9 " Me -p&$toxm UfAMTC Or all kinds re supplied W Mil Id throuchthe ONE CENT A WOKD columns llnDI of TnK DIS PATCH. Situa WfUni,tion are e cnred qnlckly. The "Adlets'l UCI D are growing In popnlarlty. ili.lr. flNC An claie or Advertisers hare UHt an opportunity to utilize the eias IHed columns PCUT'of THE DIS PATCH. The UtH I small "Ads" are well read. They area good A UflRn and sure Investment. "UllUi FORTY-SIXTH TEAS. PITTSBURG, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1891-TWELYE PAGES. THREE CENTS. mSwtoft A NEWJOVE Crisp atWortfortheBest - Interests of Party and- Country. NOVEL TARIFF BASIS Outlined by Mr. Springer, Who-ls to Succeed McKinley. NO MORE MILLS BILL FOR HIM. Manufacturers to Be Seen -Before Duties Are Ciangei No Tariff Bill to Bo Reported In Its En tiretyThe Raw Materials to Be Fa voredIt All Depends Upon Next Year's Election Whether There Will Be Any New Bill Other Proposed Departures From Precedence Com mittees Not to Be Named on the Lines Followed lor Many Years The New Speaker Thinking for Him selfOne of the Most Accessible Men in Washington. srxciAL TEtrGRAPnic better. Bcueau of The Dispatch. ) WASHHtoiror, D. C, Dec. 10. Speaker Crisp is not spreading his confidences around piomiscuously just at present, but enough has been intimated in the past 24 hours to indicate what will be his policy in the important matter of tariff reform. It seem1! now pretty well assured that Mr. Springer, of Illinois, and not Mr. Mills.will be the head of the "Ways and Means Committee ior the next two years. The significance of this is that the purpose of the Speaker is to have tariff reform, without substituting an entirely new measure for the McKinley act. It is known that Mr. Mills favors action by this Congress in the shape of a compre hensive revision of the tariff on the lines of tho former Mills bill. It is of course understood that such a measure, no matter how favorably received by the House, would not pass the Senate, nor be approved by President Harrison. But it would de fine the tariff istue specifically as it exists between the two parties, and upon these lines the Presidental battle of next year would be fonght. Springer's Ideaof aNeTrTarlfrBlIl. Mr. Springer is committed to another plan, namely, the parage of separate bills to reach what he regards as proper to be repealed in the McKinley act atthissession, but to proceed carefully in the preparation of a general bill. "My Met of a tariffbill," lie said to-day, "is to have the Committee on -Manufactures sub-divide itself into commjttees, and make a tour of the country early next year, collecting information respecting all manu facturers and the respect in which they are benefited by protection, or by the introduc tion of the free raw material. After all this infoimation has been gathered it can be passed over to the "Ways and Means Committee, and used in formulating a tariff bill that can be prepared during the recess and be ready for presentation at the lirst day of the next Fession. If the elections, which will then have passed, result in Re publican success, w e will not present the bill. If, on the other hand, a Democratic President is elected, as I think one will be, we will push the measure at once. ".Inpuficlu-ers to Ho Cotiulted. "I think the Committee on Manufactures, with able in estimators on it, should consist of IS members, tea Democrats and five Re publicans. This would make five sub-com-m'ttees of three each. They should divide the work, one investigating textile indus tries, another iron production, another glassware and pottery, and so on. This committee would be a sort of adjunct to the Waj s and Means. Committee, whicli could go on with its work, and then subsequently get all the testimony without a long list of hearings. "These sub-committees could go on dur ing the session and also during the recess. Their inquiries should not be conducted with a spirit of hostility toward the manu facturers, but with a view to ascertain the bottom facts, and ascertain in each case what, If any, degree of protection is needed, as I have a suspicion that frequently it is represented that they need a great deal more protection than is really the case. Information to Fight Tariff With. "It should be ascertained what is the labor cost on things produced; the wages paid; whether the work be steady or not; the profits on actual capital and not on 'watered' stock; the relative cost of pro duction here and abroad; whether there are tacit or direct agreements to limit pro duction, and much more information of a practical character. This information is not now to be had. The party could then fight the McKinley bill."' It is assumed that Mr. Springer reflects the position of the Speaker. The sug gestion of Mr. Springer was made bv friends ofthe Speaker, who seemed inclined to sound public sentiment before appointing a Chairman of the Ways and Means Commit tee. So fjr there has been general ap proval, and the Speaker feels that his choice will satisfy the party. 