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About Evening capital journal. (Salem, Or.) 1888-1893 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 27, 1891)
-rv. .,mvnm!A". sw" l'""1eF': VOL. 4. "THE PEOPLE'S PAPER." .'"CO-DAY'S KEVTS TO-DAY." NO. 147. SALEM, OREGON, TTTURSDAX. AUGUST 27, 1801. EVENING CAPITAL ita - . ? thrji m mm- nj L 4 Tw JUUrUNAJL, flF PA Will sell Less than any ATTENTION! T. Come and examine our goods nud prices, We have hammocks us low as 45 cents. Croquot sets from 1.00 upwards. Boy's express wagons of all kinds. Tinware, Brooms, Soaps, Matches and all kinds of notions. This line of goods MUST be closed out in order to make room for our early Fall stock of Men's. VN omen's and Children's SHOES, HOSE and UNDERWEAR, which will beoin on arrive in a few days. Come early and get prices. ' It costs you nothing to examine our goode. 5S2& g.IJljq WIMSH (SUCCESSOR TO) ttX&t&BiKAX && OSBTTEMST, 2G1 tjf ifym ft?i SjHR llilSKiiiifl ylljK4 IS? THE FINISHING TOUCH. In putting the finishing touch to vour toilet do you always see that your shoes are in keeping with the rest of your makeup The shoos may ho better that the other garments and sstill be appro; riate, but if they are not up to the raiment in style and quality the effect is unpleasant. R. J. FLEMING'S Shoes stand on their merits. His stock is infinite in va riety, excellent in quality, nnd moderate in price. " buy yobuTT ST b wj Wii Ima EsWBfBS3S,. ! M "xiBiSg& t J yf Commercial Street. The Best for the Money all the Time. lOOllllg AriV"Bapv v?; aaaS -and SPORTING GOODS, BICYCLES, CUTLERY OR NOVELTIES go to BROOKS & HARRITT, 94 State Street, THIS IS FOR YOU ON. At the State Street Book Store, 98 State Street, you OXFORD TEACHER'S BIBLES, indexed or unindexed, 20 Other Store in the A3TE MKAN FARMERS: a ffl B - TTATSJO ATM1D ORGANS AND MUSICAL JUmiCIIANII8E. FINEST LINF. LOWEST PRICES. Installments from $5 permontli up.'Wholesalo and Retail. P. H. EASTON & CO., 310 Commercial St., Salem, Head Quarteis for thr Salem Orclieatra. dw A LARGE SUPPLY OF THE hest quality of brick at the yards near Penitentiary. BURTON BROS. balem, Oregon. ON THE NT P The Capital Homestead Company rs buildinjr a number of new cottages nn lnriro lots, in heulthv location, near tbo Electric Hue. Tbty are for utile at asnnuble prices, on easy terms, call id t'xnnilno plans: co and see the property. Correspoudenco solicited. OFFICE IN MURPHY BLOCK, SALEM, OREGON, 0 M SEPTILIIBEK 1st ! i t Season If you wnnt to buy SHOT GUNS, HUNTING COATS, GAME BAGS, LOADED SHELLS, AMMUNITION AND EVEYBODY ! Per Cent. State, No Exception Whatever. BUSINESS. ATT W v " a II M ON mm k o Successors to W. F. Bootliby & Co. POPULAR Clothie SALEM. f .J ML T M iHli:iifffti-f t s? 'X SSH " " E S K fas fi " C. wl$ n OH In HI lib The leading Normal school of the North West. Beautiful and health location, no saloons, new buildings, new apparatus, full faculty, light ful expenses and large attendance. , , Normal, Advanced normal, Business. Art, and Music departments. Special attention given to physical culture, volunteer military organi zation. Those receiving diplomas ureauthorlzed to leach in any county In the state without farther examination. Tuition Ju the Normal and Bus iness departments has been reduced from $40 to 25 per year, aud in the Hnhnnrmul fmn. JLin tn son iwr vonr. A vear at sohool lor $150 expenses. Tuition, Normal and Business $0.25 per term. Board at normal dining nan i.ou pji fu'UBU rooms with light aud firo $1 per week. Board and lodging in private homes $3 50 per week. First term opens Sept. 22, 1891. St udents can en ter at any time. For catalogue address P. L. CAMPBELL, A, B., Pres.. or J. M. POWELL, A.M.. Vim' Pros. m dw GAfTfAL BUSINESS 'wM, SAIiK35, OKKGON. A. V AR3ISTK0NG, Mnnnger. W. I. STALBY rrlncipal. BSy-Will reopen on Monday, Sept. THE BUSINESS COURSE INCLUDES Spelllug, Grammar, l'lain Writing, Arithmetic, Correspnn dence.Commerclal Law. Sinele and Double Entry Bookkeeping. Hankluc, ButineBS Forms, Business ana Ofllco Practice. THE ENGLISH COURSE Includes Heading, "Writing, Arithmetic, Spelling, Grammar, Corres pondence, Geography and History. Call at the college, or write for beautifully illustrated catalogue, free. n i m 1 0 T Ci DRAYH AND TRUCKh Salem Truck 4 Bray Co. sbB V flee State St., opposite Sa lera Iron works. Draya and trucks may bo found throughout the dav a' the orner of State ami Commercial street. BRICK AND TILE. For nrst-claHS liand made brick and tile, goto MURPHY & DESART. Largo supply on baud. Near fair ground, Balem. 