The Rome tribune. (Rome, Ga.) 1887-190?, June 12, 1895, Image 1

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page.

ESTABLISHED 1887. ALL WERE ELECTED. I Teachers For the Public Schools of Rome. i PROF. HARRIS, SUPERINTENDENT Is Re-Elected, With Professor ■ Gwaltney Principal F BY UNANIMOUS VOTE OF THE BOARD. The Eighth Grade Proper Was Established and a General Promotion All Along the Different .Grades. ! _ The board of education met in regular session last night, and there was a full board present. A change was made creating the eighth grade proper, with Prof. R. J. Gwaltney as teacher, as well as prin cipal. Os course Prof. J. C. Harris, the popular principal, was re-elected. He is at present in Athens, where he was elected chairman of the board of vis itors, a deserved and appreciated compliment. He and Prof. Gwaltney, who is still quite ill, were both re-elected unani mously. There wa s a general promotion al 1 along the lines as follows: 7th grade A, Miss Kate Robeson. 7th grade B, Miss Helen Omberg. 6th grade A, Miss Laura Hume. 6th grade B, Miss Georgia Pepper. Sth grade A, Miss Bettie Ledbetter. Sth grade B, Miss Mary Williamson. 4th grade A, Mrs. Mary Shropshire, i 4th grade B, Miss Annie Perkins. ► 3d grade A, Miss Battey Shropshire. 3d grade B, Miss Annie Neely. .2d grade A, Miss Floy Bailey. , 2d grade B, Miss Ava Jenkins. Ist grade A, Miss Zoe Eastman: Ist grade B, Miss Ruth Norton. 1 Ist grade C, Miss Callie Spullock. Music and drawing, Miss May Clark. Supernumeraries, Misses Lottie George, Cora Clark, Nannie Wood, Ella Allen. I Janitor, Rhoda Daniel. COLORED SCHOOL, L Principal, T. M. Dent, k Ist grade A, Miss May Cothran, Ist grade B, Mrs. Clara Barrett, 2d grade, Miss Laura L. Taylor. |, 3d grade, Miss Estelle Taylor. F 4th grade, Miss Eula Ray. Sth grade, Miss Alice Davis. J 6th grade, Mrs. Lucile Samuels. Supernumerary, Augusta William- L son. U Janitor, Stepney Garnett. B Baseball Gaines. Atlanta June il.—The Southern L League games today resulted as fol- I lows: ■ Little Rock 0, Atlanta 16.. S Memphis 6, Chattanooga 10. K Montgomery 5, Nashville 7.—eleven ■ innings. I New Orleans S, Evansville 8. The Bag League. Washington, June 11. —Baseball | games were played today with the I following results: Brooklyn 2, Chicago 6. ■ New York 6, Pittsburg 2. v Boston 11, Louisville 0. t Philadelphia 6, Cleveland 7.—eleven I innings. ■ Baltimore 6, Cincinnati 4. Washington 15, St. Louis 10. K GROVER AND HiS CABINET. | kt Is Stated on Go Authority That They L Will Attend At Inn tufa Exposition. ■ Washington, June 11.—The presi- ■ dent, it can be stated authoritatively, V Will visit the Atlanta exposition during ■ the coming autumn. He will not, how- j ■ ever, attend on the opening day, but ■ Will make the trip to Georgia and at- U tend the exposition during the latter K Week in October. All the members of I cabinet will attend the exposition r at or about the same time. No details ■| of-ths president's trip have been ar- H ranged. Mr. Cleveland has considered the gen- ■ eral program of making the trip and ■ will ini form the delegation of promi- j B L.«mt Atlanta citizens who are here to invite him to their city, that he will be ■ pleased to aeoepi their hospitality tai ■ the lust of October. B The CondlUea es the Stadaata. ■ Phincxton, N. J., Juno 11.— There Is ■ bo change in the condition of Fred Ohl V and Garrett Cochran, the students who w were shot Saturday night. The attend- B Ing physicians predict the recovery of | Cjqohran, but express anxiety for the ■ outcome of Ohl’s injuries. If, however, | ■ blood poisoning does not supervene the ■ doctors think he will recover. V Rele.d the Meweiatlenltta* Arma. Ifaw York, June 11.—A special to W The World from San Jose. Costa Rica, Bs flays; The police have seized a large W) lot° { arms which were concealed in a ■ church in th* village of Sace. The K ownership of the arms has not been ■ traced, but it is believed they were hid fl den by conservatives for a revolution , fl which was being worked up during the I B late presidential election. THE ROHE TRIBUNE. DELIVERING MAILS. The Postofflcv Department la Adopting Modern Appliances For Thia Work. Washington, June 11—Modern ap pliances for hastening work are being repidly adopted by the postoffice de partment. In addition to the wide use being made of the trolley cars in the various cities, the department is encour aging the use of the bicycle by indiv 5 1- ual carriers, both in delivering and col lecting mails, wherever the condition of the streets and roads make it proba ble that a saving of time will be effect ed. Scarcely a day passes without re quests being received from one or more postmasters that the