2 CAMERON COUNTY PRESS. H. H. MULLIN, Editor. Published Every Thursday. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION. Frr yenr K CO If paid in advance 1 ADVERTISING RATES. Advertisements are published a'- the rate of one doiiur per square forone insertion and lifty cents per square for each subsequent insertion. Rates hv the year, or for six or three months, a.-c low und uniform, and will be furnished on apt Heat on. Le«:il and Official Advertising per square, three times or less. each subsequent inser t'Ori .0 cents per square. Local notices lit cents per line for one lnser ■frtlon: ft cents per line lor each subsequent oon-ecutive insertion Obituary notices over five lines 10 cents per line. Simple announcements of births, mar riages and deaths will be inserted Tree. Business cards, five lines or les* -.5 per year; over live lines, ut the regular rates of adver tising. No local inserted for lesn than 7J cents per Issue. JOB PRINTING. The Job department of the PKESS Iseomplete and afl.'pU facilities for doing the best class of WNRK PAR'UCULAK ATTENTION PAIDTO I.AW PHINTING. No paper will be discontinued until arrear r.gi s are paid, except at the option of the pub. isher. Papers sent out of the county must be pa 4 lor in advance. Thrfio dynamiters, charged with at tempt in# to blow up t lie \\ elinnd canal, have been sentenced to life imprison ment at hard labor, a Canadian jury passing' on the case. Canada is evident ly a good place for dynamiters to keep as far away from as they possibly can, A New York wheelman by the name ol Brown —name sounds familiar—lin islied a 2.000-mile wheel race against time, he having wheeled off that dis tance in a little less ihaii nine days, or at a rate of more than 2-lXi miles per day. The most interesting fact about Brown is that three years ago he was declared a consumptive. Did the w heel restore his health? Strange as it may seem, the birth place of Admiral Farragut is not known. A few days ago the chamber of commerce of Knoxville, Tenn.. named a committee to ascertain the real birthplace»of the old hero, and it submitted two reports, part of the com mittee stating that Farragut was born at Lowe's Ferry and the rent maintain ing that his birthplace way. Campbell's Station. The locomotive engineer who ran the first railway train in this country, on the trip made between Albany and Schenectady on May 27. 1820. is living in New York city, at the age of 93 years. His name is Wood Benson, and his health is still good. Seventy-one years havepassed since he pulled out with the historic train, among whose passengers were Gen. Scott, Tliurlow Weed and Commodore Yanderbilt. Despite the fact that the I'arisian ex position authorities some time ago pro fessed to believe that the American athletic teams were making tiiis eoun try ridiculous by refusing to take part in the athletic games and sports if the latter were conducted on Sundays, they have yielded their point and the contests will be held on Saturdays. Even Paris is beginning to recognize that ridicule is not the fatal weapon with Americans, where principle is con cerned. that it seems to In with some Parisians Dispatches from London have men tioned the sudden appearance and enormous sales of pictures, buttons and little flags in connection with the recent popular demonstrations, and now British commercial pride is shocked to learn that they were im ported from this country. The largest London dealer says Birmingham man ufacturers could not furnish them at all. and in no other country were they manufactured as neatly and cheaply as in the I*nited States. Thus America leads in small things as in great. Francis liicknell Carpenter, the por trait painter, who died in New York re cently, aged TO years, had among his sitters Presidents Fillmore. Lincoln, Tyler and Pierce, William 11. Seward, Charlt s Sunnier, George William Cur tis, James Russell Lowell, Henry Ward Beeeher, Horace (ireeley, Schuyler Col fax. and John C. Fremont. In 1804 he painted a large historical picture rep resenting President Lincoln signing the emancipation proclamation, and it now hangs on the staircase of the 'liousi of representatives. The latter attracts the eyes of millions. The election of Uev. Dr. David 11. Moore as one of the new bishops of the Methodist Episcopal church makes the remarkable coincidence