Crawfordsville Daily Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 25 September 1890 — Page 1

VOLUME VI—NO 15

100

ABE CALLED

^QmeliV

a

better profit, *enfl tank

Is done principally at our store." If we name

a price for any article you'will have the

goods to compare with it. A good round

cents worth for every dollar you spend

with us or your money refunded Better

we can not offer you. Our Fall Goods are-

coming in now and we would like to have

you see them. Come and see us.

It is not too early to look around

for Fall and Winter Wraps.

ren's Cloaks.

I have just received my stock oi

Cloaks, Jackets, Reefers and Child­

A full line of Plushes.

.W.ROUNTREE

Indianapolis Elusmess University

Old Bryant & Btratton School, North Pennsylvania St.. Wben Blook, OpposttePost'OSce. THE DEMAND FOR ITS CRADUATES IS CREATER THANTHt SUPPLY. ItBtanasat tooneaa of Coimncrciiil Schools llstyenr enteruny time elective orptcscribcd

Diploma tree atmduatlon: a strictly business school in an uori vnlod commercial center: superior Oqulpmenta, ana uaoqualen in tho success of its trrmluatos no chtime for positions furnished.

ELEGANT. ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE. FREE. HEEB & OSBORH, PROPRIETORS.

«LAMPGHIMNEYS«AK?

YOU GET Trtk/VRONC SORT THE RIGHt^ON"

Made only by GEO: A! MACBETH & CO., PITTSBURGH, PA.

CASTORIA

far Infants and Children.

lab—iwaBiitioa chaarap that CactorU mm* Oolle, Ooagpailim.

rwDUaMx^H««aapertertofto7MT0criDtton

I Soar Stomach, DiaiTb«*,

I

UtoOtMa^fimUia,!!. T. Without lijurioua nedicaifca. TUB CmTioa COMTAKT, 77 Murray 8treet, N. Y.

usy.wiveawbo U3e APQ L-* G*

n£v§&s^emtogrow

THE DAILY

*r"euUoB^*""

A,

promAe-

re

olcLTty a.

A complete wreck of domestic happiness has often resulted from badly washed ««"»», from an wri^inmi kitchen, or from trifles which seemed light as air. But by these things a man often Judges of his wifo'g' devotion to her fhinily, and Charges her with general neglect when he finds her careless In these particulars. Many a home owes

!arge part of Its thrifty neatness and its consequent happiness to SAPoua *-Gr*ccrs •ften ralMfttat* tifaaIW

nth

Ittlolin and

SAPOlJO' m*te*

Insist

oa bavlnc ja*t

Weatern Miohlgan Farmers Suffer Great Loss.

DISASTER FOLLOWS A HAIL-STORM.

Crop* Beaton Into the Earth—Tlio Total •lgm LosaEUlmated at *300,000—Deatltutiun Among the Loiert-

An Arkanana Flood.

UNLUCKY MICHIGAN FAIiMERS.'' ASHLAND, \vis., Sopt 25.—An Ashland man who has just roturncd from Huron County, Western Michigan, which was storm-swopt a (ow days ago, gives startling reports of tho destitution which ho says provalls among tho losers by the storm. Tiio storm swept through a portion of country remote from any telegraph offlcc, tho hail falling In olouds and covering tho ground four to six lnchos doep. Tho track of tho storm was through Sigol, Bloom field and part of Paris townships, ami covercd an area of eighteen miles long hy a mile wide. Crops woro literally beaten into tho earth. Many farmers in that section Ixvo on rented farms, which aggravates thoir sufferings, as they can not pay their rents. Besides they have nothing to livo on. Many will bo in danger of starving unless immediate holp is given. Tho total loss in crops, stock, corn, etc., by tho storm is estimated at S300.000.

HF..VVY RAINS IN ARKANSAS HELENA, Ark., Sept 25.—Tuosday evening this city was visited by tho most terrific and destructive rain-storm ovor known in Its history. At about 8 o'clock in tho afternoon a steady rain commenced and contlnuod until 0 9'clock. A veritable cloudburst occurred, and in an Incredibly short time tho lower portion of tho city was one vast sheet of water. Fences wore swept away, sidewalks torn up and collars Inundated. Tho lower portion of tho city was submerged and hundreds of people driven from their homes. The total rainfall tho last threo days has been 10 10-100 inches.

