Show TALKS WITH TRAVELERS r I Surgeon E S Tenney of Fort Doug Jc 3as returned yesterday from a Denver d anu trip He said I was told at department depart-ment headquarters that the hurryup UBD I orders were more to get the live stock ul Btarted early toward the coast as two large horse transports had been f n unexpectedly r1 unex-pectedly secured by the Quartermaster General and would bo put to an early In i use The Ninth cavalry will go into camp at the Presidio where arrangements ea arrange-ments have already bceli arlaule it M r by the Quartermasters department q i and traop C Is liable to leave tiny day line 1 i now for San Francisco u Maj Forbush of the Ninth cavalry sy6 goes with his squadron and the coin A niandlng officer at Fort Douglas will be i Cnpt Fen rose of the Eleventh Infan 4J t try He had l typhoid and malaria in c Porto nico and Is herb recuperating hmorcpelatng adr Part of his regiment is now on the S fls I Island and part In this country 1 y Whethcr I shall be detailed to foreign I I A service oiv not 1 cannOt at present R state M I to f t i Eugene O Butler a Dubuque lap C neo hotel man is a guest at the Kenyon Jf75 p J 3 traveled from Dubuque to Denver on l i iny wheel I he said to a Tribune reporter ipe efti re-porter and found it good riding all 0 1 I Jthe way I took two weeks in making y the trip as I stopped along to see I a c things und call on people I knew I jt followed the Union Pacific to Denver jl l W 1 but did not have to use the railroad 11 f rightofway the roads were rlghtof way enough Did not have t punctured in th tire once t e1IC0 S The crops through Nebraska and ce llt ff ft the Missouri River valley are grand to DesU t l f look l at There have been heavy rains r throughout Nebraska whIch have Just Vlr S kect the crops up In great shape Colo re uASi 1 Irado too Is doing well and Donver is J Fa very lively city I did not wheelS wheel-S through the mountains but came over 4 ftthe Hlo Grande as I did not like too to-o ride a wheel alone west of Denver rit < G V f I The change in political sentiment In 1 r1 lltho country IB well Illustrated In an iji jMcxperieniu of mine in Colorado tour a Ifycars ago said Assistant Sergeant 1l iatAnns Stewart of the United States I a AU Senate at the Knutsford yesterday I I I v < I have alwaytj as now been an enthusiastic en-thusiastic Republican and while tray iUCI r cling In arallway car i got Into a dis I 1J fIolwaycat D Wt cuiiln and warmly upheld McKInley und the prtnclplew of the Republican 5l15IP party There were quite a number of 5h 11 passengers in the car but I did not pay 1 i4 any attention to them until presently iou r chi the conductor approached me andes and-es tce touching me on the shoulder said I CtlIl r3 think you had better not talk longer in I i i that way Why1 I immediately looked Because said he It is likely to cause trouble Mr MfKInley ia a Ivory unpopular piiHnn in tolcmuln and here your remarks are not relished hereThen for tho first time 1 noticed that the looko cast toward where I had been sitting from different parts of the car were anything but friendly Now it is entirely different and McKinley and prosperity are the theme every whore I As manufacturing interests in the South increase people there tend more I toward Republican principles said i Arthur J Cox of AVcstvIlle lsB at the Kenyon yesterday Mr Cox was f formerly n Democrat They are becoming be-coming expansionists protectionists i soundmoney men Were It not for l fears of negro domination Alabama I and Louisiana would be Republican today to-day but there In that great black cloud and oven Northerners who go south to I engage In business soon side with the Southerner on that point I And then what has Incensed Southerners South-erners against the Republican party is the appointment of negroes to Federal I oIFlccs A Southern white dislikes this exceedingly I especially when there arc so many good white people ready to till the offices The trouble is I caused by promising olllces to blacks for votes In political convuntlons And then the I J backing up of negro pretensions by Federal troops has not been forgotten However there is no more sectional feeling There is l large movement of lumbermen lum-bermen from the North to operate in the South with the exhaustion of the Northern forests and Southern pine Is very popular for finishing Interiors Lumber was high last winter but by spring prices fell and the market has not yet recovered its buoyancy The time is coming when all our forests will be destroyed and they cannot bo replaced Builders must then have recourse re-course to Iron glass and stone I dont know what tho paper men will do when the forests are cut off1 U < a Bert Holden attended the TaleHar yard boat races at New London and while feeling somewhat elated over the fouroared and fresh man races accepts ac-cepts the result of the university race philosophically and said yesterday It was the fortune of war but at the same time I believe Harvard would have tme If Harding could have been got out of the boat Sheafe at No7 I did his best to Induce him to Jump into the water he would not have drowned as the launches following could easily have fished him out but the man lay like a log inside the boat and could not be moved and there was his oar dragging drag-ging in the water and himself n deadweight dead-weight Sheafe could do nothing but push Harding out of his way and finish fin-ish with seven oars and the passenger |