-ViJ. w WANTQ Of all kinds are supplied nUC All classes of Advertisers hare UllUan opportunity to utilize the clas sified columns pCUT or THE DIS PATCH. The Ufcll I small "Ads" are well read. They area good A lAnRFi and sure Investment. M lYUnUr - v tnronch me uaeccsi A WORD cotnmn PATCH Sltua xtmou ofTHEDIS- ft vlll. tions are e- cored quickly. The "Adlets' HELP. are growing in popularity. . prataag IWttjft FORTY-SIXTH TEAR VICTOR MD VICTIM Tell of the Features "Which Von and Lost the Great Ohio Campaign. THE GOVERNOR'S REASONS Are Xuniorous, While the Governor Elect, Who Ought to Know, THIMS TBE TARIFF DID IT ALL. Colonel Frank Burr Writes That Foraker Will Defeat Sherman. HAKEITI HAS TAKEN A BIG CONTRACT rRPICIAIi TELEGRAM TO THE DISPATCH.! Colttmbcs, Nov. 8. The temper of Ohio politics is 93 degrees. The Republi cans are as much disturbed as the Demo crats. Some people think that Mr. JToraker is making a bluff and does not really intend to be a candidate. That is entirely a myth. The controversy between the Sherman and Foraker forces is as arbitrary and complete as ever was known in American politics, and when the fight is ended Ms Foraker will have the bet of the game. In the first place Ohio polities is a prob lem to any human being. The manner of the defeat of Governor Campbell stumps the average citizen. In Cincinnati, where he was expected to lose 6,000 votes, he gained 4,000. The greatest statesman in Ohio said that was on account of the liquor interest'. Hut there are larger lessons in tbe result in Cincinnati, or the liqnor in terests. Ohio has settled one question, and that is that protection to American indus tries is a part of her cardinal life. A Mystery That It Was Not Worse. It is simply a mystery that Campbell was not beaten by 50,000 instead of 21,000. There was no support from the outside. There was little harmony at home. Mr. McKinley was in a position to own the earth. Hence the result. Nobody recog nises that fact better than Governor Camp bell, who "peaks of the free silver craze as the "crowning issue of this defeat" Gover nor Campbell looks upon the result with much complacency. He feels exceedingly well for a man who has been turned down in perhaps one of the most remarkable fights that has ever been made in this State. Speaking of the contest he said: "Yes, we were beaten: there were many instru mentalities tended in that direction in fact, many agencies conspired against us. The Australian ballot system worked againt the Democracy. "Where we ex pected to win with the Alliance, or the People's party, we lost. It was the general expectation that the Republicans would follow in the lead in this new idea, as they did in Kansas, but the result shows that they did not. It was only Democrats who vofed for the Farmers Alliance candidates. .ot-Kanning-After Kds This Tear. ""lais was entirely unexpected, because, as a rule, the Republicans run off after these fads instead of tbe Democrats. The Ger mans, who, in a controversy like this, are usually our friends, could not fathom the Australian ballot system, and we lost hun dreds of votes from that cause. I have hun dreds of letters stating this to be a fact. As a rule tbe German character does not hunt after new arrangements, and especially in the country districts they are stubborn and do not like this new-fashioned way of vot ing. That is the reason that we lost heavily in the country districts, where we should have gained." "WThy did the Democratic farmers take hold of this combination?" "That I do not Know, but the fact re mains that the Farmers' Alliance, as we find it after the election, was an organiza tion of Democrats in Decoeritic counties, and existed only with the people who could influence the Democratic results. "Wher ever it existed in Republican districts, it melted away before the voting began, and the party ticket was supported with the old time zeal." "Tbe Farmers' Alliance cut no figure in the fight, encept to injure us. Whatever might Lave been its original purpose, it simply contributed to Republican success. I have many letters upon this subject that furnish some interesting statistics. Here is one township in Seneca county, in which there is not a Republican voter, where this fourth party gets a vote of 106, every one of which was Democratic. "We got a blacK eye in every rockribbed Democratic county in the State in the same way. Even the Prohibitionists decreased their vote by 7,000 o 8,000, and that helped the Repub licans." "What about free coinage?" Silver Kept Away Contributions. "There was nothing in the silver ques tion. It lost us the support of the business men of the East, and closed the gates against us in all of the financial centers of the country. This made the State Central Committee bankrupt from the time it opened the campaign. Bat after all, this contest teaches many useful lessons. Nat urally, Ohio is a Republican State, and when we carry it it is, to a greater or less extent, an accident, and therefore I feel that we have lost nothing in this fight. Mr. McKinley has carried the State by about the average plurality, in spite of all of the differences that have existed in our ranks upon local questions." "Governor, what support did you get fromVirgil P. Kline and Lawrence T;Neal, who were raudidates against you for the nomination?" "Mr. Kline gave me a hearty and loyal support. He worked hard for the success of the ticket. As to Mr. Neal, I have noth ing to say as to what he did to aid the Dem ocratic party. I am willing to leave that to others." F. A. Bubb. IDEAS OF THE VICTOR. -MnJo McKinley Talks of the Winning Fight He Made in Ohio. New York, Oct. 8. Special Governor-elect "William McKinley reached New York from Canton, O., at 11 A. 31. to day. "With his wife, who accompanied hire, he went direct to the rooms of his lirotLcr Abncr, at the Hamilton HoteL After a dm e about town and through the j--nrk he returned to the hotel for lunch, and 'Ihonloran hour he talked to the newspa per men. He was first asked nbout the re s' cent contest in his native State. Jt was a very interesting campaign," he Mid, "and purely impersonal. The great issues made by both parties were squarely fought out. They were, of course, the tariff and silver. There were