Bloomington Progress, Volume 18, Number 14, Bloomington, Monroe County, 4 June 1884 — Page 4
NEWS CONDENSED. Concise Record of the Week. SASTEBH. New York dispatoh: Seventy-fonr oui'arsa aeea of this city, members of an sasociaiion whose charter has beeo subscribed to by thirty different Interests, representing: 1360,000,008, held an Important meeting. That onion has been formed for the purpose of presenting discrimination by tbe railroads, telegraph, and express oanpantea. Tbe meeting-was devoted to aa Interchange of views and the relation of instances where the relators thought they had been disc rim-
By an explosion in tbe straw-board, factory of Moore A Wilson, Waterford, N. Y., flva men lost their lire? and ClOM worth of property was destroyed. Frederick D- Grant and Jesse B. Grant filed schedules la their assignments at Now York. F. IX Grant owes $S,ei5,Ma, with assets nominally worth (1,990,013. J. E. Grant's liabilities are plaoed at SS5.SW, the nominal value of his assets being (131,130. The International Lodge of Good
Templars, la session at Washington, elected tbe Hon. James B. Finoh, of Nebraska, Right
Worthy Grand Chief Ttmplar.
The true inwardness of the Pens Bank collapse at Ftttsbogh rear, boa the pubL'o in Interesting slice. President Riddle has
led a confession of judgment In faTor of
the wreck for $S,T8a The overdraft of 9380,000 reported previously have now swol
len to SVMQ.oae, and K Is expected that the
babnitea wiU reach (9.000,000. Theottceraef tbe concern are charged with desperate spec
ulation in on ever since the Cherry Grove dlsti lot waa opened, For ordering the swathing of a female patient with bandajes steeped la kero
sene, and oa his second visit directing that
mora oil be poured oa the ligatures, the woman dying in a short time. Dr. Franklin Pierce was found gnflty of manslaughter at
for ttsee days, was found near Phaenlx Hastes, Jrd. Her mind bad become unsettled by over-study, and It is feared that the will not recover fcer reason.
WASHINGTON.
Charles O'Oonor left $20, 000 in money and a portion of his horary to the law Insttaote of Wow York, (10,00(1 each to four ladles, and two-thirds of tbe residue t his stater, Eliza M. Eloane. wiaxitmr. The Dakota Supreme Conrt has decided that the Capital Commission was validly organised, teveislng Judge Bdaei ton's deoMoa in ttie Distriet Court, An appea was taken to tbe United States Supreme Court, and nnta tbe tatter's decree Is entered the capital win remain at Yankton. Major Dewees telegraphs from Fort ReEOthat he has arrested thirty-Ove lutf uev
Indian Territory, and many more are
r way. Be has asked for two troops
of cavalry from Fort Sin, as the invaders made serious resietaaon to Lieut. Day. Jack Hanley was convicted in Sannders County, Nebraska, of prize-Bghring, and given a term in the penitentiary. Alderman Gaynor, of Chicago, died
last week in great fonr, from a ballet wound in the head inflicted by James Pacer on May EL The murderer was taken to the Joliet Fenitenthuy for safe keeping. The Union Pacific Bead, having wfferad a tinging' defeat in Its attempt to reduce wages, is credited with an attention to discharge 40 per cent, of its employes and cadeaior tore-engage them at lower rates. Mrs. Alexander Edmunds, living at So. MI9 Booth Coaipton avenne, while laborbig under a temporary at of insanity, cut tbe throats of her three little children, with rater, and then deliberately drew tbe weapon acroas her own throat. George Anderson, an aged farmer
residing at Bowling Green, Ohio, was killed j
