei slaves lbs hoses 1 the rich ass s tees wcsannt is sd Iseos4r q dade mae is pg usa loaded pe hilt tahecas ligidud loaded hieput pawdpr sad out md was kighitasd juts swearing fiusthera ansusad nt Ailasam scout Wtit Virginia an asspst 1- 1an Virginias estps- siimaoe s lidS Tame itri use The trade man ban 3 e The receipts Esgihb s bat east ouch oure lbs mile lb mma bemuse neomesy thereisre arsuad the canIng the buss itrusk anise meesssttg makeS every snt- inn two and dbaasnt of ScM 15115 CCitt S5Cb 1 OiL gets ver prossd the belt the that bsue acosm novel ligbhMp to messed iday seer and worked tumpsd u casisis si aesetsi gas lean husidem Is 1 sod league well be- iubntittcd severe test A mark si known scent the has a taut Uard Eden sod I a nsa serious Pens et oldlaibisned waves astpapnr apes she bill tiadessu 1 whss ass sut Cba4m is Cisriti11 s5 pleg Jut bosse who he btga to declIne thi twestimb and spun them mom among usiths arise that play be c usevusdi pispad Nadi A wosma elhisp ssiis sccaM oubsi appemame Street sd stim ap rfrt tint ui basso it merits heap us s4 rini pasn en a diasposel sad upon glass whim Oas naive russd ad kiiurs heats and hur bud tam per cleaned by er keep glass > ¬ < > > = < = = °

Transcript of Washington Evening Times. (Washington, DC) 1901-08-13 [p 4]. · 2017. 12. 26. · 4 TIIE EVEMXG...

Page 1: Washington Evening Times. (Washington, DC) 1901-08-13 [p 4]. · 2017. 12. 26. · 4 TIIE EVEMXG TIMES W ASll fifO TUESDAY AUGUST 13 1901 ir TUESDAY AUGUST 13 190- 1IfSVlVANIA AVKNUE-MORM

TIIE EVEMXG TIMES TUESDAY AUGUST 13 19014 W ASll fifOir

TUESDAY AUGUST 13 190-

1IfSVlVANIA AVKNUE-

MORM Q EVEMNfl AM StISI AY SOOO-

MORNlNfl ANt 4 1O-

EVBMKO AND SUNDAY tH-

SONIJAYOMY 1uMonthly by Carrier

KVEXINO AXUSOMIAV PlftV C

MOIIMNH AND S0NDAY 2Wtl r centEVKMNG A D OXDAY ThirtgJive cents

THE TIMES COMPANYWASIUXOTOX D C

The cirekti j of The Tim tor Ute weeended Augwt JO toOl wa a fallowsSHxljy AugtMt 4 18738

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T nJ Aunmt S JS-

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FrMay Mgt t 2rSaturday AHg t 19 J 8I-

TU1 2StS9bDaily average StfMdar 187JO cxeepteJ l

Tiie IroKreuM of the StrikeThe record of yesterday and this

morning in the steel strike disclosessome losses and gains on both sidesAt points like McKeespori and Wheel-ing conditions for the jtttst twentyfourhours have been symptomatic of earlycollisions At the former place the Hatrefusal of Mayor Black to clear thestreets around the tube works of thecrowds which were obstructing theworkmen renders It probable that thetrust will appeal to the courts andperhaps invoke the military power ofthe State within a short time Fromsiding strongly with the strikers thebusiness community of McKeesjMjrtseems to have veered around and pub-

lic sentiment is reported as turningagainst them largely as a result oPresident Shaters speech in which hecalled upon alt workingmen to with-draw their savings from the banksShould they act upon such advice localbusiness interests would be badly injured as the mill workers furnish thebulk of deposits in McKeesnort

Estimates of the number of men whohave struck first and last or whoare rendered idle by Amalgamatedstrikes vary greatly Probably theaggregate now out is between fifty andsbcty thousand of which total not morethan four or five thousand responded tothe second call There are some indication that harmony does not exist atstrike headquarters It is reportedfrom Pittaburs that several

leaders are striving to secureterms of surrenderS through threeprominent Pittsburg manufacturerswithout reference to who Is

to have no pitpoint these negotiators are trying

to make is an agreement on the part ofthe trust that its component corpora-tions will permit the strikers to returnan union men leaving the plants unionor nonunion as they were on the lastday of June

It is to bo feared that much as such-a solution might be useful in preserving the organization of the Amalgamat-cd Association and in irniUng an end

U W 1 r lamity Morgan and his associatesvoMld not consider It It I suspected

that their purpo e te to compel the mento gi b c If at mil ms individuals andto make them sIgn individual contractsnot to remain or become members oflabor union

Posetuty suck a policy might be motHpolitical pressure and some sort

peace b patchedup on the line it te-

net easy to believe that men as stub-born ae Morgan and Schwab wouldyield when they consider that precli-cully they won the light alreadyBut the Ohio approaching-and the Nationaland State with good reason are anxloss to this strike out of wayand forgotten before it can become adangerous factor in Buckeye politicoOn that account w Jo not doubt thatMr McKinley Mr Henna are woik-ing to Wing their trustaround to a state of mind whichpermit the of me concessionThe great difficulty in rendering effec-

tive such pressure te that In the pres-

ent case the trust controls theand the Republican party and

the latter I the obeying and the formerthe comma mling Influence

The NvKru PopulationThe rapkl gain of the white popula-

tion upon and over the colored in theSouth will In tend to a settle-ment of the in that re-

gion The census show thatLouisiana is no a Statea majority of the people being nowwhites and In several other SouthernStates the negroes are groundnumerically at a rate continued will soon make them a very insig-nificant minority This is ascribed Inpart to the Influx of whites In part tothe high death rate among the blacksand In a lesser measure to an emi-

gration of the negroes to the NorthernStates

With each succeeding year the color-ed race becomes a smaller fraction ofthe population not merely of the country as a whole but of the Southern