no side mat ters of importance. The people showed a strong interest in both questions. Gov ernor Campbell made a strong campaign. I think his personal qualities helped him much." Major McKinley was asked which issue, in his opinion, proved the strongest. "That is only a matter of conjecture," he said. "But we made no Republican gain in either Cincinnati or Cleveland, the great commercial centers, where the silver ques tion was more likelv than anvwhere else to influence the result" Major McKinley would say nothing about Presidental possibilities for -1892 in either party. HARRITY'S NEW CABINET. HE WANTS A CLEVELAND DELEGA TION FROM PENNSYLVANIA. In Return He Will Be Recognized by Both, the Ex-Prcsldent and Governor Pattlson as the Party Leader Chairman Kerr Very Willing to Retire. rrr.ot a staff coRRrspojfDEXT.l Hareisbthig, Nov. a "Who will lead the Democrats in Pennsylvania, is the ques tion that is agitating party followers throughout the State. The answer comes a trifle indistinct and uncertain, but the an swer is "William F. Harrity, although he is more unpopular to-day than he has ever before been. As the accepted -leader of his party in the late fight he is of course ex pected and compelled to stand the brunt of the defeat and in the accumulation of disas ters the Secretary of the Commonwealth is for the time fairly buried under grievances, petty and profound. Had he won the bat tle, it would have been different But while Mr. Harrity may never be the candidate of his party for Governor, he will, for a time at least, be the acknowledged leader, whether his leadership in the last contest was satisfactory or not His posi tion fixes that It is an open secret that Mr. Harrity and State Chairman Kerr were not pulling together with the harmony of a well-mated team in the campaign just closed. Mr. Kerr was a faithful chairman, however. He worked industriouslv for his party and he has taken chances that might tuutiucicuucsperaie, out he has won no place that gives him power, and as he has wearied of the chairmanship he will drop out of command, and if he can be elected Chief Clerk of the House of Representa tives at Washington he will be content as a follower and not a leader of his party. ...... ju a ucpariure jaarruy is su preme, and he will sooner or later creep out lrom under the wreckage of last Tuesday, and will, until the nextPresidental election at least, be the accepted boss of Pennsyl vania's Democracy. Harrity is Cleveland's acknowledged representative in this State. He will he agreeablv burdened with the re sponsibility of sending a Cleveland delega tion to the next National Convention, and while he is engaged in the ex-President's campaign he will have no one to question his authority or to interrupt his leadership. If Cleveland should be elected, as his nomi nationseems to" be conceded, then Mr. Har rity will beyond question become the ad ministration's sole agent for the distribu tion of postoffices and other Federal places in Pennsylvania. No man in Pennsylva nia stands closer to ex-President Cleveland than Mr. Harrity, unless it be Governor Pattison, and the Governor's faith is firmly fixed on his Secretary of State. With Governor Pattison and "ex-President Cleve land both standing firmly at Mr. Harrity's racK ne is ine jeaaer oi me .Democracy in this State, and he will continue to be the leader for several vears Jto come. As Grover ClevelanbTwTJhTar'sayhal's'coirdiTion,"" nota theory,'" and that condition supplies a positive answer to the question that is just now agitating the Pennsylvania De mocracy GREAT REFORMS PROMISED IN BEHALF OF THE NEWLT-ELECTED OHIO LEGISLATURE. Congratulatory Addreis of the State Com mitteeWhat Slay Be Expected or the New Body The State to Be Again Redis tricted Political Jealousy. Columbus, Nov. 8. ,SperiaZ. Chairman Hahu and-Secretary Matthews, of the Re publican State Committee, have issued a cir cular to the Republicans of Ohio, as follows: You have won a glorious victory in a cam paign of national importance. It was a contest for principle, and its effect cannot be hounded by State lines nor limited to a single campaign. Ohio has again pointed tho way to the nation, and the Republicans of every State are rejoicing with you in the significant Indorsement of the Araericnn principle of protection, as embodied in the McKinley tariff law and the sound doctrine of honest money, as enunciated by the legis lation of the last Republican Congress. It is upon these issues that the next na tional campaign will be waged. With a can didate for Governor conceded bv men of all parties to have conducted his ranvass on a plane commensurate with tho gravo Im portance of the issues Involved, and tho dignity for the higli office for which he was nominated, your triumph! is indeed signifi cant and gratitying. Your matchless stand ard bearer and the whole of your excellent State ticket are elected by majoritiesgreater than those usually given in Presidental years. You have chosen a Legislature more strongly Republican in both branches than ever before elected in the history of the party. Upon this splendid achievement, in behalf of the Hepublican State Executive Committee, we heartily congratulate you. The incoming Hepublican administration can confidently ho depended upon to cor rect the partisan abuse, mismanagement and extravagance which have characterized Democratic rule in Ohio during the past two years. The next Legislature can be lelicd upon to promptly repeal the in famous gerry mander bv which the majority party of this State has been deprived of its rightful and equitable representation in the popular branch of Congress. The election of a United States Senator will be accomplished with due regard to law, ana witnous corruption, scandie or disgrace. The infamous scheme of the Democracy of Ohio, proposed in the last General Assembly, to steal 15 or 1G of Ohio's electoral votes for a Democratic President, will bo consummated, and Ohio will In the future, as in the past, be per mitted to cast her electoral vote as the ma jority of her people decides. In these results you may well rejoice, for they are just cause for congratulation. There is not a little jealousy between the State Committee and the Republican League over who