by his wife, aw best his bead to a palp with a hickory case. The murderess la believed to be Insane. She was twice an lamats of aa asylum. Her brother, who la ow nt the asylum at Columbus, killed a man several years ago. Three boilers in the sash factory of Oarr, Byder Wheeler, at Dubuque, exploded tbe other day, killing live persons and sertonsry wounding several others. The engineer is said to. kavo been running wtth but llltie water. Horace B. Buell caused himself to be rent aa express matter from Chicago to Manhattan, Kan., in a box so arranged that he conHsttm.it, He expected to escape from the platform in tbe darkness, but his box was set down bottom-side up. Bis next misfortune was to be placed on his head, when he frightened the agent out of a year's growth by begging to be released. Be paid te.13 fox express charges, when (17.80 would have purchased a ticketThe banking-house of Henry Strong, at Green Bay, Wis., with a capital of (60,to, has dosed its doors. Two masked men, armed with Winchester rifle, haltel tbe rort Benton eoaoh twenty-rvB miles from Helena, robbed the passengers, and rifled the mafl bags. Prentice Tiller, the St. Louis express robber, pleaded guilty and was sentenced to Are years imprisonment. David Stone, of Hillsdale, Mich., pleaded guSty to the charge of murdering
niece, Lain Dyke, and was
to solitary easanemeat in the
Penitentiary for Ufa. The premmms for races at the Iowa Slate Fair, beginning at Des Motaes Aug 29, amount to (3,100. A vast crowd assembled m the CMMuTJalCoort-room at Chicago to warn tbe
of tbe MeKeagne trial. Judge
Jour expomcaV-tto hope that the
t make no demonstration over
the verdict, but when the acquittal was
amaoaneed the Coor shook with applause. The accused was permitted to hold a reception, when he waa returned to bis cell to await trial oa aa indictment for tbe murder of Mrs. Witlson. In Fountain County, Tndia-ia, in a deposit gf black sand, gold has been discovered yielding a large percentage to the ton. Tbe "and" has caused no little excitement In the district. At Tower Hill, HI, a mob attempted to lynch three highway robbers, on their way to the ShelbyriHe JalL Tbe oScer threaceaed the vigilantes with death, and sa.'ely lodged the men Inside the prison walls. A mob wrecked the office of A. K. Webb, a lawyer of Madrid, Iowa. Webb bad brought suit a ainsta half-witted boy and garnished bis wages for a fee in a case which wag sever brought to trial.
The surplus in the Treasury now is about (165,000,000, Of this sum about (20,-
000,000 will be needed to meet bond calls, but it is expected Oat at the cud of tbe fiscal ysar,
June 80, the surplus will be at least equal to what It is at present. The receipts at the Treasury Department exceed the expenditures of the Government now by an average
of f 1,000,000 daily.
V. W. Ker, one of the prosecuting
counsel in las star-route cases, gave sensa
tional testimony before the Springer Cungrecaloaal Investigating Committee lost
week. Two indictments in connection with
the frauds, be said, had been quashed be
cause the names of the ind:oted parties had not been written in full. Bliss, "the leading special counsel," had advised that the names need not have been written in full. Ker also
complained that luJictmeats for perjury had not been pushed against one Charles H.
Dickson, now holding a position in tbe De
partment of tbe interior, Kor also declared that Bliss tried to discredit the testimony of witnesses for the proeeoutioa and to belittle
their obartoter, and swore that Merrick, another of the prosecuting counsel, told him
that be wsnted "to let Doner go." Mr. Ker
also testiSed that Merrick told him that Biles wanted to get rid of him (Ker). The testi
mony is rather sensational, and places Mr. Bliss in a very queer light. Mr. Ker, of the star-route counsel, informed toe Springe Committee that William Pitt Kellogg bad said he ought to take a shot-ana sad blow out Sex's brains, and the latter desired it known that Kellogg can have that kind of satisfaction by giving notice of the time and place.
POLITICAL
Lamb, the Republican candidate, was elected Mayor of Norfolk, Virginia. A call for a temperance convention baa been signed by 32,300 voters in Indiana. New York special to Chicago Times: 'Tour correspondent callod at Grer stone for tbe purpose of verifying a sensational report printed in a morning paper regarding tbe health of Mr. Tilden. After waiting a few minutes in a reception-room, Mr.