1 Iit 31111s Is Not Counted in It. Mr. Mills does not appear to desire the place, his ambition being now directed to ward the United States Senate. Early in the spring the Texas Legislature will be called to elect a successor to Senator Reagan, resigned, whose seat is now filled by the Governor's appointee, Senator Chil ton. Mr. Mills expects to oe cnosen to rep resent his State in the Senate. To place him at the head of the "Ways and Means Committee of the House, with a reasonable expectation that he would be able to serve but a short time in that capacity, would in vite complications and embarrassments when it came to transfer the work of the committee to other hands- From the manner in which he has started out it is evidently the purpose, of Speaker Crisp to conduct his office on a broad, na tional basis. As rpidly as possible he is informing himself on the views of the new members regarding what are known as tho general issues. His office at the Capitol ii practically open to all comers, and 'there ii no exclusion ofthe humbler members of his party or of those who opposed him in his canvass. He is honestly endeavoring to get the sense of the country through the mem bers of the House. A Change In Committee Naming. Speaker Crisp is discussing with the older members a scheme which will embrace a, change in the practice relating to the ap pointment of a Committee on. Rules. The practice has been to have this committee composed of fire members, the Speaker being the chairman ex-officio, and the other two members of the majority being the chairman of the "Ways and Means Com mittee and the chairman of the Committee on Appropriations. This practically put the control ofthe business in the hands ot these three persons. It is suggested and the suggestion comes from the Speaker that a Committee on Rules be created, composed of a reasonably lnrge number of the members, and these will, for legislative purposes, be the equiva lent of the steerinir committee. Under such an arrangement the party leaders would share with tho Speaker in the control of legislation. The result would doubtless be beneficial, and if the Speaker can satisfy himself that such an arrangement would facilitate business the experiment will be tried. Other Novelties Contemplated. Another change tlfat is in contemplation relates to appropriations. There are many appropriations, such as for rivers and har bors, the naval establlshmentacriculture, etc., which are not passed upon by the Ap propriations Committee, but by the com mittees having those special matters in charge. The separation of the appropria tion bills wasdone some years since, to cur tail Mr. Randall's power when he was at the head of the Appropriations Committee. The apparent effect has been to increase the aggregate appropriations. It is proposed to reunite these separated appropriations by having them all restored to the regular Appropriations Committee, which will be presided over by Mr. Hol man, of Indiana. "With the mention of that name no more need be said. His platform is to reduce the appropriations 5100,000,000 from what they were last year. Evident Purpose ofthe New Speaker. The above comprises the principal changes which the Speaker is now considering. Nothing has been definitely determined upon, and the newly elected presiding officer of the House is open to receive sug gestions from any quarter. He is carrying no revenges with him, but seems to be ds sirou9 of impressing the country that the Democracy is a national and not a sectional party. One of the first subjects to occupy the at tention of the Foreign Affairs Committee, after the organization of the. committees of the House by Speaker Crisp, says the corre spondent of the Associated Press, will be that of hari treatment of Hebrews by Russia. This question will b; earnestly pressed upon the attention of the commit tee, and it will be urged to go ns far as pos sible in cvprcssinc its sympathy with the Russian Hebrews in their distress, and to take sucli measures, consonant with the usages of diplomacy, as will tend to secure. u auicuuruiiuu ui lueir cuuuiuua. xms Government will be asked to continue the use of its good offices as an intercessory with the Czar in behalf of the Hebrews. Dea! In Line With the Message. The President in his message devoted some space to the question of wholesale banishment of Hebrews from Russia, and to the endeavors which this Government had thus far put forth in their behalf. The sub- I ject will be brought to the attention of the committee, prooaDiy y me miroaucuon oi a formal resolution, but the customary dis tribution of the various portions of the President's message will bring the matter before the committee in the absence of any resolution whatever. Representative Rayner, of Maryland,wbo was one ot the more prominent of the new members of the House in the Fiftieth Con gress, said this morning that he should not feck the chairmanship of any committee, but that he earnestly desired a position as a member of the Foreign Affairs Committee. He tool: a deep interest in the question of the Russian treatment of the Hebrews, and wished to be in a position where he could do the most effective work. He did not think his Coneressional experience entitled him to a chairmanship when there were older members in his State Congressional delegation, and he would be content with his two rocmittee assignments in the Fif tieth