Show THE TURN GALLED Mendacious Old Bill McKinley Mc-Kinley of Ohio WILSONSLONDON SPEECH Was Garbled By McKinley For Political Po-litical EffectWilson Expected as Much and Prepared Himself for it by HavineHis Address Correctly Reported Report-ed Two Noted Men Dead BALTIMORE Md Oct 7Tbe Baltimore Bal-timore Sun correspondent boarded the New York as she came up from quarantine quar-antine and carried to Mr Wilson the first home news he had received for some time His attention was called to the Suns report of the speeches of Major McKinley I Mc-Kinley commenting on the London speech and the chamber of commerce dinner He read this attentively and putting down the paper remarked The best answer to all this is the speech I delivered and which Major McKinley is criticising If Major McKinley is rightly reported re-ported he has simply garbled my speech by using the first half of a sentence sen-tence to twist it in one way and omitting omit-ting the last half which could not be so used I knew full well that whatever what-ever 1 mght say on such an occasion would be thus garbled and falsely presented pre-sented to the American people by protection pro-tection speakers and papers and so I did what I seldom do or have time to dodictated and gave to the press an accurate synopsis of my speech and a full copy of the address to the London Times which culled forth the long editorial ed-itorial in that paper the next day from which Air McKinley and his followers may take all the comfort they can draw 11 went abroad at my doctors suggestions sug-gestions to shake off my unspeakable fatigue so as to take part as much as possible in the campaign In England I visited friends at oxford and Cam b1 idge Everybody being in London phrase rut of town I saw few public men The dinner tendered me was I felt too great an honor to my country and myself to be declined coming from the treat commercial chamber ol the world I accepted feeling that 1 could not show my appreciation of it better than speaking as an American citizen and exactly as I speak here at home In this I wa not deceived My speech was received by the whole audience in the spirit in which it was made and while many peihaps most of them may have disagreed with me I found that more than one longheaded long-headed Englishman agreed that our reduced tariff would make us a great competitor in the worlds markets and eventually regain for us our share of the carrying trade of the I world Mr Wihon was asked whether he had made any investigation about trusts in England hI did not this time he replied but when 1 was in England in 18891 did and discussed the subject in a series of articles I wrote for the Sun at the time Some of those articles were written from Enaland Trusts as we know them of course cannot exist in Great Britain Where the whole world is free to compete no trust can corner the market With regard to coal Mr Wilson stated that the English syndicate which formerly owned the Nova Scotia miners were much pleased at getting rid oi the property Practically bunker coal was on the free list in the McKinley bill Foreign steamships could and can buy Nova Scotia coal at Boston New York or at any American port free of duty and yet they prefer to buy the Maryland and Virginia coal This fact alone ought to do away with the scare about free coal If you should unfortunately be for the house observed Mr Straus I have no doubt the people of West Virginia will insist on putting you in the seDate I much order the house Mr Wilson Wil-son replied It is a far greater and more active body Mr Wilson proposes to begin his canvass can-vass at once HIS END WAS PEACEFUL BELLEFONTE Pa Oct 7Ex Governor Gov-ernor Andrew G Ourtin died at 5 oclock this morning His end was peaceful ho having been unconscious during the last twelve hours All the members of his family were at his bedside side when he passed away Mr Curtin had been in feeble health for Home weeks but his condition condi-tion grew serious on Thursday last and from that time he sank rapidly Death was caused by old age The exgovernor was in his eightieth year and this being combined with nervous trouble whicb upon reaching the vital points in the brain ended his life When the case first took on a serious aspect physicians were summoned but they then abandoned all hopes of recovery re-covery and the death of the old war governor was not a surprise OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES DEAD BEYERELY Mass Oct 70liyer Wendell Holmes died at his residence Beverly Falls Farm this afternoon Oliver Wendell Holmes was born at Cambridge Mass August 291809 He Graduated at Harvard college in 1829 and began the study of law which he soon abandoned for that of medicine After taking his degree of M D be spent some time in the hospitals in Paris and other European countries He returned to Boston in 1835 and began be-gan praticing In 1838 he was elected professor of anatomy and physiology in Dartmouth college and in 1847 was appointed to similar professorship in the medical school of Harvard univers ity from which he retired in 1882 But it is chiefly as a writer that Dr Holmes is known As early as 183 his contributions appeared in various periodicals and his reputation was established es-tablished bv the delivery of a metrical essay entitled Poetry which was followed by others in rapid succession In 1857 he began in the Atlantic Monthly a series of articles under the title of The Autocrat of the Breakfast Break-fast Table which were followed in 1860 by The Professor at the Breakfast Break-fast Table in 1872 by Poet at the Breakfast Table As a writer of songs lyrics and poems for festive occasions he has long occupied the first place In 1886 he visted England where he was received with great cordiality Editions Edi-tions of his collective poems have appeared ap-peared from time to time the first in 1836 He had contributed largely to current medical literature as well as to literary journals and reviews and for a Ions time held a warm place in II the hearts of the people as a lecturer A series of genial papers from his pen entitled Over the Teacups appealed ap-pealed in the Atlantic Monthly dur inir 1890 The latter years of his life have been spent in quiet retirement at Baveily Palls farm broken occasionally by a lecture to the Harvard students What Do You Take Medicine For Because you are SICK and want to get well of course Then remember that Hoods Sarsaparilla Sarsa-parilla Cures All we ask is that in taking Hoods Sarsaparilla you will do so with perseverance perse-verance equalling or approaching the tenacity with which your camplaint has clung to you It takes time and care to eradicate old and deepseated maladies particularly when they have been so long hidden in the system that they have become chronic Remember that all permanent and positive cures are brought about with reasonable moderation Hoods Sarsaparilla attacks at-tacks disease vigorously and never leaves the field until it has conquered |