Tilden himself came in unannounced. He
said that toe report at his falling health waa a purs fabrication, and utterly with
out foundation; that his health st present was better than it had been at any time during the past year, and that be had mere:? run down to Greystone for a few days to personally oversee some improvements that be is making on the place. Mr. Tilden shook hands warmly with the correspondent, excusing himself with the remark that he was
Just about te take a walk through his
grounds and make a visit to tome pet animals."
San Francisco telegram : "The electa of delegates in the forty-seven city
clubs to the Stats Democratic Convention was continued til past midnight. The double resolution pledging tho delegates to TUdeoT and against Field was unanimously
adopted.'' St. Lotus dispatoh: "The Democratic county conventions so far held In this State, either for the nomination of county tickets or the selection of delegates to the State convention to choose delegates to the national convention, hare expressed decided pre erenee for Samuel J. Tilden for I5 residentThere teems to be a strong desire throughout the State for the reaomination of the NM ticket" The Democratic State Convention of Wisconsin adopted resolutions denouncing the present tariff as a masterpiece ot in ustice and false pretense, and demanding mat all custom house taxation shall be only for
and the balance en hand is (338. The change in the directory Include the dropping of Charles G. Hammond, ot Chioaao T. V. B'atohford taking hit piece. Annual memberships were abolished, and life memberships raised from (at to (50.
An expedition whioh lately left Nassau oa a British yacht has been safely landed In Cuba. At Saints Claire, oa the island, CoL Tarona is organising a large force.
FOREIOZt.
Judge Foraker, of Ohio, is, at his own re tuest, to nominate Senator Eherman for the Presidency at the Chicago conven-
' HBE RECORD.
Hiram Sibley & Co.s extensive warehouse at the foot of Dearborn street, in Chicago, was entirely destroyed by lire. The bu Idlng was used as a seed storehouse by the firm. The Same spread with extraordinary rapidity, and the eTorta of the aiomoa to save the buQdlng were utterly unavailing. The conflagration was witnessed by a great mass of people, probably 30,000. Tbe loss is estimated at (50,000, about twothirds of which is covered by insurance. A Are in tke works of tbe Atlantic Oil Refining Company, Philadelphia, raged for many hears, causing a toss of (800.000. The handsome building of the Toronto MaU was damaged by ore to tke extent of (100,000. Tbe central telephone office was destroyed, and every wire was torn down. Other fires: TjUBSLS. Chicago, hide and tallow wsrehouse (to.floe Manhattan, Ksn., hotel 15,009 Cannon Falls. Minn., stores ......... SB.0OO Sioux Falls, Dakota, hotel 15,000 Brockton, Mass., plow works 95,000 Oevebwt, Ohio, oil tank 1V0 Doctor. 111., t-le works. io,n HolUdayabanc. Pa., sa I works. 10,000 Stone Bridge, N. Y., hotel S6,o Long bland, N. Y-, canning works, 100,000 Averts, IIL, bnatneas booses 16,'joo Wanpaca. Wis, basket factory. 10,0.0 Henry. IlU Ave stores 15,000 Menesha, W.s., bedstead factory. 15,000 Sew Orleans, warehouse and eeatmts... U9.0C0 Oaro. Mich., business block S3.CO0 Chattanooga, Tenn., bnstnea property. . 78,000 Fort Yates, Dakota, store. 10,000 IiancaFter. Pa., tobacco factory. 15,000 bonton. Ohio, nail mill xs,io Buffalo. N. Y., paper milL. ....... ti,0M Ovhkosh, WR, shinsle-m B...... ........ 10,R0 Sfaeboyaan, WK, tannery 10,rt Carroll, Iowa, seven buildings 15,000 Wradlng Mass.. robber factory. 30u,oos
SOTJTHRK. H. C. Blanehard, of Bkhmond, Va., a coffee merchant, has failed. The failure to doe to heavy dealings In futures. Tbe liabilities are plaoed at $223,000. CoL Wm. Speace, formerly United States Marshal for tbe middle distriet cf Tennessee, who shot and killed his son-in-law, CoL Edward S. Wheat, his successor, la Nashville March 1 hut, was recently convicted of murder in tbe first degree. A motion for a aew fc.- al was overruled, last week, Judge Allen sentencing Speace to be hanged in tbe Jail-yard, Jolv 13. Inge ft Mabone, who carried oa aa extensive tobacco business at Petersburg, a,, have executed a deed of trust for the tieweawefthfr creditors. The junior partner is a sea of Senator Mabone. The absence of the President reeuHed In a run en tbe Ret Springs (Ark.) Hatloaal Bank, which was compelled to close
A mo was also begun en tbe
Rational
In a quarrel about a horse-trade star Dublin, 6a,, Stephen L. Padgett shot bis brother Joe dead.
