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Show f sentinel: THE MANTI, UTAH, WEDNESDAY VOLUME XI. the money power among tlie HeTHE NINTH DAYS CONTEST. of brews. The record shuwed that tlie Savior was betrayed by Judas, tlie only silver mail among the twelve, who insist! d on a ratio of So to 1. As The Silver Champion is Besting to the diversion of half of the water front the stream, Mr. liorr sail that if Wall Street's Attorney the other hulf furnished all of the needed, tlie mills would not l.e affected at all. replying, said that unHave Not Assisted derMr. Harvey, the bunk credit system, we had In the Fieo Coinage Campaign-Sil- ver had punles, and we always would Will r.,.i.e the Working-lat.n'- u have them. Tlie panic of l.S!C was not to a in the coinage, but to Wages, and Only the Self Jh ihe I aink change credit system. Favor a Dear Dollar Xt Was In answer to Mr. Herrs statement that the great mass uf tlie debts of Harvey's Day. e the nation were debts, and therefore iifil cuiilriieted hofi-ithe of deini.iietlzatbni bill. Mr. the passage July 27. The Inst day hut Ilarvi y quote! from the Hankers' Chiiago, Tiiin .l.i silver conLen- - Mi gseliie, showing an aggregate in a wu-lt- -r Cilver-Fioildce- rs In-- . short-lim- - begun Inn afli M.ijuii. l.urr opened with u comparison of cot in' pruiiuclion I rum lMiu nagis i:iii t i as sin. v ii in u table pivpureu by Slulisliciun Cnrnnl IX Wright. Wltn wuiri amt piitvs In isuu taken us1SWIa luiMi.i, ur mu, he showed tliut In prices were 'Ji, wages 15, und tne pus w ot Wages 172. Hurr In ui,ue that at no time in the lni'iiiry of tin Nuinm was it nearly as Iiiim..tiji: ns it was at this time, lu K.iti i .f the "crime of id." lie submitted that his statistic were more applicable to the conditions under discussion tii.ni those of dir. Sauerbeck, quoted Mr. Sauerby Harvey on Thursday. beck s figures were made on the prices of England. Harvey in turn took up the prices of wheat fur a series of years, in reply tu llnrr'B statement on Thursday, that I ne funner received as much for his produce in gold us he received before rilvei- was demonetised. Fur answer lie quoted the prices from year tu year, lie (leelurcd the arguments of Hurr were those used in all time to bulwark tyranny. Tin Declaration of Independ-arence was-proper answer to such guments. The priqier index of prices was to measure them In urticles uf International use. Tables made up by the gold men, even on these articles, showed that they were lower than In '!. K - D.. Deferring to Dorrs argument touching the measure of value In human toi!, Harvey quoted from an article by liorr In u New York puiier, in reply tu a who suggested mak- ing so much work the equivalent uf a dollar. Hurr declared the pruimsltlon absurd, uinl confusing. noun abusive. tlie large long-ltni- e debts Mr. Harvey said: This is coining to u close virtually on Munduy 1 shall speak exclusive! v upon the independent action of the United States. CAUSE OF FALLI Nil PRICES. Mr. Hurvey denied Mr. Hnrr's assertion that failing prices were the of improved facilities. Mr. Harvey said it is the supply produced and the demand for it that regulutes the price of such products. Suppose a widow owning a farm receives the voluntary assistance of her neighbors to raise and harvest her wheut crop. Will her wheat be worth any less than the price lixed by the quantity uf wheut in existence, known tu the traders, and the estimated deniuml tor it? If all the corn crop in the United States were destroyed except the crop in Iowa, would the Iowa corn price be governed by the cost uf production, or the relutive supply and demand for corn? The cost of production hus nothing to do with it. A man may produce an ounce of gold for ten cents, that is worth $20. The fact that It cost him ten cents doe not make it worth less than $20. A PLETHORA OF MONEY. Mr. Horr Mr. Harvey is mystified because he takes It fur granted that tlie business of a country entirely depends upon the amount per capita of the circulating medium. He insists that if you shrink that you ruin the business in the country. There ure a large number of men who believe that doctrine, but no more transparent humbug wus ever taught the iieople of this or any other country. Money is a There plethora in this country are hundreds of millions of dulliii-- lying idle simply because there is nobody to use It. Did you know tliut? Why, my friend Hurvey und all you men who talk that way as usual get the cart before the horse. It Is not abundance of money that makes business active; It is business that makes money active in this world of ours. Applause. And until you can comprehend that point, Brother Hurvey, yuu will never