of four bishops of that church natives of one county and three of the same town, viz.: Athens, (>. The first of the four. Rev. Edward It. Ames, was born near Athens in 1800 and elected bishop in 1852, serving till his death in 1870. Uev, Charles C. MeCabe. born in Athens in 1830, was elected bishop in 1800. Rev. Earl Cranston, born in Athens in 1840, was elected bishop in IS'JO. Dr. Moore, born in Athens in 1838. A man can go without food, water and light for a long time when he has to. Advices from the orient iell of four miners being entombed in Japan in the big Matsuyasu colliery. The men were without food for 12 days, had only wa ter enough to moisten their lips four or live times a day, and their light last ed but twe llays, and yet it is stated thut when they w re finally rescued they were in comparatively good con dition. It is an experiment that few would want to try, and we are willing to take their word for what happens to a man under such circumstances. The New York Sun added Mr. Upson Downs, of Boston, to its collection of freak names. A Boston paper mur mured "Fake!" Then il looked into the matter and discovered that a centle man named Cpson Downs really and truly lives in Bo«ton. Pacific Railroad Settlements. Washington, June 2.—"The settlement of the Pacific, railroad Indebtedness must he ranked as one ill the greatest achievements of President AlcKlnley's administration," said Gen. Charles Dick, member of con gress from the Nineteenth district of Ohio, and secretary of the republican national committee, to-day: "All efforts either by congress or the executive departments prior to 1X97, w. re of little avail in protecting the govern ment's Interests in these roads. In fact, there were grave doubts whether the gov ernment would succeed in being reim bursed, even in part, the vast sum expend ed by the United States in aid ol their con si ruction. Hut the government has real ized in cash or its equivalent, within two years, the sum of $124,421,t>71 out of about $130,000,000 that was due, and more than half the money collected was for accrued In terest that had not bee n paid. "The discovery of gold in California: the rapid increase in wealth and population in the territory west of the Kocky mountains, and a movement on the part of the older slates to establish closer connections dur ing the civil war with those outlying com munities. led congress in 1562 »to authorize the construction of a railroad to the Pacific ocean. The direct benefit to be derived by the government was its use for postal, military and other purposes. The act of July 1, ISH2, chartering the Union Pacific ltailroad company, was not sufficiently lib eral, and therefore nothing was accom plished under its provisions. Though the t'nion Pacific company was organized no one was found who would venture money In the construction of the road. "On July 2. 1.M14, congress amended the net of ISH2. by making provisions more favorable to the companies. Tin net of iw: . provided that the government should have i first mortgage on the property of the companv, while ihe net of IMM provided substantially that, for the bonds the gov ernment should issue in aid of the construc tion'of Ihe road, il should take a second mortgage. Two companies wer> organized under tile provisions of the act of 1564. ; iid entered energetically upon the work of construction. The road was built from the California end eastward by the <\ n tral Pacific Railroad company, and from ihe Missouri river westward to the com . uion meeting point at Ogdeti by the T'nion ' Pacific company. "Their lines were united May 10. IMI9. anticipating by more than seven years the time required by congress. t'nion l'a cifie company constructed 1,034 miles, and lin Central Pacific 743 miles. The road of'the latter company was subsequently extended 140 miles, and the lines of the two companies from the Missouri river to San I Francisco represented a mileage of 1,917 miles. "in aid of these roads and connecting branches the United States Issued bonds V-> the amount of $t)4,t>23,512. Failing to be reimbursed for the interest paid on these bonds, it became necessary, in protection of the Interests of the government, to pass the uel of May 7. I(s7s, known as the 'Thurman act.' This act provided that the whole amount of compensation which might from time to time