where the negroes chiefly reclearly indicates that the

Southern are in no imminentdanger of dominated politically-or otherwise by the blacks ThereIn scarcely been a possibility of

thing In any Southern Statesince the passing of the reconstructionperiod and the ascendency of the ne-groes In certain States at that time wasin large degree owing to conditionswhich can scarcely arise again Withthe negroes constantly growing weakerOB a physical and political force thereis but small chance of their ever gain-ing control of a single State In the Un-

ion and there is very little upon whichto base a cry against the horrors ofnegro domination With the exerciseof just a modicum of good commonen the people of the South are

an safe on this score as they aremost any other respect

Absolutely all that is required to scure the permanent ascendency of tnewhites IB a reasonable restriction of the

through an educational testa test will for a time dtofran-

clitefc eighty and perhaps ninety percont of the present voters andaffect but a very ofthe white The education of the

will necessarily be slow Veryfew of those who ar now andIlliterate will ever educate themselveseven though it wuld require but littleeffort to do so For we know that it Is

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only in rare cases that illiterate adultsbecome educated

Disfranchieeinenl on account of ig-

norance may spur up the negroes theeducation of their children but withthe older generation pollticrly power-less it would he wholly inyp 8lble forthe rising and subsequent generationsever to attain a power that wouldmake them dangerous There are tworeasons why this should be so Firstthe education of the negroes will broaden their minds and make them lessdangerous as voters and secondly theywill be a steadily diminishing quantity-In point of relative numbers Vith asweeping of all illit-erates of both colors It Is doubtful ifeven in South Carolina the black votewould ever again be onehalf as largeas white

From all of this it follows that it Isaltogether absurd for the people of anySouthern State to lash themselves Intoa ferment over the Imaginary danger ofnegro domination Equally absurd andmote unwise is it for them upon anyfeeling of perverted sentimentality to-

make exceptions in their ballot laws infavor of men whose ancestors were

As Senator Morgan suggestssuch exceptions rest upon no ofreason or Justice Theyan hereditary class of whovote not because of any merits of theirown but because their grandfathersvoted before them A ballot cast by anignorant White man is no more likelyto be voted intelligently than it wouldbe if the voter were black anti the ex-ception Is moreover in direct conflictwith the spirit and genius of Americaninstitutions The exception Is more unjust to the educated whites than It Isto the ignorant blacks anti there isliterally nothing to be urged in itsfavor

Short Croiin In KurojieThe reports from Europe indicate that

the wheat crops of France Germanyanti several other more or lessant countries of the Old World arefar the normal and that more

usual quantities must b im-ported in order to supply the deficiency-It is said that France alone will haveto look to other countries forilftyslx million bushels Thistends to the advantage f those eonstries that have whet for sale of whichcountries the United heads thelistIn

this case though as in many oth-ers the mere of shortage takenat their face are quite likely tomislead For example while France Isflftysix millions short it by no meansfollows that she will buy any suchquantity It must be remembered thatcrop failures either total or partialaffect the general business conditionsof the country in which the failures occur and in doing so they affect the buy-Ing power of the nation In brief acrop failure from the sum ofnational the less prosporous a country Is the less it can andwill buy even of the necessaries of lifeWith a considerable portion of the Kuropettn population wheaten bread is almost a luxury to be in onlywhen prosperity seasonswhen times are hard there te a eryconsiderable substitution of cheaper

In thfe connection it must ateo benoted that there has during recentmonths been a marked subsidence ofthe prosperity wave In Europe andthis Irrespective of crop condition Ifthere te a marked shortage of the cropsit will add to tne depression and itwill certainly manifest itself In smallerpurchases of foreign goods

A weary physician declared not longago that the talent of reading atomwas one of the most valuable and oneof the rarest in modern life He saidthat during convalescence or in casesof a tedious ailment it was oftenmost beneficial to the patient to listento some entertaining book rend aloudby a pteasantvoiced attendant butthat It was almost impossible to getanyone to do the

It te only to review the Mat

of ones acquaintances to that thisIs true In the first place the culUva

of the voice i neglected nowadaysit never has the attention

which it should a timehcwever when a low gentle voice andcareful enunciation were consideredattributes of culture and when a gen-

tleman or a lady could be distinguished-by the accent of the voice in speakingTo sonic extent this is still true butthere ar many people In what iacalled good society who seem to thinkthat careless pronunciation clip-

ping of words or some trick of modula-tion Is a mark of smartness andthat careful speaking Is pedantic andoverprecise Of course this whimsicalInterpretation of culture has its inlluonce and the result is a carelessness inother grades of society which is not atall necessary

cause of careless speakingis the diminished attention

which ie paid to reading aloud In theschools In the oldfashioned schoolthe reading class was as much a partof the days business as the class Inarithmetic and the pupils were re-

quired to read and to learn and reciteextracts from the best authors untilthey were nearly grown Moreoverthis exercise occupied from an hour toan hour and a half of each day andwas accompanied with careful instruction by the teacher on matters of in-

flection pronunciaton and accent Ofcourse there are some children whocannot be taught to read aloud proper-ly but their blunders only made clearto the brighter ones what were thefaults to be most avoided and betweenthe bright particular stars and the hor-rible example of the class the majority-of the pupils gained a fairly correctIdea of the art which they were studyingThe

lessons In elocution which havebeen Introduced along with Gther modera fads do not take the place of thisdrill It 1 not half as Important thatthe average child should be taught torecite Mabel with her face against thepane as that he should be able to readthe newspaper or a good novel aloudwith intelligence and intelligibility Toanyone who loves books and it is tothem people that reading aloud In timeof illness is the greatest blessing It IB-

IMMrftive torture to hear a passage Insome favorite author rendered stum-blingly or with wrong inHectioiiH andthat the way at least five people outof ten will read It

Two or three simple things are abso-lutely necessary In the practice of thisart One is an agreeable voice clearwithout being loud and penetratingwithout being shrill This can be cul