understand this financial question at all. Laughter. Mr. Hurr explained that the sufficiency or lack of sufficiency of banking facilities had much to du with the question of the necessity of a large or small per capita circulation. This country has a per capita of (26.U2. Canada has S10 per capita, but Canada has an elegant banking system no better on the face of the earth than the Canadian system of utilizing banks. Switzerland. one of the most prosperous little Nations on the face uf this globe, has only 114.48. The ratio of money to the population proves nothing. What we need in the United States Is good wages for work, steady employment for our men. und we have got money enough to do twice the business we are dulng. Applause. Mr. Harvey At the conclusion of this debate Mr. Horr and 1 have 2500 words each at our disposal to write at our leisure within seven days after the debate. to sum up the debate, and anything In Mr. Herrs arguments that 1. I will attend to do not reply to in thatsummary, because there Is only to a short time left us, and I want to answer some matters that have been Introduced Into this debate at the earlier stages. I want tu speak a few moments on the proposition that wages have Increased. ORGANIZED LABOR AND WAGES. Speaking of organized labor, Mr. Harvey said: sustain wages for "Organizations those actually employed while engaged at work, but when you average the wages by Including the unemployed, and Include the expense and time lust. It does nut do so. Make the calculation this way and you will find that the gold basis has measured itself in wages with mathematical accuracy. "This condition is not healthy; it Is not good for the country; It breeds strife. It creates liiss to industry und labor; it destroys manhood; it makes criminals. The cause for It should be Tlie lalwr orremoved. Applause. ganizations will continue anti have a right to continue us long us money is organized; as long as nionoiMilies ure organized. Applause. l.ut we should have a civilization thut would make it unnecessary fur any orgdiilzatloiis uf that character to exist. "In Europe wages have been forced down to the legitimate level of the gold standard. The bayonet hus been used to do it. Later it will do it here. The Interest of the laboring man is on our side. We will hold his wages up without strikes or the expense of strikes. As the gold of California and Australia raised his wages, so will the silver of our mountains, as It pours into our metallic money stock us primary money, raise his wages. There will lie work for all, and the strife for labor will cease. The mun who now hus work or a situation and Hellishly reasons that he benefits himself by maintaining a dear dollar, is neither tunad nor humane. He is assisting In wrecking his rountry, and it may be too lute to remedy the error when he. too. is without employment. Appluuse. THE PULLMAN INCREASE. Mr. Harvey asked if the public were not deceived about wages being -used. Referring to tne reported ID per cent advance in wages at Pullman affecting 40UU men, conceded by the cumpuny without demand by the toilers, Mr. Harvey said tlie Tacts are. that there has been no advance made in wages at Pullman, and that Mr. Pullman himself admits that there was no advance made, and what they meat was that they hud given the men thut were at work about 10 per. cent more work to do. They had previously been winking only half-timApplause. Mr. Harvey read a letter from Thomas 1. Kidd, general secretary of the Machine Woodworkers' International Union, saying: If clothes and food embraced all the necessities of tlie laboring people, the dollur would unquestionably be of greater value to them than ever, but they do not. and what the laborer may save by cheaiier clothes and food is more than offset by il iron of ,f illl.Onll.Oim. m'f ate to-da- y, se to-da-y. Hurr said that Mr. Harvey had only quoted u brief extract uf his, and dal not give the sense uf the article. 'J he replied that he did not want gold or silver niuney, but i.mviy paper, base.1 on nothing. It was only another form uf the socialistic cruse, und Mr. Harvey would come to that In the end. Ilia disease had not reached Us worst stage. It would come to socialism and anarchism in the end. Mr. Harvey's friends In the audience broke out in dissent at this statement, and Mr. Hurvey declared that nut a word he had uttered would jUBtify It. Mr. Horr declared that the only applause which. Ids opponent bail secured mun his friends In the audience was when he denounced a large part of the Iieople of the country as scoundrels, and asserted that the country was going to the dogs. Mr. Horr then took up the question of banks, which