The l'otter-Lovell Liabilities. BOSTON, Sopt 25.—Footings of the Pottor-Lovell liabilities havo been reached. Tho indebtedness has been found to bo about SO,000',000. Tho direct Indebtedness to banks is about S3,000,' 000. Ihdlrect liabilities are large, becairte of tho guarantees placed upon a great deal of paper.

United Labor Ticket la rcnniytranla.

PHILADELPHIA,

FURIOUS STORMS. I STOOD BY HIS GUNS.

FLOODS IN FRANCE.

PARIS,THE So^t. 25.—Furthe*

reports of

damage by floods are being received. The town of Annonay, Department of Ardecho, and tho surrounding country have been inundated by the overflow from the Cance and Deaumo rlvorS, and tho damage is enormous. Factories have been destroyed, bridges swept away and tho railways damaged to such an extent 'as to render them Impassable. The floods have been acoompaniod by some loss of llfo. In Annonay a rqanufacturor and several men have boon killed. The water Is still rising.

Reversed the Sentences*

DUBLIN, Sopt 25.— At the AVaterford assizes Judge Waters reversed tho sontonces of throe moiUhB' imprisonment ^t bard labor pronounced upon Mr. Fisher, editor of the Munster Express, and Mr. Redmond, editor of the Waterford News. The two editors wore oon vlotod under the crimes act

Blew Ilia Father'* Brains Oat. 1 LITTLE ROCK, Ark., Sopt 25.—Horaa Mercer, a boy IT years old, shot am "kijlod his father Monday night His .father had. thrashed him about something and he waited until tho old gentleman went to sloop. Qo then got bis pistol and blow his brains out Ho la 'now In jail at Dardanollo.

Sopt, 05. —'The execu­

tive committee of tho United Labor party met boro Wednesday and placed tho ^.lowing ticket In nomination: Governor, Theodore

P.

Rynder Lieuten­

ant-Governor, Justus Watkilfs'i Secretary of Internal Affairs, Henry R. teller.

The New Chemteal Culou.

LONDON, Sept. 25.—The prospectus of tho now chemical uAlon has been issued showing a capital of £3,500,000, of which £7,000#00 will bo Issued ugainst the works, etc., and tbo remainder agalnet tho stocks of chemicals and for a working capital.

Prohibition Cuiiitidate (or Governor. IIARHISDUUO, Pa., Sept 23.—Tho Prohibition Stato Committeo mot hero Wednesday afternoon and nominated John I). Gill, of Westmoreland, for Governor, to take tho place of Charles Miller, cf Venango, who declined.

ThouattiHtu are Starving.

LONDON, Sopt 25.—Suaklm oiJvicQS report tho famino in tho Interior as terrible. Thousands aro dying of starvation. Caravans aro plundered by tho dosperato natives to obtain food, and the ownors are murdered If they resist

Terrible Acclde.it In a Ship-Yard. LONDON, Sept 25.—An explosion oc curred on tho steamor Pandora, at Armstrong's ship-yard, at Nowcastlo. Twelve persons employed about tho steamer were so badly scalded by tho escaping steam that they will die.

Raging: at Oakwuod, O.

ODiphtheria

AKWOOD,O., Sept.

25.—An

Congressman Kennedy Refuses to fiaolc Down.

HE DEFENDS HIS ANTI-QUAY SPEECH,

(t ll Eliminated from the Record, How9T«r, by a'Vote of WO to 3G-The Day** Doing, tn the

Senate.

*1

nousE.

t^ASfilTfOTON, Sept 25. -When tho House met1 Mr. Miller (who was on Tuosday decl&rod to be elected as a Representative from the Seventh South Carolina district) appeared at tho bar of the House and took tho oath of office.

Mr. Hitt (111.), from tho committee on foreign affairs, reported a resolution calling on the- President for information relative to tho killing of General Barrundla. Mr. McCroary (Ky.) stronuously advocated the passage of the resolution. It was adopted.

Tho resolution from tho committee on recommending that the ontlro

ladlfclary speech of

pooch of Mr. Kennodv (O.) attacking tho Senate bo omitted from permanent publication.In the Congressional Qocord was oalled-up for action.