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tivated if the pupil is taken in timeAnother is precision of pronunciationwhich is also a matter of education Athird Is general intelligence for obvkmsly nobody read wen withoutunderstanding the subject matter ofthe book The last and perhaps theleast important is the quick visionwhich enables the reader to take in twoor three lines at a time so as to gatherthe general tenor of the sentence orparagraph and give the right force toit but this is not necessary if the matter to be read is familiAr or has beenread beforehand With these qualifications one may be able to read clearlyami give the sense and cause the hear-er to understand the reading

Iorto ItivoK Coffee InterestsPoto Rican coffee producers are com-

plaining that Brazilian coffee can beshipped Into the Island and sold therefor about onehalf the price of thehonK product This may be true al-

though it Is not easy to see why thereshould be such a difference But bethat as it may the people of PortoRico eagerly sought the sovereignty ofthe United States and bitterly resentedthe idea of not being regarded asAmerican citizens Immediately uponthe rendering of the insular decisionsthey petitioned for free trade with theUnited States and the petition wasgranted This cleared up the situation-to the extent of making the island acommercial if not a political part ofthe Republic

Now it is said that the coffee menwant a special duty for the exclusionof Brazilian coffee No one can tellwhat a Republican Congress may dowith reference to the but It isplain that the status of Porto Rico having been measurably cleared up itwould be bad policy to cloud it againby the imposition of a special duty oncotton imported Into the island

If the coiTee interests of the islandsuffer through Brazilian competitionthere are other interests which are-

i greatly benefited by the changed com-

mercial status Her tobacco and rumcan now be sold freely in the Americanmarket so can any other product-of the plantations Besides the interests of the coffee producers are onlyone stole of the coffee question

II Porto Rko is wise she will acceptthe situation just as it is She wouldbetter abandon coffee raising entirelyand COnline herself to other stapleproducts than to ask for legislation attile hands of Oongre that would etantamount to a declaration that theisland is not a pert of the UnitedStates

Ordinarily we should think that something was about to happen at the BostonNavy Yard since It te the Intention of theNavy Department to take Sampson awayfrom that place Hut on reflection itwould appear that it Is not Charlestownfrom which it nt desired to have him

but Washington while theSchley Court of Enquiry shall be in sosskm Once on waiting orders the condition of Sampsons health might make-a to Europe Imperative and therehi small reason for doubt that a leave ofabsence for the purpose and others notmentioned would be given without heMtalton or delay The real point is that the-Navigation Bureau ring Is in terror forfear Sampson can be forced on the standtloi o ner Enquirywould be next to farcical were tl e person chiefly responsible for the bitter andunrelenting crusade against the Victor ofSantiago excused from substantiatingehsrge and insinuations against Rear

Schley in open court But sostrong is the desire and determination to

him from the ordeal and othersfrom consequences arising from It thata naval gossip it the Departmentif driven to the wall will attempt toprove him mentally incapable of giving

i testimony Probably Sampson friendsmay argue that us he wa absent from

j the victory the glory of which he as-i Mimes he might remove himself to a

distance from the Enquiry absurdI claims and conduct generally have made

necessary with equal proprietyj The movement Is on in earnest for the

overthrow of the machine that o-i dominated the city of PhiladelphiaThe franchise eal which lately shockedthe moral sentiment of the country

to a nonpartisan combination of thereform forces through which H to hopedthat the corrupt machine may be effec-tually wiped out W should have pre-ferred to see the Philadelphia antiring

I Republicans rally to the support of thej Democratic ticket But the Philadel-

phians probably know their own busi-ness best At all vents they think theydo and the present movement contem-plate a division of the ticket betweenreform Republicans and Democrats Itwould be hard to imagine a political com-bination that would not be Justifiable ifnecessary to break the power of theQuay machine in any of its component

And still we are left la doubt towhether the Constitution or the Colum-bia is the better boat After smilingsomething like a dozen races the honorsseem to be nearly oven Never beforeIn our yachting history did two wouldbeCup defenders seria to be so evenlymatched The feature of thesituation is that unless Shamrock II Is aconsiderably taster boat than Shamrock-I at the time of the last Cup raceseither the Constitution or the Columbiacan beat her with ease But the probability is that Shamrock II IB a better boatthan Shamrock I was or is How muchbetter we do not know but we hope thatthe improvement I not enough to enableher to

events cost their shadows before The leaders In the subsidy grabscheme are to meet shortly antI conferUIKHI the confected measure with whichthey expect to paralyze the Treasury before the end of the next session of Congress Hanna will be on hand of courseand so will Frye Groavenor and Littlefield It he can spare time from ida pre-paration to champion the anticanteencause for the benefit of the hysterical sistern and the wholesale whisky dealersThe grabbers are hopeful that with Al-

len Butler and Pettigrew out of theSenate the loot of a hundred and twentymillion dollars or so of public money forthe enrichment of a few transportationmagnates may become an accomplishedtact It may but not without a strongfight

Fr M IHttaburg Deepak

willot t Admiral Howfcon UW itvpettireunfits of SaMpMMt SM tmkiM k fc askedby Admiral Scale M rather pwUiwl 1 sattie Xivy ftejiwtMMat M MMM ittter Uri tr fcw

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JAPAN AFFECTED BY tH fcA-

TroiiMe ot tit ntter fonntrytlortrd tlut vmerM CommerceAlfred E Hock Minister th

United States to J n has forwarded to

on trade in Japxr prepared by ArthurHyde Lay for thj British Legation atTokyo In this mater Mr Lay

lameniahfe occurrences In Chinaand the continual of an un tiled staterapidly trade of Japan

her Industries havesuffered in cous Mif He Moreover thesilk crop upon wrrh this country in themain relics to adjst the balance of Itcommerce with feviKii countries was adisappointment th to the im-port trade the inflations in the autumnof 1SS9 were that te ensuinj year wouldoffer 9 endtd optfrtnnities for business

appeared in the r turns for 190 and theyear orened witha feeling of overconflin commoral circles It soon be-

came apparent hcrever that the outflowof specie which hd already begun waslikely to incrfeaehnd that the large arrivals of expected would hindan increasingly stringent money marketThe ye are some factors which haveoperated unfavonbly upon the trade ofJapnn

