Decatur Democrat, Volume 35, Number 41, Decatur, Adams County, 2 January 1891 — Page 6

"REVIEW OF THE TEAR. ■CHRONOLOGY' OF THE NOTABLE HAPPENINGS. Bead the History of 1891—Tl# Briefly * Told and Replete with Reminiscent Suggestiveness—Great Men Have Gone, ■ Great Heeds Been Done. s Tale of Twelve Months. The erd of 1891 has come, and a retrospective glance may not be uninterost- ■ esting. Its history'is much the same as that of any year of the past decade, except that it was marked by the Bouth American revolutions. Below wfl be found an enumeration of the principal events: Political. JANUARY. » I— Balmaceda assumes dictatorship of Chili. 7— Civil war inaugurated in < hili. 8— Nebraska a.nvass*ng Board declared Boyd (Dem.j elec.ed Governor; Thayer (hep.) maintained Boyd's inelegibility. and held armed possession of his official quarters until the 15th, when he surrendered under protest; on the 181 b, the bupreme Court sustained Boyd’s claims. 14—(Speaker Hanna o f the Colorado House refused toe vacate his seat to his successor, Mr. White; n ilita called out oi the 15. h, one of White’s bodyguard shot at Hann ; in quel ill? 'disturbance i olice inspector Hawley was fatally shot; White was finally seated the 25th, by • the Supreme Court. 21— David "B. Hill chosen United States Senator from New York. 26— Henry H. Swan takes his seat as District Justice United Suites t ourt in Michigan, vice ®. B. Brown, raised to supreme Court. 28 Peffer elected be ator from Kansas suc■ceeding ingalls. 29— Lfluokalani proclaimed Queen of the Sandwich islands. FEBRUARY. 24—Chas. Fostcr confirmed Secretary of the Treasury Lv the senate. 27— Senaßr Blair of New Hampshire appointed Minister to China. MARCH. 5— Coi.eervative party iu Canada, Sir John Macdonald'lead r, successful by reduced majority. 11— Gen. .John M. Painter chosen Senator from Illinois on the 1 ;4th ballot. 30- Baron Fava recalled by Italy. APRIL. -1 ’ 6— United States Senator Edmunds, of Vermont, resigned. 10—Lorenzo Crounse, of Nebraska, appointed Assistant Secretary of the Treasury, ' 13—H. H Nebeker, of Indiaaa, appointed United States Treasurer. 1 Way. s—Gov Boyd of Nebraska declared ineligible. 19—Formation of People’s Party at Cincinnati. SEPTEMBER. 2— Tho Junta assumes control in Chili, OCIOB'ER. 12— Political riots in Montevideo; many killed and hurt. 26— Minister Egan demands satisfaction from Chili for t e Baltimore incident. 29—< hili returns an impudent answer io Minister Egan. NOVEMBER. 3— Flower elected Governor in Now York, Bo.iegin lowa, McKinley in Ohio, Russell in Massachusetts, liepubliclln success in Pennsylvania. s—i'onseco proclaims himself Dictator of Brazil.... Admiral Jorge Montt elected President of i hui. 9 Provinces rebel against Fonseca in Brazil. 23—Fonseca forced to resign in favor of Peixetto. Peace ensues. DECEMBER. 7— Char. F. Crisp, of Georgia, chosen Speaker. 9 President Harrison’s message submitted to Congress. Crime. JANUARY. 19— Express robbers got 820,000 from a Rio Grande train, near New Orleans. 27— Nellie Griftin, 12 years old, killed by Russell C. Canfield, in Michigan. Canfield sentenced to Jackson for life. FKBUIIARY. Hr-Geo. J. Gibson arrested charged with intent to blow up .-chufeldt’s distillery, Chicago. Indictment followed 16th. MARCH.1— Discovery of embezzlement of $400,000 by J. T. Hill, deceased, President Ninth National Bank of New York. 10— David H. Poston, attorney, killed by H. Clay King, attorney, Memphis, Tenn, . MAY. 11— Attempted assassination of the Russian Czarowitch at Otsu, Japan, two jinrikisha men rescuing him. 0 81—-Greek brigard Anastasius captures a railway train in Turkey in Europe, securing vast plunder and the persons of English and German tourists, for whom he secured $40,000 ransom from Germany. JUNE. . 16 Train wreckers kill three at Coon Rapids, t lowa. JULY.2- Ex Treasurer Barddey. of Philadelphia, sentenced to firteen years lor misappropriating funds, and tine . $500.0.0. AUGUST. 2—A band of West Virginia Italians kill a man. his wife and five children, and burn their bodies. 8— Bank robbery at Columbus Grove, Ohio, !n daylight; Farmer Vandemark killed by the . thief. v .vV. J. Elliott, Cleveland, Ohio, editor, sentenced for life for murder of A. C. Osborn. 22— killed at communion service in ehurch at Glassy Mountain, 8 C. 26—Kendall-Jarvis feud in Kentucky results in three deaths. 28— J< 8. Baxter, insane painter, killed his wife, two children and himself at New York. Ijir— SEPTEMBER. s—Sloan. lowa, bank robbed of $4,006. 10- man aud woman jump into Niagara cataract, going over the falls. ...M. B. Curtis (Maulice ijy^ljiuger)—"Sam 1 of Posen”—kills policeman Gran'ftuOl ban Francisco. ’ li Ji’ded WiIoY, < Fg3js L kill. his half-brother intt quarrel, with a Pratt, Kansas, and escapes to Indian Territory. ' 17—DituioYP 1S 01 Uvniyuite under,San Quentld • (Cal.) YHspn ... .Everett Moore, Sulphur Springs, Texas, eHitfti’, killed by.E. W. Tate of Hopkins County Echg, 28— Prisoners attempt to lynch the Sheiiff at Gadsden, Ala ....Three murders at Lulu, Miss. 80— Express t.airArobbers getslo,ooo near Utica, N. Y... .McCartney's Exchange Bank, Fort Upward, Wis., robbed of shj,ooo. RTt. Beh. 2—Ulster County (N, Y.) bank robbed of half a million... Flight of Standi ford Bros., Chrisman “(Ill) bankers, with $200,01X1. ...Win, Housen and Spencer <_ amcrou kill each other near Kenton, Ohio. IC—Bank at Enterprise, Neb., robbed of $3,500... Whitecap troubles at Orangeville. Ky., result in five deaths. 