did the work of the campaign, and they are watching each other with a great deal of anxiety. THE SCHEME TO OUST BBICE. Ohio's State Senators See One Way to Settle the Senatorship. Columbus, Nov. 8. Special Tele graphic interviews have been had with a number of members-elect of the new Re publican Legislature which will in January elect a United States Senator to succeed John Sherman. Including Hamilton county, and not counting Cuyahoga, as no members were talked to in Cleveland, the roll stands as follows: Foraker, 20; Sherman, 13; re ported for Foraker, 8; reported for Sherman, 9; declined to talk, 10; undecided, 4. Other counties are vet to hear from, but this is a fair index of the feeling in Ohio, and the probable result One ofthe Senators-elect, John Bain, of the Sixteenth district, ?aid he was in favor of unseating Calvin S. Brice and choosing both Sherman and Foraker. Senator Hildebrandt, of Ashland, remarked: "The convention at which I was nominated in dorsed Senator Shermau and pledged the support of this, his own district, to him for' re-election. 1 shall be guided by the wishes ofmypjrty in this regard, but I am for oiMmg Brice and electing both Shermau and Foraker." MINERS 'WILL FIGHT To the Bitter End Against the Prom ised Return of Convicts. AGGRESSIVE ATTITUDE ASSUMED. Imprisoned Toilers in Neighboring States to be Beleased. ONE COMPANY ABANDONS THE CONTEST rsFECIAL TXLEOBAU TO THE DISPATCH. Knoxvhae, Tenx., Nov. 8. Any one who might have visited Coal Creek yester day or tolled up the six miles of mountain climb to Briceville, would have found the miners and mountaineers lounging about as though it was a holiday. In fact little work was doing in the mines, as everybody was waiting to find out what the companies pro posed to do about the demands made upon them for better and more legal treatment At Coal Creek the miners looked rather hopeful, hut at Briceville the men stood about, chewing slowly and silently, while the women denounced the State, the con victs and the owners of mines in shrill voices and with much twiUing of their mouths. Late in the afternoon a miner toiled up the steep and wild valley from Coal Creek to tell about the surprising way in which the owners of mines in and arotnd Coal Creek had agreed to the demands of their employes. Briceville was glad to hear this, and glad to know that their friends aown the valley were to have work and fair play. But Briceville had too much doubt as to tie way the Tennessee Coal Mining Company proposed to act to be loudly enthusiastic. The Proposed Return of the Convicts. Late in the evening, ju6t before dark, a bit of pews came which set them -all in a turmoil, made the happy faces at Coal Creek sad and wrathful, made the doubtful faces at Briceville lower with rage, mingled with that look of satisfaction which' comes at the fulfillment of a prophecy of any kind. Briceville had prophesied the worst and the worst had come. The news which the operator at Coal Creek had spelled from the wire was that the Governor proposed to send the convicts back at once and under a sufficient guard. When the operator announced it to a group of miners, there was an outburst of wrath, and when a messenger bore it to Briceville, which is most noticeably concerned in the convict matter, men and women shouted and swore and indulged in one-sided argu ments and threats. Here was all their work undone or rather to be done over again. Here was another long struggle and perhaps a bloody insur rection. At first tbe miners said they would attack the guards at the beginning and drive them back. The unnecessary danger of this became apparent, and it was informally decided thai they would simply await developments. If there was a chance to overthrow the stockades while they were building, this would be done. If they had to wait until everything was restored and a feeling of security came to the guards, than that time would he patiently and watchfully awaited. One thing was apparent, the miners and mountaineers were determined that never again should convicts labor in the mines of Walden's Range for, any length of.time. Determined to Drive Them Ont. "Itaint asif we was -young men with no families," said one miner who has dug tons of coal from the Briceville mines. "If we was that way, we'd pick up and get, but we've got families and we've bought land and built nests for our little ones. We can't give up everything and go away. Now I ain't got no money to move and I've got six young ones, not to speak of ma. She's nigh 80, but as hearty as a squirrel, and ma and pa lived here and pa died here, and now I'm here and I'm going to stay, and I've got to stay, what's more. So young man, you kin bet a dollar that there ain't goin' to be no convicts here, not if the whole State comes with them." The only place in the Walden's range that rejoiced without any bad news at all was Oliver Springs. Colonel Renfro, the manager ofthe big mountain mine standing near the ruins of the stockade, yesterday said that he and his company had done with the convict labor forever. He said that it was not only risky, but unprofitable, even under the best circumstances. When this news got around among the free miners there was great joy. They are to have a check weighman on equitable arrangement of car weights and no convicts. But the outlook for Briceville is dark indeed. Going to Invade Other States. The miners there say, and this may or may not be true, that the releasing of the convicts of the three stockades was but the beginning of an organized movement which will release not only all the con victs in the mines of Tennessee, but those of Georgia and Alabama as well. It is certain that the miners of all sections and States look upon the leasing of "zebras" with equal hatred. Whether such widely scattered plans could be brought into a general movement is extremely doubtful. There is no doubt, however,' that the Briceville and Coal Creek miners will not submit to the return of the convicts with out a struggle. Up to the present time these miners have never said they would do anything without doing it. Last" July they said the convicts would be sent back if they came. The convicts were sent back, and when they returned under military guard were sent