728 3IOKETI To Lom on Real EsUU Security, Agency l'aclflo Btalci Barlnim, Loan A Building Co. FEAR & HAMILTON, SAtEM. Orgoo 6:12 dw INSURE IN YOUR HOME COMPANY "Tlie State." Antti Over 350,000 Dollar, GEO. M. BKLUK, City Agent, And special agent for Mar'on county, Vt lice viOi i ht Componr, T EVERYBODY FirPfrSffWSSSXCnSBTKSS. Commercial Street. "i Hatters and Furnishers , 235 Commercial Street, OREGON. 05KBOKMMB3HBHny OREGON STATE NORMAL SCHOOL, MONMOUTH, OREGON. Board of Regents: Stal e Board of Education, ex ofllcio; His ExcelIency,Sylvestcr Peunoyer, Gov.; Hon. G. W. McBride, Sec. ) ofstate; Hon. E. B. McElroy, r Superintendent of Public In J struetien: Benjamnn Schol- fiuld, Pres.; J. B. V. Butler.Beo.; Executive coiumUtee; Hou. J. J. Duly. Hon. P. W. Haley ,and J. B. V. ButlHr, Polk; Jacob 1' 2. Vooruees, Marion; J. U. ntte, Jt&Jjgji Polk; Alfred Lucey, (Maqkaums; A. JNOliner, luuiinuiimii, v..n Holmes, Marlon. per term often weeks, Subnormal $5 7, 1801. Studonta registered uov.-S3a ,TIIE SHORTHAND COURSE TNCLUDEHKhnrthand.Tyrewrltlnif.Bpcl 1 llu,Gniiniiur, I'laln N rltlnCor respondeuce, Manifolding, Letter ' opy lug, Bnsluet-saud Legal hormK, liualutts and Olllce l'mcllce. 310KGAIT & MEADE, Truck & Dray Line. Good teama and prompt work ia on atroni;bold. M.T, RINEMAN DKAI.EH in Staple and Fancy Groceries, Crockery, Ulauwaro, Latnpi. Woedei and Willow ware. All kind of mill feed Alfto veeetablenaad Trait in their eason "Highest 1'rlce paid for country produce.' Weaolldt aabaru of your patronage, 94 JWbUuj street J. P.WHITE, EXPKE68 AND TRUCK LINE Ha all n j f all kinds. Beat work. Wiod at sxrf train. UNREASONING FAITH. Eininplm In Illitnry of Its Innnenrn Upon llmnan Ilnpplnos. Thoy wero not wretched nt all, tlioso early London citizens; but, on tho con tmry, Joyous nnd happy and hopeful. And not only for reasons stated, but for tho great fact tho greatest fact of tho time of their blind and unreason fng faith. It is impossible) to exaggerate tho Im portance of unreasoning faith as a factor in humnn happiness. Tho life of the meanest man was filled with dignity and with splendor, bocauso of tho great inheritance assured him by the church. Wo must never for one moment leavo out tho church in speak ing of tho past Wo must never forget that all peoplo, savo hero and thero a doubting Rufus or a questioning prince of Anjou, believed without tho shadow of a doubt Knowledge brought the power of questioning. As yet thero was no knowledge. Therefore every man's life, however miserable, was to his happy ignorance the certain anteroom of heaven. Wo aro fond of dwelling on the medlroval hell, tho stupidity and tho brutality of iti endless torturo, and the selfishness of buying salvation with masses. Hell, my friends, was always meant for tho other man. IIo who saw tho devils painted on the church wall, rending, tearing, frying, cutting, scouring tho poor souls in hell, know theso souls for tlioso of ids enemies. Like Danto, ho saw among them all his public and ills private foes. IIo looked upward for his hope. Thero ho beheld loving angels bearing aloft in their soft arms tho soul redeemed to the abode of porfect bliss. In that fcoul lie recognized himself; ho saw the nortroituro, exact nnd lifelike, of his own forgiven and sanctified features. When the embassadors of the Caliph linroun al Iinsohid brought gifts to the great King Karl, tho finest thing ho had to show them was tho splendid servico of tho church. This story is told literally. It might bo told as an allegory. In London, Saxon and Norman as also for many centuries to follow tho finest thing they had to show was the church, with its music that moved tho heart to tears; its promises, which steeled tho soul to endurance; Its glories, which carried tho beholder far away from tho wnttlo and clay of his hut and his grimy leathern doublet; its