The Augusta herald. (Augusta, Ga.) 1890-1908, August 18, 1908, Page PAGE SEVEN, Image 7

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PAGE SEVEN MARKETS OF THE WORLD. NEW YORK COTTON. NEW YORK- —The cotton market this morning opened easy. There •"as a determined and apparently concerted bear raid, under which prices gave way fully 17 points. The selling mavement received an im petus from cables which were considerably poorer than expected and presanre from the South. (Today’s Figures.) Open. High. Low. Close. T/Juary 9.01 9.98 8.95 9.01 iugust 10.00 10.15 10.00 10.11 Stoker 9.38 9.38 9.25 9 32 December 1.08 9.08 8.98 9.06 Tone steady. Spots 10.40. (Yesterday's Figures.) Open. High. I<ow. Close. fanuary 90s. 9.10 8.94 909 * u SUSt 9.30 9.42 9.14 9 41 October 9.10 9.13 8.97 9.13 December - 10.25 10.48 9.98 10.10 .Tone, firm. Spots 10.50. NEW ORLEANS COTTON. (Today's Figures.) , Open. High. Low. Close. /anuary 9.07 9.07 9 07 9 07 October «. 9.15 9.22 9 15 9 20 December 9.05 9.11 . 9.05 9.11 Tone, steady. Spots 10c. (Yesterday’s Figures.) , OpeD. High. Low. close January 9,22 9,22 9 06 9.17 H ctob9 s 9.26 9.26 9.11 9 25 December 9.17 9.17 9.02 9 15 Tone, firm. Spots 10c. CHICAGO MARKET. CHICAGO.—-Wheat opened at slightly higher prices than yesterday's 'i°J tone , 7* s Btr °hS and healthy. Offerings were ~ _ £* b, * s did not fohow our decline. The fear of heavy move ment in tns northwest of the first run of wheat is the deterrent Influence against a confident position on the long side at the moment . (Today's Figures.) ** Open. High. Low. Close. September 91% 1 3 4 PORK^ b * ' Ji% 94V4 93V4 94 ' 4 ?S2SS? 76 7 «% ™ 76% Deoensbsr 63% 6 4% September 46% 47% 46% 47% 4 «ft U% 48% RIBS — September October , OORN— September 925 825 817% 917% O*TS 5 - <LOb#r 935 937V4 927V4 927 - 4 September 877% 880 870 870 October 890 890 880 880 (Yeststaa* ’ s Figures.) WHEAT Open. High. Low. Close. September 93% 93% 91 % 91% December 94% LuEN— September 75% 75% 75% 75% " ecemb * r 63% 63% 63% 63% UA l o~* 4i * PORK— 4714 46V4 467,4 September October L£RD— ' »32% 932% 927% 927% nine)*” *••• 945 945 937% 937% September 880 88 2% October 890 890 887% 887% AUGUSTA COTTON, Today’s Quotations in Lo cal Market. Augusta, Ga., Aug. 18, 1908. Middling today—lo%. New Cotton—9%. Middling last year—l3'/,. Ton*— Quiet and eteady. (TodayTTFiguree.l Good ordinary 8 1-8 Strict good njjddlln* 9 1-8 Low middling 10 1-8 Strict low mlddltng 10 1-2 Middling 10 5-8 Strict middling 10 3-4 Good middling 10 T-8 Good ordinary stains 7 3-1 Low middling stains 8 3-8 Tinges, Ist 10 1-1 Tinges, 2nd ... ~ ...10 1-4 (Yssterday's Figures.) Close. Good ordinary 8 1-8 Strict good ordinary 9 14 Low middling 10 1-8 Strict low middling 10 1-2 Middling 10 6-8 Strict middling 10 3-4 Good middling 10 T-8 Good ordinary stains 7 3-4 Low mlddUgg stales 8 3-8 First tinges 10 1-2 beoead t togas 10 M Net receipts today IT* Throw* cotten tc lay .. .. Ofoas receipts today IT3 Receipts, Sales, Shipments and Other Cotton News. Receipts fer Weak. Sales. Spin. Fhptt Sat. . . . , 368 241 211 Mon. ... 114 112 Taos ... Ml 848 Wed ihurs .... .... Frl Totals . . 731 701 1808. 1807. Bat 517 122 Mon .... 38 «2 Toes ... 172 44 wed .... Thors. . .... ro, .... .... .... Totals . . TJB 889 Isteelae and RSaalpta. Stock la tigaata. 1888 9,88* stock la Aaguela. 18*7 «444 Received since Mpt. 1. I*o7 3M.HI Received *4ae. Sept 1. 1808 . M 47.74 In tight and Suaply Bight to Aug 5. .11,417,112 18.298.484 During week . . 18.722 62.26 C VMM* supply .. 