back again. Then the miners agreed to an armistice to give the law a chance to relieve them. When the law failed to do anything they redeemed their threat and loosed the con victs. Now they have renewed their prom ise that convicts shall not work in the Waldeu's Range district The State will give them a chance to prove whether that promise is as good as the former promises. As the latest news is that the Governor proposes sending the skilled convicts under a heavy guard to the mines at once, trouble is expected before the week is ont Knox ville citizens expect that the dismantled stockade at Coal Creek, which has been left standing on account of a dying woman in an adjoining house, will be burned to-night, or to-morrow night at the latest COBBY DEPOSITORS ABE NERVOUS. The Equitable Aid Union Badly Bitten by the Bank Failure. Erie, Nov. 8. Special. Attorney C C Thompson, of Warren, Pa., representing the Equitable Aid Union, came here late last night and entered up the bond against the Union Treasurer, W. B. Howard, and his sureties. The bond is for $50,000, the Treasurer having had on deposit in the Corry First National Bank, which was closed yesterday, 518,000. The sureties of Treasurer Howard are President Allen and Cashier C. G. Harmon, of the defunct bank, and C H. Bagley and L. L. Bliss, also resi dents of Corry. The Equitable Aid Union was instituted at Columbus, Warren county, by Dr. Seaver, the Supreme President, 10 or 15 years ago, and has always made the Corry Bank its depository. The bank's attorneys state that the institution will be able to pay dollar for dollar one year from now', as it is thought the hcavv line of securities will all be realized upon by that time. Officials of the Equitable Aid Union say the order will only sufier temporary inconvenience, and that an extra assessment may be required to" tide them over. Notwithstanding all re- PITTSBURG, MONDAY, ports that the bank will be able to payoff all indebtedness, depositors are becoming very nervous and may take some sort of action to protect themselves, unless Bank Examiner Miller makes some sort of favorable statement very soon. A prom inent Spartansburg merchant had just drawn 511,000 from his local bank and deposited it in the Corry Bank the day before its closing. CRISPI'S NOVEL ADVICE. HE URGES FRANCE TO JOIN HANDS WITH THE DRE1BUND, And Accept in Return the Neutralization of Alsace-Lorraine Northern Miners Threaten to Strike on the Insurance Question The Gambetta Monument. Pabis, Nov. 6. L Matin prints a letter from Signor Crispi to M. Desmarets, of the Paris bar, in which, after saying that the Pope "is consumed with ambition and would sell his soul to regain temporal poVer for the Papacy," Signor Crispi expresses ap proval of the neutralizing of Alsace-Lor raine on the condition that France join the Dreibund. "Alsace, then," he says, "will be a 'bufler' between France and Germany." The Dreibund agreement, he adds, contains no word againstFrance. He concludes by appealing to all men to unite to preserve Europe from the scourge of war. A large number of miners' delegates met at Calais to-day and decided that unless the demands of the miners are conceded in a fortnight all of the miners of the North of France shall strike. They want the sick and pension funds to be managed by the Government instead of by the mining com panies, accusing the companies of a malad ministration of the funds. They also de mand a modification of the system of com pulsory cessation of pit work, which was arranged in order to reduce the outpnt. There were 120 delegates present, represent ing one-third of the miners of France, who are pledged to strike. The Gambetta monument was inaugurated atVille d'Auvray to-day. Gambetta's heart, preserved, was placed a't the base of the st&tue. THE SOMMEBFrELD TRAGEDY. One ofthe Wonld-Be Suicides Is Dead and the Other Probably Dying. Berlin, Nov. 8. The Sommerfields, father and son, who tried to commit suicide yesterday, opened the veins of their arms besides shooting themselves with a revolver. When found, both were bathed in blood. Felix expired Saturday evening. Sigmund still lives, although there is a bullet im bed(v,ci in his brain. Sigmund is conscious at interva, d there ;g a bare chance of his recoverv. lnSilS?T. Wished in 1873. It was 1 t s3i 5Tersion of a large num ber of private industnaoncer ,, panies during the -trSS: ing money lor the development or Tj;nr a seaside resort on the island of Ruges. HiZ. assets will thus be slow of realization. Sig mund's wife recently filed a petition for divorce. Both Sigmund and Felix married heiresses. Felix's wife is a daughter of tho millionaire Pinkus. All have been person ally extravagant Felix was an epicure and wrote cookery articles for Boencn Cour ier. Many creditors and small capitalists were attracted to the firm by the high inter est offered on deposits. WOODHUXLISM IN FRANCE. TennleC. Chaflln Says She Was Offered Colonelcy in the U. S. Army. PABia,-Npv. A Victoria Woodhull sod J Tennie C. Chaflin.are' about to opetTthelf propaganda in Paris. M. Vacquerie, Victor 'Hugo's executor, in a leader in the Sappel E raises Mrs. Woodhnll and predicts that er lectures will meet with such success that the Grand Hall of the Borbonne will not be large enough to hold the audiences. Miss Chaflin Lady Cook is credited with telling an interviewer that she had been offered a Colonelcy in the United States regular army. Dillon's Advice to ParnelUtes. Dublin, Nov. 8. John Dillon, speaking at Templemore, Tipperary county, to-day said that Irishmen the whole world over are' burning with pride and gratitude that the people of Cork had performed their duty so nobly. He appealed to the Par nellites to consider the hopelessness of their position and seek for a reconciliation. Timothy Healy declared that the landlord Orangemen supported the Parnellites and that Mr. Redmond had received fully 1,000 Conservative votes. France and the World's Fair. Pabis, Nov. 8. M. Fayette, Chief of the Ministry of Commerce, will probably be the Head Commissioner from France to the Columbian Exposition. He is the only offi cial thoroughly informed about the Chicago Fair. His appointment is opposed, how ever, in some quarters. M. Lourdelet, a leading