be due to the railroad companies for services rendered the gov ernment should be retained by the govern ment, one-half to be applied to the liqui dation of the interest paid and to be paid by the United States upon the bonds issued to. each of the companies, the other half to be turned Into a sinking fund. But it soon became apparent that, with the approach ing maturity of bonds issued in aid of the roads the provisions of the 'Thurman act' were not adequate to the protection of the government's Interests. Efforts were per sistently made looking to a settlement ot this vast indebtedness, but without suc cess. So recently as the Kifty-fourth con gress an attempt was made to pass a bill to refund the debts of the Pacific Railroad companies, but it was defeated in the house by a vote of 1(17 rays and 102 yeas. "On January 12. ls!>7," continued Gen. Dick, "the day following the defeat of the funding bill, Ihe attorney general was informed by the president thai default had occurred in the payment of the Union Pa cific and the Kansas Pacific indebtedness to tin* government, and he was directed to make arrangements to secure, as far as practicable, the payment of their indebted ness. An agreement was entered into be tween the government and the reorganiza tion committee of the Union Pacific, rail road, by which the committee guaranteed, should the government undertake to en force its lien by sale, a minimum bid for the Union and Kansas Pacific lines that would produce to the government, over and above any prior liens and charges upon the railroads and sinking fund the net sum ot $45,701.059.99. in performance of this agreement the bid was guaranteed by a deposit of $4,500,000. Hills were then filed In the United States circuit courts for the foreclosure of the government lien. The decrees entered for the sale of the roads not being satis factory to the government, papers were prepared for an appeal. Then the re organization committee came forward with an offer to increase its bid to $50,000,(100 Instead of $15,754,0511.99. Subsequently, to settle nil points In dispute, the reorganiza tion committee decided to abandon this second bid and to increase the minimum amount to be offered for Ihe property to $58,448,223.75. being the tibial amount due the government on account of the T'nion Pacific road, as stated by the secretary of the treasury, including the sum of $1,549.- "CS.2O cash in the sinking fund. Such an amount was bid by the reorganization com mittee on Novi mher 1, 1597. and the sale was confirmed by the court on Novembers, 1897. After the confirmation of the sale Ihe whole amount was paid into the treas ury of the United States in convenient in stallments. thus relieving the government from anv loss whatever upon its claim for principal and interest due upon its sub- Amnunt 7>>tt thf Vuitfd States .1 fat NAME OF lto.\n. Central llranch Union Pacific Sioux City and Pacific j Total j sidy, and bringing to a final and most satis factory termination one of these long standing and troublesome questions. "In the case of the Kansas Pacific indebt edness, by decree of the court an upset price on the sale of the property was fixed lit a sum which would yield to the govern ment $2,500,000. The reorganization com mittee in conference with the government declared its purpose of making no higher bid lhan that fixed by the decree of the court, so that the government was con fronted with the danger of receiving for its total lien upon this line, amounting to near ly $13,000,000, principal and interest, only the sum of $2,500,000. Believing the interest of the government required that an effort should be made to obtain a larger sum, and the government having the right tore- prospective value of our new possessions, from a commercial point of view, has been a matter of doubt and controversy. Yet even under the disturbed conditions which prevail, the exports to Cuba, Porto Rico, the Hawaiian, Philippine and Samoan is lands have almost doubled in 1800. as compared with those for the year preceding, and the outlook for the future is promising. It follows, of course, that with an increase of trade will come increased opportunities for employment and higher wages. The great nations of the world are eager J competitors for commercial suprem j acy, and Ihis country must win a fore most place or be content with condi tions that invite national stagnation and dec iy---Youth's Companion. ' IT7"Un:!l)le to meet the republican party upon a square battle of nation al issues, the Bryan press seizes upon ' the discovery of peculation in the Un ban postal service with gleeful gloat ing, a.s if it were unprecedented that a public official prove, unworthy a party trust. —-Cincinnati Commercial Tribune. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY, JUNE 14, 1900. tlcfm ilu incumbrance:; upon ilic properly, wlucli WI ie pi. or m tin. IK 11 UI H. Kovern mciil «ue.:iny, u> ]>uyiii& ilu Minis luwiul ly uue ill J'l.sptct I lie len 1 oui (u 1 lie U'eas -1143* 1" 11 it' urnti 11 y, ilic president, on I eoruary », j.vjei, autnurifccii ine seen - tury ol tin tieasuiy to pay me amounts lawfully title UJIOII their pnor Hiortguyes upon ttie eastern and niiuuie divisions ol saut roati. • j iic 11 the reorganisation committee of Uie Kansas l'acilie ollerttl In bni for the road a sum which would realise to the gov ernment the whole amount ol the prin cipal of the debt. Sfi.ata.UUO. It was be lieved that no better price than this could be obtained at a later date if the sale should be postponed, and it was deemed best to permit the sale to proceed upon the guar antee of a minimum bid which would real -1 izij to tlie government the whole principal of its debt. The sale thereupon took place, and the property was purchased by 1 lie reorganization committer. The sum yield ed to the government was $M,303,U0U. It will thus be perceived »hat the government .M cured an advance of J3,Mi:i,UUO on account .if its lien, over and above the sum which the court had lixctl as the upset price, and which the reorganization committee had declared was I lie maximum which they were willing to pay for the property. "The result of these proceedings against the I'nion l'acilie system, embracing tin main line and the Kansas l'acilie line, is that tin- government has received, on ac count of Its subsidy claim, the sum of SH4,- 751,22!.75, which is an increase of sl\- 0y7.H13.78 over the sum which the reorgan ization coimrittee first agreed to bid for the joint property, leaving due the sum of Interest on the Kan .1:: Pacific subsidy. The prosecution of a claim for this amount against thr receivers of the I'nion l'acilie company in IXiIS resulted in securing to the government the further amount of $521.597.70. "The indebtedness of the Central l'acilie Railroad company to tin- government be c.ijne due January 1. 1898. when default in payment was made by the company. The deficiency appropriation act of July 7. IX'.IS, appointed the secretary of the treasury, the secretary of the interior, and the at torney general a commission with full power to settle the indebtedness to the government growing out of the issue of bonds to aid in the construction of the Central Pacific and Western Pacific roads, subject to the approval if the president. "An agreement for the settlement of this indebtedness was entered into between the commissioners and the railroad com panies on February 1, 1899. The amount then due to the United States for principal and interest upon its subsidy liens upon the Central Pacific and Western Pacific railroads was 155.812.715.48, more than one half of which was accrued interest upon the principal debt. The agreement for set tlement provided for the funding of this amount into promissory notes bearing date ol February 1. 1899, payable respectively on or before the expiration of each successive six months for ten years, each note being lor the sum of $2,940,835.78, or one-twen tieth of the total amount due. The rotes bore interest at the rate of three per rent, per annum, payable semiannually, and had a condition attached to the effect that, if default be made either in the payment of principal or interest of either of said notes or in any part thereof, then all of the notes outstanding, principal and interest, imme diately became due and payable, notwith standing any other stipulation of the agree ment of settlement "it was further agreed that the pay ment of principal and interest of the notes should be secured by the deposit with the United States treasury of $57,820,0(10 face value of first refunding mortgage four per cent, gold bonds, to be thereafter issued by the Central Pacific or Its successor having charge of the railroads then owned by the company, such bonds to be part of an issue of not exceeding $100,000,000 in all, anil to be secured by mortgage upon all railroads, equipments and terminals owned by the Central Pacific Railroad company, the mortgage being a first lien upon the prop erty. "In pursuance of another provision of the agreement, the four earliest maturing notes were purchased by Speyer & Co.. March in. 1S9!I ; anil the proceeds, amounting to sll,- 702,51.1.12. and accrued interest to the date of payment, $35,771.02, in all $11,798,314.14, were received by the treasury March 27. 