A u v if t J in j i rn 5 I d H U I J f la V 14 r Gtr Pftw V -- Tr f J X THE CASTLE CASE Wealthy San Francisco Merchant and His Wife Accused of Shoplifting A case which has attracted internation al attention is that of Mr and Mrs Wal ter M Castle of San Francisco who have been admitted to 200000 bail in London to await trial for grand larceny The Castles who are wealthy Americans and move in the best society of the Pa cific coast are accused of shoplifting Castle is a member of one of the wealth iest firms in San Francisco and a gradu ate of London University His wife is one of the society leaders of the Golden Gate a woman of gentle disposition and liighly cultured They went to Europe this summer and in September arrived in Xondon They stopped at the Hotel Cecil mS WAXTEK M GABTLK -and their wealth insured them every flt tention The couple often went out on -shopping expeditions One day they vis ited a furriers shop and after examining -the furs left without making a purchase After they had gone the shopkeeper missed articles and put detectives on the track Mr and Mrs Castle were fol lowed to their hotel and there arrested An examination of their trunks which had been packed ready for sailing reveal ed an amazing amount of stuff the pos session of which is beyond any k tion the police can offer unless it be taken -as evidence that Mrs Castle has a mania for collecting odd triiles Among the ar ticles were a number of watches all alike -a plated toast rack that came from the hotel breakfast table thirteen umbrella heads and a pair of sheets bearing the mark of a big London hotel The sable and chinchilla skins missed by the furrier were also found After their arrest 2000000 sterling was offered as bail but the authorities re fused to release them The United States embassy interested itself in their behalf but without avail They remained in common cells at the jail seven days when they were arraigned held for trial and re- a MRS TTXA CASTLE leased on 200000 bail Charles Mat thews one of the most noted criminal lawyers in England has been retained to assist in the defense and influential friends have sprung up all over the king dom to help save the Castles from fur ther disgrace but their efforts will hardly avail Larceny is a felony in English law the punishment for which is prac tically unlimited and the charges against the Castles are so well founded that their legal advisers are in despair They do not believe that Magistrate Shell wilL even consent to consider the case under the first offenders ad which provides punishment by fine in liieu of imprison ment Their attorneys admit the thefts but will set up kleptomania as a defense PRINCETONS GREAT DAY Cleveland Participates in the Cele bration of a Universitys Birth President Clevelands address was the principal feature of the Princeton Col lege celebration at Princeton N J It was delivered in Alexander Hall whence he had been escorted on foot through tha college grounds from President Pattons house by the Philadelphia City Troop Mrs Cleveland riding in an open carriage with Mrs Patton The exercises opened with a prayer by Rev Dr Theodore L Cuyler of Brook lyn After Dr Cuylers prayer President Patton made the formal announcement that what was formerly the College of New Jersey will henceforth and forever be known as Princeton University A scene of wonderful enthusiasm greeted Dr Pattons remarks He then an nounced the endowment fund received amounting to nearly a million and a half dollars not including the amounts con tributed for Blair Hall by John I Blair of Blairstown N J and the new library The ceremony of conferring the degrees on the sixty five men elected for that honor was next on the program It was learned that President Patton desired to confer the degree of doctor of laws upon Mr Cleveland but the President modest ly declined the honor The degree of doctor of laws was conferred upon a large number of European college professors and scholars After the conferring of de grees the President addressed the great assemblage Thomas Kidd aged 14 sxm of W K Kidd of Cleveland was mmdered at Dal ton Ohio by Carl Mcllhiney aged 7 The Kidd boy who was a cripple was vis iting at the Mcllhiney home The boys were last together while the Mcllhineys were at church and thty quarreled Soung Kidd struck Carl with his crutch The latter then went into an adjoining room procured his fathers gun and snot Kidd blowing off the top of his head Bishop Henry T Bacham a well known Moravian preacher is dead in Grace Hill Iowa POLITICAL WEATHER FORECAST Indications point to an overwhelming snowstorm throughout United States about Nov 3 sweeping everything before it LINCOLN ON EFFECT OF CURRENCY CONTRACTION From Mr Lincolns speech at Springfield 111 in December 1S59 Addresses and Letters of Abraham Lincoln Published by Century Co New York Yol I page 21 I have already said that the sub 1 Treasury win reuuee me quauuiy oi money in circulation This position is strengthened by the recollection that the revenue is to be collected in specie so that the mere amount of revenue is not all that is withdrawn but the amount of paper circulation that the forty millions would serve as a basis to is withdrawn which would be in a sound state at least one hundred mill ions When one hundred millions or more of the circulation we now have shall be withdrawn