The Hooc River r It's a Cold Day When We Get Left. VOL. 8. HOOD RIVER. OREGON, FRIDAY. SEPT. 25. 1896. N0.1$. Y J A THE NEWS OF THE WEEK From 'All. Parts of, the New ' World and the Old. 0F INTEREST TO OUR READERS Comprehensive Review of the Import ant Happenings of the Past Week Culled From the Telegraph Column Richard' Williams, the ex-customi inspector, of San Franoisoo, oonvioted of extortion; has been sentenced to sii fears' imprisonment and f 10,000 fine. I A bakery at Wooaburn, , Or., wai "y destroyed by fire, and a baker named 1 Eflhl was" bnrned while trying to sav I some of .his effeots from the building. i The loss is $2,000. ' Hops aggregating In quantity ovei ) 75,000 pounds have been oontraoted by p1 Marion oounty growers to Charlel .Green & Son, the purchase prioe being 6 oents a pound. Ed son Keith, for fortyyears a promi ' -aent oitizen of Chioago, threw himsell f.into the lake at the foot of Thirteenth 'street in that oity, while temporarily f insane, as a result of ohronio dyspepsia and insomnia. ', ' The "Amerioan " ship Luzon, Captain Park, whioh left New York May 31 . for Shanghai, passing Anjeron August - 18, grounded on a bar at Woo Sung, It ia probable the ship will be floated . after she has been lightened, but she must be drydooked before putting to sea again., "Kill me, 'kill me; shoot me out of this misery." This was the agonizing cry of .Anton Duaback, who has been employed in the Guggenheim smelting works near Woodbridge, N. J. Dus baok was working near a tank of sul phuric aoid, when he lost his balance and plunged headforemost to a fate more horrible than death. His eyes (were badly burned and his hair eal en ' ' - off. He oannot reoover. From Pittsburg, Pa., oomes word that Russian spies sent out by the gov ernment of the czar have stolen Ameri can armor-plate seorets and propose to 'turn their acquisition to profit by fur nishing information by means of whioh Russia may make her own sheaths fox battle-ships. This in brief is thejdis- t .. ""oovery whioh has been kept quiejt for somemonths by the offioials of the (Car negie Company, and whioh has wovied , tlie naval authorities and oflloiWis of j , una uuuubiy nuu ui iuo tsroel uiy f 'J, The engineer and ordinanoe Sr. 2tt' 1 J r: xnents of the array are preparing-" for the execution of the legislation of the last 'congress,' looking to the improve ment and strengthening the fortifica tions and coast defenses of this country. Plans for these important works have been formulated, and in most instanoea the approved projects. are under head way. The appropriation of $12,000,000 made by the last congress has been al ... , loted so as to accomplish the greatest good with the means and facilities at : and.., .. ., s ,. : K. One (workman, John Nonan, wai killed and three perhaps, fatally in jured by a falling pile of brioka in Chi oago. The aooident was caused by the caving-in of the old briok foundations. The bark Gainsborough, from New castle for San Franoisoo, ooal laden, went ashore near Diamond Head, four miles from Honolulu, and is a total ioss.: The crew with the captain, hia wife and children, left in boats and i 'wore picked up by a tug. ' w Frank Hepburn, a son of Congress man Hepburn, of Iowa, fought a duel in Chester, Ark., and was killed by the 'second shot from his antagonist's weapon. The duel was the outome of a joke whioh Hepburn perpetrated upon W. E. Sims, a saloon proprietor. An examination of the papers left by Henry Dixon, an Englishman who died in the almshouse in Witobita, Kan., reveals the fact that Dixon was of noble birth and that his wife was the grand daughter of the Earl of Albermarle ' and daughter of Lady Georgiana Hill, .. who eloped with .Thomas MoGann, the ' Fenian agitator. The story was told - in an old diary found among Dixon's t papers. ,, . : An infuriated mob of laborers bat tled with the polioe of South Chioago for the possession of a wagon-driver whom they threatened with lynching, because his runaway horse knocked down several of the crowd. - After a 'fierce 'struggle in whioh stones and olubB were freely used,' the driver, Peter Zisliski, was resoued from his as sailants. In addition to the half dozen men trampled beneath the hoofs of the t" frantio horse, a number of the crowd were severely beaten by the polioe. Reports made by three vessels that have arrived reoently in New York arouse the gravest fears that the three- v luuHieu snip otat ui juawe, wniun J New York September 4 with a cargo of uutu tur ouhuuui, una uemi uuruou at sea, and that all on board, some twenty-six men, have perished. The State of Maine is well known along the Pa - cifio ooast. She has been to San Fran oisoo a number of times. f(She held the record between San Frano.soo and New