Congress, namely, places on the For eign Afiairs and Commerce Committees. An Idle Day 1 ilh Congressmen. About two score members of Congress were in and about the House of Represent athesthis morning, answering correspond ence, chattering, and listening to appeals for office and considering the now-absorbing topic of committee assignments. The House not being in session, it was comparatively an idle day for the members, but for the new Speaker it was one of arduons and un remitting toil. Mr. Carlisle, when he became Speaker, departed from the custom of selecting mem bers of the Committee on Rules regardless of their committee assignments, and made its membership go as a matter of course to the chairmen of the two most important committees, namelv, "Ways and Means and Appropriations. Speaker Reed followed the same course. The previous Speakers, Messrs. Randall and Keifer, had selected the Rules Committee with regard to other considerations. Messrs. Blackburn and Alexander H. Stephens being the former's associates and having otherwise special committee prominence. A number of Dem ocratic Congressmen urge a return to this policy, and represent that its effect would be to strengthen the Speaker. Keeping In Touch A itji His Party. The "Ways and Means and Appropriations Committees now have prior rights under the rules over other committees, and with their respective chairmen on the Rules Committee, which is the guiding or "steer ing" body of the nouse, the result is repre sented to'bc disastrous to other committees, whose business may be important. Mem bership on this Rules Committee, it is urged, should be high enough honor with out other committee assignments except of a very Ordinary character, such as the chairmanship perhaps of some minor com mittee. Moreover, as the chairmen of the two principal committees would be the managers of work originating with their committees, the Speaker would have these men as his active lieutenants in fiscal and revenue affairs, and the Rules 'Committee members as lieutenants in other proposed legislation, and altogether would have n excellent opportunity to keep thoroughly in touch with his party. It has been presumed that ex-Speaker Reed would be one of the minority repre sentatives on the Rules Committee, but under this policy such, perhaps, would not be the case, as Mr. Reed might prefer to lead the minority of the Commit tee on "Ways and Means. There are two sides, however, to the proposed method of constituting the Rules Committee, and the Speaker also heard the objections that were urged against the plan. The King or Gxoeoa lias Smallpox. Athens, Dec. 10. The illness from which King George is suffering, which was at first stated to be chicken pox, is now pro nounced smallpox. HOPES rlUBERTY Held Out to Mrs. Maybrick, the Fair American Now in an English Jail, BY HER NOBLE MOTHEB. An Affecting Meeting, in Which the Prospects Are Talked Over. MB. MAEIUS MAKES ADMISSIONS, The St John Divorce Case Enlivened fcy Evidence of Quarrels. ENGLISH EDITORS JDMP ON OUR BEN London, Dec. 10. One of tho seldom granted privileges to life prAners in Brit ish prisons was allowed to-day to Mrs. Flor ence Maybrick, the American woman who is serving in Woking Prison a sentence of life imprisonment on the charge of poison ing her husband, James Maybrick, a Liver pool merchant. This privilege was permis sion for her to receive a visitor from the outside world. For months this young woman has been immured in her dreary prison, and her feel ings may be better imagined than describ'cd as the time approached for her to gaze into the face of a friend and to hear something of what was going on outside of the walls. The time allowed by the prison regulations is but an hour. As the time for a friend to visit the pris oner approached, Baroness Caroline de Roque, the mother of Mrs. Maybrick, left her home in Rouen, France, and came to England. She at once proceeded to "Woking, and as soon as the officials allowed her to do so she entered the prison, andjn, a short time wasJe'r;nltt&.lo!3lurtlaughter., Holding Ont Hope for-Xlberty. Theh-meotinjr was most affectionate, and though the visit was made in the presence of a prison officer, the Baroness conveyed to her daughter intelligence of tbe efforts being made to restore her to her children and 'the world. She told her of the money that had been contributed by tbe people of the United States to pay counsel to procure her release, and of the Manchester fund which has been raised for the same purpose. 