Mr. Kennedy was accorded tho floor for twenty minutes. Ho said ho had asked the commlttoo on the judiciary either to let his spoech appoar In the Eecord entire or to strike it out ontlro. He was willing to stand before the people of Amerios on that speoch. believing that-tho people oi this country in their flr«t Indgmont and in tholr sober second Judgment would approve the words he bad ottered. fie had heard from the country. It had been charged by a tew persons that he had gl^on aid and comfort to the pemooratlo party. What wero tho indications that bo had done so? Ho held lit his hand clippings from newspaperg throughout all America, and In all that list there was not ODe single Democratlo paper which had approved his spoeoh. Bnt there wer„e hundreds »nd hundreds of clip, pirtgs from Republican papers, and with one or two exceptions they approved his words. He also held In his hand letters from'every section of tho land, from itglne t6 California'and from the lakes to the pill, indorsing tho word, letter and spirit of (vis speech.

He wag willing to stund before the

Elonged

Ople of the oountry and wait for their dorsement, "the party to whioh he had pledged Itself in its platform ftnd during the campaign'to-per-form certain duties and fulfill certain promleos. One oI these pledges, he ialjj—the first- and greatest—was that the Repnblioan. party would put on. the statute books of tho land a law for the.protection of every eltlaen—high

or

low, rich or poor, white

•r blaek—so that he oould go to the ballot-box, deposit his vote and bpva It counted. It was because Kto party had failed to do this that ho had

Btood

upon this floor and

spoken of broken pledges and broken •iomlsos. This Hduse had performed its Jjlqdees, and, as tho Spoaker said In Maine the other' day, It had redeemed every protalse to the people. It was tho fault of the Houso that the pledges had riot been redeemed, and ho had a right

to

cpldomio

of diphtheria Is raging liero. Twentyfour cases and throo deaths havo boon reportod by pnyslcians since Tuesday. All tho schools havo been closed.

Want rivi-Day Week.

Isiii'EMixo, Mich., Sept. 25. Tho 4,000 miners In Isl-poming havo decided to ask for a fivo-day week for the nigbt shift Tho mines are making money, and no trouble is expectod.

A o7ont Year for Salmon.

SAN FKANCISCO, Sopt 25.—It is reported that tho salmon pack for the season on Frazer river, It. C., was 11,750,000 pounds, valued at $1,407,243.

Foil From t» Urlilc**

CoLV&inns, O., Sopt. 25.—liort Barber, 11 yoars old, foil eighty feet from the Panhandle brldgoover tho Scioto rlvor. He was instantly killod.

Bay this hero and else­

where. If for that ho Was to' be judged, then he was ready to be judged by this assembly and by the people •f tjio oountry. He had made speeches on this floor wbloh had sunk into tho record as raindrops sunk into tbo ocean and were lost forever. But he had at least made one spoech on this floor that the people had heard, yho House might blot It from the record and Bweep It from existence, but

It

could not blot It

from the qulckoned oonsolences of 90,900,000 people of America. He then quoted from a speech delivered by Abraham Lincoln In 1859 In a joint debate between him, Joslah Lamborn and Stephen A. Douglas, In whioh be expressed his devotion to the Qftase of the people He oould not, he said, rival the words of the grept emanolpator, but with tbo single talent God had given him be would stand on this floor, or anywhere, defending the rights of the poor, down-trodden and oppressed. [Applause ln gie galleries.] Ho had stood for Ave years on fifty battle-fields to teBtlfy his devotion to tho cause of liberty and unity and for twenty-five years since, whenever opportunity presented Itself, he had stood In behalf of liberty, justice, equality, a free ballot and a fair oOunt Others might seek for the aoclalm of the high born, the titled and the rich, but as for htm be woQld be content with the tears and the gratitude and the blosslng of tho poor, tbe lowly and tbe oppressed. [Applause on tbe floor and in the gall erles.1

Mr. Stewart (Vt) said nobody questioned the gontleman's fidelity to the principle ot liberty, and nobody challenged tho record he had mado In defense of that principle. The question was not as to the accuraoy of what tbo gentlepian had said—not as to whether It was true or false—tho question was whether the spooch, which was In spirit and subst-anoo a bitter and savago arraignment of tbo oo-ordlnate branch, was a violation of parliamentary law and ot the privileges of tho Douse. That was thp only question.