power, which stood between him and tho tyrannous over lord, nnd saved his homo from starvation and his womankind from dishonor. Fortunate indeed it was for tho peoplo that they had the church to show to those embassadors of tho Mos lem. Walter Besant In Harper's. CuClUhmon in New York. Tho English colony in Now York is largely mado up of young men of cul tured loisurely habits. Thoy aro for tho most part younger sons, of good education and no calling or profession. In almost every caso inquiry elicits tho fact that they aro pensioners on homo bounty. Thoy aro living on limited allowances Just enough to encourage respectability such allowances being apparently doled out with the viow to sustaining llfo without leaving margin enough for dissipation or a return tick et. In fact, in many instances tho al lowance is made conditional on remain ing abroad. If they should violato this condition it Is work or starve Under tho circumstances it would seem that a Continental life would bo preferable, In viow of its cheapness; but theso young follows prefer America. "Americuns aro kinder to English men," said ono of theso young men, "than tho peoplo of continental Eu rope 'Wo have worked that section of the earth a triflo threadbare. Thoy don't like us. When it comes to India, Australia, Canada or any of the Eng lish colonial possessions, wo prefer tho United States. It costs inoro to live here, but tho life is worth living. So ciety receives us whether wo have money or not. In London I'd bo an ofllco drudgo and bo limited to board ing liotiso society. Horo a well edu cuted, agrceablo English gontlcman is well thought of, and can dino at tho exponbo of somebody else a good deal of tho tinio." New York Herald. The Foe of Good Knglltli. The grammarian, tho purist, tho per nicketty stickler for trifles, is tho deadly foe of good English, rich in idioms and racy of the soil. Every man who has taught liimself to know good English, and to lovo it nnd to delight in It, must sympathize with Professor Lounsbury'a lack of admiration "for that grammar school training which consists In teach ing tho pupil how much more ho knows about our tongue than tho great mas ters who havo molded It, which practi cally sets up tho claim that tho only men who are able to write English properly aro tho men who huvo nover thown any capacity to writo It." Bran dor Mattliows in Harper's. Shower of Pollea. Tho so called showers of sulphur which havo at times visited various cities, notably St Louis, aro nothing but clouds of yellow pollen blown from pine or other forest trees from eoino dls tant place. Perhaps out of millions of grains thus scattered far and wide only a single one may bo of service.- Profes sor Joseph F, Jamas In Popular Science Monthly. Ilumorlnc the Public. Foreman Where shall I put this re port of tho prizo fight) Editor 1'ut it uJongxIde of Rev. Dr. Goodman's sermon. Then peoplo can read the prize fight while pretending to read the sermon. Now York Weekly. INHUKANOB Cora pan y. rise. rue aaa uo U.W. BSKLKIt, Atnt, Balem, Orjron m CAPITAL JOURNAL. H0FER BROTHERS, - - - '.Editors. UHLIH J1KD DAI LY. KXCEITHUNDAY, JJT TIIK Canital Journal Publishing Company. (Incorporated. Oflleo, Commercial Street, In I. O. Uulldlng loitered at the postofTlco nt Salem, Or., na Bccoud-clnfs n rttrr. PLAIN WOKUS T ASTOKIAN8. Astoriansnre holding more rail road meetiuc8. They would meet with more railroads If they would cut loose from Portland aud Btrlko out for a lino to tap tho rich fruit aud gram region In tho heart of the Willamette valley. Autorla people should not Imaglue for a moment that any railroad connection with Portland will ever be worth a cop per farthing to them in tho way of commerce. Portland is only n re ceiving and distributing center for commerce. It cannot In tho nature of thlugs allow another Blnillar cen ter to l)o developed to divide her trafllc as Astoria certainly will. The driblets of trafllo that Portland would allow to leak out and in over a line to Astoria would bo mighty email. A Portland-built lino would be officered, aud run by and iu the interest of Portland. It could not be otherwise. A lino to tho Willamette alley at Salem would be under tho