Medgiaer, the daughter of the
i wlaj had $eee
MXSCEULaJHEOUS. A rumor from the City of Mexico is to the effect thatFresIdent Gonaalez will next month ask Congress to allow him to resign. The Bail way Hail Bureau has completed a schedule for dally service between New York and the City of Mexioj, 8,79 miles, the average time being seven days. The Postmaster of Chicago has received orders to forward all mall for Mexico by way of'BI Paso. A Cuban residing in New Orleans has advices that Aguero has burned tbe erors and sugar-hoiiaes on seven large plantations, and baa been victorious in encounters with the Spanish troop). Chatham (Out) telegram: During the holiday games here the grand stand collapsed, and 1E0 persona were Injured several seriously. No fatal results are feared. The injuries consisted of broken anas, legs, and ribs. Some were injured internally. The Baptist Missionary Union, at its session In Detroit, voted to commence ChrisrJanfctigworfcoathe Congo River with the expenditure of (30,000 per annum. The exercises of the graduating class of the Naval Academy drew to Annapolis. Presidtut Arthur, Cen. Sheridan, Admiral Porter, and tbe Ministers from England, Bnsaia, Germany, and Fra'.ee. Mrs. Caroline Spaulding Burdette, wire ot Bobert J. Bnrdctte, of tho Burlington (Iowa) TlaicHejt, dloi at Ardmore, Pa , last week. Mrs. Burdette had been an Invalid for several years, suffering fro.n Inflammatory rheumatism, and went East, accompanied by her husband, hoping to find relief through tho skill of some of Philadelphia's famous physicians. Mrs, Durdette's condition had lately become so alarming that her husband canceled bis lecturing engagement and never
left her aide. Owing to the recent "departures" of : swindling bank presidents and officials from 1 the United States to Canada there has grown up a detfre to make the extradition treaty 1 between our Government and that of Great
Britain somewhat more stringent and comprehensive. The American Gongregationsl Association held Its thirty-first annual meeting at
W "fcsjsjr'f peafspw wave
Mr. Gladstone stated in the British Commons, in reply to questions, that the proposed European conference on tho Egyptian
question would discuss nothing buttheBgyp
tian financial situation. He proposed to lay
before Parliament the cerrespondonoo be tween the two nations respecting the confer.
ence. Due regard, he assured tbe Commons,
would be given to England's rights and priv
ileges.
The Count de HausonvlUo, a French politician and a member of tbe Parte Acadj
emy of ths 'Immortals," Is dead. Ho wi
born in the French capital May ST, U6.K
The midgets, "Gen. Mite" and Millie Edwards, were married at a publto ball at Manchester, England, recently. The band
of the Third Dragoons played the woddla ntareh. The race for the English Derby was declared a "dead heat" between St. Galten and Harvester. The stakes were divided. This Is the first time in tbe history of the Derby that the contest has resulted ht a dead heat. Queen Adelaide, the favorite, came in third. The Catholio Bishop of the Soudan has arrived at Cairo from the south. Be reports that seven Italian r Heats and four Sisters of Mercy were marsacred at El Obeld. He also reports that three priests were exposed naked to the sun for four days, and died' from tbe electa of tbeir exposure.
LATER HEWS ITEMS. Isador Jones, a Detroit dentist, was
pardoned from the Michigan Penitentiary, It appears that he bad a taste for detective
work, and voluntarily aided the police, who
scon grew tired of him and oonvicted him of receiving stolen property at order to rid themselves of his presence. It Is not believed that he committed any crime.