who can con template without terror the distress ruin bankruptcy and beggary that must follow The man who has pur chased any article say a horse on credit at one hundred dollars when be reduced to one hundred millions by there are two hundred millions circu lating in the country if the quantity the arrival of payday will find the horse but sufficient to pay half the debt and the other half must either be paid out of this other means and thereby be come a clear loss to him or go unpaid and thereby become a clear loss to his creditor What I have here said of a single case of the purchase of a horse will hold good in every case of a debt ex isting at the time a reduction in the quantity of money occurs by whomso ever and for whatsoever it may have been contracted It may be said that when the debtor loses the creditor gains by this operaton but on examin ation this will be found true only to a very limited extent It is more gener ally true that all lose by it the cred itor by losing more of his debts than The Use of Money Mr Bryan put the essence of the money question in a nutshell when he Baid at Washington The gold stand ard is bad because the man who has money can profit by the rise in the value of that money without using it in commerce or trade To day in our great cities the oldest and best established mercantile or man ufacturing houses find it difficult if not impossible to secure the credits which every business house occasionally needs Though the newspapers are filled with reports of the influx of gold from foreign countries there has been no improvement in the money market by which enterprises may benefit Within a week the paper of one of the biggest millionaire houses in New York was discounted at the almost usurious rate of 9 per cent Wall street specula tors with interest bearing securities to offer for collateral get money to gamble with at easier rates but the firms which employ their hundreds of men get the cold shoulder in the money mar ket Why is this Some with a partisan point to score will tell you that there Is a lack of confidence in the money mar ket bred of fear of Bryans election In the next breath they will insist that there is no possibility of his success But as a matter of fact the evil rests on a fact which antedates Bryan and will exist in even more vicious forcn for rears to come should he be defeated The evil Is that of a money of increas ing value and the corresponding depre WmL ill H I til JlTOI iH nnT iXI Wvp 2 m IIOXEST ABE he gains by the increased value of those he collects the debtor by either parting with more of his property to pay his debts than he received in con tracting them or by entirely breaking up his business and thereby being thrown upon the world in idleness The general distress thus created wiH tobe sure be temporary because whatever change may occur in the quantity of money in any community time will adjust the derangement pro duced but while that adjustment is progressing all suffer more or less and very many lose everything that ren ders life desirable Why then shall we suffer a severe difficulty even though it be put temporary unless we receive some equivalent for it ciation in tae prices of everything else No commercial enterprise thrives on a falling market and all markets have been falling for ten years though never so rapidly as since the repeal of the Sherman law in 1S93 put an end to all governmental additions to the volume of the circulating medium It has been only the part of shrewdness for the bankers to hesitate about lending money to be used in buying or manu facturing goods that to an absolute cer tainty could be bought or made more cheaply a year later But it has not been the part of Avisdom even for the bankers who might be thought to profit by dear money to urge the con tinuance of a currency system which seriously narrows the field of profitable investment Money which can earn a profit for its owner while lying idle in the vault is the deadly enemy of national pros perity The money which must be ac tively employed if it is to be increased is a spur to enterprise and an induce ment to commercial activity San Francisco Examiner Hard Knocks for Plutocrats When government is properly ad ministered there will be no railroad wreckers to make themselves rich by bankrupting those who put trust in them when government is properly ad ministered there will be no representa tive of a coal trust sitting by every fire side to exact tribute from those who desire to be protected from the cold of winter when government Is properly administered there will be no syndicate fattening out of the governments ad versities after they have brought those adversities upon the government for their own benefit when government is properly administered there will be no corporations which assume greater au thority than the power which created them when government is properly ad ministered it will recognize those fun damental principles set forth in the Declaration of Independence All men are created equal that they are endow ed with inalienable rights that gov ernments are instituted to preserve these rights and that governments de rive their just powers from the consent of the governed When these four principles are applied then government will be what it ought to be No man who understands society or the necessity of government