Mr. Stewart then demanded tho previous question., despltoMr. Boutello's protest that tbo House could not afford to have a gag law. The provious question was tbon ordorod—yeas, 141 nays, fltt. The resolution wu3 then adopted— yeas, 150 nuys, 80.

Tbo House thon went Into committee of tbe wholo, Mr. Allen (Mlcb.) In tbo chair, ou tbo Sonato apiondmenis to tho deflcicnoy bill. Tho French spollatlop claims amendment was •non-con-ourred In. Tho commlttoo thon arose and a conference was ordered.

The lloutio soon thoroaftor adjourned. SENATE. WASHINGTON, Sopt 25.—The tyonate on Wednesday passod a number of bills on the calendar.

Tho conference report on tho Houso joint resolution to lnorease the number

0RAWFORDSV1LLE, INDIANA- TIIURSl)A\. SEPTEMBER 25, l«90 PRICE 2 CF'NTS

of tho board of managers of the Ka tional home for disabled volunteer soldiers and to All vaoanclos In sucht board-was presented, oxplalned by Senator Ilawley and agreed to. It proTides for a board Of eleven mom burs and names tho following managors:

Edmund K. Morrill ot Kansas (tor the unex. plred term of John A. Martin, decQascd), Alfred L. Pearson of Pennsylvania (for tbo unexpired term of Jobn F. Uartranft» deceased), William B. Franklin of Connecticut, John C. Dlaclt of Illinois, Thomas \V. Qydo ot Maine (in plffco ot Auguatut 3. Fornham, named in tbc bill), and George W. Steele ot Indiana.

Tho Senate then resumed consideration of tho Houso tilll (with Sonato substitute) to define and rogulato tho jurisdiction of tho courts of tho United States, and It was passed—yoas, 45 nays, 0.

The Sonato bill to pay to tho personal representatives of Captain John Ericsson $13,930, found duo to him by docroo of the court of claims in 1657, was passed.

The Sonato resumed consideration of tho bill (which was partially dlscussod some weeks ago) to establish a United .States land court and to provido for tho sottlomont of privato land claims in certain States and Territories. No action was taken.

PLEA FOR ANARCHISTS.

Petition to Set Schwab Free Judge OrMHam Appealed To for a Writ ot liabeaa Corpua.

CUICAOO,

25.

Sept

—Tho first legal

stop toward the reloaso of tho Anarchists now confined In the penitentiary was taken in tho Fodoral court Wednesday in tho shapo of a petition for a writ of habeas corpus on bohalf of Michael Schwab. This movo has been contemplated for some tlmo, but the potltlon setting up tbo grounds upon which it Is Bought to relievo tbe Anarchists has just been oompleted Attorney Moses Solomon, who appoarei as ono of tho attorneys for the prisoners at tbo time of tho criminal oourt trial. Mr. Solomon 6ays he bas associated with him In this oase GoneraT B. F. Butler, and a letter from tho latter says that tho prisoners aro entitled to dischargo undor tbo law. The roason Schwab appears alono in tho light is because tbo law in his case will cover those of Oscar Neboe and Samuol Flelden, and should Schwab prove successful In his application, thon the other prisoners will follow with similar petitions. The main ground upon which Schwab's release Is asked Is that he waB not present in person to the 8upreme Court when sentence was pronounced on him.

BASE-BALL.

Mmw tbe ProftoMtouai Games I'lijetl on Wednendar Reunited* Players' League games on Wednesday resulted as follows: At Chicago—Chicago, 4 Philadelphia, 3. At Cleveland —Boston, 5 Cleveland, 4. At Pittsburgh—Brooklyn, 12 Pittsburgh, 0. At Buffalo—Buffalo, 0 New York, 4.

National League: At Chicago—Philadelphia, 9 Chicago, 8. At Cincinnati —Brooklyn, 8 Cincinnati, 1. At Cleveland—New York. 5 Clevoland, At Pittsburgh—Pittsburgh, 0 Boston, 3.

Illinois-Iowa League: At Cedar Rapids—Cedar Rapids, 7 Dubuquo, 1. At Monmouth—Monmouth, Ottiymtva, 4

Western Association: At Denver— Milwaukee,-10 Denver, 0. At'Minneapolis—Minneapolis, 7 Oroahft, 3. At Sioux City—Sioux City, IS St Paul, 9.