A heavy frost in Southern Wiscon
sin, Northern Illinois, Northern Ohio, and po--iiont of Pennsylvania and Michigan seri
ously injured fruit buds la those sections on
tho night of the SBth ult.
The Frenoh Government has decided
to celebrate tbe centenary commencement of
t'je revolution of 1789.
The annual review of the troops in
and aronnd Eerlin was held last week by the Emperor, who appeared on horseback.
Mr. Thomas Sexton, the most elo
quent of the ParneUIte members of Parllam nt, is about to proceed te Australia on aa Irish patriotic mission. He will be aooompanlcd by tbe younger ot the Redmond brothers. George Mountfort died at Boston, aged If. He was a son of Joseph Kountfort, one of the famous Boston tea party. A bill to abolish the prison-labor contract in Massachusetts was defeated la the Legislature of that State. By the fall of a scaffolding in a railway tunnel near Ugonier, Pa., nine Italian laborers were killed and eleven ota. era severely injured. The Belmont coal mines in Alabama, In wh'oh V. S. Grant, Jr is a .principal stockholder, have closed down because of the Grant & Ward failure. In a shooting affray near Granby, Mo., resulting from an old grudge, John G. Koonue, ex-Postmaster, and Nathan Tabor, a merchant, were killed, and George Hudson, a desperado, seriously wounded. Sir Bartle Frere, well known in connection with British South African politics, died In London after a protracted illness. He took a conspicuous part in connect'on with the Boor and Zulu difficulties of England In the Cape region. The iron manufacturers of the Mahoning and Shcnango Valleys signified their willingness to Sinn last year's scale with the new additions omitted. It is believed that there will be no ironworkers' strike in tbe Youngs own dislrlct, but at Pittsburg matMrs are unsettled. Employes of the Wabash Road at Chicago quietly stopped work because they bad not received their wsges. Gen. Benjamin F. Butler, of Massachusetts, was nominated for President by the National Greenback Convention at Indianapolis. Judge West, of Mississippi, was nominated for Vice President. The Minnesota Democratic Convention met at St. Paul and elected delegates to Chicago. While not instructed, those chosen are in favor of Tildan. Several inebriated men at Sharpsburg. Ky., amused themselves by shooting at lighted lamps In a grocery store. One o the lamps exploded and sat Ore to tbe building. The flames spread rapidly, and nearly all the principal business places of the town were destroyed. Tbe total loss If place! at 110,000. Is the Senate, oq the 39th ult., a memorial was presented asking an appropriation of (t,ott for tbe southera Exposition at L-oBtsvtlle.on account of Government exhibits. The remainder cf tbe appropriation for ttir Ohio Blvcr sufferers was voted for the relief f citUens along the MiFStssippi. The District of Colombia appropriation bill waa passed. The Senate adjourned to Monday. In the Hoots bills were reported te regulate the exportation of imitation butter and cheese, and te make (1. 000,000 the limit for the cost ct tho pnbli- bnildrng at Louisville. The legislative appropriation bill was amended te provide that there shall be bat forty-three internal raven ne districts and sixty-seven enstoaas dietrkts. In this shape it was reported to the House and the previona question ordered, when an adjoornoient to Saturday was taken.