22— Eugeiie Garcia, teller at New Orleans, embezzles $190,001’.29— Three convicts tunnel out of Jackson (Mich.) prison. 31 —Homer State Bank at Dakota City, Neb., robbed of $1,600. NOVEMBER.' 12— Express robbery near Milwaukee. 29 Attempted assa siuutiou of Rev. Dr. Hall, at New York, by a demented German. IM9CEMBKH, I—lsaac Sawtello,condemned to,death in New Hampshire for killing his brother, confesses the,.crime, but alleges Maine as to avoid capital punishment... . F.xpreßastraiu robbery at. Old Ojphard, Mo.; loss $30,000.... Attempted 1 welting in Indianapolis. 4— Unknovni man demands $1,250,000 of Russell Sage, and throws a bomb, killing himself and Sage’s secretary, at New York. 5— Hiram Saw die’s head found buried .in Maine, confirming ills brother’s confession. 13— Murder f lour New York people at New Smyrna, Ha , by unknown parties. 16— Five men rob a mail wagon at Chicago of $3,000 cash and $200,00u securities. Disasters. JANUARY. ‘ 1-Eleven girls burned to death at a church fair in Leeds, England. 13—Steamers Boar and Britannia in collision in Firth of Forth : thirteen drowned. 18—Gas ex, losion ut Findlay, Ohio; killing '-two, hurting twelve. 26- in the East doos $6,000,000 damage. 27— Colliery explosion at Scottdale, l’a , kills 151 miners. FEBRUARY.** B—Steamer Chiswick foundered off f-cilly Islands; eleven drowned. 12—Boiler explosion at Haro Point, Quebec ; 0 twenty billed, twenty-nine wounded. 20— In New York 1 ity, on Boston and Albany, six burned to death in collision. 21— Colliery explosion at Cumberland, N. 8., 120 Mrlsh. 2i-;At 'an Francisco, vessel Elizabeth wreck1 ed; twenty drown. - 23— Five miners rescued at Jsnosville, Pa., after eighteen days’ imprisonment Parkersburg, W. Va., flooded; damage, $4,000,009. 26—Yuma, submerged, NMARCH. B—Loss of steamer Buckeye on Puget Sound; 20 drown.....L 8. E. irain near Havana, 111., derailed ; many injured by burning. 11- Insane asylum near Nashville, Tenn., burned; six perish... .Steamer Roxburgh Castle collided with British Peer, in English Channel; twenty-three drowned. 17— British steamer Utopia sinks ironclad Rodnev in Gibraltar bay, 56b Italians drowned. 24— flteamship btrathairly wrecked off North Carolina coaet ; nineteen perish. >27—Off Virginia coast, bark Dictator ; eight lost. « .30—Snowslides in Western mountains.kill fifty people. ’ APRIL. a—Wreck of British ship St. Catherines off I ire-damp explosion at Tamaqua, Pa.; killed. Hix postal clerks and two engineers TRlled in a wreck at Kipton, Ohio. < • MAY. . - 7—Gas explosion in a Clarksburg (W. Va. mine; four killed. 20 Turnado destroyed part of Mt. Vernon,), Tex. 21 - Srreral lives lost by tornado Bear Centralia, Mo.

JUNE. ~ B—Siymen from theAJnited States eutter Bear dpojvnedin Icy Bay, Alaska. 10— Unprecedented rise in the Bed River; great loss of life and property in Texas and In. aian Territory. Floods become general throughout the Northwest. 6 14— Near Basle, Switzerland, 13) killed by a traiu going through a bridge; hundreds hurt. 15— Swiss railroad ■ reck, killing 60 people. . 24—At Long Branch,.N. J., Frederick Brokaw drowned while vainly attempting to rescue a > drowning girt ' JULY. 3— Twenty-one killed in a collision at Ravenna, O. 11— Tornado in Prussia kills fifty people. 21—Deatna from cholera at Mecca reach 380 in one day. 23 -Collision at St. Mande, France; fifty-one 1 perish. 33—Three hundred persons drowned near Bombay. AUGUST. 6—A West Shore accident kills '.thirteen persons. 8— Cyclone kills three people at " ashburn, Wis., and does $50,000 damage at Ashland. 9 Seven lives lost in Boston harbor, by capsizing of a boat. 12— Thirteen people killed on a steamboat by a hurricane at cold Spring Grove, Long Island ....Tornado causes great loss of life in Delaware. 11—Two killed at Catlettsburg, Ky., by powder explosion.... Twelve fatady injured in a collision at Egg Harbor, N. J. 16 Two hundred killed by a typhoon in Japan. 17 Excursion train wrecked in Switzerland, > twelve killed.... Cloudburst in Austria; forty drowned. 18 - Collision in Prussian Poland, ten killed. 19— Cxclone at Martinique; twenty vessels wrecked, over 300 people killed, I,OIXI injured.... Thirty miners killed in Belgium. 22 « ollapse of building in Park Row, New York, killing sixty-se en people. , 26 -Et gland ravaged uy storms.... Martinique appeals for ad. 27 -Thirty killed at Statesville, N. C., in railroad wreck.... loudburst at Troy, N. Y. 29—Much damage by a cyclouß in Newark, N. J....Faulk ounty, North Dakota, swept by fire; much grain burned. 31—Five k lied, thirty-one injured, by derailed train at Troy, IndTwo killed at Swingles Station, cal., by derailed passenger train... .Alanzon Knot and two daughters killed at Chardon, Ohio, at a crossing... .Three fishermen drowned at Petoskey, Mich., two at Merrill’s Lake, N. Y„ and two at Annisquam, Mass. . ...Four killed by lightning at Magnolia, Ark. HEI T MB B. * This month fearful floods occurred in Spain, drowning over 4,000 people. 