member of the Chamber of Com merce, said: "I shall resign from the Chamber's Chicago Committee, as a business man ought to head the Commission." Another British Cabinet Promotion; London, Not. 8. Sir John Gorst, Under Secretary of State for India, has been ap pointed Financial Secretary to the Treas ury, in succession to William L. Jackson, recently appointed Chief Secretary for Ire land. A Socialist Elected to the Chamber. Pabis, Nov. 8. The Socialist La Fargue has been elected to the Chamber of Depu ties for Tille, capital of the Department of the Nord. Much excitement prevails in the town in consequence of his election. Limerick Now the Seat of War. Limerick, Nov. 8. This city to-day was the scene of a fierce conflict in which 40 soldiers and a mob of people engaged. Four soldiers were seriously wounded with knives. Six civilians were arrested. KILLED BY AN IDIOT SON. Walter Dooke Protests With an Ax Against a Nickname. OzAUK, Abk., Nov. 8. Sfrerfat News reached this city this morning of one of the most horrible murders ever committed in this county. The coroner was notified, a jury of inquisition summoned, and upon in vestigation it was found that J. C Locke came to his death from the effects of two blows on the head from the edge and one from the back of an ax in the hands of his son Walter. The deceased's head was split wide open and his blood and brains were all over the bed on which he was found. He was of un sound mind and about 80 years old. Walter Locke was a natural-born idiot and about 20 years old. He was taken into custody by the officers and will be confined in the county jail. The only cause given for the murder by the son was that his father had called him "Bud," a name that he ab horred. Three of the family were of un sound mind. Investifratinc Abnses on Americans. Cur of Mexico, Nov. a Mr. Sutton, United States Consul General in Laredo,, has arrived here for the purpose, it is said, of obtaining information concerning the abuses committed upon American citizens in Mexican territory in connection with the Garcia affair. NOVEMBER 9, 1891. THE HUNT FOR HERESY Gives Rev. R. Heher Newton the Topic for One of His Sunday Talks. WHAT HE THINKS IT ALL MEANS. Dr. Briggrs Defended and Praised Escaping From a 'Storm. for THE ONCE BAPID GROWTH OF CREEDS rSPXCXAI. TILEOBAH TO THX DISPATCH. New Yobk, Nov. .8. Rev. R. Heber Newton preached on "Heresy Hunting" at the morning serviee in All Souls' Episcopal Church this morning. Speaking of the Briggscase he said: "Doubtless this sud den escape from the storm, which is a de cidedly good thing, has been largely due to the ability of Dr. .Briggs. The light that he turned on scattered the clouds, and men saw the truth as they had not seen it before. This was to have been expected by those who knew him and who saw the mental confusion evinced by his opponents. But heresy hunters, as a rule, arc not disarmed by the force of reasoning. They are hardened, not softened, by the warm light of truth. They are not the more inclined toward peace when they discover their mistakes, but too often made the madder thereby. "But this storm must spend itself some where, and we are not to deceive ourselves by imagining all the danger is past The Presbyterian Church has simply struck the region of the theological trade winds, and she is called upon to readjust her rigging and move forward on a new course. Drift in a Dangerous Direction. "The trouble was that this sudden tack ing ol sails portended to many a drift in a dangerous direction. Now, there is a great call for a change of course on the part of the entire Christian church. New found knowledges compel the restudy ofthe dog mas and institutions of the church in the light of historic criticism and comparative religion. The.unbelieving croak at this, but churches are multiplying on every hand. We want more faith, but faith that is sim pler, freer, and more substantially fixed. Faith has been too much expanded in the past It has lost vitality by its over growth. "The church has "watered its stock of dogmas, and now it must liquidates Once creeds grew with such bewildering multi plicity that it would have defied any man from month to month to tell his own theo logical status. Learned bishops subscribed to directly contradictory creeds, ignorant of their mental confusion. From all this rank luxuriance of creed-making we are epitom 1,Ilsl our faith. We are moving into re- fions ortKonfrht where forms of faith must e elastic, where mty cannot be permitted to construct the faith itself. WUHk x- ""iys Demanded. "Men will no longer be bound w th Ut ter of tbe form, but by its, ...k.3!!?6 in spirit Then the dead hand of the past may not bo outreached upon us of the living, and our minds be compelled to square our thoughts by thoughts of the past "It has been abundantly proved by these discussions in the Presbyterian Church that no man can be found who thinks at all who is not heretical upon some point of the Westmiajster cpnfession.A.round three gilunils of faith, which 'Dr. Briggs has pjucituy auu auir mamiainea, me contest has been waged. Dr. Briggs could -not receive the Bible as the very word of God, and the reality of a revelation which Bible worshipers are clamoring for can never he conceded by modern thought to the Book as a whole. Again, some men are more impressed by the authority of the church than by that of the Bible, but the questionings of our age have dealt a fatal blow to any merely superstitious notion of the church. Men prefer the consensus of judgment on the part of competent men. Finally, reason must be the rockbed of onr faith, and Bible and church alike rest on it Only by reason can records of revelation and church philosophies be tested and tested satisfactorily." CHASED BY AN ALLIGATOR. THE EXCITING EXPERIENCE OF A EOT IN GEORGIA. He Finds a Mammoth Saurian Sunning Himself and Tries to Measure Him The 'Gater Gets Mad and Rnns the Lad for Two Miles The Capture. SriwANIA, Ga., Nov. 8. Special Young Stafford Jenkins, who lives at Egypt, this county, and goes to school in Sylvania, had a very exciting experience with an alligator, while driving from his home here to-day. The old saurian was lying by the side of the road, sunning himself, and Staf ford thought