carriers attached to their offices be permitted to use bi cycles and to retain as an offset to the cost the car fares now given to them. In every case the department declines to permit the diversion of the car fares for the purpose stated, but agrees to grant a certain sum, ranging from $2 to $3 per month to each carrier, to be applied to repairs for his wheel. During the winter months or in any month when the carrier gives up the use of the wheel he again receives car fare for his transportation. Although the department favors the use of bicycles, when the conditions are favorable it does not in any case require their use. The wheels are favored specially for collectors and carriers delivering letters in the suburbs. The cities having the best of pavements naturally have the largest number of bicycle carriers. It Buffalo. Cleveland, Washington anl Grand Rapids they are gradually com ing into general use. The plan of having the wheels owned by the government instead of by the carriers was tried about seven years ago in this city, and was abandoned after a fair test. It was found impos sible to get the carriers to keep their wheels in proper order, and the cost of repairs soon became too great. WADE HAMPTON TALKS. Says He Is For Sound Money—Not Sur prised If Cleveland Gets a Third Term. Portland, Or., June 11. —General Wade Hampton, United States railroad commission-r, arrived in Portland on a tour of inspection of the Pacific rail roads. This is his first considers bl 3 stop at any place si pee fie delivered the address at the unveiling of the monu ment to the confederate dead at Cni Oftgo. . '■How do you stand on the financial question?" he was during a con version. *b. r.TTi fftTur at sennrt money. Toe five propositions set lorth by Secretary Carlisle are unanswerable. I hope th it every uew-paper in tin country op posed to free silver will continue publish theie propo itions. Nothing could be more convincing. “Secretary Carlisle’s preliminary statement of a proposition that he is about to discuss is a speech in itself,’’ ' exclaimed General Hampton. “He is argumentative, clear headed and most convincing. He has wonderful ability, and is all right on the financial ques tion.” He says he does not believe the Dem ' Oyratijj party will declare in favor of free stivm: It Jt&ul'l ii&t surprise him, he said, if Cleveland would be nomi nated for a ‘hird term. _ AMERICAN YACHT. It Was Bought In jTiylda For the Use of the Revolutlonisli In Cuba. New Ytytx, June 11.—The Cuban revolutionists agents in Florida for the purchase of war material and ships for expeditious lately bought a steam yacht 120 feet long, of 1,000 tons register and with a speed of 16 1-2 knots an hour. It was this yacht, it Is said, that took from Tampa last week an expedition headed by Carlos Roloff and Serafin Sanchez, which Is reported to have landed at Sagua La Chiquita. The yacht was bought for (30,000 She carried six Gatling guns. The ex pedition was composed of 280 men, among them a Catholic priest, Dr. Val des Dominguez, a Cuban physician, one telegraph operator, a civil engineer and a powder maker. Fourteen of the men are Americans They took 65 rifles, 50,000 rounds of ammunition, 500 pounds of dynamite and 6 carrier pig eona Abandoned the Vestel. ®T. Malo, France. June 11.—News has been received here of the abandon ment on fire and with her passengers on board of a British vessel, the Why Not, bound for the Island of Jersey and loaded with fodder. The crew of the Why Not, it appears, deserted the pas sengers when the vessel caught fire and taking to the boats, succeeded in land ing st Erqny, department of the Cetes dn Nqtrd, not far from here. The«e She all the particular# obtainable. The fate of the passengers es the Why Not is act known. Crewall Gilts a Divorce. Naw York, June li —A verdict granting an absolute divorce to Charles E. Crowell was returned oy a jury in the Queens county court The defen dant, the jury held, had been guilty of adultery with Jacob R. Shepard, a law ?or, whose name came prominently b.- ore the pub’ic in connection with cor respondence published in the presiden tial campaign of 1884. Carlisle Will 9»shk at Loalsvllla. Wasbingtok, June 11. Secretary Carlisle will speak at Louisville, Ky., on next Friday evening on the financial issues of the day and for that purpose will leave here Thursday. This is the only speech that has been arranged for and probably the only one he will de liver for some time to oome. ROME, GA.. WEDNESDAY. JUNE 12. 1895. IS STILL LOOKING UP. Trade In the South For the Past Week Has Been Good. GREAT IMPROVEMENT IS NOTED- A Cotton and Woolen Mill For Cartersville. AN ADVANCE IN THE PRICE OF IRON. As the Cotton Season Approaches Renew ed Interest Is Shown In the Establish ment of New Cotton and Oil Mills. Chattanooga, June 11.