3 -Seh.toner Paunonia wrecked on Hawaiian reefs; twelve perish...’Dynamite factory at White Pigeon, Mich., explodes, killing sixteen 5- Two killed at a Lafayette, Ind., railroad crossing. 6 Steamer Arizona sink an unknown schooner and crew a sea. 9— Building collapsed in-Berlin, killing eight. 10— Steamship collision near Greece; fifty drowned. 11— workmen killed at Saltsburg, Pa.... Mrs. Win. Klein, Barton County, Kan., leaves four children in her home, and they burn to death. 15 -Collision in the Mediterranean ; sixty-fiva lost. 18 Empty whisky barrel explodes, killing three New York boys. 19 - Five killed in an Idaho railroad wreck.... John Schtilk, wite, and four children burned to death at Chicago.... Seve n fishermen drowned off Newfoundland. 20— Phil i.ullen and wife lock two children at home; they mm to death.... Terrible fires sweep Emmons County, N. D. 21— -Five drowned in the Hudson River going to a christening. 22 Terrible forest fires in the Northwest. 24— Fourteen Italians killed by cannon explosion at Newark, N. J., during a celebration ....Ten firemen hurt at Minneapolis; loss $200,00J....5ix Italians killed in a wreck at McKin's Station, Pa... .Twenty-four killed, thirtv hurt in a collision in Spain. 25— Boiler explosion at Tionasta, Pa., kills three. 28— Fa’nl forest fires in the Northwest.,.. Fatal storms in Minnesota.... Eight Philadelphia firemen injured. 3.)—Three killed, eighteen hurt in a collision at Kent, 0hi0.... Six sailors lost in a perior gale. OCTOBER. 1— Four killed on the Harlem Road. 2— Twenty Newfoundland fishermen lost. 4— Boiler of tug Parker explodes at Chicago; eight killed, eight injured... .Nine miners killed by a ciyo-in at Pottsville, Pa. 6— Nows of loss of steamer Woleston; twentyone drowned.... Four killed by an engine at Crook’s Crossing, N. Y. 11—Wreck of United states steamer Dispatch. 1- 13, 14—Many vessels wrecked on the Atlantic coast. 14 — & O. fast mail wrecked at Hicksville, Ohio; two killed, eighteen hurt. 15— Fly-wheel buret at Manchester, N. H., causing the death of three, wounding ten.... Three members of the Chicago Inter Ocean staff killed at Crete, 111... .Terrific storms in Gieat Britain. „ 16—Reports of many lives lost at sea in the storm. 19— Locomotive at Pottsville, Pa., explodes, killing three. 21— Wreck at Monmouth, 111., kills four. -22—Thresher boiler bursts at Mayville, N. D., killing six. 26— Collision at Thorsen Station, Minn., kills five. 27— Fuse factory explosion at Cleveland kills four ...Report confirmed at Boston of the founderiugof an unknown four-masted schooner with all hands. ...Twenty killed at Lennox, France, by the falling of undermined buildings. 28j-Cable reports of terrific earthquakes in Japan, thousands being killed by shock and floods. 29— Twenty perish by burning of steamer Beirrjp at Milikeu’s Landing. Miss. NOVEMBER. 4 -Seventeen killed by falling miner's cage at Eutto City. 8— explosion at Nanticoke, Pa., mines, k) Ila fourteen. 9— Four men and thirty six horses burned to death at Denver. 13-Five peaish in a fire at Columbus, Ohio. 22— Reported loss of 'schooner Finney and twenty-five men on Lake Erie. 27—'Collision at Toledo. Ohio ; ten killed. 30— Five killed by a falling bridge at Kalispell, Mont... .Thirty killed by in explosion at Blackburn, Eng. , — . cih-'ll. J I—Reported loss of steamer Tahita, a slaver, in Drake’s Bay, Pacific Ocean, with 400 souls, 2— five killed by dynamite at Haverstraw, N. Y... .Reis family of five burned to Detroit. 4— Three kill d in a collision at Pennington. N. J.... Twenty drowned by overturning of barges in the Hudson River....Two killed, four hurt, at East Tlmmpson, Conn. 5— Nino killed by falling walls at St. Paul. Q—Sixty miners killed by firedamp at Paris. 10— Three killed in a collision at Anna, 111. 11— The vessel Maggie Ross lost in the Pacific; 14 drowned. 12— Three convicts killed at Anamosa, lowa,, by falling scaffold Five burned to death at Mooseiaw, Manitoba. 17—Twenty-six sailors drowned in the Thames. 4 Fires. MARCH. ' 17— At New York, s2,' OJ.OJO. r u APRIL 12—At Chicago, Smyth’s furniture establishment ; $750,099. JUNE. 16— Seabright, N. J., 409 buildings, $800,009. august. 6— Comanche, lowa, burned. 12-Oberne, Hosick & Co.'s warehouse at Chicago ; lose $250,100. 18- Jacksonville, Fla. Los's $1,000,000; sixty-five bulh-ings burned. SF.FTI-MBFR. ’’ 2—The Dalles, Oregon ; eighteen blocks; loss $1,000,030. ' . , ■ ■ 11— Delaware Iron Works, Newcastle. Del., loss $390,1X0. a 15—commercial Advertiser building in New York. Three fatalities. Loss $500,000. 17— Memphis, Tenn., theater, oldest in city; loss SiO.JJio. 21—At Savannah, Ga , wholesale grocery houses ; loss $350 900. 27— Five fires in St. Louis; loss oversl,o3o,ooo. Two fatalities. » OCTOBER. 5— Squire & Co.’s packing-house, 1,500 live hogs, burned at Somerville, Mass.; loss $150,000. 6— Divinity Hall, Yale College; loss $75,000 ... .Davis Co., Ind., court house and records.... ■ Business portion of Colfimbus Junction, lowa, ®lsi',oo)....Times building, Lyna, Ohio, and surrounding blocks, SIOO,OOO 8-Cutting mansion and art collection ; New York, SIOO,OOO. 2- AParadise Park,” New York; 100 families homeless. 