York. The captain was a part owner in the vessel. i A Mysterious Shooting;. - Arnold Flosch, of the oloak manu facturing firm of Bernard Pasternek & Co., of New York, is in a hospital with three pistol-shot wounds. ' His aon, William B. Fosoh, is in oustody on suspioion of having attempted to take his fathers' life. The shooting oo ourred in the apartment of the elder Fosoh, at the Hotel Peleter. He lived there alone, his wife having died three years ago. ' Work of a Mexican Mob. A mob attaoked the Amerioan Pres byterian ohuroh in Amusa Calienta, Mexioo, and broke windows and doors with stones. The minister's house was attaoked. The mob also broke every window in the" oollege in the same oity. Minister Ransome has been ap pealed to to use his beat offioes with the government to secure the punish ment of the offenders. A Storm in Pennsylvania. A storm of wind, hail and rain, whioh Bwept the eastern part of Penn sylvania Saturday night was the most severe that has visited that section for a long time. Scores of buildings were unroofed, some utterly ruined, thou sands of panes of window glass and many skylight's shattered, and apple and other late- orops almost destroyed. Four Killed and Six Injured. ' Four men were killed and six badly injured in a oollision on the Cincin nati, Hamilton & Dayton railway, near Connersville, Ind., by a payoar and freight train. The paycar was fol lowing the regular freight, eastbound. Both were running as extras. Another Bunk Fails. Tbe private banking house of Gardi ner, Morrow & Co. , the oldest bank in Central Pennsylvania, has closed its doors, owing to the general depression in business. The firm says it expects to pay every dollar of its indebted ness. Impure Water in Schools. The publio schools of Chioago are liable to be closed at any moment on the order of the health commissioner, beoause the water supply afforded them by the board of eduoation without filters is impure. Fire In Chronicle Building. A fire broke out in the stereotyping room of the Chronicle building, San Franoisoo, whioh destroyed $2,500 worth of property before it was extin guished, the firemen being handicapped by the height of the building. This Dog Deserve a Medal. , James Feenan, a well-borer, who re rides alons in a small oottage at Berk ley, Cal. , narrowly escaped being burned to a orisp, while asleep in his home. He was saved by a little dog, who kept up a frantio howling and tugged at his master's clothes until he awakened him. In escaping from the house Feenan was seriously burned and is now in a serious oondition. The firemen who were battling with the flames had a narrow esoape. Some giant powder that had been stored in the house exploded and blew to pieces all that was left of the building. Tale of Brutal Savagery. The state penitentiary board of Ar kansas has ordered the discharge of a number of state employes for cruel and inhuman treatment to oonviots in their charge. Two oolored oonviots had es caped, and when captured they were severely whipped. Iron rings . were welded about their neoks and one end of a ohain fastened to the rings and the other to their waists. They were un able to straighten up when a member of the board saw them. The chains were drawn so tight the men were un able to raise their heads and were com pelled to work in that oondition. Not a Hostile Act. . The Brazilian minister in Rome has oabled to Buenos Ayres that he has had a conference with the Italian minister of foreign affairs. The foreign min ister declared that in sending the cruiser Piedmont to Brazil, the Italian government had not intended any hos tile act against Brazil, being assured that full satisfaction would be given for the insult to the Italian flag. Cached Powder In a Stove. Three men of Brighton Park, Chi cago, were injured, one of them seri ously, by putting powder in a stove to dry. They were preparing to go hunt ing, and placed . the powder in the oven and forgot about it. The build ing was completely wrecked and their esoape from instant death is considered miraoulons. A Woman Firebug;. Ethel Woods, an unmarried lady of about 22 years, of Danville, 111., has been arrested for arson. Her lover, George Allen, deserted her, and it is oharged that she attempted to burn down the house in whioh he slept. When the fire was discovered the whole side of the house was in flames. e A Mysterious Fire. The stook of woodenware, household goods, etc, of the Carlos Unna Com pany, of Portland, Or., was damaged to the extent of about $8,000 by fire. The firm is unable to acoount for the origin of the fire. The stocte was in sured to the full' amount of the loss. -r ' V Three times ar many herrings are consumed as any Other kind of fish. Only a Spark Needed to. Pre oipitate