'J.he pale face of the beautiful convict lighted up with joy as she heard ofthe sym pathy of the women of America for her. Milch passed between the mother and daughter that does not concern the, outside worm. Y nen me prison omcer notiuea tne Baronness that her hour was up, and that she must leave the prison, she and her daughter, amid tears and sobs, tenderly em braced and kissed each other. The Baron ness then withdrew, and Mrs. Maybrick re sumed her usual prison employment. Caunot Endure Her Prison Fare. After the Baronness de Roque had left the prison she was interviewed regarding Mrs. Maybrick by a reporter. The Baronness said she found her daughter looking ill. She is intensely weak, and frequently an inmate of the prison hospital. She is unable to sleep, or to eat the coarse food given to the pris oners. During the course of their short con versation to-day Mrs. Maybrick said in de spairing tones to her mother: "I have done nothing. Nothing has been proved against me. "Why do they keep me here? Is it because I am apoor, little Amer ican girl? I cannot understand why they will not give mercy or pardon, and let you take me away. I feel deeply grateful to my American friends for all they have done in my behalf." Baroness de Roque said that Mr. Mat thews, the Home Secretary, and the prison officials always gave her the greatest facil ities when she "visited the prison. She de clared that Mrs. Maybrick is treated with the utmost courtesy by those in whose charge she is. Mr. liumley, tne solicitor, nas nad and is still having many conferences with Sir Charles Russell to "discuss new points in re lation to arsenic and arsenical poisoning. These points were not submitted at Mrs. Maybrick's trial. They are regarded as having such an important bearing on the case that both Mr. Lumley and Sir Charles Russell believe they will be sufficient to bring about the release of Mrs. Maybrick. A CASE OF MOTHER-IN-LAW, Mr. Marios Talks on the Stand or His Quarrel "With Miss St. John. London, Dec. 10. Mr. Marius, the de fendant in the St. John divorce suit, was still on ibe stand to-day. He denied the testimony given by Miss St, John that he had thrown his watch at her. He said he and his wife had had a quarred and he be came so angry that he threw the watch on the floor and smashed it. He denied most emphatically that he had slapped his wife's face or pushed her. The witness admitted that once, after a quarrel with his wife, he .tried to force his way ont of the door, threatening to leave the house. He said his first wife had been divorced from him on the grounds of immorality and de sertion. Mr. Marius declared that if it were not for Miss St John's mother and brother he and his wife could live happily together. He denied that he went to the Gaiety The ater and demanded 100 from his" wife. He hid no need of asking for that or any other sum. HOI BH0T FOB HABBIS0N. English Editors Say His Message Is a Vote Catching Paper. London, Dec. 10. The St James Gazette, commenting on President Harrison's mes sage, says the most important part in the document is that part having reference to the results of the McKinley tariff. The fig ures presented, the Gazette declares,compare significantly with British figures, which re main stationary. It is all very, well to say that the Americans will-presently discover J .- tlh. ." W y l -4fr ' . Una. MAYBRICg. ..je-BSR -&- ri i-!. A -r2 :. - .. . the mistake in their fiscal policy; but per haps they may not. In the meantime, the calculations of tbe supporters of the McKin ley bill are working out much better than anyone in England had reason to expect. The Globe sarcastically comments on the message, which it says is adroitly' traced on catch-vote lines. In some passages spread eagleism is served up hot: in others nervous J Yankees are assured that the Government knows how to climb down, as. in the cases ot Chile and the Bering Sea dispute. Lord Salisbury, the Globe adds, need not be much frightened at President Harrison's tre mendous menace and expression cf 'concern at foreign encroachments on territories con trolled by American Governments. If Venezuela passed uuder American control, the least that could be expected would be that the suzerain power would forthwith guarantee the Venezuelan debt. The Globe disputes the statement made in the message that the prosperity of the United States is entirely due to the McKinley bill. On the contrary, ,it says the prosperity of the country is' due to an exceptional harvest there at a time when Europe is short of grain. KHXED AND BOBBED HEE 805. An Awful Doable Tragedy In a tittle Tillage in Austria. Vienna, Dec. 10. The son of, a" peasant couple living in Wieselburg recently re turned to them after an absence of 16 years in America. He was much changed in looks, and, thinking to give his parents a pleasant surprise later on, did not disclose his identity, supposing that neither of them recognized him. This sup position was correct as regarded his mother, but his father recognized him, although he concealed the fact. The seeming stranger's request ior en tertainment was granted, and during a con versation which followed he showed his en tertainers the contents of a bag in which he carried 600 sovereigns. The sight violently aroused the peasant wo man's " covetousness, and - after her supposed lodger had retired for the night and was asleep, she cut his throat in order to secure the money. "When told by her husband that she hod not killed the stranger, but her own son, the shock she experienced was so great that she herself fell dead. KILLED BY A CORPSE. THE DEATH GRIP OF A WOMAN STB AN GLBS HEK MOTHER, Strange Affair That Occnrred In a Western Hamlet An Aged and Foeblo Woman's Terrlblo Fate The Awful Discovery Mado by Her Elderly Son. Cincinnati, Deo 10. Special. One of the strangest affairs occurred.Jast night at Elizabethtown, an insignificant hamlet on the