11-99, as part payment of the indebtedness of the Central Pacific and Western Pacific Railroad companies. The properties of the I various companies comprising the Central Pacific system were subsequent 1 v convevi d to a new corporation called the Central Pacific Railway company, which latter ex ecuted tin- mortgage and bonds provided for by the agreement of settlement. "fin October 7. 1599, bonds were delivered to the treasury department bv the Central Pacific Hallway company to secure the outstanding notes hi Id ie,- the treasure The I'nlted States, therefore, holds the notes of the Central Pacific Railroad com pany guaranteed by the Southern Pacific Kail road company to the amount of $17,- 050.172.3fi, bearing interest payable semi annually at the rate of three per cent, per annum, and secured bv the deposit of an equal amount of first mortgage bonds of the Pacific Railway company, thus provid ing, beyond any doubt, for the sure and gradual payment of the whole of this sub sidy debt, and providing In the meantime for the payment of interest at the rate of three per cent, upon the unpaid balances. The Cnlted States, through the settlement agreement thus entered Into will be re imbursed the full amount of the principal and Interest of the Central Pacific and Western Pacific debt, aggregating 555.812,- 715.48. "The amounts due to the I'nlted States March 1, 1900. from Pacific railroads on ac count of bonds issued in aid of their con struction were as follows: rch 1, 1900. from Pacific ftititrondn. j PHINCII'AI,. | INTEHKST. I TOT At,. fl.rtoo.om $2,152,54 s:i,7"i2.:kV>.M j 1,f128,:i20 2,578,077 68 4,206,997 .118 3,228,320 , 4,731,037.22 7,059,357.22 "Kfforts ate now pending looking to the collection of this indebtedness. "Out of an indebtedness of about $130,- 000,000, more than one-half of which con sisted of accrued Interest, the government has realized in cash, or its equivalent, the sum of $124,421,670.95, within a period of less than two years. No other administra tion in the history of the I'nlted States has ever so quickly, so thoroughly and so sat isfactorily enforced the settlement of large claims held by the government against business corporations, nor has any similar settlement ever previously been made by tlie government to such good financial ad vantage. The claims were due. The presi dent insisted upon their collection, and thiji was done in a prompt and businesslike man ner." iryf'inned to a blanket recently pre sented to Mr. Bryan in New .Mexico was the following' note: "Under the I republican administration the wool in tliis blanket sells for 22 cents a pound. Under the democratic admin istration it sifld for six cents. Please tell this to your constituents.-" At ! ! .st advices Mr. Bryan had not read lie campaign tip from the platform. —St. Louis G lobe-Democrat. people will continue to toil and spin, sow and reap, and gather into liarns. These platform carpen ters who live by polities may see in that an oligarchy, but their food and raiment would get. infrequent if 1 lie people were not at work in com merce lo produce the wherewithal upon which the workers feed as well as the non-producing- drones, like Bryan. San Francisco ( ail. US'What worries the democratic leaders most is the country's prosper ity. They can't ignore it and they can't discredit it. Perhaps t'-cv may discover that it is unconstitutional.