Mr. Harvey, on a former occasion, had denounced. He ndinitted that there were corrupt bankers. but the business of banking as curried on was the outgrowth ot civilization, and banks were a blessing. T hey made it possible for a gold uollur to do twenty times as much as it could He hnd seen $1 ly.lHKl.UOU du otherwise. of business settled in. three hours in I lie N cv York clearing-housand less than 5 per cent was dune in money. If It hud been necessary to count all this money, it would have taken an army of men and many long days of work. 1K It CAPITA AND FAILURES. Mr. llurvty, replying, presented a table of ligures, showing the failures in l be cuuuiry tor a series of yeurs. He Kiln led out tnat during the war, when i lie circulating medium amounted to yu per caplin, failures had been reduced to u minimum. As the circulating medium deercused, failures increased. The Nation owed it to Itself to get rid uf this great amount uf bank credit and suLsiliute money for It. Tue Interest of the millions of debts to the banks were the equivalent of the umount of the annual failures. Mr. Harvey then proceeded to quote and mileage figures as to the number of receivers; oi i ail roads in the han-ithe comparative increase uf tenant farmer over owning tunnel's in ISIS) and over ISM), us shown by the census of iviiirim, und the great percentage imiiickcciicrs who ure renters, nut ownMr. e, I ers. Mr. Horr said that he would admit that the quantity of gold In the world laid iml incivnsid as fast as the business of the world, but it was not neees-- r. iry. line hundred dollars would now no more than $2000 would formerly. Liiicty-liv- e per ce.it of the business without the use of gold, ex.iis cept as a standard of measure. He ilia r I rated the ease by citing a stream ,.n which there was un mill, lat other modern mills lie constructed iilnng this stream and by using the same water the output would be vastly Increased. Mr. Harvey, replying, made another application of the comparison of the r.iv.'iiii to money. Suppose, he said, Hint mills hail been built along the ircam. and Its machinery adapted to (i. Then MippoKc that suddenly one-ha- lf of the ilow of that stream would L' cut off. how would it affect the mills? Suppose, again, that certain persons should divert the water of this t li re it in great reservoirs and i barge the mills u toil for its use? That v.'i uld he n pnrallel ruse to that of the iieople and the of the I si nl;s nt present. SUICIDES AND CRIME. Sir. Ilurvey. resuming his statistics, the number of pay,. figures showing JiDinJJ'idc in the United tftales from nf suicides, the number U JX'Jl: the DW2 number f convicts in prison, etc. He Attributed ills se to the flccreasoil wages nin! the Increasing value of money. He said he jMiInted nut 'hise things they indicated a national dis-of ease; n disease threatening the life necessary to hon-t-;l- y fhe Republic. It wasdisease In order to diagnose Ihe All Republics had .apply the remedy.Hiime causes. When fufuvi from the ih-.-reached a point where the control of tlie tiece'snrles of lifu fell Into the builds of seliish men. a monarchy ha I logical nnd necessary. Mr. Horr said that the mnlc nf 1893, whose effects Mr. Harvey had dilated .on. whs chletly due to a fear on the of this country of a part of Hie ln oplesilver standard. Mr. return to the Harvey, said Mr. liorr, had laid the rucl(lxlun uf the Savior at the dour ih-n- Mn-iii:!- . se s to-d- ay inert- e. 4 JULY :il, increased ivnl alone. When all tilings HOLMES' are considered, the real value of the di liar is no greater now lli.ni III lMi5. line trouble that labor will now recognize in the United Suites is that, on Police Are Unveiling the Greatof tlie depressed condition of laborers ui not working full est Criminal of the Age, time. Ti.e unions have sucre, il.'d In holding lip the price per diem, hut the men are )oi vnrh'.ng more than say l? the tin which is milking Bodies cf One Man and Two Women that they are (hut niurli less in doll-irTurned Over to Him by Holme t lving. Taken From a Dark Room in the LAND TENANCY SYSTEM. Castle Did the Tlend Murder Speaking of tenancy, Mr. Harvey Minnie Williams's Brother, Too? said: "Twenty million acres of land ill is owned by the United Slate English tilled nobility, and tne English laud lone ncy lias to that extent hic:,.T,i, July 27. Insjiectiir I'itxput-ncinto this counIi ,ii v s it In be hern ulrnidy liiii'i.d'.i-'-- d (VMaln Ci.it lit tin- Slob of Illienia there is a In e lauiili is weie cmiurit ted in try. "S "' an mini'tlie of that has '' tlie Lop county by ,.i' !,,i:ins. uinl Uuur.l) a c by the n.u'.r ef Lincoln, w till- r.