—The Trades man has received reports of industrial conditions in all parts of the south for the week ending June 10. The recent advance in the price of iron is well sustained and has led to a 10 per cent increase in wages on the part of the Pioneer Mining and Manu facturing company, one of the largest mine and furnace operators in the Bir mingham district. It is expected that other mine operators will follow this example. In addition to the two steel working establishments, one at Besse mer and the other at Birmingham, now under way, The Tradesman announces the organization at Sheffield, Ala., of the Sheffield Coal, Iron and Steel com pany, with (1,500,000 capital, controlled by Pennsylvania iron and steel work era, who intend to thoroughly develop the resources of the southern coal and iron fields, and also to establish steel works. Coal mining is now very ac tive, and no labor troubles are expect ed. The Flemington Coal and Coke company has been chartered at Flem ington, W. Va., with (1,000,000 capi tal, and a coal mining company with (200,000 capital has been organized at Thacker, W Va. The interest in textile mills built by southern capital continues to be very active. For the present week The Tradesman reports the incorporation of a cotton mill with (200,000 Capital at Charleston, S. C.; of one with (150,000 capital at Athens, Ga.; one with (50,000 capital at Prosperity, S. C., and others at Graham, Goldsboro and Mt Holly, C.,agdat Belton, Tex., apd a cpt ton and woolen mill at Cartersvi.lle ( A large bleachery and dye works jjjji process pf organization at Augusta, Ga. As Hie coicon season approaches re newed Interest is shown in the estab lishment of new cotton find si! feliiS. The Tradesman reports oil mills each with (50,000 capital as to be built at Atlanta and Fort Gaines, Ga., and one to cost (30,000 at Rome, Ga., and one costing (12,500 at Spartanburg, S. C. Other oil mills are tp be built at Colum bus, Ga., Natchez, Miss., aud Brandon, Tex., and a cotton oil refinery at Me ridian, Miss. Among other important new industries organized or incorporat ed during the week are fertilizer works at Charleston, S. C., with (250,000 cap ital; development companies, each cap italized at (200,000, at Bay St. Louis and Brookhaven, Miss.; a tobacco fac tory, with (100,000 capital, at Rich mond, Va., and horseshoe w or k s with capital at Orlando, Fla. Recent “-dvaneqs in prices in lumber aje well sustained auu caused an increase in the number of new mL*' During the past week The Tradesman reports the organization at Meridian, Miss., of the Mutual Lumber company i with $1,000,000 capital, of cooperage Works to cost $166,666 at Greenville, Miss., pnd others at Darlington, S. C., and of lumber companies, each with (50,000 capital, at Grafton aud Parsons, W. Va. MEXICAN MINTS. Th® Government Will Assume Control and Make a Slight Change. Washington, June 11.—Mr. C. L. Tompkinson, an American resident of Mexico, who is interested in mining there, and who is temporarily in this city, in explaining the new regulation concerning the taxation of mines in that country, said that it grew out of the faot that the Mexican government had recently decided to resume control of the mints. It appears that the mints have for the past several years been leased to private individuals who, while they have charged a mintage tax, have put it on a somewhat different basis from that proposed by the government. The charge for minting gold and silver has been about 4 1-2 per cent, while the government has collected in addition a tax of sixty-one one-hundredths of 1 per cent; making in all a tax of over 5 per cent to be paid by Mexican mine owners having their ores coined into money tn Mexico, while those who sent their products to smelters either tn Mexico or th* United States escaped the payment of the bulk of th* tax. The government, upon resuming con trol of the mints on the first of July next, proposes to levy a uniform tax of 5 per cent on the gold and silver con tained in all the ore mined in the coun try without regard to where it is treat ed. “The change, said Mr. Tompkinson, "Is in the greatest of fairness to all and while it is jvobably Intended to en courage home Industry no one can real ly safely find in it legitimate reason for oomplaint. Those who have been ac customed to seed their ores to the Mex ican mints will find no material differ ence, and what difference there is is in their interest. FMtilon Is Everything. Some politicians try to explain their getting on what appears to be the fence by claiming it’s all the stile.