1,144.294 2,417,201 Estimates for Tomorrow. Today Last Yr 1000-8000 Galveston H 95 4500-7500 Houston 200-400 New Orleans 822 Port Receipts. Today. Last Yr. Galveston 9986 701 New Orleans 80 94 Mobile 52 Savannah 1105 220 Charleston 7 .... Wilmington .... Norfolk 37 43 Baltimore .... New York .... Boston .... Philadelphia .... Brunswick .... Pensacola .... . arlous.. .... Totals 12000 1120 Interior Recelnta. Houston 6089 2047 Augusta 173 H Memphis 24 97 St. Louis 8 .... Cincinnati .... Little Rock LIVERPOOL COTTON. Open. 2p m. Closa Jan and Feb . 4 96 4.92 4.91'A Feb and Mari 97 . ... 4.92*/* Mar aDd Apr .5.00 .... 4.94 * Apr and May May & Jana.. 4,87% 4,96% June-July July and Aug. 5.75 5.70% 5.65 Aug and Sept 5.31 Vi 5.26 5.24 Bept and Oct 5.12 5 08% 5.60 Oot and Nov .5 04 5.02 5.00% Nov and Dec 4 99 ... 4.94% Dec and Jan. 4.87 4.94 4,92% Sales 3,400 Receipts 7.000. Tone, barely steady. Middling 591 LIVE STOCK MARKETS. UNION STOCK-YARDS, lll.—Hogs Receipts, 12,000; market steady. Light, 6.26*6.85; bulk. fi.50a6.80; mixed, 6.30a5,90; pigs. 8.25a6.10; heavy, 6 25a6 10; good to choice heavy, 6.55afi90; rough, 6.25*8.58; porker*. 6.70a6.75. Cattle; Receipts, 9,000; market weak. Beeves, 3.55a7.50; Texas steers, 3 50 •6.26; western. 3.00*600; stnekera and teedara. 2.60a4 60; cows and heifers, 1.78a6 98; calves. S.SOaT 25 Shewp; Receipts. 18.000; market weak Natives, 2 40*4 25; western, 2.75 a 4.38; yearlings 4.2585.16. Lambs Natives, 3 50*6 35 west wrn. 4 00a 6. So DOMESTIC SILVER MARKET. NEW YORK —Commercial bar ell ver, 61 l-4c Mexican dollars. 45c. Today’s Stock Market By T. C SHOTWELL NEW YORK. —Stocks were very irregular in the early trading to day. Thomas W. Lawson was busy in Smelters and Reading Both those stocks made sharp advances at first, but quickly sold off. Trading in them was very heavy. C. P. advanced in spite of heavy losses in the Vancouver fire. A report that the New York Central would reduce its dividend In order to escape prosecution by the public service commission on the charge of paying dividends out of capital aroused some bearish senti ment. It Is known that the road Is not earning its fixed charges at pres ent. On the curb market. Bay State Gas was still the feature with the Guggenheim shares fairly active. In the cotton market there was a vigorous bear raid that carried October option from 10.42 down to 10.27. A partial recovery followed this. Americans are dull in London. The fact that railroad presidents who have been planning an in crease in freight rates have decided to take no action until after the election, has done tremendous damage, not (Wily to the hull campaign in Wall street, but to the prosperity movement in general. Their action is taken to mean that all talk of Improving business Just now is purely political. In Twenty~Three Automobiles Orphans Were Given Grand Ride Cars and Their Drivers. Owners. Driver. Mr. Burum's car H. P. Hurum Mr. Garrett’s car .. ..C. li. Garrett D. F. lack’s car Clark .lack It. J. Edoufield's car ...Mrs. Barrett W. Miller's car Robt. Tidwell Speth Bros, car G. Speth Augusta Motor Co.’s car .W. A. Miller J. Harper Davison's car.Jno. Davison Erbeldlng s car E. J. Erboldlng Perroux Bros's car F. Perroux Dr. Goodrich's car .1. W. White A. T. Davi’s car A. T, Davis Oonnerat Agency’s car.. Mr. Mahoney Thos. Barrett’s cur Chauffeur D. Sluksy’s car Chauffeur B. S. Dunbars car Chauffeur C. D. Carr's car Chauffeur Dr. Coleman's car Chauffeur Dr. Murphey's car Chauffeur Dr. J E. Allen’s car Chauffeur Augusta Motor Co's car..E. P. Gunter It was a big, a generous, and a beautiful thought that prompted Mr. E. R Honk to give the children of the Orphan Asylum a pleasure that they had never before had come Into their little lives, —an automobile ride through the city and around the sur rounding country, with Its perfect roads. it was equally lovely and thyughtful of Mr. Turner Howard to add so much to the delightful outing by asking the children to the Savoy as