will ever raise his hand against government It is against the abuses of government and we shall not be driven from our purpose to eradicate these abuses al though every man intrenched behind a special privilege shall heap abuse up on those who attempt to rob him From Bryans St Paul speech Is It a Craze The goldbug papers are in the habit of speaking of the demand for free coinage as The Silver Craze Language of this sort is really a slur upon the intelligence of the American people The demand for the free coin age of silver in many sections is over whelming and insisted upon by Repub licans and Populists as well as by the Democrats To say that the masses can be led off by a craze can be made to seriously demand an absurdity is to impugn American intelligence and practically to claim that the American people are incapable of self-government If the demand for the free coinage of S iW R I A II l E L tions and which has disrupted the Re publican party in many States is a flighty visionary impracticable scheme The rapid spread of the demand for the free coinage Is the strongest of arguments in its favor The American people are not easily humbugged they cannot be made to follow fads and ab surdities There must be something beneficial in it something which brings relief to the masses else the latter would not support it The silver question is one that every American should carefully study and with careful thought comes conversion to the cause No craze can succeed in this country and the earnest demand for free silver reveals that the Ameri can people recognize in It a cure for many of the evils they now endure Europe Ready for Silver When Czar Nicholas was in Paris re cently he was addressed according to a special cablegram in the Chicago Tribune and the New York Journal by the French minister Meline as fol lows Your majesty silver is in disputably the best money of the world Russia and France being the greatest agricultural and industrial producers should stand together to reconquer sil vers natural position and replace it on its old footing Our alliance in that re spect would be beneficial to the na tions The correspondent quoting the woras of a member of the Czars staff then says Aside from this French states men and many others tried to influence the Czar and the Russian ministers in favor of bimetallism on all possible oc casions during our stay As a result you may announce that Wittes posi tion is shaking as he alone is uphold ing the gold standard in the govern ment He will meet with decided op position in the imperial councils The minister of agriculture is especially out spoken against any financial change Bryans election will undoubtedly find Russia and France ready for interna tional bimetallism The Indianapolis Ticket MARCUS fV VS Sl The Hannacrats Atlantic Constitution As to Business Men A great deal has been said during this canvass about the business interests of the country An attempt is made to identify trade with usury and make their cause by common consent one As a matter of fact as Mr Bryan said in his great Chicago speech the artisan who fashions a brick is as much of a business man as the manipulator of op tions It Avould be amusing if it were not that it endangers the prosperity of the country to see the coupon clipper to whom a dear dollar means greater pow er appealing to the green grocer on the BRYAN ON PRIVATE DETECTIVES O In his speech in the House of Eepresentatives May 12 1894 Mr Bryan said I only desire to say Mr Speaker that this resolution ought to pass It is simply to investigate whether there has been any violation of the Federal Constitution or laws by the action of these men I believe in law and order but I believe that the law and order should be main- tained by the lawful authorities and not by the private armies Govern- ments are organized to protect life and property These functions should not be transferred to private individuals and hired detectives until we areready to acknowledge government a failure It is not fair to compel corporations to protect their property in this fy way nor is it right that the safety and even life of the citizen shall be imperiled by a private and irresponsible soldiery Let the public order be preserved by public authority silver is a craze then the leaders of the movement the men who have gain ed high places in American pontics are lunatics If sober judgment would re veal the folly of free silver then the great mass of American citizens are not fit to have a voice in the govern ment of the affairs of this country No sensible reasoning mind will admit that a financial policy which is demand ed by millions of Americans which has swept over the entire country and which is now invading the East and making thousands of converts daily is a craze The thoughtful American will perceive that a movement which has enlisted the support of so many bright minds and which has swept the Demo crats from its old leaders and I VL PlCKEMlP J I Y2 wHErVYoii 1 J L FNf EMJ CARL15LE the GREAT idfrlHlS TRict I IV LEADING FEATURES OF A GOLD PARADE mmmmm Ullllll l l iflfl Ml score that both are business men and therefore have a common concern and a common profit in sound money Both are not business men One is while the other belongs to the parasite class Which is the retail merchant in favor of small profits and slow