-iL i if. t w.;c f i tii and you mu diive for miles through '..loi'igii, i,.iu tii.it Rulinis cun Inthat county on your way to that count ii ill im if murder city. The fuui.ii a in. in, whose ui.inty scut and have on both sides of you one of Lon! Scullys possessions, with they iiise l divulge, but was tlie Irish liailcheil cottages over the lii'jiMg V. til tile I. dice uf Ihe laspi'Cli.!' land." uv.i niunii. Applause. i,,id nlt. police that Mr. Hull' I have traveled extensive- lie llilil luiillllti ili,. three skeleton for thirl liollneF, and that the skeletons wen ly, very extensively, through States of this Unit n. and never yet from loilles taken I'rnni the liniihe iff saw u single farm nor had iny atten- II ul mm in street. One of tion culled to one, thut was owned by these, he said, was the limly uf a ma:i, people living outside of the United und till ether two Were Women. They States. There are some, but they are were taken from a dark niom in HMlinex'K lieus. i:i the very fetv. night time, mni two of the III. milted skelelulis were reOWNERS. OF MINE INTEREST turned i.i Holmes. Tin third skeleton Mr. Hurley said: "The proposition is is now In the possession of Inspector made by the gold standard men that Fitzpatrick. alt of our efforts for the restoration of Tile Ilesli of the bodies had Hot been n silver a iv for the lntcrst of stripped iiuai the buiics when tin In true. our is ll.li'iles not owners, it were given to till! lleW wllllcSi. struggle tn restore a sufficient volume but the face were so lacerated of priniury money in the country, we and torn that ldcntllii-ulio- badlywould have have turned our attention to silver to been iiupnssiiilr. The police also found uu expressman right the wrong that was committed who was uble to give what und to restore to the people that which of belie vul to is; lmMii'lunt evidence. The la the iHHipies money, irrespective name of the cxpiessniiin who owned that properly. We do not Is Charles Humphrey, and in tlie month of June. object to gold because the gold miners 1MH. he was hired liy Holmes tu produce It. and the arguments that the a tnix and a trunk at the Union gentleman makes about sliver producers could he made with the same force depot in tills city. 'J'lie box. according alKiut the gold producers; but I want to Humphrey, wuh taken from a dark to make another answer to it. I want room, und had the appearance of a to say to you that the silver producers coffin Ikix. This was expressed to Philhave not assisted in running this cam- adelphia, while the trunk was sent In If they were as- another direction. Applause. paign. TIIE b'KKLETi IX STi iRY. sisting any one, it is reasonable to suppose they had assisted me. I began The story of the mail who articulated In 1S93. my work by publishing the Skeleton 1h to the effect that lu May, a weekly paer. und commenced bring- June. he was sent for Holmes, 1 out books in leoembcr, isiKi. I be- who at thut time was goingbyunder ing came chairman of the bimetallic exof Gu.'don, and asacil if he would ecutive cominlUcu of this State in the articui.ile the skeleton of a man whose summer of lxy3. My committee ap- body was lu tin possession of Holmes. pealed personally and by letter to He accepted the Job, and was taken by about all the silver mine owners in Holme to a room wuich would have the West for donations to assist us. Is'i'ii dark, even in the day time. We did not receive a cent. At one time Stretched out on a table n the middle 1 sent out forty-fou- r letters to selected of the room was the body of a man. names of as many prominent silver '1 lie skin had removed mine owners, who were supposed to be from the face, but in entirely all other respects men such Mofllatt as and the body was ill good condition. wealthy o Shuar of Colorado, anil Clark of The articulator and Holmes had some and did not receive a cent from talk as to the best way of taking tlie them, not even enough to pay the body out of the house, as Holmes said IKistage un the letters; not even the he did not want the neighbors to sec courtesy of a reply, except from one. the body removed, it was finally agreed At the time I brought out "Coin's Fin- that the articulator should cut off the ancial School' I was in debt and had arms, and that Holmes would provide no money JqtL'.' , Jon. tie removal of the rest of the PRESENTATION TO MR. HORR. corpse. Tills was done, and the articuIn closing the detiate for the day, Mr. lator left the house, carrying the arms with liiin in a sack, lie had JuHt Ilarvey hunded Mr. Horr, os a sou- reached his house and was preparing venir, a silver dollar of 1799, with the to go tn lied, when Ik- was called tu word "unit upon It. Mr. Harvey said: door the by a loud knocking. He went "Take