Amerloan Association: At Coluiqbus —Syracuse, 3 Columbus, 2. At Toledo —Baltimore, 7 Tolodo, 0. At Louisvillo—Louisville, 1 Rochester, 1.

Conffreaiilonal Nomlnatlona* The Congressional nominations on Wednesday wore: Indiana, Second district William N. Darnell (Hop.) Fourth, Jobn P. Rankin (Rep.). Illinois, Twelfth district Milton McCluro (Rep.). Loulsana, Fifth district S. W. Groon (Rep.). Michigan, Fourth district, G. L. Yaple (Dem.). Missouri, Third district, W. J. Gibson (Rap.). Ohio, Fourteenth district, B. F. Swingle (Rep.). South Carolina, Seventh district Wlll-

iTirst

am Elliott (Dem.). West Virginia, district, John O. Pondloton (Dem.) renominated. New York, Twen-ty-ninth district I. N. Pago (Dem.)s Thirty-third, George A. Davis (Rep.). Connecticut, Fourth district, Robert Do forest (Dem.) L. D. Baldwin (Pro.). Massachusetts, First dlstrfct, Charles 8. Randall (Rep.) Tenth, Joseph H. Walker (Rop.)j Twolftb, Francis W. Rockwell (Rep.). Now Jersey, Soventh district Edward F. MaDonald (Dem.).

The Finch Monument Uncalled. CHICAGO, Sopt 25.—The unvalllng of the statue erected to the memory of the lamented John B. Finch, the famous temperance orator, took place at Rose Iiill Cemetery In tho presence of a vast concourse of people. The services woro conducted under tho auspices ot the Right Worthy Grand Lodgo of Good Templars. They were exceedingly solemn and improssivo. Orations wore delivered by B. F. Parkor, of Wisconsin Dr. E. It Hutohlns, of Iowa W. Q. Chose, of Pennsylvania, and Uriah Copp, Jr., of Illinois. BSD Three Men l^owned.

S-ANDDitinoE, Ont, Sopt 25.—Wednesday morning about 9 o'clock Arthur Bowyer, Charles McDonald and Hugh Roney went out out in a sailboat. Intending to cross Stony lako. This afternoon men on tho other side of the lake discovered tho boat lying on its side, and after reaching It found Arthur Bowyer banging In tbo rigging drowned. Tbe other two aro missing and aro supposed to have been drowned.

Treasurer nuatoii to liestcn. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., Sopt 25.—United States Treasurer J. N. Huston was here Wodnosday, and in conversation with some ot his friends said that ho would tender his resignation immediately after tbe election in this Stato. lie will return to his home at Connorsvlllo and dovoto himself wholly to private business.

Two Men Shot by FUhorwan.

LIMA,

O., Sopt 25.—Tuosday night

Jacob Andorson, a flshorman at tho Col Inn reservoir near here, detected Jacob Botkin and Lowls Smith stealing bis note and, after calling on tbem to surrender, opened firo on them and killed Uotkin and wounded Smith mortally.

A MAN OF NERVE.

Blrohall Unmoved by the Evidence

1

Agalnet Him.

MASTERLY SKILL OF HIS LAWYERS.

Brnnght to ltoar oo the State's Witneasea, It Soroly 1'ntzlea Thetn—Medical Points That Help the l'rlsounr'e Caax.

THIRD DAY'S DEVELOPMENTS.

WTIIF.

35.—Tbethird

OODSTOCK, Ont, Sept

day of tho great murdor trial opened with tho case looking decidedly black for Roginald Blrehnll. Every point in tho damaging evidonco advanced by tho crown is being opposed with masterly skill by tho dofenso, but tho grim line of evidence remains unbroken. Tho defonse so far has been extremely severo In cross-exam-inanlon. What will bo offered when the dofenso opens its case-remains a mystory. Tho torrlble chain of evidence that Is bolng forged by tho prosoeution appears to havo no effect on Blrchall and ho liBtcns impassively to tho witnesses.