sales or large profits and quick sales Another thing The business man should consider that we now have a gold standard and yet he never before in his business career saw the people so slow to buy nor his bills so hard to meet Will he vote to perpetuate present conditions A single British county yielded34 867444 ions of coal last year np A REMARKABLE POND Blasted Into Existence and Notr liar an Uncanny licputation Cradled at the foot of a circling group of hills lies the most mysterious and at the same time ghostly sheet of wa ter in Alameda County California For years It has borne the name of Blairs pond and during its exist ence has bidden beneath its dark sur face more human bodies than any simi lar patch of water of its size in these regions Indeed there has not been a coroner in Alameda County since 1S75 until the present time who has not been obliged to record on the death rolls some victim of the weird pond and strangest of all each one of the martyrs to the dismal hole has been a good swimmer Prior to 1S72 there was not even a suggestion of water on the spot At that time a firm of stone contractors named Bates Wells realized that hidden in the hills was a quantity of very valuable paving rock which then commanded a big price from the city of Oakland They conceived the idea of opening an extensive quarry and getting the citys contract for the paving which was to be done A long lease was obtained from Blair the owner of the land Then the first quarry in Alameda County was open ed With time the bettor quality of rock became scarce so orders were given to sink a wide shaft and work out the lower stratum This task was under taken in the summer of 1S73 and had progressed with such good results that the hole was gradually enlarged until it covered a considerable area Then again it became necessary to go deep er into the hill This time extensive preparations were made for blasting When all was ready a mighty charge was adjusted and with the explosion which followed a vast torrent of water spouted forth from the excavation Before the astonished workmen had time to realize what had happened they were knee deep In the flood Their tools were submerged and it was with difficulty that the mules attached to the carts were rescued The cars on the tracks remained laden with rock and to day if the pool were drained the complete equipment would be found in the pit So sudden was the deluge that with in an hour where once stood a pros perous quarry nothing was to be seen but a rising mass of water As soon as possible every effort was made to empty the new lake but in vain It is always full of water but never overflows San Francisco Ex aminer Shallow Plowing for Wheat It used to be said that wheat would bear deeper plowing than ony other grain crop If the furrow brought to the surface one or two inches of sub soil that made the soil firmer and less pervious to water thus lessening the Injury by freezing and thawing But Western winter wheat growers and spring wheat growers also have learn ed a plan that Is even better than deep plowing because it costs much less They do not plow at all merely culti vating the surface among the grain stubble and seeding on that The wheat makes Just as good a fall growth and even better than where the stub ble is turned under thus drying the soil Most of the wheat roots are kept near the surface for the rains do not penetrate farther than the cultivator has gone This saving of plowing en ables a farmer cheaply to get a large acreage into wheat and if he gets a fair crop he Is ready to undersell the Eastern wheat grower who keeps on plowing for wheat in the expensive old fashioned way- Unluclcy Quarter to Six Seventy five per cent of the people we discharge every year remarked the head floor walker of a mammoth dry goods establishment which employs over a thousand people lose their places on account of a quarter to six A quarter to six is the hour at which preparation is made for closing the days business At that hour the male clerks begin to cover their stocks and the female clerks commence to ar range themselves to go home Usually a number of ladies come in at this hour and the clerks eager to go home in answer to questions of customers ally say We are just out of what the customer happens to want Day after day we discharge girls for this reason and fifteen times out of twenty you ask a girl why she lost her place and she will invariably answer on account of a quarter to six- Met an Old Friend I cannot but admit my condition your honor said the dignified old gen tleman who had been carried to the police station the night before in a state of collapse but the circumstances arose from my meeting an old friend of younger days an old friend from Ken tucky I have the honor of being a Ken tuckian said his honor and I will let you go By the way who was the old friend He may be a friend of my self The dignified old gentleman first got himself near the door and then said in a soft voice John Barleycorn Indianapolis Journal Rather Public Lord Forgivuz Seems to me some of your actresses make their matrimonial status rather public William Ann How so Lord Forgivuz Advertising in the dramatic papers as not engaged Judge Its Meaning TeacherWhat is the meaning of tho sentence They fared forth Tommy It it means that they ate at the fourth table Indianapolis JournaV