War. ; THE TURK CLEARED FOR ACTION Awaiting- the Word to Slaughter All ' Christians and Bombard the Foreign Colony A waiting the Command. London, Sept. 23. The Berlin cor respondent of the Times quotes a Con stantinople dispatoh to the Vossiche Zeitung from an unusually well-informed correspondent, whioh is said to have evaded the censorship of the Turkish offioials, and whioh says: "Everything wai ready for a general maasaore of Christians, and a bombard ment of the foreign quarter of Constan tinople, should the European warships attempt to pass the Dardanelles. There were forty-eight guns, placed in posi tion on the heights above Para, and the Turkish fleet in the harbor was cleared for action. The street patrols were oomposed exclusively of palaoe troops, while the Sopatchis and Kurd ish cavalry, although apparently un armed, loitered in the streets, awaiting the word of command." The Times has a dispatch from Se bastopol, which declares that a portion of the Russian Black sea fleet, consisting of four ironclads, three gunboats and several . torpedo-boats, is cruising off Otohiookoff, at the mouth of the Dneiper, under orders. On reoeipt of a telegram from the Russian ambas sador at Constantinople, they will join the admiral, leaving Seabstopol with the remainder of the fleet, and go di rect to the BosphoruB. The whole fleet has been plaoed on & war footing, and has embarked three battalions of in fantry and troops. The south of Rus sia has also been placed on a war footing. . Still in the Same Vein. London, Sept. 23. The St. James' Gazette this afternoon publishes a dis I" ten from Milan, Italy, that the Seool says the departure of the Italian flying squadron for the Levant is the initial step toward forcing Turkey to grant the reforms demanded in the oase of Armenia, and it is taken by Italy and supported by the United States and Great Britain. The Seool adds that in the event of the sultan's refusal to grant the reforms he will be deposed. A dispatoh from Rome to the St. James's Gazette says that the Italian ships will co-operate with those of Great Britain and the United States. ; DEATH OF TWO HOPPICKERS. Mrs Dolan Fell From a Bridge -Graf Accidentally Shot Himself. - Portland, Or., Sept. 23. Two hop piokers met death by acoidents at Champoeg, one by falling from a bridge early yesterday morning, and the other by the aooidental disoharge of a shot gun this morning. The first was a Mrs. Mary Dolan, who lived in South Portland. She had been pioking in a yard about a mile and a half - to the eastward of Champoeg with , some friends, and, in going home about 4 o'olock in the morning, they had to oross a bridge over the Champoeg mill race. The bridge was being repaired and it was considerably torn up. Mrs. Dolan stumbled over a jack-sorew and fell a distance of twenty-seven feet, breaking both thighs and suffering in ternal injuries that caused her death in about two hours. The deceased was about 50 years of age and left six children. She was the wife of Wil liam B. Dolan, of 234 Gibbs street this oity. The victim of the shotgun aooident was Hermann Graf, 18 years of age, whose home was with his parents, at 407 Engene street He had borrowed the gun to go shooting pheasants. He laid the gun down along with the muzzle toward him. One barrel was discharged, and sent its deadly load into his abdomen, tearing a hole through which the intestines protruded. He lived half an hour.. v . Fate of the Fishers. Boston, Sept. 23. The catboat Hebe, of Dorchester, with six men, whioh started on a fishing trip Satur day morning, has not returned. It ia thought that the boat capsized during a squall, and tnat the men are drowned., Those aboard were: John Cannon, Miohael F. Burke, Martin J. Burke, Joe Burke, all brothers; Pat rick C. MoCormack and Henry Don nelly. A Boy Fatally Shot. Victoria, B. C, Sept. 23. Yester day morning the 14-year-old son of Mr- Holmes, a milkman living on Gordon Head road, was dangerously wounded by a pistol shot Young Holmes and a neighbor's son were playing with the pistol, when it was discharged acci dentally. The bullet entered the abdo men, outting through the intestines and inflicting what will prove to be a fatal wound. ' A Jealous Swiss Kills His Wife. Aspen, Colo., Sept. 22. Antonio Cuaze, - a young Swiss, living on a ranch twelve mi'es from this oity, to day shot and kiiled his wife and her mother, Mrs. ' Quinn. Jealousy was the oause. Cuaze was arrested. A NIGHT OF TERROR. Lawlessness at Leadville Brought to . .. ' an. End, l ; Leadville, Colo., Sept 23. The work of dynamite and. buckshot is in evidence at the city morgue, where lie( five bodies, yesterday full of the vigor- ons life of the mountains one riddled with bullets while doing his duty, two