—Chicago Mail . - SILVER MEN ARRIVE. The Memphis Convention Promises to Be Largely Attended. LOVELY WEATHER LOOKED FOR. Dalegates Are Expected From Twenty-Five States. THEY ARRIVE ON EVERY TRAIN. The Gathering Will Embrace Democrats, Populists and a Few Republicans. Mass Meeting In Memphis. Memphis, June 11.—The silver men will have ■ beautiful weather for their convention, which opens here at the Auditorium, where the sound money convention was held last month. The sky is clear and though the temperature is high up in the eighties, a pleasant breeze tempers the heat. Indications point to a very large at tendance, including a number of men prominent in national politics. Dele gates are arriving by every train and will continue to come in up to noon Wednesday. There is a noticeably large proportion of men from the coun try and smaller towns among those al ready seen on the streets. It is now thought that there fully 1,000 delegates in attendance when the gav .1 falls on the chairman’s desk. The per sonnel of the convention will embrace Democrats, Populists and a few Repub licans. Delegations are expected from 25 states, but scarcely any from east of the Mississippi or north of the Ohio. There are seven United States senators here: Jones and Berry of Arkansas, Bate and Harris of Tennessee, Geor > and Walthall of Mississippi, and Tur pie of Indiana. Senators Stewart cf Nevada, Shoup of Idaho, and Butler of North Carolina are expected. The program of proceedings has not yet been fuliy decided upon in all its details. The convention will be called to order at II o’clock by W N. Brown, president of the Bimetallic league of Memphis. Judge L.H. Estes of the circuit court, will offer up a prayer, and an addre-’s of welcome Will be delivered by ex-Con gressman (JfiSev Young of Memphis. It ha* noj yet beeudv-tei Jrflned wheth er or not there will be a temporary or • ganipation. In case 1/ is d.eddoJ to Start off with a permanent organization Senator Harris will nominate for per manent chairman either Senator Tt •- pie or Senator Jones of Arkansas, proo ably the former. If Turpie is made chairman of the convention, Jones w.J be chairman of the committee on reso lutions, and vice versa. Committees on credentials and' reso lutions will be appointed and the con vention will adjourn until the after noon. The resolutions will probably be presented at the second day’s ses sion. Among the speakers will be ex-Con gressman Sibley, of Pen-isylvania, Alex Delmar, of California, ex-Governor Prince, of New Mexico, Se:: -.tors Jmes, Turpie, Stewaii and. ; coop a'.; i proba bly ex Cor r s iai; Bryli.'., of Nebras ka, Sep '.t'__ JLu’.is wi'.i not- peak, but will devote his .itUur'io.i to the business of the coiY eli th'd. C"F. T-LL'o CREW. Favorable nt <• 1 Oars r.*exi bt E»i4. London, jugs li.-=Thd Sr. Janies Gazette, in the course at a IW I g article on the Cornell crew, now training iiear Henley, written by an expert oarsflian, commends the crew. The writer says that their style is very uniform, far more so than is usually seen in Eng land. He adds that the Cornell men feather clean and have a good, lively recovery, in which they set an example to many English crews. They do not attempt to row secretly or to suppress inspection of their boat. They appear to be thoroughly sports manlike, try to do their best and have already created a favorable impression at Henley. In conclusion the writer In the St. James Gazei e says that the weak fea ture of the Cornell crew is their want of reach Rain Proved ■ Bleeslng In Nebraska. Omaha, June 11.—Two inches of rain has covered the entire state in the past 48 hours. Fields of grain which had been abandoned as ruined, which had been so patched that a match wou’d have kindled a serious conflagration, have revived and will, in most oases, make a full crop. The growth has been something remarkable, and most at th 3 fields might be harvested if matured, at once. Rivers and irrigating ditches are running full. Crops can be made without further rain in June. Cftuie KufTferlngr. Pau, June 11. —The floods continue throngheut the Navarre and the low lands of the Pyrenees. Severe suffer ing as a result of the floods is reported from the Basque country. Roads, bridges and railroads have been swept away and fields have been destroyed by the rush of water from the hills. •ladvtone Will G« to Kiel. London, June 11.—Mr. and Mrs. Gladstone have ooarded a steamer which sails tor Hamburg and then goes to Kiel in order to enable its passengers to witness the opening of the Baltic and North sea canal LUTHERANS IN MARYLAND. The Board of Publication Makes Its Re port at the Conference. Hagerstown, June 11.