Ohio river, ten miles below this city. The McDole family has lived for years in the most abject poverty. The mother is past 80. Besides her the family consists of son and daughter, each about 60 years of age. The son is a veteran, and greatly en feebled by wounds received in the war and aggravated by insufficient and indifferent food. Mother and daugnter slept together, the mother being very feeble. The daughter was the most robust ofthe three. The family retired as usual, lost night, and the son noticed nothing out of the ordinary, until early this morning, when groans from ".his; mother's room,calleuhim,ther.to"vtitnessA blood curdJing-sigut. ' " During the night the sister had been taken mortally ill. In her despair she had caught her aed' mother in her arms and pinioned her tight against her breast. At the same time the mother's head had been pulled down under the covers and partly bent downward, causing partial suffocation. The horror of the situation had caused her to faint, and while thus unconscious the daugh ter had died, hugging the mother. The icy arms had stiffened and the aged victim was held as if in a vise. Help was summoned, but it required the united strength of two men to remove the dead woman's arms and release the mother, who is so low from the shock and choking she re ceived that it is scarcely probable she.-can recover. SABGENPS F0BTBAIX 01 TOM HEED Attractlns More Attention Than Anything Else Now In the Capitol. Washington, Dec. 10. Serial. Sar gent's oil painting of ex-Speaker Reed at tracts more attention at present than any thing about the Capitol. To-day the por trait was removed a few feet from its former location, and now hangs between the crayon pictures of ex-Speakers Randall and Car lisle. Almost every member of both Houses of Congress has been to inspect it, and hun dreds of visitors stand before it daily, giv ing their opinions as to its value as a like ness and a work of art. The opinions vary widely, but' the con sensus seems to be that the portrait is most artistic, even if the likeness is not as cor rect as it ought to be. The chief criticism is that the expression of Mr. Reed's face is one that those who have seen him in the House are not familiar with, and there is no doubt this criticism is well founded. A MISER'S MISERABLE EHD. Overtaken by Death While Encaged in Coantlnc Over 833,000. -West Superior, Wis., Deo. 10. -aof.J Thomas Koeher came nere in 1853 from Pennsylvania, and that his time has not been lost since then was proved this morning, when a neighbor, alarmed at the old man's non-appearance, broke into his residence and found him stretched dead on his bed, a pile of gold beside him, a bundle of bills on the table, and a miscellaneous as sortment of Government bonds, mortgages and other securities scattered on the floor. Wealth to the amount of over f 22,000 was scattered about the room. Investigation showed that the old man had been engaged in counting his wealth when stricken by heart disease. G0VEBH0R. HILL GUARDED. His Friends Prevail Upon Him to Take Frecantions Against Cranks. t Albany, N. Y., Dec. 10. Spofcrf. In view of the excitement over Senatorial con. tests, and the frequent assaults of late by cranks, Governor Hill's friends have pre vailed upon him the necessity of his having a bodyguard to and from the Capitol. Heretofore the Governor has proceeded to the mansion from the Capitol at all hours of the night through the lonely streets unac companied. Now three detectives shadow him, and a watchman does duty in the Ex ecutive mansion grounds at night. CHARLIE EVARTB SUDDEN DEATH. An Invalid Son of the Ex-Senator Found Dead in His lied. "Wisdsor, Vt., Dec 10. Special Charles B. Evarts, son of ex-Senator W. M. Evarts, was found dead to-day in bed at his father's country place here. He was in his 47th year. Ho entered Yale College in the class of '66, but left before graduation and enlisted in the Union army during the late civil war. Afterward he entered the school of mines of Columbia College. He returned' to the family homenere, where He has aince lived. He, was never married and was on invalid, BLAINE WON'T TALK But His Friends Eefnse to Believe That He WH1 Decline to Kim. HIS-HEALTH EXCELLENT. State Auditor Poe, of Ohio, Says He LateljrSpoke of 1884, and DECLARED HE WAS COUNTED OUT. Shepard's Paper Still Harping on That Looked-For Letter. HARBISON'S BOOMERS TAKING HEART rSrECIAL TOLXOIUIT TO THE CISr-ATCTT.1 Columbus, O., Dec. 10. State Auditor Poe .returned to-day from Washington, where he called upon and had two inter views with Secretary Blaine. Mr. Poe says so far as Blaine's physical condition is con corned, he will be abundantly able for the fatigue of a Presidental campaign, and that the cry of ill-health cannot of itself oper ate to prevent his nomination, if he is will ing to accept. Mr. Poe is disinclined to ex press an opinion as to the probabilities in the matter, however. "I found," he said, "that Mx. Blaine's memory, which has always beon exceptional, remained good. He recalled having met me in 1884, during his Presidental campaign. He was passing through the State en route to Detroit, and I boarded the train on which he was traveling at one of the stations