horribly mangled by the dynamite they were using to destroy life and property, and the others full of leaden pellets re-' oeived while they were fighting in the shadows to destroy the lives of men who had taken their places in the mines. An additon was made to the death list at 6 o'olock this evening by the discovery of the body of Miohael Daugherty on the ground near the Em met mine, where he fell while leading the rioters who went to the Emmet flushed with their victory at the Coro nado. There were many people in upper windows and on house roofs provided with night glasses, who in the bril liant moonlight saw the savage attack on the Emmet and the more than gal lant repulse of the murderous rioters. These watohers say that the first volley from the mine was delivered at close range, and that the attacking men fell like grain before the sickle. How many met the fate of Daugherty it may remain for time and a search of long- abandoned shafts in that vicinity to tell. It now seems that the rioters dragged away their dead and wounded, Indian fashion, for a great many peo ple hae been about the Emmet today, and this is the only discovery of the kind. ,; , : . The story of the defense of the Em met is a thrilling one. Easily accessi ble, and surrounded only by a light 1 3 iu MnJAU4Hl i. I, . . Jj uunru iuijub, lit bubiiib wuxiudiiui bunt xu was not quiokly overwhelmed, its men slain and the building demolished. But ' the fifteen buckshot found in Daugherty's body and the story of the fearful effeot of the first volley from the mine tells bow quickly the rioters lost stomach for the bloody business. The work at the Maid of Erin was hap pily done for naught Had this mine been blown up, the great pumps which drain it and many other mines would have been destroyed, and the ensuing damage frightful to oontemplate. ' This morning's work, particularly with the fire department, has destroyed the last yestige of sympathy for the strikers, and this faot was evidenced at a large ly attended meeting of representative oitizens this afternoon. Their pro ceedings were secret, but entirely har monious, and the measures deoided upon, if stringent, will be benefioial in the highest degree. A DAY OF PRAYER. Suggested by Chicago Ministers, Ow ing to the Political Situation. Chicago, Sept. 23. At a union meeting of Christian ministers of all denominations today, which was called by D. L. Moody and whioh completely filled the Central Auditorium, the sug gestion was made that in view of the present political and industrial crisis, it would qe desirable to have a day of humiliation and prayer throughout the nation. The suggestion so manifestly reflected the feelings of all present that the oall to all Christiana patriots of the nation was at once proposed and adopted by a rising vote. "To the Christian oitizens of the United States. In common with a large number of our fellow -oitizens of every religious and political creed, we believe our nation is in the throes of a great conflict, portending most serious oonsequenoes, unless there be merciful interposition of the divine hand. We believe this to be true independently of any settlement of the presidential, con test, one way or another. . "On one hand that mysterious fao tor known as 'publio confidence' is de clining, as illustrated by the depression in both financial and industrial circles, while on the other, political class and even sectional feeling is running un usually high, and likely to become in tenser as the day of eleotion draws near. Not only is it true that ques tions requiring most careful and dispas sionate consideration 'are very 'likely to be determined in many instances by the heat of passion, but after their deter mination, the results may prove bane ful over a wide surface and for a lengthened period. We could not view the situation, perplexing and forebod ing as it is, outside its relation to the mind of God. We believe in his pres ence and agenoy among us. He is gov ernor among nations. But we believe this to be the time for Christian pa triots to follow the example of our forefathers in the earlier crisis which have confronted us, and pray unitedly to him that keepeth ' covenant and meroy for them that love him and keep his commandments, that he would visit us with especial grace "We therefore affectionately invite and earnestly urge our Christian fel-low-citizenB throughout the length and breadth of our land, irrespective of de nominational or political affiliations, to join with us in observing Thursday, October 8, as a day of fasting, confes sion, and prayer to Almighty God that he will allay passion and restrain evil amng us; that he will strengthen our faith and inspire hope; that he will impart wisdom, and bestow patience, and