opposite charac ter of iulluences outirely. It would be to tho Interest of this eutlre valley to get direct access to Astoria, with out paying toll to Portland control and Portland interests. If those Astorians, who are pushing railroad enterprises, cannot see this they must be blind indeed. They must reallzo that they will be a mere com mercial dependency of Poitland to long as they do uot uiuko their city independent of Portland. This can ouly bo accomplished to any advan tage by a direct railroad connection with Salem. Astoria and Salem should pull together. They should first get together and then stand to gether. SAV1U) TO T11K COMJUMUII. The MeKiuley act hits been de nounced as lu the solo interest of tho manufacturers and as now burdens for the consumers. Tho New York Tribune prints a table showing tbo decline in the price of two standard grades of sugar from a date six weeks before tho McKlnley bill went into eilect until about a week ago. Gran ulated sugar is taken as u lest of the grades most widely used, aud crush ed as a test of the higher grades. Hero is tho table: Qranulnted. Crushed. All. 80,1800 OlWcts 0.T6CIS. Sept. 0, IhW) (1 75 cts. 7.10 clH. Bei.t. U, 1800 H.02 CU- 7.1X1 ctn. Sept. SO, 1800 0 112 Cts. 7 00 ot. Sept. 27, 18'W 0 02 cts. 7 00 cts Oct. 4, 1800 0.0.! CU. 7,00 cts. Dec.0, 1N1I 8 13 cts. 0 7i cts. Jiu. 10, 1891 5 01 cts. 0 fiOcts. Keb. 14. 18..I 12 cts diets. March 21. 1801 0 23 els. 0.01 cts. July 11, 1801 4.23 Cts. 6 00 cts. July 18. 1801 4 2ft ctfl. 5.00 cts July 2j: 1891 15 otx. o.00 cts Aug. 1, 1C01..W ! US cts. fi 00 cts, Aujf.8 1801 -I.WctB. fiUOcts Aujj 15. 1801 i 12 ctP. 5 00 o . While crushed sugar is and for six weeks has been mure than two cents lower than before tho act passed, the prico of granulated is from 2 to 2 cents lower. During tho period of transition, after tho act passed but before It went Into efl'ect, tho chang es wore unnatural, being largely gov erned by speculation in crude sugar, which could bo Imported for manu facture iu March free of duty. Again, after the act went intoeflect, the great deraaud to supply deploted stocks caused some advance In price. Hut slnco the market hus settled the consumers are paying fully 2 cents less than thoy paid before (ho new tariff was enacted. This is about fl per capita for the eutlro population of tho country, men, women and children. Reckoning dutiable sugar alone, excluding the domestic prod ucts and free imports under the Hawaiian treaty, the imports in twclvo months ending Juno .10th wero :i,103,B73,f70 pounds. Tho dif ference of more than 2 cents per pound in cost means that more than $01,000,000 has been saved to con sumers In this country by ono item of the MoKluk-y bill. Tho saving Is pretty equally distributed, too, There Is no urtlcio of so universal consumption as sugar. mi'itovK Tin: mAm Tin: JouitNAii applauds the coun ty court in its determination to build better highways Iu Murlon county. Dut the county should not do it all. There are wealthy farmers in Oregon who should take holdund Improve tho roads around nnd thro' their own lands. Many men look upon a road tax us uu Interference uud generiU nuisance, to tie avoided if possible uud to bo shirked in tho doing. It is not a mutter of how much tho roads may bo Improved, but with how little Itjffort the duty Imposed by law can bo discharged. There Is not enough interest taken In good roads. There Is utmost n totul luck of Individual pride, and ulthout Individual prldo public pride is wanting. It Is llie pride of the Individuals that makes tho sum total of public pride. Tho peoplo ought to bo aroused to a deeper In terest lu good highways. Oregon la no longer a rough coait state, ocou pled by widely scattered pioneers. It Is a state with a permanent popu lation, with farms aud homes tliut aro to b family estates through sue ceedlng generations. Good ronds Highest of all in Leavening Tower. agagJST ABSOLUTEty PURE muBt suroly follow In time, and by individual efforts tho peoplo will be educated lo n higher prldo In country roads' that will bo smooth for tho carriage aud strong for tho wagou that carries the products of tho farms to market. NOT TIIK FlItST. Washington Pest: J. W. Foster, who