- THE MARKET. NEW YORK. BasvBs ( .so Hoes a. is FLotra Extra. t.uo Wuxat No. 3 Chicago........... .84 No. a Bed 1.0J coas No. M Oato White. 0 Pobx Meas 1T.M CHICAGO. Bebvxs Choice to Prime Steers, S.M Fair to Good 6.00 Butrhers' a.M Hoos ... a.60 Floub Fancy White Winter Ex kH Good to Choice Spring.. 4.60 Wbxat No. a Si ring- .81 No. Bed Winter 1.0 Otras Ne.a. .M Oat? No, 1 Al 1S No, X , M IliKLEt-Wq a,..;,..., AT BuTTBn Ciiotoe Creamery...... J8 Fine Dairy. .14 CSBEBB Fnll Cream. 11 SUmmed Flat OS Eggs Fresh IS Po I'ATOEH Peachblows .84 PORK Mass 19.00 Laud M TOLEDO. WtrATNo.Bed AS Cobn No. a M Oatb-No. a ., M MILWAUKEE Wheat No. a M CORN No, a M Oath No. J 81 iUBLKY No. 9 1 POBK Mesa 18.50 LABO. lit"VJ!,'4'" a BT. LOUIS. Wheat No. J Bed Ml Coim-Mlxcd.... 81 Oats No. a -M Kre. n PoBWHess MiaatisiiswA" '40 CINCINNATI. Wheat No. a Bed 1.01 Coax M Oath Mixed. s Poax Mess . IiABZ M DETBOIT. FtOTB 8.M Wheat No. 1 White. 1.08 COHS Mixed..... M Oats No, a Mixed. 8t Pobx Mesa , so.oo INDIANAPOLIS, WmuT No. a lied loo Cobs-Mixed -84 OATMixed........i.i...BW M eari:::::::::::::::::::. 5 Common! 8.80
610.0 S8.00 .as at MH t) LOS
.as
4?
018.00
SENATE AND HOUSE.
Ptoceedings of the Federal Congress Boiled Down Mb. Aldrlca't subs.itute for the House
labor bureau bill waa passed by tho Senate, May 33. It provides for toe establishment of a labor bureau in the Department of the Interior, which shall be under charm of a Commissioner . to hold office four year who shall oollact data relating te capital and labor, and make an anna 1 report to the Sacrotary of the Interior. Senator Harrison report xl favorably from the Committee on Torcltorisa the bill which provides that tbe Dakota Legislature shall consist of forty-tour mi mlws of the Council and eightyelk'ht members ol ths Hone, and that t ths next general election there shall be elected two members of th Council and four mcm'iers of the House in each legislative district. In a debate oh the bill to provide tor protecting the Interests of the Unite! States In respect to Incumbrances, Mr. Book said that under tha letter of the act the Priskli nt could pay off tha Union Paoitto Itailroad mortgage. Mr. Mater stated that on the maturity of the Union and Central Pacific mortgages, in 18 U, these roads would owo tho Government (isx,000,009. Ths pension appropriation bill was passed. Ia the liott e. Sir. Wdlir denio'i that ho had ben solicited by William H. EnolMi to absent himself on the occasion of the unseating of Mr. l'oolle, and no expressed the hope that ths invca:wti"e committee wonld inquire inf the ma;ter. Mr. Kellogg called for an inquiry Into his alleged connection with the star-route frauds, and the matter was referred to the Judiolary Committee. A bill was passed apiroprlatla M, ooa to bar certain quartermaster claims, one-half of which is dne to citlsns of Ten essse. In committee of the whole, a favorable recommendation was made on the bill to retire Henry J. Hunt as a Major General. At the evening session forty-two pension bills were pass -d, Winding one giving ISO per month to tho widow at Gen. Ord, Tax bill restoring Alfred Hopkins to the rank of captain In the navy gave rise to a long debate in the House on May 21. Hopkins is the officer who left PensacoU without l ave when the yellow fever prevailed there, and was dismissed from the rorvioe. Tbe bill was Anally passed. Mr. Hatch, ot Missouri, presented ths conference report cn the bill to rstabl.lh a Bureau ot Animal Industry the Hous?oonferreo recommend com nrrenoe in all the Senate amendment-. The amount of tbe appropriation is l00,ooo, and the Jurisdiction of the Commissioner of Agiioulturo is limited to Kuch investigation and such disinfection and qttarantue measures as may be accessary to prevent the spread of contagion and mieotious diseases from ene State or Territory Into another. The Commtsg oner it prohibited from ap' lying any money toward paving for tho animals it w s found necessary to slaughter In order to prevent the spread of disease. The report was agreed to. A bill was passed to permit Lieut. Reynolds, of the nary, to accept a decoration from the Emperor of Austria tor saving eleven lives. Tbe Senate was not in sees!, n. Mb. IxoaIiIA reported to tbe Senate front the Committee en Judiciary, on May as, a anbstltnte tor tbe Joint resolution