in Wood county. It was the day before our State election, which was then held in Oc tober. I introduced Mr. Blaine to the crowds that gathered at a couple of stations at which the train stopped, and he urged them to be loyal to their party, telling them that as Ohio went in October the country would go in November. Blaine Says He Was Counted Out. "Mr. Blaine spoke of this incident of his trip as familiarly as though it. had occurred but yesterday, and he also talked quite freely of other matters pertaining to his campaign. He made the remark that he was counted out in New York. This opin ion is, of course, shared by many who have not the same information on the subject that Mr. Blaine has. "I rode out from Washington in company with Congressman J. D. Taylor, and we be came acquainted with a Dakota gentleman who was a Democrat. We got to discuss ing Blaine, and the Dakotan said to us that he did not think the Democrats could nominate anyone able to defeat Blaine next year. He believed that he would unify and enthuse the wavering Republicans of the Northwestern States-.as. j,, no. othr man could.' ij- --$y??'.r' "Sc' , Ehepard's 'Paper Keeps K Up. The Now York Mail and Express has the following this afternoon from Chicago: "The Washington dispatch yesterday foreshadowing an authoritative announce ment of Secretary Blaine's future course In regard to the Presidental nomination has attracted a great deal of attention here to day. It was telegraphed from New York to all the morning papers and reprinted here this morning. Substantiating as it does the frequent publications of the rela tions and understanding existing between President Harrison and his Cabinet chief, yesterday's publication is regarded here as virtually takinir Mr. Blaine out ofthe race. as certainly as did his celebrated letter from Florence to B. F. Jones in Februarv, 1888. "Chicago is full of ambitious people, politically as well as in other ways, and with hundreds knocking at tne doors of only a score of public offices it is no wonder that President Harrison has had to decide in a way that has left heartburning and dis appointments rankling in many breasts. Hence the movement against his renomina tion, which the disgruntled ones started some months ago in many parts of the country, under the guise of a Blaine boom, has had some support here. Dismay Among- Blaine's Friends. "It can be imagined, therefore, how great was the consternation among them to-day when they read the Washington special. It was a bombshell in their midst, for despite the frequent warnings they have had that Mr. Blaine could not be made a consolation candidate for disappointed office-seekers, they have continued their efforts to drag him into a position of disloyalty to his chief, and nothing short of such" announce ment as that made yesterday could make any impression upon them. To-day, how ever, they find themselves in the position of boomers with nothing to boom, and some of the more discreet among them are beginning to fall into line with dominant sentiment here that Presi dent Harrison is entitled to a renomination. Thev now realize that it would be political suicide to stand in the way of the time-honored custom of the party to reward work well done, whether of the chief magistrate ofthe nation or ofthe lowest officer in their own local government at home. "Here in Illinois the unselfish and patri otic Republicans who want to win the great battle of next year are as solidly arrayed in favor of President Harrison's nomination, as in New York and other Eastern States. They are not trumpeting the necessity for him in the Democratic and Mugwump newspapers, but they recognize that the masses of the party are for him and stnnd with them in favor of his renomination." STANDING BY PROHIBITION. Iowa Temperance Folks Urge Republicans to Stick to Their Pledges. Des Moines, Dec 10. The fate of pro hibition in this State is a matter of con cern with politicians and people at the pres ent time, and a meeting of the Executive Committee of the State Temperance Alli ance was held here to-day. The result of the meeting is the issuance of an address to the people of the State of Iowa, declaring their loyalty to prohibition, and expressing a belief that the election was not a repudiation of prohibition. The address says that the Republican members of the General Assembly cannot go back on the platform on which they were elected, and also asserts that all votes against Boies were prohibition votes, ana that therefore the majority ofthe State is for prohibition. The address further says that prohibition has been a source of otrength to the Repub lican party, and expresses the belief that the Constitutional amendment of 1882 was legally addpted, and, further, that the Su preme Court will finally so declare. The address closes by urging all temperance people to renewed activity for the enforce ment of the laws. San Francisco Wants the Convention. SAN Francisco, Dec 10. At a meeting ofthe Citizens' Committee lost night a dele gation was named to go to Washington to confer with th Dnmocratie National Corn- Jmlttee and endeavor to secure the selection J Jg$z0 Just Enough English, Ton Know, to Keep Mm Out of the White