his guests, and It is a toss-up, since the affair was first announced, as to which has most engaged the attention of the eighty or more chil dren that were out, —the ride or the indecision of ihe young minds, that have never as yet had a more mo mentous question to decide, than the one wnich confronted them—what they should take when they got to the Savoy. This latter was settled for them in the most satisfactory manner by Mr. Howard, who, with his usual forethought and to facilitate matters and let them get the perfect enjoyment ot the ride, served all the little guests with chocolate-tips, and had a concensus of the orders of the childrn been taken, it would have developed that ninety-nine per oent bad already solved the problem, and chocolate-tips were what they all wanted. The machines, big arid little, lined up in the Asylum yard promptly on time, the absence of the gun, which was screened by accommodating clouds, adding much to the pleasure and comfort of the outing, and the merry happy throng of little folk piled Into the cars amid the most joyous of laughter, for this wns the first time that any of them had ever enjoyed the delightful sensation of riding in a "horse-leas carriage." Oil. WILL SOON ENTER BIOMINCHIi September Fifteenth, the Date Given by Manager Alex Bonnyman. ATATiNTA, Ga.—According to Gen eral Manager Alex Bonnyman, of the Atlanta, Birmingham and Atlantic railroad, that line will be operating Into Birmingham. Ala .. by September 15th, thereby connecting the last link In the new system. The entry Into Birmingham will be effected from Pelham, where the At lanla, Birmingham and Atlantic crosses the tracks of the Louisville and Nashville. By a trackage agree ment between the new road and the Louisville and Nashville the tracks of the latter company from Pelham to [Birmingham and Its warehouses and depots In Birmingham will be uaed by the a , B. A A. MR- N- A- BATES PRESIDENT BANK OF BATESBURG BATEHRCRO. H. C.- The board of directors of the First National Bank of Batesburg. at their last meeting elected Mr. N A Bates president, to succeed Mr. \v \V Watson, resign ed, and Mr. T B. Kernagnan was f lerted vice president, to succeed NP* Bates. Mr W. W. Watson came here from Columbia, 8 G., to take the poaltlon of president, of the First National Bank at its organisation in Ootoher, 1900 and hts administration of the affair* of the said bank hat been very successful. Mr Watson will move from here to Orangeburg, H C , the first of Otto her, next, when the new arrange ment will go Into efface THE AUGUSTA HERALD. There was a nottcable absence ot pusning and crowding, so usual with children, and so systematically had everything been planned, that in less time than It. tikes to tell it, the chil dren ami the home staff of Asylum of ficers, were comfortably esconced In the roomy machines and the antici pated treat materialised. The pro cession ot twenty-three cars was led by Mr. Percy Uurum In his big ma chine, that sped noiselessly along, the very poetry of motion. There wus ;he fluttering of innumerable flags, joyously clutched in the llttlu hands, there was the merry, gludsoruu laugh ter of the happy, lighted hearted chil dren, and there was a general holi day aspect that appealed to every one. Away they sped down Fifteenth street to Broad, where they circled the Momwnent and lined up In front of the Albion, where Mr. Pelot awaited them on the root garden with his camera. picture was taken and the camera A picture was taken and the visit to the Hnvov was made and the delicious ices and cakes oujoyed. There was a general out-put of the cltlsens to watch the happy little children that were so enjoying the ride Through all the streets, from sll the sidewalks, from every plaar.a