that he will forgive our iniquities as a nation and grant us his salva tion." f An Ohio Farmer Most Cruelly Treated by the. Mob. BEATEN AND BURIED ALIVE fhe Family Was Under Threats and Afraid to -Communicate to .the Authorities Their Story, Toledo, O., Sept. 22. Thewhitecaps have oreated another sensation in this oounty by whipping a man named Huntsman, who lives at Holland sta tion, ten miles from here, and burying him alive. According to report," the story has only just leaked out, although the outrage was committed Spetember 9. The family was under threats and afraid to communicate to the authori ties the story, but neighbors learned of the faots and informed the polioe today. The faots, as reported to the police, are that two of the Huntsman children, coming from the postoffioe.were picked up on the road by two men in a buggy and accused of stealing a pocketbock containing $80. The next night, a party of men came to the Huntsman house, and, after calling Huntsman out of bed, seized and dragged him out side and beat him and misused him in a frightful manner. Then they oarried him to a grave, and, putting him in it, oovered him with earth. After awhile, they dug bim up again, and then beat and abused him a second time, and finally, buried him again. Then they dug bim up the seoond time and again lashed him and drove away. fine two ohildren were also lashed. The affair oocurred 'about midnight. Huntsman is a respeotable, well-to-do farmer. A GIRL KILLED HERSELF. Drank Laudanum Because of Her Love . for a Fickle Youth. Kansas City, Sept. 23. Vive May Walton, the 17-year-old daughter of a barber, oommitted suicide last night by swallowing two ounces of lauda num. At daylight this morning her body was , found in a dooryard a short distance from her father's home. Miss Walton was enamored of George W Duffy, a laborer. The ' tragedy fol lowed a sensational soene in a ball room, whither .Duffy had gone in the company of several ladies who are visiting his mother. Miss Walton ap peared at the ballroom very much agi tated, the tears rolling down her oheeks, and, taking young Daffy by the arm, led him out of the room. Then she handed him a two-ounce bottle labeled laudanum. She told him she had swallowed the poison. ' She also hand ed him 'a note whioh he thurst in his pooket. Daffy then dismissed her and returned to his pleasure. . When the police learned of the suioide, they found Daffy and obtained the note. In it the girl declared she intended to take her life because of her love for the fickle Duffy. ' . GAVE THE WRONG ORDERS. Collision Between Two Railway Trains Near Butte. ' Butte, Mont, Sept. 23. By a colli sion between the Union Paoifio express train, from Salt' Lake and the West, due here at 11:35 A. M.; and a mixed train ou the Montana Union, bound for Anaconda, near. Rocker, four miles west of here, at 11 o'olook this morn ing, the engines of both trains and ex press and smoker of the Union Paoifio train, were wreoked, and quite a number of people seriously injured. All of the injured were on the Union Pacific express, whioh uses the Montana Union traoks from Silver Bow junction into Butte. The passengers hurt were all in the smoker, whioh was tele scoped for a third of its length by the express oar. The aooident is attributed to a con fiiot of orders. The trains were to have passed at Silver Bow junction. It is said that the dispatcher subse quently released the Union Paoifio and failed to . change the orders to the mixed train. ' The trains met on a straight pieoe of track, the express going twenty-five miles an hour and the mixed train fifteen miles. - The engineers of both trains reversed, and put on the air brakes and then.jumped with their fire men. None of them were hurt. Both engines were demolished. The express oar of the Union ' Paoifio train jumped the track and telesooped the smoker. The passengers of the mixed train were in the rear of the train and es caped with a shaking up. The injured were all brought to this oity and taken to the hospitals. " A Judge on a Strike. ' St John's, N. F.. Sept. 22. It is announced that Sir James . Winter, judge of the supreme court, is about to resign to resume the practioe of law be cause of the reoent reduction of sala ries making it impossible for him to support the dignity of the postion. He has entered suits against the govern ment for amounts. Murder and Suicide. F. J. Fowler, of Stillwell, O. T., found his runaway wife in St. Joseph Mo. , and shot her and then shot him self. Both are dead. THE TRADE REVIEW Downing, Hopkins & Co.'s Weekly M::r , ket Letter. Portland, Or., Sept. 23. While the conservative investor lmn been waiting for the skies to clear the trade on 'change baa made heroic el orts to put prioes on