OCR Text |
Show I AIUIEItV ALLIANCE VuntorJonrs Stales Ills a lews On Tbat Orsnnlaallon. Nh Yolk, August 5. Senator John P. -Jonta expressed himself ery freely in an JplTrletr oh the Ijrn'e' !llauce. He thought tha farmers might secure twenty or thirty, or even forty, Alliaucemem-bers Alliaucemem-bers iu the next Congress. "Then the end ot the movement w 111 come," said be, "bei-aueu when thei arc Uieru Uiey will hnb nothing noth-ing which they will demand to LaAo done that is not now being done, lhe part of their movement on which I look with the muet la tere-st is the demand for the Issuance of money upon the products, corn, wheat, oats, etc. It is going to make the men who hae been wy-ing wy-ing for iears tbat money must hac an intrinsic alue take a new view of things. 1 f the gold men are right, then the f inuers are right. There Ismoreintrinsirvalueiu wheat, corn and oats than in gold, because these products supply and sustain life whereas gold will not. If It situ a man's choice to take wheat or gold ou which to subsist for a number of i ears ou a barren islantl, how itlick-li itlick-li he would choose tho whest. But while awakening tliu gold nieu to the foellslmess of their JioslUou in reference to w hat mouei should be, it will also awaken an Intelligent discu-siou ami an understanding of the real liasis of mouiy, which si ould lc quantitative, 10 matter what the medium tf exchange be-tw be-tw ern the people. It is tatcut that if the poiiulation increases three pcrce.it, or fhc per cent, it will require three s.r cent or five per cent more monty to ctleet exchange ex-change that is to transact basinesa among thu jieople, if the money condition is to remain unchanged This is why I and inaui others be-Iiec be-Iiec that tho medium of exchange once decided un may beani thing whiih the goemment selects and gives the name of monii to and i s value u ill nhvas be relativcli dc-termicesi dc-termicesi bi the ratio of its unit to the poiuUliou and demands jxit tijion it.-' Imnlburst In Vrlronn. Nl 1 iilks C-al , Aug 5 A cloudburst cloud-burst ill tl e eastern jart of Mojave Cotinti, Arizona, last night, washed out a bridge tn o mile j from Yucca. Au costbourui freight train was pre cqiilaUd into the river, killing the fin man and criously uouudiiigthe engineer and braktmau. The sail I ranclso express, which was dt lajeil by the washout, ouli reached una a fen minutes after the freight accident, having a narrow escaiie. Ll- Mos-U nt Hie World s 1 air. f'liicv.o, Vug 5. J.H Sanders, publHicr of the Hrccdcrt' Ua.tUc, has written a letter to the World's Kair headquarters relative to a unique and thorough! original plan fur a II vi stock exhibit at thu Imposition. Impo-sition. His plan embodies the following fol-lowing features There shall lie selected and pliced ou exhibition thoroughly characteristic and full representative male and female matured ma-tured siecimensof each and every breed of hor-e-s, cattle, sheep and swine raied 111 America. Tlie breed are to lie classified and grouped with reference to special ailaj tatlon and the uses of each Kach s(cclnien so selected need not uecc-ssaril be the best or most ex pensh e that might be found, t ut in every case must be such as are mot thoroughly characteristic of the breed represented. In the selection f the esjiecimcns none but animals bred and raided In tlie United States should be considered. In n lienlurky Feutl. JtUKNsiDK, K, Aug. S Ilia fight Is-tween I'ohce Judge Smith and Town Marshal Coomer on one side and Hen Ca-sid and his sons John nnd Hennan ou the other, over an ol ! feud, John Cassidy and JudgeSmith were fatally wounded and the other three participants seriously. se-riously. An Anarrhlsl Itlnf 1.1 IZATOTII, N". J., Aug. 3. A desperate flghtoccurredatnpicnlc of thu Arbiter Turn Verein at Jailer's grove last night, nearly a hundred men taking part iu the fray. Six iwiiceincn were badly handled by the infuriated anarchists. During the riotau American Hag floating fromaEtatTat the entrauce of the grove was torn down and trampled under foot. Warrants are out for a dozen of the rioters. TIis ralrlarrlis. Cni(-A(.o, July .i Cantons from all parts of the country continued to arrive today to take part In the Triennial Cantonment of the Patriarchs Patri-archs Mililant, I O. O. K , nnd the cit is ablaze with tlie black, red, gold and purple trappings and rU-liSng jewels and waving plumes of the order. The forenoon was devoted to competitive com-petitive ixempllfication of subordinate subor-dinate degree work with closed dcors, iu the Battery Armory. Garden City Lodge of CLicago opened the competition, and was followed by Wicker Lodge, also of this city. This afternoon prize drills of cantons can-tons by classes were begun on the lake front In the presence of a multitude mul-titude of people. Tonight General John C. Under wood held a reception at the Audi torium Hotel parlors, which were crowded with brilliantly utiiformed chevaliers and their ladies. 1 Sad Story. foBT Worth, Tex , Aug. 5 Today Sulla KIrchler, an orphan girl, ten years old, niado complaint that sho had been criminally assaulted as-saulted by a Mexican named Luc&-tcro Luc&-tcro w ho was assi-ted by his mistress, mis-tress, I'ollio Tarker, both of whom lire now in jail. The child is suffering suf-fering from a loathsome disease, which will probably prove fatal. The girl has been kept a prisoner lnce Juue, until rescued today. 8he tells a pitiable story of how she was beaten and starved. It Is believed be-lieved by the officers that other children have been subjected to similar treatment. tnpslatsl. New OrLEAs, Aug. o. The steamship CUy of VaUat, from Central Cen-tral America, reports tha Captain Itnw Ky, of the schooner Joteph Ji. JArcAcca, while en route to the schooner with the commandant of the port and two uukuown iwraons capsized during a squall and all wiredrowneil |