Bouse. of San Francisco as the place where the next Democratic National C-vention is to be held. . Harrity Solid in4 faJ-fj, "- Bedford, Dec. 10. Fletcher, Chairman of the DemoStH? ty Committee, who is also a memberO'Vn Democratic State Committee, has announu'O himself, favorable to the election of Hon. William F. Harrity to the vacancy on the Democratic National Committee caused by the death of Hon. William L. Scott. COLD DAYFORWARMCASTLE. INDICATIONS THAT HE IS UELT TO BE BOUNCED. His Friends in Pittstrars Are Booming Him for Congress The Collector Calls Upon Commissioner Mason He Mnst Go and Case Will Probably Succeed Him. Collector Warmcastle's friends who are confirmed in the opinion that the Collector must either-resign his office or be turned out, are already booming Mr. Warmcastle for Congress in Mr. Dalzell's district. They believe that in their fight for Warmcastle ior Congress they will have the assistance of both Quay and Macee. Many of -the workers who heretofore were opposed to Mr. Warmcastle are now in the field work ing for him for Congress. A telegram from Washington last night said: "Collector Warmcastle called upon the Commissioner of Internal Revenue just before the department closed this after noon There had been some sort of an un derstanding that he would be informed at that time as to what disposition the Presi dent would make of his case. It trans pired, however, that the President had not reached a decision, or at least was not pre pared to announce one at that time. The Commissioner intimated that the Pres ident .and himself would probably hold another conference before final action w'ould be made public '.'On all hands it is rumored that Mr. Warmcastle will have to go This seems to emenatefrom the Internal Revenue Bureau, but official confirmation is withheld. An additional rumor has gained circulation (that the successor of Collector Warmcastle will be ex-Collector Frank Case, and that the appointment will be dictated by Con gressman Dalzell. In that event it is inti mated that Senators Quay and Cameron would appeal to Senatorial courtesy and have the nomination held up." SOKE FREIGHT RATES REDUCED. Important Action Taken by tho Central Traffic Association. Chicago, Dec 10. Special. The freight department of the Central Traffic Association has authorized the Pacific Com pany to reduce class and commodity rates between Chicago and various Indiana and Ohio points to the same basis now in effect between those points and Cleveland, in order that the company may forward traffic to and from Cleveland over its own route via Alliance. Chairman Blanchard was re-quested-to arrange an early meeting oflines interested in ice traffic for the purpose of fixing winter rates on ice from the various producing points to points in the territory of the association. It was decided that the same rates may be applied from Chicago to Benton Harbor and St. Joseph, Mich., that are in effect from Benton Harbor and St. Joseph to Chi cago. These are: First-class, 22 cents; sec ond, 18; third, 13; fourth, 10; fifth, 8; sixth. 7; grain and lumber, 7. These rates will take effect December 15. MISHAP TO A WHALEBACE. Her Rudder Drops Off, tea-fin Her a Helpless Hnllc at Sea. Astoria, Ore., Dec 10. The first whale back to visit the Pacific Ocean has met with a $250,000 mishap before completing her initial voyage. The British steamship Zambesi, from Hong Kong, arrived here to night, having in tow the disabled whale back steamer Charles W. Wetmore, out 83 days from Philadelphia. Though able to steam when discovered, she had no way of steering, the rudder hav ing dropped off, leaving nothing but the rudder frame. ALL ABOABD FOB 60UTH AMERICA. The First Dirt Thrown on the line of the Pan-American Road. Victoria, Tex., Dec 10. The first dirt on tbe new Pan-American Railway was thrown to-day in the presence of a large con course by Major Fly, of this place, and work was begun in earnest. It will be the shortest line to the City of Mexico by nearly 300 miles, and will open one of the finest sections on the continent. The line is said to have good financial backing. THIS JIOENIXG'S XEW3 DIRECTORY. Topic. Page. No Free Trade for Crisp 1 Mrs. Maybrick and Her Mother I Still Harping on Blaine 1 Crimes of Great Men's Sons 1 Quay in Allegheny Politics 3 Bitter Fight on Burled Wires 3 latest Phase of the Eewls Scandal 3 ARomance of Old Papers.. ..1 3 Editorial Comment and Social News .... 4 Niedringhuus Booms Plttsbnrc. 3 Analysis or the Armor Tests O The Senate's Biggest Bill Day 7 Denver's Sensjtlonal Murder Trial 7 Oleo Men Appeiil for Clemency. 