a. higher plane, and to infuse new life into speculative transactions. These efforts have mi i with partial sucoesss. Two very seri. ous obstacles have been constantly in the way of success. ' First, the genera I publio, frightened by the cry of harr times, fights shy of all forms of trad ing. Seoond, tle overproduction o( the whole agricultural world has caused a depression whioh has been most dis couraging to those who attempt specu lation only on the buying side. But th local trade has made a good fight. Prioes have gone lower and lower until bear plungers found themselves at-i tempting the impossible in forcing far. ther declines. ; There has been a lonrj period of narrow markets at olose tn the lowest prioes ever recorded on thn , Chioago exchange. The past wsek brought the first upheaval in any quar ter. Natural conditions have favored buyeiB to an extent that attention has been withdrawn - from the . political field. There has" been fresh vigor in the pits by reason of the return , of many speculative leaders from . abroad and from the summer resorts. TheHe have taken hold with more confidence than those who have been through the tiresome trade of the summer months. But the changes in the routine news and statistics, the all important-law a of supply and demand have favored buyers "and helped prices. The latest government estimate on the crop totals places wheat, corn, and oats at muob lower figures than established by popu lar judgment. While the trade dis credited the totals' in a way the ' mar kets were relieved beoause the official exhibit was not excessive. The Wash ington report came when markets were making headway . and the influence was a negative one it simply was not bearish and depressing. The advances soored are enoouraging. Wheat shows improvement of 5 oents from extreme low point. ' i The export sales, at the seaboard have been heavy. Chicago has been on an export basis. St. Louis, in the oentei of the winter wheat belt, has been kept busy supplying a very urgent mill ing demand from the interior, and re ceipts at that point have fallen off sharply. ' ' There are evidences that New York carriers are putting big money into wheat in the Northwest and that a great volume will be taken to the sea port for carrying profits and to meet any emergency abroad during the long term when lake navigation is impossi ble. This tends largely to offset the very heavy receipts at Minneapolis and Dulutb, which are largely the result oi tight money. Country elevators will not carry the farmers' grain this win ter. The forwarding -of this great volume of grain to terminal market will increase the" visible supply, but the grain will be in shape for an urg ent foreign demand, whioh European trouble may foroe at any time. Exports of wheat, flour inoluded as wheat, from both coasts of the United States last week amounted to 8,566,- 326 bushels, against 8,709,000 bushels the previous week, and as compared with 2,588,000 bushels two years ago, and 4,727,000 in the like week of 1893. The American visible supply of wheat inoreased 2,053,000 bushels, and not; -totals 49,655,000 bushels. : . KILLED WITH A CLUB. Henry Brusco Struck on Back of Head by B. Hutherlin. Oakland, Or., Sept. 23. Saturday evening at 10 o'clook Ed Sntherlin, George Nolta and Henry Bruso went to the residenoe of James Brown to have a ohicken supper. Nolta proposed that he and Brown should take a drink of liqubr. Brown had his baby in hia arms and Nolta said, after Brown had drank, "Give the baby some."' . Bruso remonstrated, and a quarrel ensued be tween Nolta and Bruao. , Brown order ed Nolta and Bruso out of the bouse. Sntherlin followed, and the quarrel was renewed. Sntherlin got a large club and struck Bruso on the baok of the' head, fracturing the skull and knocking him senseless. Sunday two physicians were summoned and tre phined Bruso's skull,, but he never re- . gained consciousness, and died, this evening at 6. o'olook. " Sutherlin was arrested, and had a preliminary heat ing at Roseburg. He ; was held to answer without bonds and was plaoed in jail at Roseburg. , Forced Acceptance of Bank Notes. . Madrid, Sept. 23. Cautaih-Genera Weyler, of Cuba, has issued a proola-' mation which threatens ' severe penal- ' ties for the non-aooeptanoe of the notes of the Bank of Havana at their face v value, although they have already suffered a discount-of 16 per cent. The government is enforoing this proclama tion despite the resistance of the com mercial classes and of the general pub-. , lie. .., . . : .' Another Bankwrecker Arrested. New Orleans, Sept. 23. Joseph N. Wolfson, a prominent lawyer, was ar- f rested tonight for aiding in fleecing the Union National bank out ol $36,000. Svv' 3&- 1' !' '" ' 1- y - , 1