—Following is the report of the board of publication society, Lutheran evangelical church, read by secretary S. A. Holman, at the Hagerstown conference. While the sales for the year just clos ed have not yielded as large a result as those of the several years previous, the church and the board nevertheless have cause for congratulation tor what under providence we have been able to ac complish. Congregations and Sunday schools, in common with the individuals composing them, have experienced dur ing the year just closed, the effect of “the general business depression, ’ ’ aud in consequence, have put off purchas ing books or periodicals, except such as were strictly necessary. Since the last biennial report we have earned for and credited the general synod for royalties on books of worship, common service, catechisms, liturgies and Augsburg songs, $2,073; donated as per resolution of the board as extra discount on periodicals by the United States to Suudayschools under the care of the board of home missions, $2,365; deducted and charged off from the face value of stereotype plates, under the 10 per cent rule adopted by the board, 1878, $1,520; charged off for “wear and tear” of store and boardroom fixtures, $143; charged off to profit and loss ac count for doubtful accounts, $443, mak ing a total of $6,545. While our net profits are reduced by the above amount, it should be a source of gratification to the church that (2,073 of the above for royalties has been saved to the treasury of the general synod, and (2.366 to the Sunday schools under the care of the board of home missions; a total of $4,384, which, with the $9,000 passed into the treasury of the society, aggregate a saving of $11,439 to the church because of the publication house. The report of the auditing commit tee: The a’-.diting committee reported that they h.'.ve examined the books and securities of the treasurer, Joseph Stalb. The amount held by him as treasurer is $40,350.57. The net assets of the house are $7,992. This amount added to the (40,353 in the hands of the treasurer gives $108,342 as the total net assets of the society. The board has decided that the Sun dayschpol Herald cannot support itself as a weekly and accordingly will make no change in the issue. “UNFIT FOR DOGS TO EAT.” So S»y« a French Pai><>r of a Compound by tltv of Ain«r<c»n Lara. Washington, June 11. —The depart ment of agriculture has received from France an extended notice of the con demnation by the municipal chemist of Paris of a compound which is being sold in France under the name of Amer ican lard. The chemist has ascertain ed that the compound consists of hog offal treated chemically at a high tem perature and under strong pressure. It is deodorized and bleached with chlo rides. The Journal Des Debats, a Parisian newspaper of prominence, denounces this compound sold in France under the name of American lard as unfit even for dogs to eat. The authorities at the agricultural department knew nothing of this al leged American product and intimate tbftt it may not be of American origin at all; 'TWAS ALL A MISTAKE. A Cabl*gr»m From Shanghai Says Therg Was No Massacre of Missionaries. New York, June 11.—The following cablegram from Rev J. R. Hykes, at Shanghai, has been received at the office of the Methodist Missionary so ciety in this city: Property at Cheng-Tu destroyed Mis sionaries all safe. » “These »dvices, ’ said Dr. Baldwin, the recording secretary of the society, “are official, and while confirming re ports of property loss, should set at rest the rumors of the massacre of mission aries. There was no massacre. ” The Lose of Property Was Great. London, June 11.—According to a special dispatch from Shanghai, the loss of property as a result of the recent rioting at Cheng-Tu, Kiatung and Yo Ching amounts to several million dol lars. The Chinese officials, it is added, headed by the viceroy of the province of Szechueu, openly encouraged the mobs to all sorts of outrages, and the petition of foreigners for protection were refused Btatne t» Ifavlla Luther Unveiled. Birun, June 11.—The statue to Mar tin Lather was anveilsd at Newmarket. The bosses lu the vicinity were deoort ed and the local authorities, clergy and studesrta to»k part in the procession. The weather was beautiful and the-*e was a large assemblage at the ceremo ny. Pidnoe Frederick Leopold repre sented the emperor and made a speech at the unveiling of ths statue. Liverpool, June 11.