Introduced by Senator Jackson, proposing an amendment to the Constitution relative to terms of office of ths President and Vice President Favorable reports were mads on bills for two additional Associate Justices for tho Supreme Court of Dakota; tor a commission to rnn and mark the boundary line between Indian Territory and Texas, and to forfeit the unearned land grants of the Atlantlo and Pacific Road. A bid waa introduced to authorize the enlargement of the barracks at Newport, Ky. In the House of Representatives, bills were introduced to appropriate f50,0"0 for a borne tor disabled soldiers ot the Confederate army at Fredericksburg, Va.1 to abolish license txes on dealers in tobacco i to open overland ooramorrioation with Alaska and develop her commercial resources: to nenslon all honor
ably discharged soldiers of the rebellion at ths ace ot 48 years, and ;or the flninitand impr fon-
ment ot any national nana omcaai woo anau brinr loss an tha institution bv loana made for
his own benefit. The ceutosted e action rase of
Wallace Vs. McXlalev, from the Ktgntoenth Ohio District, was taken up. The majority report nnseats McEInley and declares Wallace entitled to ths seat. The minority
resolution confirms the right of the sit-ins; mem
ber. Speeches wore delivered by aieeara, t urner. of Oeorirla. and Adam . of New York, in
anpport ot tho contestant's case, and by Messrs. Hepburn and Robertson, of Kentucky, and E. B Taylor, of Ohio, in so.i p.irt of the comestce. Mr. Robertson is the only Democratic member
of tbe comm.ttee on Eieotions wno signed me minority retort, and be annealed to his side of
the House not to vote to unseat McKinley.
Os the bill to grant the Cinnabar Railroad
right ot way through Yellowstone Park, Mr. Logan raised a breeze by detailing tbe encroach
ments nude on the park, and by complaining
that he had been Inoessantlv lobbied in behalf of this road by an official of the Interior Department. Mr. Cameron reappeared upon iheuoor, at tor proloneod absence in E-.rope. and re eived congratulations. Mr. Ingalu Introduced a bill for the sale of lands belonging to the prairie band of Pottawatomie. Mr. Lanham sub Itted
the maji rlty report on the Danv lie rio, claiming that it waa preconcerted by the Democrats
tor me pu pose or inumiuaunx toe negroes. Mr. Saulsbury presented the minority rep rt on the Copiah County mooter, aaaerting t.iat the investigation waa originated to aid the Repuuli- i cans in the President al canvass and pei haps furnish an excuse tor rejecting the electorial vote of Mississippi. During the debate on the Utah bill for the suppression of p lvgaoiy, llr. Brown, of Georgia, mado a werp.ug attack on the morality of ths State Of Massachusetts and New England generally. Tha House of Rej resentativea passed a loint resolution appropriating an additl n.il loo.ouo for the r list ot sufferers by the ot crriow of th Mlssis-li pi River and its tr butaries. The House resumed the consideration of tho Wallace-Mc-Kinley contested-election ca e. Mr. Hunl (Dem.) admitted that under tbe laws of Ouio the sitting member not entitled to his seat, and yet he believed Mr. McKinley had been elected. He based his opinion upon the fact that a number of illegal votes were cast for the Demooretlc cand.date. Mr. Folia t ridiculed the testimony upon which hia colleague bne d such an opinion. Mr. Mills believed, according to tbe law and foots ot the case, that
lieved he would be less than a man If he allowed
rty clamor to lead nun to vo e against tus conviotions. Mr. McKinley, tho contestcc. made a tan-mtnrite ancenh in hie own behalf. He In
voked no technicalities, and dclared that he
did not want a scat wntcu rouia oe r. tninea o lv by invoking them, bat he asserted that, conceding every technicality, he would still have aa unquestioned majority ot the votes cast in the Eighteenth Ohio District. The House proecedea to vote upon the minority
resolution accisung mr. jaonjruejr vuvivicu 10 tk. . .. . T, -. ln.rmi ItlH- H,V, 1KU ThA
following Democrats voted with the Repubti-ans in the' affirmative: Blarkbarn, Dorsheimer,
Hnrd, Mills, Po tcr, itoucrtson, - nompson. tr. White men.), of Kent.nekv. voted with the
Democrats. The majority resolution seating Wallace was adopted without discussion, and that gentleman appeared at the bar and took the oath of office.