Tho case opened with the introduction of medical testimony. Dr. Taylor, of Prlncoton, told of Bonwoll's wounds. Ho said both bullets passed through tho brain, either wound being sufficient to produoo death that the wound in tho back of tho head wa^mado flrst and the bollot passod up ward and forward that the hair near both wounds was singed, showing that tho pistol was held close to tbe victim's head. The bullets wore of S&callben. Death was Instantaneous speudden that tho heart had stopped at the half boat "the other organs of tbo body were in a healthy condition and there was nothing to cause doatb but tho wounds on tbe hoad. These It was utterly impossible for tbo deceased to havo Inflicted on himself. In view of the attempt which tho dofenso is expected to make to provo that tho body did not llo In the swamp during the storm of February 17, tho day when Bonwell was killod. Dr. Taylor was minutoly examined as to tho condition of the body. He said ho bcliovod that when found it had lain less than seven days In tbo swamp— possibly four.

Mr. Blackstock succeeded In getting the doctor considerably contused and made him contradict himself on several points. He led the doctor to say that there was redness of tho scalp under tho wound, and afterward read to him Ms statomont at tho Inquest thatthere was no such rodnosa. Tho doctor had flxed t'ue tlmo the body was in the sw^pip at four days, and his statement at 'tho inquest was road that it was less than a week. Mr. Blackstock pressed the witness bard. Tho doctor was compelled to admit that undor ordinary circucoBtancos decomposition would beglb In three doys, but thoro was no decomposition whan the body waB found. This, however, ho a^ trlbuted to frost At flrst slg^t tho doctors thought tho wounds on tUo body were the result of decomposition, but afterward dccldnd that tbey resulted from violence. Ills roason for Considering that thn wound on~ tbo' body was inflicted just beforo or after deuto was mainly that the true skin fras not affectod.

Dtv Welford, of Woodstock,:showed on the human skull positions: of tho two bullots on entering and on their discovery In tbe young man's brain. Either would havo caused instant death. The counsel for tho defonse emphasized tbo fact that the de* ceased,- though a man of small stature, was of such muscular development that bo was unlikoly to come off second be:t tn a struggle with an opponent of average wolght Tbo boots of tho decoased woro clean and marked as If from walking over sbarp, hardsubStances, whereas at tho tltne of the murder, and particularly in the swamp, there was mud and slush. Tb4 abut did not bear the appeprEmce ot' navln£ boon out In a rain or sleet-Storm.

Polly, Blrchali's companion ion 'the' Atlantic voyage, was recalled aha produced his rovolver, to which reference had boon made at a provious part of the proceedings, and said that It Was larger than Blrchali's. He also recognized as Blrchali's sovcral letters which were

put ih evidence, rotating to the negotiations carriod on by tbo prisoner induce himself (PoUy) and Benwall fo come to Canada.

Tbo assessor and holders of oyer official positions about Niagara Falls testified that thoro was no truth in-the prla^ oner's representations to Engllahtnen that ho owned an extensive farm and other property within tneir^lstrlcta' They knew him thoro neither, under his right namo nor under that ot Somerset.

Meteorologists of tho Dominion s«rT-

lee were called to prove that bord, eight sjvamp, tweon the 17th of Fobruary, when If

miles from tho.

there tfas

alleged tho murder took' place,' and Fe' ruary 81, when tho body was foi^ndj ioft weather, followed by rain and sleet tnd then winds and a Ught fall of Iratiif snow. Tbls harmonizes In the' loatn with the crown's theory that tbo prisoner is it guilty man.

Chief-ot-Polico Young, of Niagara Falls, testified that bo had arrested the prisoner and Identified Bonwell's keya, pencil-case and other articles found on his person. He testified that Blrchall wbon arrested In bed Fobruary 38did' not ask what tho charge Against him was or make any comment

The remainder of tho evldenoo waB devoted to prove that Blrchall bad been seen'In anTabout tbo swamp hunting small game, and that he lcpew 1(, well. Ono wltnoss swore that be bad seen Iiirchall within ten rods o( tho spot whore the body was found. The case Is expected to last to tho ond of the week and perhaps longer.

Ulaappoluted in the Corn Crop. HENDERSON, la., Sopt 28.—Farmers find in gathorlng corn for feeding purposes that it Is a groat dosl short of tholr estimates, with fully one-tbird soft and tbo bulk of it loose on tbe oob and not well filled.

How'

kJ

Your Liver?