he was dead. As it was the largest one he had ever seen he thought he would measure it, and accordingly got out of the buggy, and, getting a fence rail for a measuring rod, he laid it down alongside the sleeping alligator. It was a ten-foot rail, and the end reached a little over half way alone his body. Staf ford pulled it up fora second measurement, and was just cutting a notch in the rail at the end of the animal's head when the 'gator awoke and yawned. To say the bow was frightened would but feebly express it He says it seemed to him that he was at the mouth of some dark and lonely cave. He recovered sufficiently be fore the alligator was completely awake to spring for the buggy and put whip to the horse. By this time, however, the alligator was alive to the situation, and gave hot pursuit For nearly, two miles pursuer and pursued went at lightning speed down the road, the distance neither lessening nor in creasing between them. Finally they came upon a party of men, and the mad saurian halted. The party gathered poles and fence rails, and advanced to attack him. A terrific fight ensued, and for awhile it looked as if the half dozen men would be vanquished and destroyed. Sometimes, with a sweep of his infuriated tail, the alli gator would cut completely in half a rail in the hands of one of his opponents. At last one of the crowd very thoughtfully punched out the eyes of the monster, and after that he was soon conquered. The alligator, they say, measured after he was dead over 16 feet inlength, and as to his circumference the writer would be afraid to venture an as sertion. This is the largest and most sav age alligator ever heard from in this section. GOT THEIB GOODS CHEAP. Retailers and a Clerk Conspire to Swindle a New Jersey Pottery. Tkenton, N. J., Nov. 8. Joseph Mayer, proprietor of the Arsenal pottery, for rob bing which several arrests were made yes terday in Philadelphia, estimates his loss at more than 573,000. He says that a con spiracy between his invoice clerk, William Sweet, and crockery dealers in Philadel phia and Trenton has been in existence about six years, and that they divided the profits on wares which he was accustomed to forward to them. Sweet would charge them on Mayer's books with only a small fraction of the value of the goods shipped. Sweet and his wife are held here, and besides the c:ockery dealers arrested Vesterdav. others will be arrested to-morrow. FtfES RtAITTb A DAT OF UNCLE JERRI'S WORK. The Agricultural Secretary's Third Eeport Ready for Reading. FARMERS TO BE CONGRATULATED Because of Aoundant Crops and let Very Well Sustained Prices. HOW RAINMAKERS ARE GETTING ALONG Washington, Nov. 8. Secretary Rusk, in his third annual report as Secretary of Agriculture, says that notwithstanding the inJ..t -"i.lrl of crops this year, values are well sustained, xie? emulates .uoif mo increase in the value of agricultural pro ducts over last year will be not less than $700,000,000. He states that during the first three months of the present fiscal year our exports in cereals alone have aggregated $76,000,000, adding that the indications now are that the jalesabroad.o .the surplus from our farms will, during the present year, largely exceed those of any previous year. Mr. Rusk notes the increase, by some $28,000,000 in the imports of agricultural pro ducts during the first ten months under the present law, by comparison with the same period during the last year of the old law, but emphasizes the fact that the increase is confined largely to articles not competing with home products, such as sugar, tea, coffee, etc. At the same time he states that the change in the rates has checked the importation of products which may be produced at home. Decrease in a Number of Imports. A decrease in tobacco is noted from $17, 000,000 to $6,000,000; a falling off In foreign barley of nearly $3,500,000; in eggs, $1,250, 000; in horses, a falling off of nearly $1,500, 000, and a gradual decline in the imports of all live stock. . Referring to the import of hides, ad mitted free of duty, he states that this causes a great depreciation in prices real ized for hides for home production, and earnestly recommends that the duty pro vided for in section 3 of the tariff act, ap proved October 1, 1890, be imposed in all cases where the Countries from which such hides are shipped have not granted equal concessions in regard to the admission of the agricultural products of the United States. In speaking ofthe inspection of meat for exportation the Secretary says: Our people demand something more than protection from communicable diseases. In most, if not all European countries, in spectors according to their reports, freely pass for consumption the meat of animals affected with foot and month disease, pleuro pneumonia, localized, tuberculosis, actino mycosis, and similar diseases which accord ing to the views and customs of this country must be condemned. But all the meat for the foreign market is inspected the same as tnat designed lor nome consumption. In this respect, as in others, wo have met the ob jections which have been raised to Ameri can products, and have not only removed tbe cause, but have gone beyond what was asked by onr critics. I am of the opinion that the inspection of animals, and their marking for identification, may he accomp lished for a sum not exceeding 3 cents per head, and that the cost of microscopical ex amination oj nogs win not exceed o cents per bead. More Money Asked for Inspectors. He earnestly recommends that Congress be asked to make an appropriation suffi ciently large to extend the inspection to all applicants. He estimates that the losses to our pork raisers during the pastten years owing to the prohibition by foreign countries aggre gate over $260,000,000. Pleuro pneumonia he regards as quite under control and lim ited in territory to two or three counties on .Long Island and in New Jersey, over which a morougii quarantine is e-xerciseo. Anc inspection of imported animals has been rigidly maintained. The Secretary points out the fact that for more than a year there has been no well authenticated case of pleuro pneumonia in American cattle exported to foreign coun tries. Mr. Rusk regards it highly probable that tbe