24—Cars and cotton at Birds Point, Mo., $150,00). 21— At Louisville. Ky., $503,000. 29— At Lima, Ohio, $150,000. 33-At Clinton, N. J., $.60,000. 9 NOVEMBER. 12— At Ybor City, Fla., $300,000. » ‘ 17—At Bt. Ixiuis, $1,3.50,000. 24—At Minneapolis, $400,0)3. DECEMBER. 3- Plainfield, N. J., $150,000. 6- Philadelphia. $350,000. Obituary. JANUARY. 2 -Alexander W. Kinglake, English historian. 3— A. J. Bobertaon, State Senator, Sidney, Ohio. 4— Mons. A. Labelle. Canadian Minister Agriculture, Quebec. 5— Mme. Emma Abbott (Mrs. Eugene Wetherell), opera Singer. 7— Gon. Charles Devens, eminent jurist and soldier. 10—Gen. J. H. Butler, famous tn Canadian border rebellion; at Ijafayette, Ind., suddenly. 13— Jno. W. Boot, famous Chicago architect. 17—George Bancroft, the venerable American historian, aged 91. 20— King Kaiakaua 11., monarch of the Hawaiian Islands. 22— Prince Baldwin, heir to Belgian throne. 28— Ex-Gov. George E. Crawford, of Kansas. 29— Hon. William Windom, Secretary U. 8. Treasury. 80—Hon. Charles Bradlaugb, eminent-free- > t thinker and member British House of ComKmons. I 31—Jean Louis Ernest Melssonier, the famous 1 French artist. <

februaby; r B—Hon. Julius Honseman, Grand Rapids, Mich. ; 10-James Redpath. famous lecturer, aboli- • tionist, and champion of home rale. 13 Admiral David Dixon Porter, U. 8. N. 14 -General William Tecumseh Sherman, one a es the foremost figures of the civil war. 13— General Henry Bastings Sibley, first Governor of Minnesota. . »■ 19-Prof. Alexander Winchell, Michigan Uni- • versity. Ann Arbor. 21—C. C. Rood, Grand Rapids, Mich., capitalist.* - 23—Gen. Robert McAllister, noted cavalryman, Belvidere, N.J. , 24—U. 8. Senator £. K. Wilson, of Maryland. 1 26—Gen. Asa Stone, Winchester, Ind. 28— 8. senator George Hearst, one of Cali1 fornia's mining kings MARCH. 1 4— Leonard W. Jerome, famous turfman, broker, and diner-out... .William P. Wells, profes-' eor of law, University Os Michigan, at Detroit. 9—Right Rev. Benj. H. Paddock, Episcopal Bishop of Massachusetts. , ID—John I'. Swift, United States Minister to Japan, at Tokio. 12— D. Bethune Duffield, prominent lawyer, at Detroit. c 13—A. Minor Griswold, known to readers of i humor as “The Fat OontWbutor.” * 14— Herr Windthorst, leader of the Centrist or Catholic party in the German Reichstag.. ..Hon. r Henry Fralick, Grand Rapids, Mich. - 17—Prince Napoleon, son of Jerome Bonaparte, King of Westphalia. 1 2w—Lawrence Barrett, one of the foremost tragedians of the period. 21—Gen. Joseph E. Johnston, ex-Confederate 7 leader. 23— Ex-Gov. Lucius Robinson of New York.... Chas, F. chickering, of piano forte fame, 1 25—Dr. J. p. Wickersham, ex-United States Minister to Denmark, Lancaster, Pa. 27— M. Baltcheff, Bulgarian Minister of Fi- ’ nance, assassinated. 29— Rev. Dr. Howard Crosby, Presbyterian, > New York City. 31—Hon. Josiah B. Grinnell, founder of Grinnell, lowa, at Grinnell APKtr- > 2 —Gen. Albert Pike, head of ths Scottish Rite Masonry... .Banker baring, Rome. Italy. 7— Gov. Daniel G. Fowle of North Carolina.... Phineas T. Barnum, the renowned showman. ’ 9—Win. Wallace, postmaster at Indianapolis, ■ brother of Gen. Lew Wallach, and first law 1 partner of President Harrison. 13— Rt. Rev. Bishop Gilmour, Roman Catholic Bishop of i-leveland, oldo. 14— Gen. F. B. Spinola, member of Congress from New York. 16— Milton H. Butler, of Detroit. Formerly active in public life. 17— Maj. < has. O. Wood, of Indiana.... John Mulligan, oldest G. A. R veteran. ...Maj. Gen. C. H. Hamilton, Milwaukee. '1 19— Alanson sweet, one of the twelve found 1 era of Chicago. 20— Rev. Henry Darling, D. D , LL. D., President of Hamilton college.... Mary E, Gough, widow of John B.Gough... .Dr. Jas. K.Thatoher, Professor Yale Medical Schoo)Congressman Melbourne H. Ford, of Michigan. 24— Count ’Carl Bernhardt Helmuth von Moltke, Germany's famous Field Marshal. 1 25—Grand Duke Nicholas, the Czar’s uncle. ' 29 —Dr. Joseph Leidy, noted surgeon, Philadelphia. 1 MAY. 3—Rev. Geo. Bothwell, Brooklyn, from a cork I in his lungs... .Barry Sullivan, Irish tragedian. 5— Most Rev. Wm. Connor Magee, D. D., D. 0. L., Archbishop of York. 8— Madame Blavatsky, theosophist. 21— Judge Alphoneo'Taft, ex-U. 8. Attorney General, and one of Ohio's most gifted sons.... Henry Shelton Sanßfcrd, ex-U. b. Minister to Belgium. 26— Rear Admiral Carter, U. S. N. 27 —John M. Hale, collector of customs during the administrations of the elder Harrison and Tyler; Ellsworth, Me., aged 91. 28— 8. J. Breckenridge, of Et. Louis, while addressing the Presbyterian General Assembly at Detroit; heart disease. JUNE. 3— Dr. Benson J. losalng, historian; Poughkeepsie, N. ¥., aged 79. 6— Sir John A. Macdonald, Prime Minister of the Dominion of Canada, B—Chief Justice Isaac G. Wilson, of Illinois, at Geneva. 15— Joseph K. Emmet, noted comedian, 17—Ex-Gov. Harrison Ludington, Milwaukee, Wis. 21--Ex-U. 8. Senator Joseph E. McDonald of Indiaaa. 24- Howell R. Price, of the M. E. Church, Camdeu, N. J. JULY. 4— Hannibal Hamlin, the famous son of Maine, and ex-Vice President (during Lincoln’s first term), like John Adams and Thomas Jefferson, expired on Independence Day. 20—Chief W. H. Ross, a leading statesman of the Cherokee Nation. 