Is the Oriental salt tation, knowing that gooc health cannot exist wit out a healthy Liver. W^en tho Liver is torpid the Bowels are sluggish and conBtipated, the food lies in the stomach undigested, poisoning tho blood frequent headache ensues a feoling of lassituSo, despondency and nervousness indicate how the whole system is deranged. Simmons Liver

Regulator has been tho means of restoring moro people to health and nappiness by giving them a healthy Liver than any agency known on earth. It acts with extraordinary power and efficacy.

4 NEVER BEEN DISAPPOINTED. Aa a general family romcdj-for Dyimcpst*,

Torpid Llvor, ConBtlpatlon, etc., I hardly ever use anything olae, and havo never beet, disappointed In the effect produced It Bcems to be almost a perfect cure for nil Siaraunn of the Btomouh anil Bowels.,

W. J. MCEI.KOY. MNOM, U»-

BBIEF

DISPATCHES.

It is expected that tbe noxtcano crop ift Cuba will be thelargeBt lr ten years. Lutherans of Mllwaukeo have decided fa organize sociotlcs to oppose tho Bennett law.

Thirteen horses wore burned in a barti at Mankato, Minn., Wednesday morning.

At Erie Mrs. J. F. McConncll struck a match whilo cleaning gloves with bonzlno Wodnosday and was fatally burned.

Mary Biol, an W-yoar-old child, died of hydrophobia Wednesday at l'oru, Ind. She was bitten by a dog a week provious.

Tho sido of tho Union elevator at Terro Haute, Ind., gave way Wednesday, lotting 10,000 bushels of grain run out Tho loss is enormous.

Tho Capital City Bank of Gutlirio, Oklahoma, suspended temporarily Wednesday. Creditors and depositors will bo paid 100 cents on tho dollar.

Wednesday Edward Lennox, while fishing near Lima, O., lay down bosi'do a fire and wont to sleep. His clothing caught fire and lie was burned to death.

Among tho Immigrants that arrivod at Now York Wednesday on the steamer Anchoria was a Miss Bella McDonald from tho County Iiildarr, Ireland, IT yeara old, who weighs 15T pounds and stands six feet seven cbes in her stockings.

WILL OBEY THt ~LAW.

President Woodruff Imuca a Manifesto Denning tho Position or the Mormon Church.

SALT LAICF. CITY, U- T.,

25.—

Sopt

Wilford Woodruff, presiient of tlio Mormon church, bas issue 1 a manifesto denying tbo statements mado in tho report of tho Utah commission. Ho denies that tho church is now teaching polygamy*or prti -at marrlago. He claims that Instead of :ort.y polygamous marrlages^which the- commissioners assort have- taken placo within a year only ono has been solomlzod, and that in violation of tho orders of tho church authorities. Ho declares that ho Intends to submit to tbo law in all respects, and will use his influence with the members of the church to havo them do likewise.

Sentenced lo the Penitentiary for Life. pARKEItSttrmO, W. Va„ Sopt

25.—

Judge'Stely, of tbo circuit court, over-ruled-theraotlon for a now trial In tlio case of Mrs. Jacob Morgan, who muidored bor husband, and sontoncod her to tbe penitentiary for lllo. Tho murder was committed so Mrs. Morgan might got all hor husband's money and marry another than, who .would not marry her-without tho money.

The Proaldent Itnturna to Washington. WASHINGTON, Sopt, 25.—Tho President returned to Washington at 8:30 o'clock Wednesday ovonlng after a three weeks' sojourn at Croason, Pa. Tho trip was marked by no Incidents beyond tho assembling ot small crowds at each of tho stations where tho train stopped. Tbo President said that ho felt much benefited by bis vacation.

Kentucky Deaperadoea Out ou llalk LOUISVILLE, Ky., Sopt

85.

Bon

French, leader of tljio French faction In the Freijch-Evorsolo feud at Iliazard, Perry County, Ky., was reloasod Wednesday on 810,000 bonds. Ebersole, tbe leader of the othor faotlon, was released last week under

(5,000

Equated

bail.

Axtell'a Tiiae.

KANKAKEE, 111.. Sept as.—Nelson, a .stallion owned by C. II. Nolson, of 'WaterviUo,'Me., trotted ft mile ovor tho Kankakee track Wodnosday In 2:12, equaling Axtoll's time. Tho first halt wasmadoln

1:04%."*'

Absolutely Puree

A oream of tartar baking oowtlor highest of all in leavening strength— U. S. Oovernnatt Report, Aug.

17 1890.