— ' Kansas City Journal.. FIGURES THAT AM AZE Proportion of Our Imports and Ex ports in American Ships. Attack Centered on Only American l.ine in That Trnile —Some Lliieiiiiek of Our Shipping. In an open letter addressed to Gen. Charles 11. (irosvenor, chairman of tlie house merchant marine anil fisheries committee, Alexander B. Smith, of New York, a former member of tlie New York commerce commission, an swers an attack on the ship subsidy bill which has been favorably reported to each branch of congress. Mr. I Smith openly charges that the foreign I shipping interests, aided by the free ! traders and other enemies of Ameri- j can shipping-, are striving- with might 1 and main to destroy the one American 1 line now eng-aging in our trade with ' Europe. In his letter Mr. Smith says in part: "Mr. Peabody's assertion that 'the j cream of the subsidy is designed to j fall to those vessels of the Interna- j tional Steamship company,' is not only erroneous, but seems purposely . designed to prejudice the public : against that line—the only line, by the i way. engaged in our trade with Eu- I rope under the American flag. This | line has been singled out for the most I virulent, malignant and frequent at- ! tacks ever since the shipping bill has • been before the public. It has been I asserted, but without a word of truth, ' that it is controlled by tlie Standard Oil and the Pennsylvania Railroad companies. "That line lias been pictured as part of a monopolistic trust, whereas it is battling, single-handed and alone, against the most powerful steamship lines in the world. These other lines —all under foreign flags—are backed up with unlimited wealth and the support of their several govern ments to whatever extent may be nec essary to enable them to successfully compete for the trans-Atlantic trade. "The American line in question is struggling at considerable pecuniary loss to succeed and to still further in crease its tonnage under the stars and stripes in the face of this coneen : trated and united opposition. In doing so it has oeen subjected to the un bridled abuse of every free trader, every free trade newspaper, every enemy of American shipping, anc' every defender of foreign shipping in the United States. "If the stockholders of this line are ready to invest still further in Amer ican ships, in the hope of ultimately earning a profit, and are ready to sub ject themselves to the fiercest and most concentrated competition of the most wealthy and powerful ships in all the world under foreign flags, the American people will applaud and commend tliem. "The ueadly purpose of this opposi tion is manifest, when we study the statistics of the United States for the last fiscal year. Of the total foreign I»ailc of the United States. 07.07 per cent, is with Europe—more than two tWrds of our total foreign trade is with Europe. Of our imports from Europe, valued at $353,884,534, only $15,430,242, or 4..'15 per cent., was car ried in American vessels. Of this, the ships of the American line carried im ports valued at $14,513,033. (if our ex , ports to Europe, valued at $931>,G02,- 093, but $27.."i55.070, or 1.3(1 per cent., was carried in American vessels, lhn ships of the American line carrying exports to Europe valued at $25,077,- 749. "The value of the imports and ex ports carried in Ilie ships of this line was $39,890,782. out of a total of SIOO,- 012.201) carried in all of the American ships engaging in our entire foreign trade. The. ships of this American line carried within a fraction of 25 per cent, of all of the imports and exports of the United States that were car ried in American ships. If, therefore, the four steamships of the American lint —which rendered such exception al and invaluable auxiliary naval serv ice to our government during llie war with Spain—can be driven out of our trade with Europe, the proportion of our currying under the American flag in our trade with Europe will drop from Ihe present 2.15 per cent, of the total to but 0.2 (two-tcntlis of one) per cent. That is to say, the foreign ships now monopolize 97.85 per cent, of our carrying with Europe, and are striving with all of ilie power and in fluence at their command to increase their proportion of our carrying to 90.8, leaving for the stray American vessel that will dare to venture into that trade the carrying of 0.2 of our imports and exports! By driving I these ships out of our foreign trade, the proportion of the entire foreign trade of tne United States carried in American vessels would be reduced from 8.9 to just seven per cent., leav ing for foreign ships the carrying of 93 per cent, of our imports and ex ports. and the estimated $200,000,000 in