The j aircitj money available formercantile purpoes with th highs rateof interest was inch felt during the yearunder review It pay he iwintrd out herethat or expedlture on works oirjj remotely productivecontinues to bears abnormally large ra-tio to the wealth ad resources of JapanIt is true a part of exm wl li fwithin the Empires own larders TheJapanese wage ner however probablysaves at present Mry much less even InproK rtioii to the intount of his Incomethan the Eurojciniiwl American workerand but little of large wage expendi-ture In connect with the defence

Hrmaint ntirhllwavM etc goes toform capital in aldof productionthese circumstance the tendency to anexcess of Imports ver and Cone Jent drain of sjecie must continue to

exist sod an ade te cash reserve curtbe maintained onlyat a sacrifice of easein the money by prudent limitationof the Government banknote circulationand of credit facllrien The flotation offoreign loans can Jnly afford temporaryrrliel in this ec and bearing in mind

bks of any but a quitegradual increase it wealth derived fromresources at present undeveloped it isevident that the of borrowing isone which should b resorted to with the

circun spe ionFor the whole the excess of Im-ports amounted to the large sum of iS-4K751 But evcotlinK points to M con-siderable dimlnutkti In Imports In MNH

The Government Iron foundry at Yuwata Onga Wstrict Fukuoktt Pre-fecture in IClushud1d not commence op-erations at the coitemplated time namely July 1SOO Ner has work yet beenbegun though the undertaking ia well onits way to compl lnn A trial working ofthe smelting funifce was made In February with satisfactory results One rea-son given for the fostponement of initialoperations Is the scarcity of workmenavailable In conscience of the great de-mand for labor in connectionwith the Chinese crisis

ForeiRn food staffs are more and morebecoming a necesiity for Japan Theyield of agrrlcuUiual products while itituctuates does much permapeople are rowing In 1900 the land undercultivation for and barley lessthan In the preceding year but the harvest a good one owing to favorableweather ondUfbnsl Flour meal and

fresh condensed milk wereal imported in much larger quantities in1SW than the preceding year

Industries in languished inPractically no new Undertakings were set-on foot and from interested in already existing ones the complaint of lackr heard When as

company has topay a much asll per cent for money tocarry on affairs it te small wonder thatdifficulty in continuing in existence is experienced ftt desideratum theinvestment of moderately cheap foreign

In and many

far however with owe or two exceptionsnothing on a large scale been donein the matter

Certain clauses of goods are now ex-empt from duty when imported for thepurpose of improvement provided thatthey are reexported within one full yearfrom the date of their importation Theidea i said to be to import for exampleplates from France and have them decorated so as to resemble Kutanl ware andwatches from the United States to be en-ameled at Xagayo and reexported

The United States continues to encroach on spheres of trade which wereformerly considered under the exclusivecontrcl of the Urlteei Kingdom or otherJiatKH American competition is now apermanent feature of the import trade ofJapan and is worthy of the careful at-tention of British manufacturersgeographical situation of the UnitedStates with regard to Japan and the eaeerae with which American munufacturers are seeking a market In this coun

more formidable a time goes on In 1900Americans again secured a number of valuable contracts for the delivery ofin 1901 including one for rails whichestimated at 72wa Among the reasonsfor the very large figures to which the im-port trade from States into Ja-pan rose In l t was the fact that the ex-tensive orders the execution of which

I wax undertaken there in the precedingI yr included SOfcw of rails whichat the high price then prevailing wouldaccount for nay l largequantity of electrical machinery for tram-line and electric and bridge-work and wire as well a dour are alsoincluded in the returns Telephone cable

at one tins a United States monopo-ly but now German makers are fulfillinglarge orders for it British manufactur

owing to the high prices forhave so far been unsuccessful in obtainany contracts for this materialDuring the past few YeArs therebeen a remarkable growth ft the trade be-tween Japan and China occasioned forthe most part by the opening up of mar-kets for Japanese manufactures in theneighboring empire

One of the schemes whereby the Ja-panese are seeking to attract foreigncapital is the granting to aliens of per-mission to hold shares in Japanese rail-way companies It has been deckled thatthere is no objection to the purchase byforeigners of such shares provided thatthere exist no proviso to the contrary inthe bylaws of a railway company amithe Department of Communication onJune 5 use informed eight of the privaterailway companies by whom it had beenapproached on the subject thatmight if necessary alter their bylawsw as to open the to foreign cooperation Many of the Japanese railways havebeen built in sparsely populated districtsmore apparently a view to militarycontingencies than with e prospect ofadequate return for the Inof raIlwayS however as traversepopulous areas awl conn t towns of com-mercial Importance the Investment of for-eign capital would be mutually beneficialmore especially if the foreign sharehold-er were able to exercise their influence Inthe direction of greater efficiency of serv-ice and the reduction useless expendi-ture

One TheoryFrom the New York WvrM-

Pethape that mile irtmport wawit atSot of the wrs may tare kicked

Anierviiii IloxcrwFrom the Mexk HertkL-

Ow m mm Hniy tie n are teUwg abortthe lyftctuwg MiaiMaifpu

SlidFrom the Norfolk Pilot

fad sew to the ismasiteea will he tit aaouttrrmefrt of aaother 12 erat quarterlydIvidend hy the Stondwa Oil CMaajr

the CHMiiMtati CuMmxrcialTril-

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GOLD MINING IN KOREA

A Krciiclimaii Secures n VnlunblcConcession Frosts the GevernmcntHorace M Allen the United States Con-

sul General at Seoul reports o the StateDepartment that the Govern-ment hiss granted to a French subject aconcession covering a gold seining dis-trict Commenting on the matter Mr Al-

ien says

ready granted to Americans RussiansGermans British and Japanese It is fora period of twentyJive years from thedate of Commencement of operationswhich must be made within two years A

t paid tothe Korean Government after the exPease of development has been recov-ered No import tax on necessary mate-rials will be levied the products ofthe mine will be exported free of dutyOther minerals besides gold may beminetl within the district The districthiss not yet been Posted but it cannot in-

clude any of the fortythree districts re-

served for the Crown and kKuwn as theHousehold mine The district notexceed iu extent thirteen and a third bytwenty miles The concession hi said tohave HO connection with a recently discussed project of a French subject tomake a loan to the European Government