25— Mrs. Mark Hopkins Searles, worth $40,0)0,060. 27— Ex-Gov. Daniel Dillingham, of Vermont, aged 92. AUGUST. - 3—Bishop Flasch, at La Crosse, Wi’. 12— Geo. Jonea, editor of New York Times, at Poland Springs, MoJames Russell Lowell American joet. essayist, statesman, teacher and critic, and ex-Mnister to England; at Cambridge, Mass. 15— Mateada Sorakichi, Japanese wrestler, at New York. 17— Col. Geo. M. Chambers, Jacksonville. 111. 20— H. W. Beckworth, United StatetfUonsulat Bermuda, Hinsdale, 111. 21— Postmaster General Raikes, of England. SEPTEMBER. 1--Rev. J. B. L. Soule, 8— Jonas M. Bundy, editor New York Mail and Express, at Paris. 9— Ex-President Gravy, of France, at Paris. 18— Prof. Ferrel, meteorologist. Maywood, Kan. 19— Balmaccda commits suicide at Santiago. 25— Dr. 8. D. Burchxrd, at Saratoga. 30— Boulanger .commits suicide at Brussels. ocroßEß. I—Harvey M. Watterson, at Louisville, Ky. 3— Gen. Alpheus Baker, at Louisville, Ky. 6—Rev. Dr. Benedict, Episcopalian, at Cincinnati, Ohio--Kt- Hon. Wm. Henry Smijh. at Loudon..,.King Charles of Wurteniburg....' Chas. Stewart Parnell, at Brighton, Eng.... Sir John Pope Hennessey, at Loudon. 10— Levi M. rates, drygoods merchant at New York, drowned; life insured for $160,000. 13— Supreme Court Justice Henry W. Allen, at New York. 14— C. F, Heinrichs, inventor, at Chicago; suicide. 16- Ex Gov. Hale of New Hampshire. NOVEMBER. 12—Donn journalist, at Cleveland. 19— W. J. Florence, comedian, at Philadelphia. 23— Gov. Hovey of Indiana. 24— Earl of Lytton, at Paris. 29— “Ijind Bill” Allen, author of the homestead act, at Columbus, Ohio. 30— Josiah Carpenter, aged 150, in Preston County, West Virginia. DECEMBEB. 4— Dom Pedro. ex-Emperor of Brazil, at Paris. 20— Senator Plumb, of Kansas, from apoplexy, at Washington. ' J. I. (.'tree. Racine manufacturer. » Chronology. JANUARY. , 1— Skirmish on White River; four Indians killed. 2— Earthquakes at San Francisco. 6—Phenomenal snowstorms in Europe; many deaths from cold. 8— Lieutenant Casey killed, on a reconnoissance.—.Red Cloud deserts the hoetiles. 14—“ Black Death” raging in Liberia; tnou-' sands dying.... Jack Dempsey suffers his first defeat in the ring, by Robt. Fitzsimmons. • 15 Hostiles surrender to General Miles. - 24—Storm shuts off telegraphic communication with New York and the East. 27—Jamaica exposition opened.... Russell Caulfield, murderer of .Nellie Griffin, in Michigan, captured. FEBRUARY. 9— Connellsville region coke strike, involving 18.0C0 men and 16,009 ovens. 10— Mardi Gras Carnival at New Orleans. 12 —Iquique and Pisagua bombarded by Chilian insurgents; surrender fallows. 16th; government troops unsuccessfully attempt recapture, 20th, and then desert to insurgents. 14—Elevon Italians killed by a New Orleans mob. 16—Minneapolis has 16,000 cases of la grippe. MARCH. 6—Chilian insurgents gain control of Tarapaca province by a decisive battle. 26— Tremendous business failures at Leghorn, Italy, aggregating $16,000,000. 29—Massacre of 470 Goorkhas in Manipur, followed by defeat of the British force under Com--1 missioner Quinton, and the massacre of himself, Col. Skone, Messrs. Grimwood, Melville, and Cosblss, and Lieut. Simpson, during a parley. This was followed by heroic resistance of the remnant of troops, and successful retreat > led by Mrs. Grimwood and Mrs. Quinton, to Lakhipur, 120 miles. Both ladles were pen1 sioned by British Government, and Mrs. Grimwood decorated by Queen Victoria with the . ’Order es the Royal Cro-s. After an arduous campaign, Britisu forces quelled the outbreak, and sentenced the leaders to death. In this campaign Lieut. Grant gained great renown. ; April 6he repulsed repeated assaults by 4,000 Manipura with a force of 8) men. 3tl—Tremendous snowstorm in Colorado.... Coke-strike riots. APRIL. 2—Coke-strike riots at Morewood, Pa.; twelve Hungarians killed, fifty hurt. 5— German pork embargo raised. 6— Twenty-fifth anniversary of the organization of the G. A. R. at Decatur, 111. B—Patent centennial celebration at Washington. •J—First train through St. Clair River tunnel. , 23—Sinking of Chilian insurgent iron-clad Blanco Encalada, by the Government torpedo boat Almirante Lynch, in caldera Bay; 290 lives 105 t... .Germany admits American pork. 24—Chilian Government naval forces defeated. 27— Ground broken at New York for Grant I monument. MAY. 1 This month marked by unusual persecution of the Jews iu Russia; many thousands leave the country. 1 I—Fatal collision of anarchists and authorities at Rome, Florenoe, Lyons, Marseilles and • other points. ft—lnsurgent Chilian steamer Itala escapes from United States Marshal at San Diego, Cat, . convoyed by the Esmeralda. 9 -United States cruiser Charleston pursues the Itata. -* 19 - JJxpulsion of Queen Natalie from Servia; !' the populace protesting. 21—Convening of 103 d general assembly of the Presbyterian Church at Detroit, 28— Beginning of atrocities in Hayti. In