freight earnings that are taken from the United States each year. "No wonder," concluded Mr. Smith in discussing this portion of his re ply. "the foreign steamship lines, and all other friends of foreign shipping, and every enemy of American ship ping concentrates his opposition on the \merican line the single heroic carrier of the American flag in our 1 rans-At.lantie trade." £-?Tn four states carried by the popocrats- Colorado, Idaho, Montana and Wyoming—bank deposits in creased from $15,000,000 in 1894 to $33,000,000 in 1899. The voters of those states must admit that, something was wrong with their financial theories in the last presidential campaign.— St. Louis Globe-Democrat. CARS RUN AT NIGHT. St. I.UIIIM TranMt Co. Hake* IMMlnct I'rogron* in Operating It* I.Sik-m. St. bonis. June 5. Last, night by the accidental discharge of a gun in the bands of John A. cierncz. a mem ber of the posse on guard fit the power house of the Transit Co. at I'roadway and Gasconade street. Wade Sargent, a non-union man.was shot in the right leg. His eotidilion is serious and amputation will have to lie resorted to. Sargent's home is in Medina, O. lie came here two weeks ago from Cleveland. St. Louis, June 0. The strike situ ation has assumed such a serious phase that yesterday 50 prominent citizens united in a telegram to Gov. Stephens, asking him to call out the militia for the protection of life and property. Negotiations between the I strikers and the Transit Co., looking j to a settlement of the strike, are oft' I for the present. From a rioting standpoint the day was comparatively ! uneventful. Assaults on passengers ; continued. St. Louis, June B.—Cars were run 'on one line of the St. Louis Transit ! system last night for the first time j since the strike was begun. The line j .elected to make the test is known as the Liudell division and is about four ' miles long. Every ear carried a po lice guard and in addition the thor oughfares along the route were pa trolled by police officers and compa nies of tin- sheriff's pos;.., the latter armed with shotguns, j The number of deputy sheriffs has grown to 1,200. The work of swear | ing in deputies continues. Twenty live sticks of dynamite were unearth ed by the police yesterday. Five j sticks were found buried under the Kasion avenue ear tracks at Easton ' and Yandeventer avenues and 20 addi tional sticks were found in an aban doned shed at Kroadway and Gascon ade street, in the neighborhood of a power house. The dynamite found on the Easton avenue tracks had been made into a bomb and placed under the rail. Had a car passed over it at the time it probably would have been j destroyed. Gov. Stephens ni Jefferson City has received many letters from St. Louis threatening him if he docs not call out the militia to suppress the riots, ami others threatening him if he does call out the militia. Yesterday he received a note reading: "It you do not call out the state militia in a few days you will be shot." Gov. Stephens says he has nor had the support of .'lie press and citizens of St. Louis in his efforts to preserve order anil that these letters are the natural result. THE WORLD'S COMMERCE. ICnjglaild 11 a* the l.ursral Share of It. < lonely Followed by <»crmau)' and the I lilted States. Washington. June 4. —Of the $lB,- 000.000,000 worth of commerce done by all the nations of the world, Eng land's share is 18.3 per cent., Ger many's 10 per cent., and 9.1 per cent, falls to the lot of the United States. So states I'nited States Consul Win ter at Annaberg in a report to the state department comparing the rela tive positions of the three leading countries in the markets of the globe. "Germany," he says, "has built, up her foreign commerce at England's expense; and the 1 nited States, just entering the field, is building up a great foreign trade at Ihe expense of both England and Germany. In Aus tralia. in Africa, in S< uth America ami in China, the commercial re pre-, sentniivcs of each nation are fencing for vantage ground upon which to build safe markets for home indus tries." Germany's success in competing in the field of commerce with her mightier rival, England, Consul Win ter attributes to several conditions. In the first place German manufac tured goods are cheaper and in some cases better. Then. too. German mer chants adapt themselves entirely to the wants of their customers, and in dustrial commissions have been sent to South America, South Africa, Mex ico. Japan and China, to study and report upon the needs of the people of those countries. Again. German traveling men are superior in the technical knowledge of their various branches and are familiar with more languages than the representatives of other nations. Their efficiency in these lines is tine to their training in !