Gold mining in Korea is now assum-ing considerable importance since it hasbeen successfully prosecuted by the Ori-ental Cootisolidated Mining Company anAmerican concern which theWoonsan nines of Korea This companyhas a d irct some twentylive or thirtymiles in txient in the richest known goldregivn in Korea The company disposedof ttt 2T per cent royalty by paying alargv cm in cash and agreeing to pay ailxed inual amount It is now success-fully operating two milk of twentyJMMrrps each and one of forty stampswhilv another fortystanH mill is incons of erection The managers have theirown cyanide plant as well The operationsat present are confined to quartz workbut the extensive placer deposits will soonbe worked Some seventy foreigners areemployed at these mines with over 39Wnatives on the pay roll or indirectly inthe pay of the company The natives aresaid to be satisfactory as miners anti theyare content on a wage of 3D cents goldper day The output and prospects areI ronounced to be entirely satisfactory

Tiie British mines are at present thetext in importance to the American minesThey lie not very far from the districtoccupied by the Americans and have longenjoyed a good reputation Much moneyis being expended in exploitation but theyperiod

The Germans are actively engaged inworking their district which lies to theeast of Seoul The Japanese ate openingup their mining district to the south ofthis The Russians seem not to havebegun work upon their mining concesstone as yet

TO GREET SCHOOL TEACHEBS

A Splendid Welcome Now Being Prcpared In Manila

MANILA Aug 13 Mr Atkinson Su-perintendent of Schools Is preparing asplendid reception for the six hundredAmerican school teachers who are expeeled to arrive here within a weekWhen the transport arrives fifteenlaunches will convey the teachers to theLwneta landing Then they will be drivento the Spa ish Exposition buildings whichwill become a temporary educational

Icolony

The teachers will their board for Jla day The buildings have been com-pletely furnished by the army with cotsehairs etc which have been loaned bythe quartermasters department arrangements for the comfort of the

are complete in every detailsThey Include contracts with andlaundrymen and the teachers will be furnisned with booklets containing taforma-

j TOeVparfmenl wRl se d StMe in tak-ing ca

pie for half rates It that theteachers will be distributed in the provfortnight Four hundred

i fifty of already been assigped to their post the rains mayPrevent many from reaching theirlions for some time

The reports of the health officials for thelast month show that the death rate wasi American occupationThe Philippine Commission will salt fori the north tomorrow but there are numer

OWl reports of Hoods and storms and themembers may have to change their itinerary These Hoods may also prevent thefa various capi

jQT AGED PHYSICIAN DEAD

Dr Sapplncton of Mitr Innd SuecumliM ut Forest Park

BALTIJrfORE Aug 13Dr ThomasSappington one of the oldest physicians-in this State died at the residence of hissoninlaw M S Breams 36 North Cal

I vert Street early yesterday He became-I seriously ill about two weeks ago at For-

est Inn Forest Park where heI spending the summer and removed-to Mr Brenans residence Death remitt

from a complication of diseasesSappington wa born at LibertyFrederick county Md October 2

and was nearly eightylive years oldIlls father was Col Thomas Sappingtonwho an omcer in the array duringthe war with Great Britain in M12 andafterward served live terms as State Sen-ator front Frederick county During one

Sapfrfngtons grandfather DrBrown Sappington one of the incor

Three brothers of Dr Sappington alldead were physicians in Frederick coun

jty Drs Sidney Gree bury and Angustin Sappington Dr Thomas P Sappingtots and Dr James Conic Sappington tweof isis nephews are now practicing physicians in Frederick county

Dr Sappington was educated at Stj Johns College Frederick and started thestudy of medicine in Baltimore On ac-count of certain differences among thefaculty of the of MarylandSchool of Medicine he and a number ofother students left and went to Phlladelphia He entered the University of

and graduated in 1839 Afterpracticing shout twelve years incounty he removed to Baltimore He

retired fron practice about twenty yearsago He was a gentleman of the oldschool and was noted for his courtesyand politeness and had many friends Hewas a member of the Medical and Chirur

I gical Society

AMERICAS OLDEST RACE

DlNCovvrlcM Itriorted I j n GermanHtlinoIoKlNt in Mexico

MBW ORLEANS Aug 13 Dr Giwtav-Lcbstein of Berlin connected with theBureau of Ethnology of Germany passedthrough here today on his way to Berlinafter a six months ethnological investi-gation In Sonora Mexico Dr Lebstem-wouM Rot give the result of his discover-ies in advance of his report to the Ger-man Ethnological Bureau but declared

indicated that he had discovered traces

tedatiag the ItaliansHe visited the mot t mountainous por-

tions of Sonora believing it the oldestinhabited portion of America He foundin aa almost Inaccessible mountain gorgethe remnant of a road broad stab welldefined showing the work of the gradersawl some evidences of having at one timebeen paved

It IB almost certain from the clear indications saW Dr Lebstein that theroad built before the gorgeformed stat the gorge was Rot a suddenformation but evidently the productof erosion that must have continuedthrough several thousand years At theend of this was a high hill of de

from rich unities the ore being ob-tained from the mountains by means of

There were evidences here that thepeople that worked the mines from whichthe ore in question was taken were muchfurther advanced in the arts of metallur-gy than tilt old Spaniards or In factthan any ncient people of whomthere IH any rcccrd