—Among the passengers sailing for New York on the White Star line steamship Germanic,'* are Mr. and Mrs. Pierpont Morgan aud Sir Frederick Pollock, corpus professor of jurisprudence in the University of Oxford. Sir Frederick Pollock has been invited to deliver the commemoration address on June 25, to the Harvard law school association Forest Fir»» Checked. Bradford, Pa., June 11. The forest fires in the vicinity of Kane are under control aud no furthar trouble is antici pated. PRICE FIVE CENTS PLUMBERS IN SESSION The National Association Meets In Phil, adelphia. WELCOMED BY MAYOR WARWICK. The Fight For Presidency is a Hot One. FIVE HUNDRED DELEGATES PRESENT. The National President, John Mitchell, of New YOJk Responded to the Ad dress of Welcome. Philadelphia, June 11.—The thir teenth annual convention of the Na tional Association of Mastei Plumbers opened at 10 o’clock in the Walnut street theater. Five hundred delegates were present when Select Councilman McCoach, a member of the association, introduced Mayor Warwick. The mayor delivered a brief address of welcome extending the freedom of the city to the delegates Mayor John Mitchell, of New York, the national president, responded to the mayor’s welcome. Among the promi nent out of town delegates present are the following: President, John Mitchell of New York; treasurer, H. E, Goodman of Milwaukee; secretary, H. J. Pattison of New York; vice president, L. B. Cross, Kansas City, Mo.; General Geo D. Scott, New York; Daniel G. Finer ty, Boston; John Trainer, Baltimore; Jeremiah Sheehan, St. Louis; E. J. Hanlan, Washington; Robert Griffiths, Chicago; John Burnside, Des Moines; J. L E. Firmin and John Drummond, San Francisco; George E. Howe and F. M. Parker, Loe Angeles; John B. Smith, Maine; James Meathe, Detroit; David J. Barry, Baltimore; Walter Clark, Florida; Edward McDonald, Brooklyn; W. M. Mitchell, Boston; L. H. Mills, Bridgeport, Conn , W. H. Paddoh, Charleston, S. C., aud Edward Mahe of Hartford. The day’s business was principally of a routine nature. Wednesday the delegates will discuss sanitation. A. committee of master plumbers of Canada are expected to reach this city for the purpose of asking that the asso ciation be reorganized so as to admit members from outside the United States. J The fight for the presidency of the association this year will be a particu larly hot one. Thus far three candi dates have appeared in the field. Vice President Ormsby, James Meathe and Collector of Internal Revenue William H. Doyle, of this city. BAD FREIGHT WRECK. Nineteen Cars Ditched, One Man Killed and Several Injured, Kane, Pa , June 11.—A bad ireight wreck occurred at 1 o’clock three miles east of this place. A heavily loaded eastbound freight train on the Phila- _ delphia and Erie road, while running at a good rate of speed, was ditched and 19 cars piled upon it. A car of oil Was in the wreck and took fire imme diately, the fluid spreading tq the eg i tlrj| wreckage ahd 19 cars ir& ablane, ” - —u teuied. supposed to bo One man v—- - "* A boilef maker from Erie, wno was beating his way. It is thought there are others in the wreck, but can be done until the fire is extingttlslih ed. A brakeman sustained a fractured ankle. A 16-year-old boy, who Was in the same car w>th the man killed, escaped without injury. He says there were others in the car with them but no trace of them can be found. It is be lieved they are buried in the Wreck Wrecking trains have been ordered and the track will be cleared away at once. The loss to the company will be heavy.- HARMON SWORN IN. He Ae<ntries the Offioe of Attorney Genor* el of the United States. Washington, June 11.—Hon. Judson Harmon wa.i sworn in as attorney gen eral at the state department. He ar rived from Cincinnati early in the morning. His commission as attorney general was made out and sent to the state department before 10 o’clock. Secretary of State Olney called at the Arlington hotel shortly before 10 o’clock and escorted Judge Harmon to t>e White where he remained half an hour with the president. Secretary Olney then accompanied him to the state department where he was formal ly presented with his commission. The oath of offioe was administered by Jus tice Harlan of the snpreme court. A Reeeivar Dapased. Chicago, June 11.—Judge Horton has deposed Receiver Moore from the charge of Roby racing association af fairs, ordered that the racing might continue an I placed the business con duct of the organization in the hands of Michael McEruy. This is a substan tial victory fer those of the Roby asso ciation who are opposed t.p the efforts of George Hankins to prevent racing at the Indiana track. The New liawailßu ■miiwr. Washington, June 11.—Secretary Olney has received a brief telegram from Minister Willis dated Hofiolu.u, June 3, and San Francisoo, Jupe 10, saying that Mr. W. R. Castle has been appointed Hawaiian minister to the United States in place of Mr. Thurston, resigned. .