260 In streeta , by order of President Hippolyte. ft— Monument to Gen. Grant unveiled at Galena, m.. . .Confederate soldiers’ monument unveiled at Jackson, Miss. 1 . Charleston arrives in Iquique harbor, where Itata is surrendered with supplies. 25 Steamer Furst Bismarck makes evestern passage in 6 days 13 hours 10 m nuiea....Cornell victorious over University of PennCotombia boat crews. Yale in four-mile eight-oar race on River Thames. fallu r®s number 6.C74, lA^wSe sert APPCir “ Ce ° f SaltOn 23—-Britisu syndicate formed to colonize Jews in Mexico. , , , . AUGUST. cers£o eaten nine Chinamen smuggling themselves into the country, . Col^ nb A 8 Gro ’o. Ohio, bank robbed; a farmer. Vandemark. killed. 10— Intense heat in Central and Eastern States; many fatalities. Accompanying storms .... Gunboat s ordered to China to protect AmeriSdumbia C TW ° people baptized at 11— onneetjent thermometers register 100 tbe B^®^ 6 •• - Terrific storms in Northern Michigan, causing several deaths ... Many fatalities and prostrations by heat in cities east of the Mississippi. 12— wave dispels heat in the East.... Russia appropriates 11,61X1,000 rubles to relieve famine. 13— Ccquimbo evacuated by Balmaceda’s troops... .Ed Pardridge, Chicago Board of Trade m&n, loses & million and quits. 0 —,Jieve drowned at Syracuse, N. Y. touched $1.14 at Chicago, and $1.15)4 at New York. 18— Rain-makers score success at their first experiment at Midland, Texas. 19— Celebration of the battle of Benningion anniversary at Bennington, Vt- - ■ - stoam .bip Teutonic makes western Atlantic passage in 5 days 16 hours 31 minutes—fastest time on record. 20— Holy coat exhibited at Treves; ninth time in its history since the Savior’s death; first time since 1344....Fai1ure of the American Wheel Company ; twelve plants involved. 22 — Unveiling of monument at New Ulm, Minn., commemorating Indian battle twentynine years ago... .Reports from Russia of starving peasants selling their children 23— -First frosts in the Northwest. 24— Battle at Valparaiso, Chili, resulting in insurgents’partial success....B. of V. encampment at Minneapolis. 26—Ergland swept by a terrific storm. 28— Chilian insurgents capture Valparaiso in the final battle.... Bread riots in Russia29— Aeronaut Geo. Hogan fan's one-half a mile to death at Detroit.... Pour Treves pilgrims crushed to death in the crowd viewing the holy coat. iil—Russia secures privilege from Turkey to patrol the Dardenelles. SEPTEMBER. 1— Twenty thousand people view Knights Templars’ parade at Saratoga. 2— Geo. Woods, spectator at a balloon ascension at Oswego, N. Y., carried up 1,066 feet and dashed to death. ...Mail reaches New York from Yokohama, Japan, in fourteen days.... Severe frost in Wisconsin and Minnesota. 3— Mammoth Scottish picnic at Now York. 4— Further reports of Chinese outrages.... Seventeen killed in Russian riots over infected cattle at Maikop... .The lie passed in the Tennessee Legislature; disgraceful row, 5— Four die, 20 made sick,- by drinking from polluted well at Dundee, Minnßatile between Texas rangers and train robbers ; 13 of the latter killed... .$4,u00 stolen from Sloan, lowa, bank. 7—Universal observance of Labor Day in America... .3’J9th anniversary of Columbus’ departure from the Canary Islands....U. S. Government recognizes the Chilian Provincial Government.... Hurricane wrecks many vessels on Nova Scotia's coast.... American ixjrk admitted to Germany and Denmark. 9 — Judge T. M. Cooley resigns as chai man of interstate commerce committee.... Kev. Howard McQueary perpetually suspended from the Episcopal Church, for heresy.... Suit against ‘ Itata dropped, and tho vessel delivered to Chili. 10 — News of Chinese outrages on Americans. ....Registry in London of Baron Hirsch’s Jewish colonization society; capital, $19,009,000. 11— Prinoe Bismarck suffers slight stroke of apoplexy. 14— Marriage of Edward Eggleston, author, to Frances E. Goode, at Madison, 1nd....N. Y. Central t aln rtins 4361$ miles in 4to minutes, making three stops.... Report of British seizure of —itylene island,'Dardanelles. 15— .Judge Swan of Michigan decides contraband Chinese may not be sent to China if they have residence in any other country.... .Turk sh commander slaughters rebels in Yemen. Arabia, and displays their heads on poles. 16— Starving peasants in Southern Russia turn brigands. 17— Steamer Furst Bi marck breaks eastern Atlantic passage; time: 6-12-28. 18— Stallion Nelson trots in 2:10 at Grand Rapids, Mich. 19— Stallion Allerton trots a mile at Independence, lowa, in 2:O9JS. 20— Earthquake shock in the Northwest. 22—Eastern Oklahoma opened to settlers; wild scramble for 10t5....5. V. White, noted Wall street operator, fails for $2,500,000... .Chili celebrates her new independence. 24— Tammany monument to New York troops at Gettysburg unveiled... .Nancy Hanks at Cambridge City, Ind., trots in 2:1'9%. 25— Shrinkage of stocks $190,000,000 in Wall street. 26— Earthquake shock in Central States. 28— “'Bonanza’’ Mackey completes a trip from San Francisco to New York in 4 days 12 hours 28 minutes... .Philadelphia cricketers defeat Lord Hawkes’ team. 29— Minister Egan at Valparaiso ordered to assert his rights. ...live hundred killtd in a Guatemala revolution... .Exeter Hall sends out 107 missionaries. 33—Wild rush for Oklahoma lands.... Nine thousand miners strike at Pittsburg... .