people of foreign countries should be informed of our resources and facilities for supplying their wants, and refers to the work done in great Britain during the past year by the special agent of the department charged with introducing Indian corn and its products to the attention of Europeans as an economic and nutritions substitute for other cereal foods, and highly commends the work already done in this direction. The Secretary deems it the duty of his de partment to keep the farmer fully informed of the market value of his wares, in order that he may know before he markets his goods just what their value is. He congratulates the country on the suc cess of the experiments in the extraction of sugar from Borghum. Good Work of the Weather Bureau. In all our efforts toward diversifying our crops, climatic conditions must play an im portant part, and in this connection he de clares his conviction of the importance and I value to agricultural interests ot the trans- VEHICLE LICENSE PAID HERE:: BECKONING. fer to his department of the Weather KnnM W f ,be neensinn in hlVhlv rnm. mend the selection by the President of Prof. Harrington as the "-bief of the Bureau. V Ji? The Secretary notes witT(SVmjlne general and growing inte 'n jf classes in this country in i''V culture and the work of hi.ar v ii til In reviewing the work of the'Jr::K "VOrf chemistry with reference to tlai. iV tion of foods, the Secretary emtlhasrzii3 neciallv the adulterations of coffee, which are found to extend to a very large percent age not only ofthe ground cofiee, but ofthe coffee bean, wholly artificial beans having been introduced into the market, of which many samples bought on the open market were found to largely consist These arti ficial beans are sold to the trade at i cents a pound. In large measure they are im ported, and the Secretary urges that such importations, as well as their manufacture and use in this country, be absolutely pro- Thereport reviews the work of the sev eral divisions of the department, and con cludes with the statement, made advisedlv, "that each one of more than a dozen divis ions whose work I have reviewed has re turned in actual value to the conntry dur ing the past year far more than the entire annual appropriation accorded to this de partment.'' Tho Experiments in Ralnmakinjr. Tonehing the experiments in producing rain, he states briefly that they have been made, but thaf he has no data yet at hand .which would justify him in expressing any conclusions on the subject In concluding his report Secretary Busk states that from the time he assumed the reins of office he has devoted his personal attention to a general enlargement ofthe scope ofthe work ofthe department In the interest of practical agri culture, especially to the extension of mar kets for the disposal of the surplus of our great staple crops. He points out that to fully carry out his views will unquestion ably involve liberal expenditure, but he says that within 20 years the efforts of the department on such lines as he has laid down will have increased the value of our annual aericultural products from between $3,000,000,000 and 4,000,000,000 to at least twice that enormotn sum. rBicnoir in lacey's offiox. The Comptroller's Position Is Not at Pres ent a Bed of Roses. Washington, Nov. 8. Special It is understood that certain prominent bankers have urged the President to take some ac tion to restore that confidence in the na tional banking system which has been badly shaken by the recent exhibitions of thefact that theGovernment supervision, which is the basis of public confidence in the national banks, is not, as at present con ducted, efficient enough to protect the public In addition to the outside in. fluence brought to bear lor the removal of Comptroller or the Currency Lacey, there is said to be friction in his office. Deputy Comptroller Nixon and Chief Clerk Han ford are understood to be hostile to each other, and the Comptroller Is said to rather side with the chief clerk, while the deputy, who is from Indiana, has the ear of the President. Whether this friction in the office is sufficient to result in the removal of Mr. Lacey it is impossible to say. Secre tary Foster declines to discuss the matter at all, saying that the appointment is one made by the President and he has no voice in the matter. How far a mere change in the head of the Comptroller's office would go to restore pub lic confidence is a question, though it would seem that there is room for improvement in the methods of some at least of the bank ex aminers and that a greater measure of pro tection could be afforded by a more strict observance of the present laws. There is no doubt, however, that better results could be attained with certain modifications of the national banking laws, especially in the di rection of increasing the responsibility of uiremurs auu making it certain tnat every director will attend to the duties assigned him under the law. GOING TO WEB A DUKE. A Daughter of Senator Mitchell to Become a Dnchess by Marriajre. Washington, Nov. 8. Special Washington society is greatly interested in the announcement to-day of the engage ment, in Paris, of Miss Mattie,M. JVIitchell to Duke Francois de la Bochefoucauld, of France. The date of the marriage has not yet been definitely fixed, but it will take place in the near future. Miss Mitchell has been one of the most popular young ladies in Washington society. To a graceful fig ure and beautiful face she adds a grace and charm of manner, a refined taste and much cultivation. The family of la Rochefou cauld is one of great celebrity, whose orig idal seat was the town of la Rochefoucauld, near Angouleme. Miss Mitchell, who is now with her mother in Paris, where she was educated, is the youngest daughter of Senator J. H. Mitchell, of Oregon. The elder daughter, who possesses much of the same stvle of beauty that has made her sister the be'lle of several seasons, ishe wife of a Navv De partment clerk, a member of an old Wash ington family, having married him when very young a'nd during her father's first terrn as Senator, about 14 years ago. She was in her girlhood, and is yet prominent and popular in Washington society. THREE CENTS HORBORJU ML Eight Men lose Their Iiye3 