it, Mr. Horr. Washington may have carried it in his pocket; Jefferson down and found Holmes und another may at one time have had It In hiM pos- man. They hnd tlie balance uf the session; It nmy have paid for the paper body, which had been cut In two pieces on which the declaration of war was after the articulator hud left the written in 1812 against Great Britain; it house. Holmes left, after remarking may have been fondled by Jackson thut he would have another Juli for when writing his message to Congress the man in a short time. True to ids word. In December he against the National banks. Apsent for tlie articulator a second time, plause. it is a lit souvenir for uny and upon the arrival of the latter at Ihe American, proud of his cuuntry and its house of Holmes he wns taken to the institutions, to carry in his pocket all same dark mom. where, on the same the days of his life. Passing dollar table where the body of the man had to Mr. Horr. Appluuse. Shouts uf "hurlain on. the occasion of his lirst visit, rah and continued applause. Mr. Horr (smiling) I shall keep this wgs the body of a young woman. Tlie face of this corpse had been ilisligured dollar and put it to a good use. I Intend to have a hole bored through it, in such a manner that it was impossiand then I will hang it around the neck ble to tell what she had looked like of my little grandchild, born Just nfter when alive. In Januury, SJ3. the articulator wus we commenced this discussion. Apfor a third time by Holmes, and It will do lJrother ilarvey sent plause. In the same room on the same table good to learn that the people of the he found the body of a second young United Slates are still, in spite of. the woman, from whose face all the skin gold standard, marrying and giving In hail been removed. The articulator had marriage, and that children are still this body taken to liis home, whom he born to us. In spite of the silver dollar. stripped the bones and mounted the Laughter and applause. skeleton. Adjourned till Monday at 1 p. m. When he called on Holme for ills pay the latter refused to give it to him. and wa. moreover, somewhat In MASS MEETING AT RIO. arrears on the bill for mounting the OEATH-GHAMBE- R. i'.nt NO. 3. tlie lieadH would have Ik n HOKE AT A BARBECUE. mats of lung hail'. ( Hie big strand was of light color, like that of Minnie William, while the other was of the BRASS BANDS. WATERMELONS l.rown hue of Annie's hair. and win-r- e Mere AND "SOUND MONEY. af-fai- is, mu-hu- s n-r- to-u- i. - - "ii-ii-- .i - 1 1 i to-d- - con-ticii- '.l - i wli-.- i ne 1 Sixty-thir- d silver-bullio- to-d- 1 ver tlu-alia- s is-e- Mon-tan- . . - Twenty Thousand Attended Government Majority in Parliament the Largest for a Century. Now York. July 27. A Herald dispatch from isiicnos Ayres says: A cor-- n spunili'iit in Rio de Janeiro li'li'gruphs that a large inns meeting was held there last night to protest tlie action of England In takingagainst of the island of Trinidad.possession thousand people were together Twenty in und around the hull where the inerting was held, niul the speech, were reeeived with the greatest enthusiasm. Hevcriil editors wen uniong those who made addresses. Tlie streets were pulroled by cavulry, ordered nut by the Government to prevent attacks on the business houses of English residents. It had also been reimrted the authorities thut the British consulate was tn danger, and at that point u strong guanl whs stationed. ANOTHER STARTLING THEORY. t- Did Holmes Murder Minnie Williams's Brother at Denver? Chicago, July 27. William Capps, tlie Fort Worth, Tex., attorney, who Is hen in behalf of the heirs of the Williams sisters, ad vu need a rather startling theory which. If found tu be true, will udil another victim to tlie large list of munlers already credited to Holmes. According to .Mr. Cupps, Minnie R. Willlums had a brother named Horace A. Williams In lanver. 'J ids young man cither died ur was to-da- y, killed suddenly in May or June, ixim, shortly hefun the supposed ininiler of tlie Williams sisters. Tin inunncr of his death is not known to tin altorney, hut he says thut he lias ascertained that the young man was Insun-for $2.i0) In favor of his sister Minnie. This faet Mr. Cupps considers to In decidedly peculiar, us he says that it Is imt reasonable to suppose that Horace William would Insure hi life In favor nf a sister who was already wealthy. He said thut his Investigations upon lids point were In an Incomplete suite, but from what he had learned he was of the opinion that Holmes had flrst insured the young man and then been Instrumental la causing his death. HOLMES'S LATEST RUSE. Letter to Quinlau, Evidently Wilt fen A Free Coinage Congressman Forced for a Purpose. the Secretary to Explain 3Ioty He (.'hleng.'i, July 27. Tin jHdice Came to Flop. from liolnn-found a li'lti-to Kit Qiiit'.lan. to which mm it Importance is mine. rl. Tlie Icilir i us follows:ImiTi. Uiirdrle. (In., July 27. Secretary nf July l. r (.ml the Interior llnke Smith Dour liit: Among their oiln Ills brief tour of Ihe State In tin y think yon took tin- id boy to Mi.'lilgail sad eiiliei' I. ft li.ni iliere tin- interest uf sound money, by ador put l.i.ii on', i.l the v. ay. told always dressing a crowd of several thousand i.i j oi. to i:od. :.i.y;hi:,g people gathered here from ail over l iill!'