■ iceiiil institutions in Germany. 4o lo red I'coplc Swindled. Washington, June 0. Representa tive liansdcll, of Louisiana, and other southern members of the house have received of late many letters concern ing tin- so-called slave pension organ izations. I'ension Commissioner Ev ans, to whom the letters were refer red, says that certain agents of these associations and other unauthorized persons have made the introduction of the various bills a medium of earn ing' a living without honest labor. "There can be no doubt," Mr. Evans adds, "that the colored people of the south have been victimized to the ex tent of over $1,000,000 in connection with ihis maticr." I'ilteeil I'erMoiiN Injured. Omaha, Neb.. June B.—Thursday af ternoon as a passenger train on the Chicago, Milwaukee cd. London. June 5. The Daily Mail has the following dispatch, dated Mondav. from Shanguai: "Later re ports from Tien Tsin show that no British or American missionaries were among the refugees who es caped from I'ao-Ting-Ku. The safety of Ihe seven foreigners still missing is despaired of. Twenty-three of the French and llelginn party arrived wounded at Tien I sin. after terrible suffering. \ppnreniiy Chinese ofli eials w'.l! <' > nothing to prevent mas saeres unless the powers take vig ous action." Better Blood Better Health If you don't feel well to-day you can b* made to feel better by making your bio od better. Hood's Sarsaparilla is the great pure blood maker. That is how it cuies that tired feeling, pimples, sores, salt rheum, scrofula and catarrh. Get a bottle of this great medicine and begin taking it at once and see how quickly it will bring your blood up to the Good Health point. Hood's Sarsaparilla Is America's Greatest Blood Medicine. QRAIN'O THE FOOD DRINK. What is Grain-O? Coffee with all the head ache, indigestion and nervousness left out. A scientific preparation of pure grains, looking and tasting like coffee and costing one-fourth as much. Try Grain-0 to-day. All grocers; 15c. and 25c. ABSOLUTE SECURITY. Genuine Carter's Little Liver Pills. Must Bear Signature of See FaoSimlle Wrapper Below. Very small and as my to take as sugar. 'l s A D T rD *? HEADACHE. CAKi tKo FOR DIZZINESS. ITTLE FOR BILIOUSNESS. t HI VFR FOR TOHPID LIVER. H pj LI ? CONSTIPATION. H B* FOR SALLOW SKIN. Mfttii'unß FOR THE COMPLEXION ! . OCWUINIi »»»tii>yi;i»»»TU»l. . £B Cortta I Purely Vcffej CURE SICK HEADACHE. FOR RATES, MAPS, TIMB-TADLES, ETC., IP YOU ARE CONTEMPLATING ATRIP, ANY PORTION OF WHICH CAN I*E MAO 121 OVER TIL 13 GEO. J . CHARLTON, OLNERAL PAHSBXOEB AND TICKET AI.BWI, CHICAGO, ILLINOIS. wsMMlha Double Dal, y Service ><^39Newlineviaßock \ . 111' 11 / ford, Dubuque. \ / Waterloo, Fori s Dodge and Coun- X oilßlßffs. Buffet library-smoking cars, sleeping ears, free reclining cliair cars, dining cars. Send to the undersigned for a free copy of Pictures and Noter. En-Route illustrat ing this new line as seen from the car window. Tickets of agents of I. 0. li. K. and connecting lines. A. H. HANSON, G. I'. A., Chicago. Dainty Dusert* Can be made with Burnham's Hasty Jelly con. Delicious jellies from purest ingredi ents. Dissolve a package in hot water anc set away to cool. Get a package at youi Grocer's to-day. Tiiere are six flavors: orange, lemon, strawberry, raspberry, peach, wild cherry and the unfavored "calfsfoot" for making wine and coffee jellies. BE INDEPENDENT!t Va"l".T *sUiVi!ll!oiN'vial'l.|A! (U.'mihMA? RKADEKS OF THIS PAPER DESIRING TO BU V ANYTHING ADVERTISED IN ITS COLUMNS SHOULD INSIST UPON HAVING WHAT THEY ASK FOR, REFUSING ALL. SUBSTITUTES OR IMITATIONS. I CENT Pr. Sq. Ft. Including' cape and nails, for the bent Red Rop Rooting. SuhKtituteß lor PlaHter. Samples free Tilt k W 31 A.\ ILL A liOOFINU COMPANY. lAIIULN, S. J CURES WHEHt ALL ELSE FAILS. ftT hm! Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use In time. Hold by druggists. |M q^iasEßSßaßEia^i