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ADDITIONS TO THE NAVY

Three Torpedo Hunt Destroyers toHe Launched Thursday

BALTI3HORC A s I3A atlaunching i to take

land Steel CoMpany Sparrows Point I

Three torpedo bout destroyers the largand the heaviest and the heavilyarmed now under conecrwetto for theUnited Government are to leavethe ways and enter the element which Isto be their home The occasion will be abrilliant event in the history of the e-

Itoament Special cars will comeVhltadeJphla and New York J

oWcer of the navy and otherinvited guests wen as the fairsors for the craft The Is totake place at 2 p w

These vessels oMclaliyknown as Now 14 M antI K wW fcenamed respectively Truxtun VWp eand Vorden after the noted naval off-icer of those names They are aN alikeEach to 2U feet 6 inches long over all andMC feet on trial load liRe They areof a feet X inches molded beam at thedeck and 22 feet lashes at the waterline The depth amidships hi 14 fe t 8inches and the apeeMed trial displacemeat is about 431 torn with a draft of C

feetThe greater portion of these boats intaken up by the machinery and coalhonkers the machinery of neeeaoity extremely powerful In order to givethe vessels the great which thecontract calls for and the bankersto carry a big coal supply The

hour and they have power 12 times as j

They are propelled by two screws andtwo tripleexpansion engines which willdevelop 8SW indicated horsepower Th fl

engines have one Wghpresmire cylinderof 23 inches diameter 1 intermediate cy-

linder of 34 inches diameter anti 2 lowpressure cylinders 37 inches In diame-ter all with 22 Inches stroke They willmake at full power about 34 revolutions-a minute working with a steam pressureof 246 pounds

The steam pressure te somethingbeing 3 pounds to the inch

greater than that of the most powerful I

locomotives The engines are as perfect-ly balanced a possible to avoid vibrationand each te m its own engineroom to-

Ktther with its own auxiliary machineryThese are situated about the middle ofthe vessel and forward and aft are the4 Thornycroft watertube boilers 2 ateach end in a separate compartmentThese boilers have a total grate surfaceof 315 square feet and a heating surfaceof 177 square feet They are workedunder forced draft there being two largeblowErs in each Hreroom vesselcarries IK tons of coal against 15 tosson the next largest of the destroyer

Forward of the machinery and hollerare the gallery quarters for the

seamen various storerooms and a corn j

partment for the steam windlass Aft of j

the machinery space are quarters for themachinists and petty otfleers and alt ofthis again are the officers quarters andthe wardroom A noticeable feature ofthese craft will be the almost entire ab-sence of wood metal asbestos or othermaterials being substituted nearly everywhere

On deck there will be two conning tow-ers one forward and one aft Upon sackdeck will be mounted agun The forward part of the boat willbe covered by a turtleback deck extending-to the conning tower Immediately aft ofthis i an enclosed space for a short dis-tance affording protection in bad weath-er and forming also the forward bridgeof the vessel Between the conning

are the four smokestacks and la vari-ous places are six Spounder rapidAreguns and the two torpedo tubes Thevessels are not armored In any way andthe heaviest plates used In their construc-tion excepting the conning towers arehut fivesixteenths of an inch in thick-ness The only projections above the

are the conning towers the oh-w M houseThe destroyer are Vr r

tIle lights and are also equipped withelectric searchlights steam and handstring gear and as before stated steamwindlasses The quarters are of good

fifecers staterooms being largerthan tho e on an ordinary passengerboat Th wardroom is 9 by 15 feet whichgives ample space for dining Both theofficers and the crew are provided withbathrooms equipped with shower andother baths

Miss Isabella Truxtnn of Norfolk is toact as sponsor for the Truxtun She is agranddaughter of Commodore Truxtunafter whom the boat is named Mrs Endlit B X Worden of New York who torelated by marriage to Admiral WoMenwill be sponsor for the vessel which isto bear name The for the

Paul Mine

names indicate are built for theof destroying the smaller torpedo boatsof an enemy which seek to Mow up bat-tleships and cruisers They are there-fore given great speed and are furnish-ed In addition to torpedo tubes with ef-ficient batteries of rapidfire

TUBERCULOSIS IN ARIZONA

Phoenix Health Officers Aroused toPrevent n-

PHOEXIX Aria Aua M Ariaonabegun a campaign against tuberculosiswhich may Anally result la a strict quarantine victims of pulmonary trou-ble Today th city council of Phoenixpassed ordinances intended to provide protection against infection front thou-

sand of healthseekers who come to Ari-zona each year The plans submitted bythe health board call for the providingof cuspidors or proper receptacles oa thestreet crossings and in public parksmost important measure is the fumigationof rooms by invalids In its

the board saysThe danger of infection to natives here-

of adopting stringent safety precautionsmore urgent Annually the number of in-

valids suffering from consumption come toArizona In greater numbers The taste of

spreading all over the country and fu-

ture influxes of consumptives will growlarger in cons iuei ce

The Arizona Medical Association at itsmeeting two months ago adopted a reso-lution railing upon the councils of thecities and towns throughout the Territo-ry to take precautionary measures againstthe spread of the disease Nearly everycity in the Territory Is preparing to takeup the fight on the disease and a billhas been prepared for the next Legisla-ture barring from entrance into the Ter-ritory alt persons showing the germs of

CURRENT HUMOR

Prom the New York WerfclrNew Bi MiT Ktntlir Haont this MattMK SKMMfet That Thats ktttter sfc-

IIIH cliriiii-iPton

He No 1 MtteMl U pfcad infinity

The Keel Were Xntithe Mttfelo C

There is a nan atacial kg by wailing shotS a expose tview leases the knee down The other curi

Did yea nit oil your kg a I esaibtttheta thta she t fiworth stark to bliss as hw own legs wouldbe Then tartan cricat exainNMtwi fhr