.. !!i r.al. hoi ti.i v in fa Georgia. Extraordinary prei--a 121 h raw you :! !:n- r.icioiy, I Kouilierii rations hud liei-- made by the coinnill-toc- s tl'ieis. fun'l you e'.iow yu.i iio-of the fordoli! Sound Money til. leid of lie iioiilil? If 'i r,.; l.cagu . A monster luirheciie and sevlull or iar.'..t. Il yo", l.'l! trim were provida'l.Mil lhl.( or hey eral hundred watiTinel-iiiiig bore Is to oil:, r ni.tllers. 'I y o ay v.u.d to ku i. ed to leed the multitude. if you wi I: In I'.ii.'iiinaii or lu l.ai.e.iioli.i The speaking took place lit the open I2lh. Il Is will tar to air. Secretary Smith received an ovae able to know win re you wen yo'l w. riltion as he rose to iqieuk. The crowd ing. i am awfully sorry. 1at. for I al- cheered him loud ami long, lie wus ways try to make tiling easy fur you. When .Minnie killed her KiKler, needed frequently interrupted by applause durwhich was yuli the woit way, but wuiil.l not drag ing hi two hours' siatH-hyon lino It. If the il. ieetlve would go to substantially the same a those he deNew York, us I want liiem to. they would livered ut Gainesville und I'olumbus. lliul where Minnie W. took them by Ikhii. The Secretary's reception here ha been I have done no k.lllng, I'nl. line liy one, a notably cordial one. A bras luind them alive. .Minnie Vi lire to-d- ay r s to-d- ay - tli.-uiv- eon-elud- I . 1 ( 1 1. .i. fi-t.r- 1 l.f - n : ulu-r.- I I i I s i aln-li- l I 1 , Uniting lhy will not come here as long a there any ii rrented. il.iugc' id her l!ot.ni May know - where she Is. and the guardian. .Mokkii- li. Wall, will ut he proper nin! safe time go lu he l,c: y,ni wife r.i e un anything you wish. no. nfiener than two I. me a nionth, dlreellng. "It. II. Ilohm-sl null and enmity prtnii. . I . Ih-i-i- Jll.i.ulelphia." many I. tier to joii. can for nil. I to expect you. it' i 'h write I Klri-ct- am doing nil I hear shortly from 1 iiiit iii rijiiii and I thank lior for It. uiy Tell hei have a tame mouse mid spider to kce nin company. My food Is tlie worst here. Shull he mil ol it . toner than pari rui . They kipt Mr. J. shut up lien hlx When we would have let hoi nut mi lull they made a fool uf her rite soon and fn-e- . Ark any qiicMtloin you want to. Georgiaim Im vimiing liei Went mother. uIhiiu two weeks ago lih regard to all. h. jt. Tin police believe the chain ji. of evl lienee ugiiliiKt Kit Quinlan Is now com pb-iand Huimes's will In tried for murder "1 won't ullov to Quinlan state'H witness ti t scape the miie," said filler of Kilim "1 have enough evl loil.iy. deiiee to indict both Holmes ami Quin Ian, and the ease will be submitted ti the grand Jury soon. Willi me I eXlM-et- . ino-nh- In-r- Kudi-nui-l- i EVIDENCE AT TORONTO. What Witnesses Will Swear to if Holmes Is Extradited. Toronto, July 27. Should Holmes, the alleged murderer of the Fitzel children, be brought to Toronto for trial, the authorities could put in the witness box thirteen ur fourteen persons who would furnish damaging evidence against him. It might be proved that on the 18th of October, in company with a wo- man known ns Mrs. Howard, Holmes brought Alice and Xcilie Fltzel to the city; that on the 25th of the same month Holmes tiKik these girls tu the house on St. Vincent street; that he was with them in that house un the morning ot the date named, and they never left the house alive. in connect ion with the disappearance of these girls, tlie woman known as Mr. Howard would tell all she knew, and the purport of lirr statement 1h now in the hands of tlie pulice authorities. When she wa in Toronto she was registered a Mrs. Bo well of Columbus, )., but she stayed with Holmes US ins Wire. r inspector Stark, upon Instructions from the authorities, has written the I'hiladcipliia authorities, asking if they will consent to the extradition uf Holmes, if a favorable reply is received paiiors will at once be tuken out and uu officer will, proceed tu Rhiladel-plii-a tu bring the prlsuner here. A Frenchman Missing. and a committee of prominent cltixens met him at tlie depot, and cheers greeted his appearance