and from the nurses and children on the greens there was u joyous waving ol handkerchiefs, the lookers-on seem ed to enjoy It almost as much as did the children, then and even on through the country everybody Beam ed to enter into the spirit of the ride and gave the glad hand as they pass ed. Th’e procession re-formed at the Savoy moved swiftly down Broad, through Elbert to Greene, and up Greene under the arching foliage of the stately and beautiful trees, the rhymic motion and (he bussing of the pCrTrci machinery keeping time to the joyous beating of the happy little hearts that, were so enjoying the trip. Over the high bridge, out through Woodlawn and Hafrisonvllle aud op to the Mlllcdgevllle road, the long train swept, moving Bwtltjy between great fields of fresh cut hay with its deliciously Invigorating fragrance, htrough hedges of feathery golden rod, with Its pungent spicy scent, sug gesting an early fall, across the Whelesß road to Monte Sano, and from there to the Hill, down Walton Way and back to the Asylum, where the children were deposited, and Ilk? wind-blown, sleepy little flowers, but oh! So blissfully happy, they in their dreams last nlghi lived over again and again the Ideally beautiful afternoon made possible for them through the kindness of Mr. Hook and Mr. Howard. ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦*♦♦♦♦♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ COTTON REGION BULLETIN. ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦ Augusta, Ga., Aug. Ik, 1908. Ausueta District. Temperature Max. Min. Rain. Augusta 93 75 .00 Allendale 97 77 .00 Athena no 73 .on Batesburg 90 74 .38 Bladcvllle 99 74 .no Caniak 93 72 .00 Columbia 95 7;, T Greensboro 99 70 .00 Greenwood 97 73 .43 Washington 97 70 122 Waynesboro 93 75 ,00 Averages 95 73 .18 Heavy Rainfalls. Galveston. Tex 1,94 Texas Rainfall. Beevflle go Cuero Dallas Greenville .02 Houston t Huntsville '.. ,515 1 Ailing 21 Mexla 28 Nacogdoches .. 16 San Marco .42 Temple or, Waco xt Weatherford T Ilrenham, missing Central Btatlon. Temperature Mux. Min Rain Atlanta .. 94 72 .18 Augusta »5 73 .18 Charleston ~ ~ ... 90 74 no Galveston 94 72 ,2fi Little Hoek 98 72 .01 Memphis 94 74 T Mobile 96 74 T Montgomery 9fi 72 .08 New Orleans 91 72 .02 Oklahoma .. 98 fiß .00 Savannah 96 74 .00 Vicksburg ........ 96 74 .01 Wilmington 94 72 T Scattered aliowera have fallen In the east central belt, but more gen eral precipitation has occurred In Texas. Temperature change* have been unimportant ri FtatfFft Observer. FINANCIAL m Union Sayings Bank OFFICERS WM. schweiotcrt. President A S. MORRIS. Vice-President. THOMAS S GUAY, Ceehier This Bat nK is De positary, for the U. S. Court North eastern D ivision, Southern District' of Georgia. Railroad Schedules CENTRAL OF CEORCIA RAILWAY. (Current sctieauu-.-i ( u.uuhca to Date.) (76th Meridian Time.) UE.PAH l URLiJ. For Savannah amt Macon . .. ■•7:Jonm For Dublin and Savannah •2:4!>ptr, For Savannah and Macon »opm For Savannah and Macon 1!9:40pm For Savannah, “Tyhee, limited" 117:rn ARRIVALS. From Savannah and Mucon ... ••7:rvt»|)m From Savannah uml Mucon . . .••8;&0am From fiavumuih and Mucon ....!!8:10am From Dublin and Savannah..*l2. From Suvan’h "Tybee Limited" I!lil.4barn •Dally. ••Kxoept Sunday. PSunday only. Drnwlng Room Rlwoping Cara batween Augusta and Hnvnnnah on night train*. Connects ut MlUcn with through sleep ing curs to and from Mnoon, Atlanta, Columbus. Birmingham and Chicago. Ills F. F POWIORS, W. \V. HAOKISTT. Com’l. Agt Trnv. Pass. Agt. *35 Brond St. Charleston & Western Carolina Railway The following arrivals a„a dvpunuvrs of (rains, Union Station, AuauHla, <)*.. Off well as collections with other compu nlea. are simply gtvnn as information, and are not. guaranteed: (Effective May 81, 1*01.) OKPARTURIB. •30 a. m—No. 7, Dally tor Anloraon, Seneca, Wgllialla, etc. 10:10 a. m—No. 1. T>ally for <lreenwoi«l, Laurens, Gr«*envUlo. Spartanburg, Hendersonville and Asheville. 