8 Prinreton's Side ofthe Football Game.... 8 Caprivl on the McKinley Tariff.., 9 Yesterday's Hotel Arrivals. O Tenor of the New Pension Bills O Lawyers Toast the Presidents 9 All the Court H ue News 10 Oil Producers' Pipe and Field Work 10 Iron Markets and Financial...., 11 Christmas Home Suggestions...;....; 13 mL-Mf p3fcjliHBBl lrfll...slE3 SONS. OFGREAT MEN Blacken Instead of Brighten Their Honored Family Escutcheons. KIT CABSOFS SON KILLS His Wife's Father and Mother and Flees From a Posse. JOAQUIN MILLER'S BOY K0BS When Made Desperate by Hunger and Languishes In JaiL A CHILD OP PATE AND HIS ST0RT Denveb, Dec 10. A special from La Junta jays: Kit Carson, Jr., a son ofthe famous old scout by the same name, to-day killed his father-in-law and mqther-in-law and then made good his escape. About a year ago Carson married Miss Susie Richardson, but because of his drunkenness and cruelty she was compelled drai return to her father a home, which is in , 'Nine Mile Bottom," some 25 miles from To-day Carson went to Mr. Richard- - - "'se and demanded his ;, wife. The v-y .' man refused the request, when ,- fj. ji at mm, me oaii passing tnTOUgn both. 8. Mrs. Richardson, wh was in the kitchen, heard the shots and hurried to the room where Carson was and was shot directly through the forehead, dying in stantly. The murderer then mounted his horse and escaped into Bent Canon, headed for New Mexico. This is not the first shooting affair Carson has been implicated in, and if captured this time there is every reason to believe that this one will be his last. Poet Joaqoln Miller's Bad Boy. A San Francisco dispatch says: Harry Miller, the young son-ot Joaquin Miller, poet, wh"owas arrested on the charge of holding up the mail stage in Mendocing county, has been brought here. In an in terview in which bfc told the story of his life, he claimed that hunger had driven him to the crime. He said: ".Up to the age of 10 years I lived with my mother, Minnie Myrle, in Portland. She gave me into the keeping of my aunt at Goose Bay, N. D., and went East after my sister, who was being educated in a convent. A year after she left they told me she was dead." The next seven years of my life was passed on my aunt's farm. His Early Hopes Blasted. "I attended a little country school at Goose Bay, but the taste of education I re ceived there only sharpened my appetite for more. I wrote to my father at Oakland, CaL, teUing him ofc-ray"&Mffe?atfa"nd',sent forjne to work on his ranch. I was satis fied to So this, because I thought with tho money he promised me for my labor X could -or ' aii. itt,, ., , educate myself in the higher branches. When ho declined to pay, anger and disap pointment came over me, and I left him. I traveled about the State doing odd jobs, working in San Francisco as a messenger for the telegraph company. I drifted back to Oregon, and hungry and desperate, I joined a stranger In breaking into a house, but we were caught and sent to the peniten tiary. I escaped, and assuming the name of Joseph McKay, resumed my wanderings. Hunger Drove Him to Desperation. "One day, tramping through Mendocing county in search of work, I came npon a house which had been left unguarded. I was famished and ate my fill, then stole a gun and cartridges and some other articles and went on. Next day I suddenly came upon the stage coach toiling up the hilL The idea of robbing it came to me as an in spiration, and I stepped behind a tree and ordered the driver to stop. Had he shown fight I should probably have run away, be cause I was frightened and shaking like a leaf. When the stage disappeared I opened the treasure box which the driver threw me, in which I found a pair of baby's shoes, a couple of money waybills, but not a cent of money. Sheriff Standley arrested me at Santa Rosa, and I shall plead guilty and suffer the penalty. He Bears His Father No 111 Will. "I bear my father no ill will, and all I ask is that he keep away from 'me. If it had not been for my brother's letter my identity would never have been known, and I would have gone to prison as Joseph Mc Kay." Miller was held this afternoon by United States Commissioner Sawyer in 510,000 bail on the charge of attempting to rob the United States mails. ANOTHER SWELL DIVORCE SUIT. De Lancey NIcoll's Sister Living In Dakota to Obtain a Separation. Flushing, L. I., Dec 10. Special.' It is reported here that Mrs. J. McKim Mia ton, sister of De Lancey Nicoll, District Attorney of New York, has gone to South Dakota to secure a divorce from her hus band. It is said that she left in September last. De Lancey Nicoll would neither affirm nor deny it. Mr. McKim Minton was also seen. He refused to give any in formation whatever. A special telegram to The Dispatch from Sioux Falls says: Mrs. J. McKim Min ton came to Sioux Fafls about five months ago and rented a cottage, here she and her two children, with their maid, have lived ever since. They have lately kept them selves very secluded. Two months ago Mrs. Minton applied for a divorce on the ground of desertion, and the suit will probably bo tried at the present term of the Circuit Court. A few weeks ago 3Irs. Minton had served upon her papers for divorce. Her husband named seven co-respondents. Mrs. Minton for several weeks bore the name of Mrs. McLean, but has lately dropped the disguise She is an intimate friend of Mrs. James G. Blaine, Jr. The Bomb Thrower Still Unknown. Upw York, Dec 10. The identity of the bomb thrower is still amatter ot conjecture. Several people called to-day, among whom was a car driver named John Kutner, whose manner led the morgue keeper to be lieve he knew something of the case He left his name and address reluctantly, and promised to 'call again. Uncle Sam as a Saloon Keeper. Des Moines, Dec 10. 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