$80,1'03 bank robbery, Ft, Hoysird, Wis. OCTOBER. I— Seventy-two shipwrecked sailors land at New York. ...Venner & Co., New York brokers, lose a million and fail. ...Jay Gould-has hysterics at a meeting of Missouri Pacifio Directors. ...Attempted lynching in Chicago.... Hebrews celebrate their New Year. '2—Boston wins National League pennant.... Seventy-day record from Yokohama to New York.... Speculation in grain futures declared unlawful by Minnesota Supreme Court,... Standiford Bros., Chrisman, 111., bankers, flee. ' , 8 -A daughter born to Mr. and Mrs. Cleveland. s—News ot destruction of vast forests by hurricanes in c innegota. 7— Grant monument unveiled at Chicago. 8— Allerton wins $10,61’9 stake from Nelson at Grand Rapids (Mich.) race-track. 9— The Cleveland baby is named Ruth. ll— Burial of Parnell at Glasnevin.... Earthquake shock in California. 12—Storms on Atlantic coast. 14— Lx grippe appears in Eastern States. 15— Allerton out-tiots Delmarch at Lexington, Ky. 16— Collision between Chilians and United States seamen at Valparaiso. 17— F ilure of Harrison, Loring & Co., Boston, for $375,000... .Stallion St. Blaise sold to > has. Reed, Gallatin. Tenn., for sloo,OiX)....ltaly admits American r.ork. 20— Sunol trots in 2:08% at Stockton, Cal. 21— Statue to Henry W. Grady unveiled at Atlanta. 22— Sir Edwin Arnold landed at New York. 23— Renewal of terrific ocean storms. 24— Ignatius Donnelly awarded $1 damages from St. Paul Press ; suit was for $100,609.... False reports of Victoria’s illness... .Martin rides 1,466 miles in six days on a bicycle at New York. 25— La Mareschale Booth-Clibborn of the Salvation Army lands at New York. 26— Discovery that Geo. Heidecker was buried alive at Erie, Pa... .Slosson defeats Schaefer at billiards at New York. 27 — Coast-defense vessel Miantonomah commissioned. ...8. J. Tilden’s will declared void ....Election rio’s in Cork. 28— Cruiser Detroit launched at Baltimore. 29— Continuance of disgraceful riots in Cork. 30— Gen. Grant’s remains placed in the unfinished mausoleum, New York Police rule at Cork.,..Miners release 300 convicts from Tennessee etockadea... .Vessels ordered to Chili. NOVEMBER. 1— Failure of Maverick Bank, Boston, for slo,BOO,uco, and President Potter arrested. . 2—More convicts released by Tennessee miners. 4—Dr. Briggs acquitted of heresy. 9—Czar of Russia celebrates ins silver wedding. 12— Startling reports of famine in Russia..... Western Union Junction, V)is., express robbery. 13— Anarchist raids in Chicago. 15— Fighting in Brazil... .Parnell memorial meeting at New York. 16 — Water supply short in New York and Brooklyn. 17— Cold wave in Northwest. 21—Big hotel failure at Missoula, Mont.... Five hundred miners strike at Washington, Ipd... .Russia prohibits exports of wheat. .22—Mad dog at Newark, N. J., bites thirteen people... .Brooklyn totally without water. 23—Terrific storms throughout the East, doing great d image at Washington and elsewhere.... Minneapolis s cures National Republican Convention. ...Further reports of massacres in China. 23—Twelve people killed at a Mexican bullfight. 25— Celebration at New York of 108th anniversary of British evacuation. 26— Thanksgiving Day... .Yale defeats Princeton at foot-ball. 27— Failure of Field, Lindley, Wiechers & Co. at New York for $1,000,009. 28— Cornell defeats Michigan at foot-ba11.... Fist fight in Omaha’s City < ouncil meeting. 29— Disanpearance from New York of Edward M. Field ana serious illness of his father, Cyrus W. Field..,.The Shah of Persia bums captured rebels alive. DECEMBER. 2— Warship New York launched at Philadelphia. 4—Severe windstorms general... .Attack upon Russell Sage, New York, by a lunatic demanding $1,200,001-; the man killed by his own bomb. 12—Conflict between police and Austrian and Italian miners in Colorado; seven miners killed. Help a man ouf of a hole once and he may forget you when he is out; but he will not fall to call on you the next time he falls in. !Be always at leisure to do good. I

HERE’S ALL THE NEWS TO BE FOUND IN THE STATE OF INDIANA. Giving * Detailed Account of the Numerous Crimes, Casnalliss, Fires, Suicides. Deaths, Etc.. Etc. Minor State Items. Blkhart is now in with the Indiana Trotting and Pacing Circuit. The roar of the new gas well at Noblesville is said to be territic. There’s a panther loose near Washington. Escaped from a circus. ’Tis said that a farmer near Elwood is allowing his live stock to literally starve to death. The oldest school-house in the State is a log cabin in the city of Richmond, erected in 1810. Workers at the flint glass works, Mun'cie, have returned to their posts after a several days’ strike. Sixteen young women and gentlemen have been arrested and fined at Hope tor disturbing-religious services. Thomas Barr, who stole eight head of cattle in Brown County*last August, has been captured tn Gilman, 111. Wki.l-diggers near Crawfordsville have unearthed some prehistoric bones, believed to be the remains of a mastodon The people of Dubois County are determined to ferret out the White Caps who whipped John Lee, and prosecute them. At a church in “Hell s Half-Acre,” in Tipton County, some rowdies