3:oh p. rn. No. 42, Dully except Sunrtuy, for Allendale, Fairfax, Charleston. Savannah. Heuufort, Port lloyal. 7:00 a. m. No. 88. Sunday only, for Al lendnlc. CharlcHton, Ponufort, Port ■Royal. Savannah, 4:40 p. m.'-No. 3, Dally for (ireenwood. No. 5 loaves Greenwood at 4.bu a. m for Spartanburg. ARRIVALS- No. 4, Dally from tireerwonfl, » 3f> a. m. No. 41, dally except Sunday, from Charleston. Snvnnnah, flenufort. Port Royal, etc., N». 37, Sunday only, from Beaufort, Port Royal. Charleston and Sa vannah, 130 a. in 12 30 p in No 3. dally from AEnevllle, Hpiirtanmu g. Greenwood, etc , 6: IT' p. m. No V, dally from Anderson, McCormick, otc.. 7. a* p m Trains <1 and 43 and 37 nnd 88 run ■olid between Augusta and Charleston. IJffectlvo June 10, 1908. then* will be Trl-Weekly Perlor Car service between Augusta and Anhevllle. leaving Augusta Tuesdnys. Thurednys and Saturdays; Aahsvllle Mondays, Wednesday and Fri days. Trains Noh l and J. ERNMBT WILLIAMS. Geneml Passenger Agent. No. 307 Broadway. Augusta. Qa. ATLANTIC Coast Line XO'i’F—Thtin nrrlv,*i« ami tlopurturM art; ylvftn as Information, hut arrival unO connect lorn* ar© not guuiunteaU No. 82. No. *h No'.ih. May 1, 1»0». HmitU 2:lopm Lv... A up:iimt n. .. . Ar. 10 OOmr 4;of.|imfvv nurnwwll ....Lv. 7 hlai 4:Bopm Lv. .. . I u-rnnark ...I„v. 7 f>san I:o9pm Ly .. Oriinrciburg ...Lv, 7:lft*ra G.Gopm LV Hmntftr Lv. f. rtOftm 7:Mpm Lv ... Flor«nr.« ....Lv. 4 40ain 6 lOiim Ar.... KWhmon*! .. . . Lv. 7:2hpm t 9 lOiim Ai . Wualilimtf.fi . Lv. 2:4r>|)rn 11:20am Ar. ... Haltlinor© . ..Lv. 2:l2pi» I MpmAr W I'hllu. Lv ll iLtn Llibm Ar N*w York. 23d Ht Lv. 9.26 urn PULLM AN I* Alt LOR OARH hotw*Fii Auaiutta and Naw York without change. Dining Car Hervlua, frlorunc* to Net* York. L D MriTLMJM. CnmmcrJ’lul Agant. *O7 Hr on ft At. T. C. WHITK. W J (ion. *>»•». Ag«nL I’aaa. Tra/I M«i Wilmington. N. C. WILLIAM H. TAFT IS TOO HEAVY FOR HORSE BOSTON.—If George T. Ange.l, president of the Massnchui ells So ciety for the prevention of cruelty i,, animals ban hla way, William II Tuft has t*ken his last horseback ride ''it Is outrageous cruelty lo uni mala,” said Mr. Angell today, for a big 309 pound man Ilk" Taft to ride s hOMc about the country, "It ought to he stopped at once, No teams’<r or any one who knows anything abou' aulmnls would think of loading a horse down "1 do not doubt the stories sent out from Hoi Hprlngs Mis' the horse's leg* have been wrenched and strain ed "Something should certainly bn done about It No mail weighing 300 pound* hut any huslncin -n horse back. If he must ride, let him use an automobile or an elephant." FOR GOOD RoTdS CONGRESS. ATLANTA, Me.— Plans are unde' way to be submitted to the Atlanta Chamber ot Commerce for that body to eal; a good rondtt congress to ha held h-re some time this fall. Al Up recent meeting of tin- HotUh «-m Association of Commercial Re/re tsrle* held In Chattanooga, Seeretsr/ Cooper, of Atlanta, stated tint such a oronoaftlnn whs under advlaeman*. FINANCIAL A Single Dollar by Itself seems a trifle and yet it Is the collective effect of many single dollars spent that holds so many young men down to the dead level of mediocrity, and the collective power of many single dollars saved In this Bank that lifts others to success. The man who despises the single dollar seldom has the opportunity to command a thousand. Have YOU a savings account here? A THE NATIONAL BANK OF AUGUSTA 707 BROAD STREET, ORGANIZED 1865. CAPITAL, SURPLUS AND PROFITS $450,000.0i L. C. HAYNE, President. CHAS. R. CLARK, Cashier. BEGINNING