W l 1

JohMW On the Mace when a

WhyV H-

ia j pr behind orway b handy with his Mot

Pram the Chicago PoetWhat the e catio I

in wield k l pn rorWith yoke uttC jpl

The seashore summit resort

place on ThurMaat the department of the Marl

nest

States

aslaunching

which are

speed

vesselsare to travel at the rate or I knots an

great as that of the bay steamer

re-markable

Inch

tow-ers

decks

size

I

I

I

Those torpedo boat their

ContRhas

against

the

The

re-port

Is growing more apparent and the need

the Salt River as a health resort Is

tuberculosis

nulled

musene S 1

Mat

Sewed of peoniedeny that IAIIMJriIi

tIN artlilt

oW lady th

The pave MIew Mr tW I Jobso

altersail

the lostlosh

rite lleltO-I1r EJidtHtte

Ks oat baskanidlist

iill allait

use Kiss

The

isthe

one the I

marine

frontWashingtonbringing

span

the

C

being

have

average

class

Space

1

th

his sponsorWhippk wilt be Miss Elsie Pope of it

destroyersaspurpose

guns

valley

fra peodlo ietecall

Seer ibasderYtoer suspote is wbeccbay they been railing it

Fan-

s lthesi aitPy-mt attend ho air yes Inate

FranPan nba adeti

palediy a

Sw antI sympathetic iswtkgaled

ss

atmeni watnt

spoe see miami Theyso

Ipimento he always son

pateamed Is Isernue isis rssepe

repair he

Greatest

gresiest iasitatthe

iWWtrti

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NOTES OF THE DAY

The unartir of eh tint mtwd Mexf-har ir hi MOO w

three thaw the of 2 big

the last twenty of ht Mb

attain Rroat ow Ow MM-

A W w-

and Ute locked key usage te a mmrutee Mjr-

nMre EaglMil live ia a tottered pMfefc eiVnri-K a wide aw To enable than ta attend

trine w na a cawrca in atsmcthe meiMiv caaal rn of MM ktffat Map

Thenight attracts the hmcts

ciMrtry theof hharm sear A g Uhis mime RM A orzMfea

the ctab MCMfwd

m theA lady te anti take of a

to-M the caantrjr-va U ass heat Only write1

andate ht MohamtBoAia onmtriet-

ofcwe tire of the uteMO e nt rr-

TorkMi rnoMsupply wile with cameo as inflltiiat sad

AbtbaMa Increased between 16M aad tOO fa-

JTl B te 186 thee were hat 7MJUra ciJ ia D nWSmrth Ot tide amiaat hunk

Caralwa laM SB Ma te M 9 one Ala

total thca aracoredTIle rapid iyaa iaa of the Amtoallsa iMnjlii

trade Mstinnti wadMMaiiao la KswWales it was larger in Wi than hi r BreraMB

total of VB afc missed awlWM 72 ataat C4 9 in Of the

MUS sadie the British flag aad 79 aavwthose of other eaoatrit

Status hosIng tower f Pies ha a rimhi tile Ttmflt tower of Bristol hi Kefaad Iti a tqmre tower of QottAlt it parts still preserve their

i or awtrea The liner

A

that the church cotlwtioM wore iaOa a Sabbath he iaianaaa1

round that the aM abu who were m wcht w fto contribute Ta hat Might he

hemmed that the talkttiaa was uMe

The Aatmerp ivory aairlrpr Trfcarh IMS ctetteda uttm tossMfcet use awi the

L a aMthet M The Aarar i rjr ourmatt napifwiat hi

are held there

M k K Bticfa-hhthja ofTtttnmm f

hot abort a4 hiH h-

Mtthirty slaves

A TopahaM Me

tilde trick fa-

of powder aad aaiahcJ it withtar a then aake ratfwM 1 paw itthe owe whom it wac for Wt aa

too la e a a Maside of his lace waa horsed badry

coal prodncia aaaictj Al

Georgia Kevtncky NorthYitgiaJa sad

ac a ach cowlbolos hi 1W West

44757785 aad hi 1 417SS4OB the BW statue

railways ia I naJia and Ioria i ahoat tireThe total bet of pa nt gUB aattttJury to Deceaahcr n MM wai lfiE4the London road sad USML5S6 far the Pass

gijii t ornwc m T per weaaFrench road cost only lM8 u per nile

While a Meanter wt oa the way lean Port-land to New York the other day lose mhnlutwore sighted about thirty sank of CapQuabeth The bix lob were but a nhort t mttahead when Men the pilot and they fephuwi-

ilwnBjitian to et out at the conn at the

whal s but this wx sit M-withowt contact with sue of Ihrai

gteaamr an if a sashes

The aaakerc of otor fchides are JHoAaat re-KarwiBi the eaperiaieatg yiiiit as t the eaaweyace of trait and net garwea praises Oa atGarden item Middlesex sad Kent hy vaasays aa acricwNMna paper One keptgrower at EaaVM H hway-fhan a lorry toad to

the Otter MeekOB

It will have n

tees Two large gathaMersmch KK as win lisle the htate-

a o tt e The gcapiacthe Issuers will optratcplaced oa a deck WIryvessel wM set a gOMgOtter Hw k swains a parti raatrrj-of the west eotuit end the aew

of Evesteeth k one of the aaaay hotaaieal wfioste-O The oa which it grows is hythe Kuicart name of the torhiddea r

Eves apple tree The alenom has a veex-pl w t W tire rotllr rewMfkaMe featwrcof the tree the owe to which it own Its seemK the trait k is iMMKtfwl haag from

hi a p cwMar aaiaacr Oraafw oa the aajtriaaand dV p crimwMl within each fruit the aa-p r ie 4 having had a piece bitten owt of itThis lost with te poimaim f ky hidthe MohamiieoaM to Morawwt it the chiiiw iiagitmet W proaertwa-