was Bent to Spain by Mr. Blaine to negotiato n reciprocity treaty, had Blmply to tako up the work where ho laid it down years before Mr. Foster was sent to Spain by President Arthur ou just the same mlsslou. Ho went to Spain, succeeded in negotiating a treaty on Hues of commercial reciprocity, and this treaty was subsequently laid before the sonato by President Ar thur. It was still on thoscuato tublo when President Cleveland camo in to olllce. Tho sonato hud uot acted ou it. Tho piesldeutlal election with its concomitant excitement sent nil questions of treaty to tho rear in tho minds of senators and everybody else. When Mr. Cleve land and Secretary of Statu Bayard camo Into olllce they withdrew from the senate's consideration tho reciprocity treaty with Spain which Mr. Foster had negotiated. That was not tho only reciprocity treaty which was arranged during tho Arthur administration, den. Grant and Gen. Prescott wont to Mexico and wero successful In ar ranging a treaty baaed on recipro city. Thoy were dispatched on tho mission by President Arthur. Tho result of their labors went to tho scnato ouly to share tho samo fato as Foster's Spanish treaty. Tho Clove laud administration withdrew it and no more waB heard of reciprocity until It was brought forward recent ly with great flourish of trumpets ns a now discovery. Whatovor credit may attach to reciprocity belongs to President Arthur and his adminis tration and should bo given to them. At that time It was necessary under the law, for the president to submit reciprocity treaties In common with all otheis to tho senate. Now it Is different. By the now law tho pres ideut may approvo such treaties. It Is dilllcult to tell what tho senate might havo done with tho recently mado reciprocity treaties were it per mitted to review and act on them. OOV. TILLMAN'S BTATICSIKNT, If there be any public ollleer who owes his placo to tho Southern Farmer's alliance it Is Goy. Tillman, of South CarolIi)a,aud what ho says therefore on tho now third party is of especial Interest. IIo has fol lowed up his recent threat that tho race Issue will bo raised against tho soculleil people's party in tho south precisely tho same ns It Is against tho republican party with n declara tion of his views ou tho third party movement in tho western or repub lican states. Tho Charleston News and Courier prints a verbatim report of Oov. Tillman's elaborate speech at Ited Hprltigs tue other day, from which the following Is an extract which should bo read by every farmer who has been induced to Join the alliance. In Kansas and other northwestern states -"Bleeding Kansas," tho blackest of tho black republican slates which helped to make us in South Corllnu, at least, subservient to the black horde that ouco domi nated our state, tho farmers with poverty staring them iu the fuco und tho sherlH' behind them with their mortgages unpaid, have been driven to adopt democratic prlnci pales lu splto of themselves. AppIauMi. They haven't tho manliness to como nut and say wo have been wrong uud you wore right. Insteud of Joining tho democratic parly outright, they want to organ ize u third parly. They won't como right square Into tho democratic party, although I admit It Is hard for u fellow who lias been voting one way for twenty-ilvo years to confess ho was wrong; but wn don't care how they help in ho long as they do help us. Laughter und uppluuse. If thoy want to yota for democratic principles lu the third party. In God's name let im tend tliem joyful greetings; for If wo can divide those fellows up thero wo'lt have u showing thou, won't wo boys? Applause. Hero Is the koynote; "If thoy western republican farmersj want to vote for democratic principles In the third party, in God's name send them Joyful greetings; for If wo can divide those fellowo up there we'll havo a showing then, won't we boy7" But tho Southern allluuco will take democratic principles only In the democratic party an a strlot parti pun. And by democratic principles It means thoo principles, the subversion of popular government, minority rule, the suppression of free ballot, tho robbery of 1.000,000 Arnerlcun cltlnms of the elective frenchUe, etc. Oov. Tillman truly