everywhere. UiingrcKKimn Livingstone came in lust night and announced his Inleiitloii In speak ut the conclusion of the Secretary 'h uililres. In response to un invitation extended by the t'ordele Free Silver long after the Sound .Money league bad arranged deniiiiistratlun in behalf of the Secretary of the Interior. There I much Indignation at this effort of tlie free silver men to intrude umii an occuKlon urranged for the States representative in the Cabinet, the Congressman's action iK'lng coiiHlrued tut effrontery. Colonel Livingstone sat unnoticed under a tree while Secretury Smith spoke. Coiigressman l.tviiigHiuiie had copies of Secretary Smith's Ix'Jtl letter on free coinage circulated among the crowd, which loudly cheered tlie Secretary's remarks concerning it. "1 am Hnmewhut amused, he said, "that some friend has distributed a circular among you containing a letter that 1 wrote in 1MKI, referring to the tree coinage of silver. 1 sin mid not lie (undid with you If I did nut say 1 had be 'll asked in ISfM) whether I favored the free Coinage of silver that 1 would have answered 'yes.' " Secretary Smith then went into a discussion of the coiidltlnns under which silver was coined In xuu nnd the different conditions now, which hail Inuught alNitil a change In opinion. Tin- - Secretary refuted the idea that the low price now prevailing were caused by the act of 1873. The Secretary then went into l'rcldcnt Cleveland's record and was enthusluctlcally cheered. During the Secretary's address, a man who stood near Colonel Livingston several times Interrupted Mr. Smith with questions suggested by the Congressman. to-ila- ys IDAHO SETTLERS SCARED. Movements of the Indians Cause General Alarm. Idaho Fails, Ida., July 27. Special to Tribune. ihe movement of troops tu Jackson s Hole and uf the Indians between Fort Hull reservation ana western Wyoming is causing considerable excitement among uil classes lu tills part of tlie country. Several families nave left their liunies on mow creek, thirty-liv- e to ilrty miles east uf Idaho Falls, und come into the town. No acts ut violence ur dcpredutlon have been committed by the Indiana, except one case, wiiere a buck stopped at the ruucii of Mr. Kellers and demanded a horse and gut it, but tne ranchers have becume alarmed ut their movements. About seveniy-iU- e inuians passed through that part of the country today, going towards Jackson's Hole, all aimed, while the squaws and an occasional fust rider are Seen going to-arils the reservation, and their smuke signals are seen in different directions. it is difficult to get accurate and reliable information from the scene of tlie reported actual troubles, but the average Idaho man dues not think the troops will have any Indians for an encounter when they arrive on the ground. The soldiers say they were nut sent to Juckson's Hole un petition from tlie people in that cuuntry, but mi account ol the anxiety or friends and relatives of l turtles visiting the NaV Chicago, July 27. A local paper says: w By no means tlie least mysterious of tne many mystifying disappearances from tlie Holmes castle was that of JVler Verrelt. He was a short, heavy-sFrenchman, with an unquenchable thirst for strong drink. He went to the castle and requested to be cured of the drink habit. Holme had an inebriate asylum in the castle, und offered to cure the habit. The drink cure in tlie custle was run under the name of the "Silver Institute. leler took the cure. He said In was heir to a two previous skeletons. The tv.-- turn fortune In Toronto, Canada. Since tional Bark. could not come to terms, and the dis- then he has not been heard from. pute finally ended by the articulator OHIO DEMOCRATS SPLIT. skelretaining possession of the third eton. and he still has It in 111 house, INSOLENCE Of THE BRITISH. the skull lie reinovi-iund Campbell Leads the brought il to the central police station, "bound Money Bolters. when it now Is. The arlii ulatur will Will Retain Possession of Trinidad )., July 27. The Democrabe kept under close surveillance for Island English Capitalists Losing cyHamilton, of Butler county met to select some days jet. as tlie police do not Confidence in America. delegates. On account of the wur bethink hi has told ail lie knows nlmut tween the was factions there a split, the murders in the castle. (.lie faction adjourned to the courtThis police declare now thut they have New York, July 2C. A Herald special house, wlih Campbell us almost positive proof that ihe first fefrom Rueiiiis Aj res says: A correspond- presiding uillcer. The other faction remale body was that uf Em. dine and the s.'cmid that uf Annie ent In Rio Janeiro telegraphs that the mained inasthe