Onwre M iirille H the pOH or ot a

which had it babitatioa for years

cello it OWN tale M-

rrroa Nat M Mr DichcK caaaatthat jrtniiiii t hiataeU aimS hat

with thank I T aee-Jw ie JS4S There is a visiblemile the paper T Mr Fee hat

to he oae playIngwe caneS heb rhintiinc that when M

have availed a cvrtaam a-

Mr Tujtent Cowatercialwritten b bus ht

the Philadelphia Mccord-

Ae nay she he baud atoa FouL St e rSecond Street

M the Norrhera g She an-At haoket hi which the anile raaoae OB annatrt-wiwUtd k Them are not oh-

m idr of windowpoetic still in vna ie in Kem K on Th

eeara Matter the pain M bright sada cr Mal Their ass old mtaMMied

places in Kcmmrfon where thet w when at all are always ctvMwdnails There ski a fine nurici Jut antis

the twnerK f as theytU U

8riIWIo g tI-Ne sews is ild-

rne tMShe sc

lit illpendre

4iM is M ill

The U OIl

meisued ill 1M-Ie a tt of lest

The

Ji is 1Stee t-J lS

The fIl tiduias Ce lieapt t-w

pp-n it bidet

a law use

last aU Ite-

the psiususbat

The Cat of HohBtt is

ping II a tlWHtfIIt Ilio-ltuI ofIs 4 a-

pr ol wet WSt anddayt ibe Ishe Na trilNrfIIJ them

A started illSt Eli

iMo dishhis Ire

toe a charter lerWIowilllt the

LoiI4eR Pasttare

snit I the of a sushi efile mob a Wy sadgMt

reached about

Itit

that low a I-

to hisher da a

tire coal smSII

SUebad IIOdIIet of drNe

chased lEIfwere

wttbndwhich ill about 11S lt iI See led of

at the ttill a Xmas tens M4Wag

recast Ilkcosregsticn heists the west

not expected

OIl July II JEi saletile is

bet Is today lit lbs lbsmaid F greatsury at of F7-

illThey tItit L h-

wiIeft thank

ill a londyIIl trg a

ait

Ie-

ue untilIre

aU kInk ed ellIn 1M thet Status

TM-

4U tbsp MIllyom

tcIM IIIIt 1Z51M i aeI-Qtal of tW Seat pimiset ill

1

aret lor thethe x rt to

nibs

byJIG

it sogate

illThe collision jMft4wreck bed

t

Fwile pustwice

half tGM a sixt St a I Jrr elsite the its Iantane would ue flilfMe

A suet of k Ite

will lie by the gaswill

Jarlite

the deppec a MIlthe Mdt of the

M Theput

plea willto a

fruit supposed to Me the

ioIL tree

Ink

sodtree

tog

of tt ot

et W wire

tie ol tile it kDidtc-

witc to Me lee tile Lundilde

JaYca

atile sd

lie W Sot the ateat

H-

oW eGIeftd uspi

her ia South

ill the tie Mtit

bsttr the toW

ssilpined tk it-t all

iIIwin

illa aquariums

IUd brbt

rourton hebude PdsssWsls

casupide sensim at eamms issud-in Siberia sew m oug I Priing ass-M nit nsS-

hikisel ngeisi hsse 5speot uses

and Is Russ down anise sothe mm

eucalyptan the idiud at-aM mawOme bbent lad h sad mma am mid

attln 15

Iwe ditry ndseusis 1 Dnt asseat apes eon ue lab

expasled suutd to IZ141d411 psndsto 4lS3N psudt and is Is 1

editor u AdTInttmad whus-

ttbsp e4sick gga tbu diskugeese apples bad baron 4-

asous and sown us shasr4pdusa-

In Melbeurae rgulsdg sale 1 q-

ases dtcbss talus atuet dseud us-

iunds dma belted ThISgdown a

sanest gloss they hidManes llustIsus

seerlusting lowed

useb flusdip-

A sh saptasing bulledles avs-Is adopted 1ps Trent ass adib

h mt sad

lust 1 iumuuusind bowgbitoilettoe remseemeesuat bait bees Its Ousrga

perpetuate the ususey Wheney ecu a-

vstIag tispust somewines pedsosmt

has bus perand

The adssrtheest spowred tbsrday Messing Wasted

resets s-

and hassewarkis so sot

seedclog CanisMinspis lb

was at muvclose

emendal was deemed to demastic lappisotaa nuns

Ie disoses

etios 1 frees tan as-

Ian loss

bums a ausdy these e

stba

year The number

i

lbs s

early aseldisetmemmml Msdsp-

osILissblab sat

perpendicular

minister eugrethiuly

antoustplalsa panel

later wasthe sisal

with 1

empamed ZAeew

latlor

plbiie tubajust tSr begInning lisp

tupsi5 sod SevsTbu-rTheoatballi there are so stases Is ikssg-

Qsiy but susilig thethem are Sb mel4emn

t-

neei slaves lbshoses 1 the rich ass stees wcsannt is sd Iseos4r q

dademae is pg

usa loaded pe hilttahecas ligidud

loadedhieput pawdpr sadout mdwas kighitasd juts swearing

fiusthera ansusad ntAilasam

scoutWtit Virginia an asspst 1-

1anVirginias estps-

siimaoe s lidSTame itri use

The trademanban

3e

The receipts Esgihb s bateast ouch oure lbs

mile lb

mma bemuse neomesy thereisrearsuad the

canIngthe

buss itrusk

anisemeesssttg

makeS every snt-inn two and dbaasnt of

ScM 15115 CCitt S5Cb 1 OiL

gets ver prossd the belt thethat bsue acosm

novel ligbhMp to messediday seer

and worked tumpsd ucasisis si

aesetsigas lean husidem Is

1sod

league well

be-iubntittcd severe test

A marksi

known

scent

the

has

ataut Uard Eden sod I a nsa

seriousPens

et oldlaibisned waves astpapnrapes she bill

tiadessu 1 whss ass sutCba4m is

Cisriti11 s5pleg

Jut

bosse who he btga to declIne thitwestimb

andspun themmom among usiths

arise that play be cusevusdi pispadNadi

A wosma elhisp ssiissccaM oubsi

appemame Street sd stimap rfrt tint uibasso it merits

heap us s4rini pasn ena diasposel sad upon glass whim

Oas naive russd ad kiiurs heats and

hur budtam per

cleaned by

er keepglass

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