expresses (ho feolltJtr and purpose of those who control tho Southern Formers' alliance. Ex, Latest U. S. Gov't Food Report. aking PnlAi I vFvriAvl TELEGMFIIIC DISPATCHES. issociatctl Press Report antl Digests of all Important News oi To-Day. MISCELLANY. TjAWYEHS in council. Boston, Aug. 27. Tho fourteenth annual meeting of tho American Bar association opened yesterday. Nearly 200 members wero present. After President Baldwin had called the assemblage to order a welcome was oxtouded to tho visitor by Hou. John Lowell, president of tho Bos tou Bar association. President Baldwlu responded, stating that tho association was pleased with tho warmth of tbo recoptlou It had re ceived. After theso' few brief re marks he proceeded to deliver his annual address. Tho prcsideut Bpoko of tho great diversity of matters treated by tho federal and state governments. He thon reviewed tho acta of congress and of the legislatures of tho dlller out states. Iu speaking of tho aotlou taken to relievo tho supreme court, ho reviewed al some length tho de tails of tho Judiciary act. Ho paid a tribute to President Harrison in regard to tho fairness and excolleuco of his appointments to 1111 tho new circuit court Judgeships. He men tioned especially tho International copyright law. The sneaker sold within last year the number of states which hud adopted tho Australian ballot system had Increased to twenty-nine. Laws relating to other important matters wore gono over, nnd tho president In speaking of tho uniformity of legislature?, said ilvo more states had uppolnUd commissions to promote it. In clos ing, tho speaker referred to tho American constitution, which, ho said, Is tho best fruits of a thousand years of Anglo-Saxon history. At tho oloso of the president's address, 100 new members wero ad mitted. A recess was then takeu. FUI.LKIl DLTAILS OP TIIK NUW YOIIK ACCIDKNT. NnwYonic, Aug, 27. Much In dignation Is felt uud freely expressed In this city at tho tardy und unskill ful manner In which tho authori ties ure working to exhume the corpses of tho unfortunato victims of tho terrlblo disaster that occurred in Park placo last Saturday. Up to 8 o'clock yesterday morning only ilfty-soven had been taken out, nnd, although many others are plainly visible mixed up with the debris, tho men at work aro power less to remove them for want of proper appliances. Manv of tho bodies are hold dawn by tho heavy presses, which It will bo Impossible to move without tho requisite ma chinery. Theso appliances uro prom ised, uud It is hoped tho work will go on more rapidly. Bodies recovered now uro simply n shapeless mass of charred, putrid llesli, In many Instances a moving muss of maggots, so that it Is Im possible to recognlzo thorn by their features. Identity, In most In stances, Is mado by clothes or some paper or watch or something in the pockets. Tho smell from decaying bodies was so horrible it was almost Impossible to breutho within the fire limits without somo counteract ing odor to Inhale. There wore 12fi longshoremen at work till Tuesday night under command of T, 13. Orlmmtns. Theso men began their work by bracing up tho walls of tho ruins which wero in uu unsafe con dition. Others begun by removing some of tho debris accumulated In the street. A largo crowd of watch ers kept constant vigil, somu look ing for the bodies of their friends or rolut'vcH, while others were simply impelled by morbid curiosity. Tuesday night the mangled form of what had ouco been a woman was found. It was rolled gently Into a pluo casket and taken to tho coroner's, where the ghostly work of searching the putrid muss begun. There wus nollilug tieur Ihereiiiniiin or on them by which Identification wuh possible. Shortly uflor another corpse wus taken out, fully unrecug nlzublo. Then a body was found in the busement of No. 70, on the east side of the building. As the fearful shape was lifted from lis garbugvd burial ground, the head rolled oft from tho trunk ami wus recovered by the coroner who took with him what was visible of the mangled skeleton. Tho coroner decided It was a girl about lo years of num. Therewu again no mcmnTof Identi fication. Just then Dr. Page, who won tho coroner's representative, v i