opera house, with A. S. chairman. The excitement Williams. It is the skull uf Annie Wil- people f j iruxil are greatly excited be- Andrews liam that is nuw at the central sta- cause of the occupation of the island of was Intense, and for a time fiuiiile-inunluTrinidad by I lie British, it is alleged reigned supreme. tion. Thu courthouse convention elected that the reply of tne British Minister to THE EXI' REP? MAN'S STORY. Jumes E. the Campbell und l'uul J. Surge Government relative tu ti'M-- u The stury of the cxpn-rsiiiuis to the the Trinidad aliair was couched In inrge to the Slate conveneffect that he wns liin-by Holmes solent term. It declares tiiat Trinidad tion. The regular convention selected tern-toa one f and told not to com., to will be liy tlie jiruish. and that M. Gray, lcier Schwab, David Bierce, Hie house until after nightfall. The England Iniemis to prevent Christian Gcnnfnghoi-fe- n. any other JohnK.F.F.Nothin, of Middleton and A. J. kept tills uppuintmem. H Bung posscs.-duthe island, tvnich she I was glvtn a box and a trunk by nation Vinnivi. Campbell's conveiiliiiii repluvds lor a coaling station. Holnies and told to take lliein to the "Round The money," and Andrews's il mister of Foreign Af- resents Union depot. Win n he was pulling fairs llruxiliun replied thut he regarded this note convention free silver. H- i- lox into the wagon hi- - turned it on us offensive. Jie deelarcd that Brazil end. and was at mice stopped by would II. dun', who told him he wuh oii no island. never abandon her right to the TESTIMONY FOR DURRANT. account to keep the box in nny other officers of civilians and Meetings of on lint the side. position except liiiii order to take the box and trunk the army anil navy ure being held, and Important Witness Whose Deposiculling upon tlie Government to tion Will Be Taken at Boston. to tile depot and leave them on tlie eml arc make hii immediate protest ugainst of the platform, and was told that they Gr.-aSuit Francisco, July 27. The prose- - ' t Britain's act. Intaken cure uf. He saw only would Tlie Herald' correspondent In Monte- ciitlng detectives in the Durrant cam mie man at tlie ili'put, who seemed to video send wiiixl that Uruguay Intends ini) tracing tlie curccr uf Charles F. in be Interested the trunk nnd Imx, lo a military guard on the Island Clark, the Boston wine drummer, who, post drove and nwny. off the port of Maldoliulo, the ilefeiiiiunl states, was Induced tu After Humphrey had told his story of Gcrrlto, liei-ha to ihe police I'nt Quinlan was which lung deserted, in order leave hen In order that he would nut brought from hi ceil, and the two i prevent its occupation by the Rrit-il- i- upiH'ur as a witness for Durrant. It Is said that Clark knows Durrant wen placed fan to face. The jmlice jSerrllo lie in the route of Ihe will not tell why thl was done, iiut proposed cable from Madeira, via Trin- niul was acquainted with Blanche 1 to tlie River 'latte. On tlie afternoon uf the murder the general opinion is that it wns done idad, liecaiiise Humphrey nongnlxed of Miss Ijiinont, Clark is supposed tn Quin I man pxs the The the at lan depot. have seen the girl in a ear with a Bulgarian Demonstration. man will be retained in custody Soffit. July 27. A demonstration ocpro) young man who closely resembled Dura witness. as y at the cemetery at the rant. but was not he. If such testicurred RAVE IN THE BASEMENT, graves of the men who were executed mony could be produced at the trial It In i.rosecullng the investigation of for the murder of M. Beltclieff. Five would go fur tu offset the statements assembled. and of the several witnesses at the prepeople tlir (iseutent of the big brick house on hundred were made denouncing M. speeches Sixty-thir- d and Wnlliire street examination, who swore that Hnd wen - wLi'kiiicn letters biumbuioff. read to liminary thiemployed by the police the same saw Durrant and the murdervd they Stant-buln- if Tieof purpose. a grave grave. Lime and quickcaine upon girl together on the afternoon she disis guarded by the military. lime :ul accomplished tlu-l- work, and appeared. Clark's deposition will lie In had to turned dies native tlie dust, taken In Boston in Durrant's interest. r, nelgh-Ixibut tt ere still remained sufficient eviwe love our No mailer how llttls we can see no reason why he sliuulil The police detectives deny that they indence do make the identification possiduced Clark to leave town, and say ble. 7 'he soft spots in the bed of hard not have kindly feelings towards us. York that they never heard of him before. Advertiser. New t the size of ere human bodies, day l et ht or to-d- ay il, in a n lu In-i- ht La-niui- it. to-da- to-da- y, 1 r 6 K: |