AUG. IST, 1908, this Bank wifi pay 4 per cent In terrsl on CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSITS. Those certificates will be issued by us lu sums of SIOO.OO nnd up, for stipulated periods of time, to suit the Depositors’ convenience. SAFETY LOCK BOXES $3.00 To $20.00 PER YEAR. The business of our out of town friends oarefuliy looked after. CORRESPONDENCE INVITED. You CKii draw your money at any time if you deposit it with us nnd hike one of our CERTIFICATES OF DEPOSIT. We pay you 4 Per Cent per annum if you leave it with us three months or longer. The National Exchange Bank. CAPITAL AND SURPLUS, $5^0,000.00. Georgia Railroad Hank Augusta, Georgia. This Bank Solicits (lie hanking business of merchants nnd corpor.it ions. Wo pay 4 Per Cent Interest on all deposits placed in our Savings Dept. YOUR ACCOUNT INVITED. Strength-—Courtesy—Accuracy—Despatch arc the slrnnarst characteristics of this hank and make it. the satlafactory bank with which to deal. Our new Coupon Cartl • flratc of Deposit pays 4 per cent. Interest four times s ysar. Safe, sane and profltabls, it is to your Interest to Invoßtlgnto. Bank. CAPITAL and SURPLUS, - - $300,000.00. THE liXßKmiilNOfc of thousands of our depositors Is Identical with that of the parson who has not begun to save The hardest part about the whole hdsl ness for tbe.m was tbe STARTING POINT. After tha lee was broken and the start made It was found to be an eaay manor to lay aside a certain sum each week or month. And It Is certainly aston ishing how rapidly a bank account grows, especially when 4 par cent Interest la. added to It each six month*. Come In and ruska your start tomorrow morning early. "WHERE BAVINGB ARE SAFE.” THE AUGUSTA SAVINGS BANK BROAD STREET. ■I SLEUTH'S STOWE STORY LOH ANOKI.KB, Cal The nrreat In thla city of Fred Yorkey, vice president of Union No, 44, of the Western Federation of Miner*, at Kandahurg, Cal., on the charge of con spiring to blow up the Yellow Asto geld mine with dvnamlta, hies develop ed a complicated condition Voekey was arrested, It was said, upon complaint of Mrs Alle.. u. Clark u detective working for n detective agency c-lalned by the Yellow Alter Mining Company to obtain evidence According to a published story, Mrs Clark now charges that nli the acctisa tons against Yockey are falx-- and says she was compelled lo swear to them hy another detective, who forced her to sign the statement at flu- point of a pistol. The who!- plot, she avers, was an < (tort to break up the milters' union at Rand- burp Th< democratic campaign book, ac cording to recent dlapatcbsa Irorn Lie coin, will undertake i fJ show Hie par ticulars In which Mr Roosevelt has failed W< assume thul the book la going 111 lie a twenty to Ihlrt volume aifali —Richmond (Vm j Times Dia na tcU. TUESDAY, AUGUST 18 FINANCIAL w OEBDET 81TTEEB BITES KEEPER OEM * WASHINGTON Rodney Ron*. ■ keeper at ine Zoo, was bitten by a dla* ntond rattlesnake yeati rday morning, while cleaning out the glass cage lu which these most venomous of all rattlers nr* kept |fe Is hovering bw tween Ufa and death at Kmergency Hospital. Bei- s hard and arm had swollen to twin their / xc, and Igi was ln»- : loi: kept a 11,,, by u apeclal snako blt ;i -I texln, wulcli had hi n tel* Uiaphcn fm iid when reached thla -It, lot nigh*, at u o'clock from New York b; a;, pr.ss. te dinn end t»V r I* dn'n ed hy ')•<» "i be cflm of the .met deadly of An crlctn snake*, n nd In the For Vw>ii, w!nn the word la pasred along ioiii" one pas lici-n "bltt*n by 11 ,|,:i " iid It Is generally conceded ' that the person's death Is sure. Her Fa' her "You must r -member, I sir, (hut we only have one daughter." Her Hii I tor "Well I er —ar mvlg I want on*, sir."—Byraeoae Herald.