patched a beer-keg through the window during service. The dead body of a little child, sewed up in several napkins and wrapped in a newspaper, was found in the woods near Valparaiso. Indianapolis is in earnest about wanting the Democratic National Convention, and has started out to raise a fund of §IOO,OOO. Samuel Thurston, about ninety years old,’of North Vernon, was caught beneath a falling tree and instantly killed, near Greensburg. August Joest, young Frenchman, killed himself at Evansville. Intended to wed a married woman and she failed to get a divorce. That settled it. Muncie is elated over the fact that twenty-five families will foliovy the Dowling shoe factory, now being removed from New York to its new property at Muncie. Miss Cora Allen, the young lady of Gosport who mysteriously disappeared last week, was found in a cave, tied hand and foot and nearly frozen. No Cine to her abductors. In the Muscatituck River, Thursday, near Seymour, a young man named Busch, from near Salem, was drowned together wi|h his team, while trying to cross the swollen stream. The body was not recovered. Miss Donnagher, of Shelbyville, who has eaten seven dogs in as many weeks, * and who was reported to be gradually getting the best of her consumption, is down with the grip, and a serious setback is feared. , T. A. Armstrong, of Montgomery County, after two years’ correspondence with a beautiful widow, Mrs. Lulu Edgerton. of Cooper, Mich., won her heart, and left to be married recently the home of the prospective bride. Benjamin Scudder, a school-teacher at Tipton, yanked Frederick Oglebay out of his seat for creating a disturbance, breaking the boy’s leg. He is the son of a proifiinent attorney. He and other bright urchins have been trying to run the schooL Frank Taylor, of Brown County, who was bitten by a copperhead snake twenty yeaas ago and became insane, and who after years of treatment at the asylum was sent home as an incurable, has become so violent recently ’as to necessitate incarceration again. During a ball in the City Hall at English, there occurred a free tight in which all the males*and many of the females took an active part. Iron weights, stones, and bludgeons flew through the air with telling effect. Among those who were seriously hurt are John Ispam Blevins, James Newkirk, and Edward Filch. The dance, of course, broke up prematurely. A novel wedding was that of John Manning and Miss Maggie Swope, which occurred in the show window of a dry goods store at Peru, Ind., the merchants paying the.minister and furnishing a nice supper, which was eaten in the window and witnessed by fully a thousand people. The bridegroom partook so heartily of the repast as to become sick, and a physician had to be called in. Farmland is now in the midst of a general boom. Four factories have located there, and contract was closed recently with the St Mary’s (OJ Tow Company for a plant which will Employ many hands. Business men are running a full force of clerks, and say that business was never better. The gas supply is stronger than ever, with ten wells to take from, and men are now at work drilling ahohier. Dwellings are in great demand, and the town is full of speculators ready to invest their capital. A glass factory is tai.<ed of, and laboring men are flocking in by hundreds. William Higgins and Charles Sellers, jr., were the victims of a terrific powder, explosion, at the Freeman coal mines, near Vincennes. Higgins was blown 155 feet, and Sellers hurled a distance of sixty-five feet through an underground entry. His shirt was torn and his body frightfully mangled. How the men ever escaped with their Jives is a mystery. The cause of the accident was a spark Irom a miner’s lamp into a keg of powder. After two hours of suffering and intense anxiety the injured miners dragged themselves to the air-shaft, and each was surprised to find the other alive. An investigation of the Auditor’s books in Randolph County, from 188 ft to 1890, inclusive, has resulted in 57,2ft0.20 being paid bacK into the county treasury; §3,447,56 of this amount was for “illegal fees,” and the remainder, $3,812.64, for “warrants -improperly drawn.” ! Gov. Chase has pardoned William Shular, who was sent to the penitentiary 1 from Crawfordsville for seventeen years . for murder. Shular’s release had been promised by Gov. Hovey. The murder was committed during a brawl, and there was always some doubt as to who fired the fatal shot. George Graff, employed in the Journal official at Peru, had his fingers badly mashed while wiping off the press. ; The toll-pikes in Delaware County are I having a tough time of JL~ snd recently several of them have been presented to the County Commissioners by dissatisfied stockhoklers. The farmers in many instances refuse to pay the fee, and several ’ lawsuits have ensued. The other even- [ ing four farmers, John and 1 Baell, Nelson Adams, and John McClean, were going to Muncie on the Granville i pike. A toll-gate was pulled down and > locked on them for refusing to pay the 3- > cent fare. Samuel Baell hitched his team to the gate, pulled it down, aud proceeded to Muncie.

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