and Several Others Can not SnrriYe. A mmcoKE EXPLOSIM, Caused, it is Thought, by a Defec- 4 tive or Broken Safety Lamp. j THE RECOVERY OP SLX CORPSES. Heartrending Scenes About the Mouth of the Fatal Shaft. AIL OF THE YICTI1IS WELL-KNOWN 3IE5 rSrICIAI. TZLXCBAM TO THE DISPATCH.! WrLKZSBAEEE, Nov. 8. A terrible mino accident, which resulted in the immediate death of six men and the fatal injury of five others, two of whom since died, occurred in No. 1 shaft of the Susquehanna Coal Com pany at Nanticoke, late this afternoon. Tha following is a list ol the dead, with the fam ilies they have left: CALEB GETHTNGS, wife and six children. JOHN AB"OT, wife and three children. WILLIAM JONATHAN, wife and threa children. JOHN J. WILLIAMS, wife and four chil dren. HENRY R. JONES, wife and two children. THOMAS LLOYD, aged 15 years. DAVID L. SMITH, died to-night. WILLIAM WlLLIAMSsoh of John J. Will, iams, died to-nighf" The fatally injured ar.e: Thomas Thomas, David Powelfand David W. Evans. Tha others opthe party were burned severely. .vT , i , It. " ,, .,i , i -r" 9 1& this morning 15 of the best Jen in the employ of the company were sent down to the bottom of the shaft to do some necessary work. Good progress had been made until about 4 o'clock, when the engineer heard a violent explosion that jinde the earth quake under his feet. Ho ,-fnre realized what had happened. & j. '' - Fearful Scene in the Shaft. rsV ', P irriage, with several employes who wereNy .nging about the engine room, was at once powered. When the men on the car riage, reached the bottom of the shaft a hor rible' sight met their gnze. All the men were lying on the ground. Some were dead outright, being burned and mangled in a horrible manner. Othere were in the agonies of death, suffering the most excru ciating pain from their burns. Help was at once sent for. Two physicians were tha first to be lowered down into the pit They were accompanied by the mine officials, who brought cotton, oil and blankets with them. As quickly as possible tbe clothes were taken from the injured and their bodies bathed in oil and afterward wrapped in cot ton and blankets. They were then taken to the surface, placed in ambulances and con veyed to their home?. The dead were the last to be brought up. There were six of them. Four of the num ber were burned almost to a crisp Th other two were-badly disfigured bat their features were recognizable. FitiaDle Grief of the Bereaved. Heartrending scenes were witnessed at the mouth ofthe shaft when the dead bodic3 were brought up. The news of the disaster had spread like wildfire, and thousands of people had collected. In the throng were the wives and children of the victims. Their grief was pitiable to behold. Every time the cage wa3 hoisted from the bottom ofthe mine containing the dark form of one ofthe victims, women and children would crowd, around, and, despite the efforts ot the mino employes, insisted upon clasping the blacic forms to their bosoms. The little girl recognized her father where the wife had failed. "Yes, mamma, that' papa; don't yon see his new shoes?" This morning the little girl's father had put on a new pair of shoes which he purchased last evening. The dead were placed in the engine house and the Coroner telegraphed for. Later a Justice of the Peace swore in a jury and the- remains were viewed and then ordered re. moved to the homes of the afflicted families A large concourse of people followed tho ambulance. AH Were Representative Citizens. The dead men were representative citi zens in the town of Nanticoke. They all owned their own property. Henry R. Jones was the Town Clerk. William Jonathan was considered one of the best miners in the anthracite region. Caleb Gethings, another' victim, was an expert on mine gases. Thomas Lloyd, the driver boy, had just gone down the shaft. Five minutes after ward the explosion occurred. The men had almost completed their day's labor when death came upon them. General Superintendent Morgan arrived on the ground a half hour after the ex plosion occurred. He said the accident was a deplorable one, but he was not prepared to say, until an investigation was made, who was the cause of it. "They were all expert men who were at work in the shaft," he continued. "They needed no overseeing. They knew as) much about the management of gas as I did. The men were engaged in making a. new opening between the old and new shafts. There were some gas, of course, but I don't think, owing to tha excellent ventilation, that it had a chance to accumu late. All h3nds were working with safety lamps. The fact that thev did work with such lamps was a preventive against any gas explosion." One of the injured men said to-night: "I think the explosion was caused by a defective safety lamp carried by one of men. A minute before the explosion X felt a heavy cloud of gas coming toward where I was standing. In a twinkling I saw a flash, all lights were out, and I was lying on my back on the ground. I knew I was burned bad. I could hear the agoniz ing cries of my companions, but I was powerless to render any assistance." THE DAY ANAECHI3IS CELEBRATE. Chicago Police Hani Down a Red Flag From Lucy Parson's House. Chicago, Nov. 8. In spite of a drizzling rain 2,000 people participated in the dem onstration and memorial to-day in honor of Parsons, Spies, Engel, Fi3her and Lingg, the executed anarchists. There wa3 a.street parade, with red flags lurled and draped in mourning, followed by speech making at Waldheihi cemetery over tne graves of the dead anarehists. Addresses were made by Henry W. Eismonn, editor of the New York Baker's Journal; Morris Schultze, editor of the Arbeiter 'leittmg, and H. Miko lander, and they were all of the most revo lutionary character. The dead men were extolled as martyrs of the labor cause, and their graves were covered with flowers. Eighteen societies were represented, every one of which brought its floral ofleriug. One of these was a scaffolds of roses with the legend in German, "Though dead, they still live;. Long live Anarchy." Mrs. Lucy Parsons house was decorated with crape. Early in the day a red flag floated over the roof, but the police went to the house and took down the flag before it had been long in position.