Tub Senate, on the tsth ult., took up the
Mexican war pension bill, and struck ont the; proposed amendment to restrict it benefits to those dependent on their labor or the aid ot others. Mr. Hoar, with tho avowed pnrpoae of killing ths bill, moved to extend its provisions to all Union snldiers of tho late war. Da the H- use a bill waa reported to forfeit the no earned land grant ot the Atlan'io and fcaciflo Bead. The Legislative appropriation b 11, whioh rednce? tho Internal rovenne collect ion dt-t-lcts I on elBhtv-fonr to sixty-three, was considered for tbe remainder ot the day and at the evening session.
I4VM
A Story or Old Hickory. Gen. Jackson was not cultured or acoornrjlished. but he had a strontr,
well-balanced mind, and he would go,
through forests of sophistry and masses of legal opinions, straight to the point. Gov. Wise, who admired him greatly, used to tell a story illustrative of the rough bark of Old Hickory's character. During the administration of President Monroe, Gen. Jackson, in command of some troops, invaded Florida and captured Arbuthnot and Ambrister, two Englishmen, who, it was charged, incited the Indians to depredations. He at once ordered a court-martial and had them hanged, with but little time to prepare for their future place of abode. He was arraigned for the offense before the Cab'net of Mr. Monroe, and Mr. Adams, tho Secretary of State, defended him on the high ground of international law, as expounded by Grotins, Vattel, and Fnffendorf. Jackson, who had quarreled with Mr. Monroe, was disposed to regard the matter as entirely personal. "D n Grotius; d n Fnfiendorf; d n Viittel," said he; "this is a mero matter between J.ra Monroe and me," It is also said of him that, pending tho question of dispute between this country and Franco in' regard to the demand for $5,000,000, Mb message to Congress contained a direct and insulting threat to Louis Philippe. The Cabinet consulted and urged a change of the phraseology. Mr. Forsyte then. Secretary of State, adroitly changed tha language dictated by the President, to soften it and make the message more diplomatic in terms and more conformable to peaceful and courteous national intercourse. But when Mr. Done! son, the President's private secretary, read to him from the proofsheets, Jackson stopped him when he got to tho part relating to France. "Bead that again, sir," sa'd he; "that is not my language; it has been changed, and I will have no other expression of my own moaning than my own words," The original words wers substituted, and his absolute dictation wrung from France the money whioh nevry cordd hayeboru obtained thjougu dipleiaaoyt-rPiwv: Pfcr.'ey Pows,
Diplomatic Courtesies. A Very interesting article might be written on the rightn of diplomatists, and on the rights of tho governments sending and roneiviug suoh representatives. But only a few general princi ules can bo mentioned here. In the first place, the diplomatiats sent by
eacn ol two eountnes to the otnei should be of tho same rank. Great Britain sends an Ambassador to Turkey, and Turkey sends an Ambassador to England. The highest rank of American foreign Ministers is that of Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary, and, accordingly, no Ambassador, which is tho highest rank in diplomacy, is sent to Washington by any government. Again, tho government to whi h I Minister is accredited has a right to refuse to rccoive him, and, if the reason be a persona one, tho government whioh sends him uoed not take o.'Umse. Ia 18lil the Austrian Government refused to receive Mr. Anson Uurlingame, who nftenva-d did good st-rvioo ta Ame ican Winifctor to Chiun, but no offense was taken, and tha historian Motley was appointed Minister to Vienna. Moreover, if a Minister lias been received, it is the right of tho government near which he is serving to ask that he be recalled, at any tirup. Th United States Government has more than once taken this course the most notable case having been during Washington's administtation, when M. Genet, tho French Minister, had behaved himself with intolerable insolence. But, on the other hand, if the government whoso Min'stor is thus virtually sent home regards tho reasons ol hi dismissal as insufficient, the retaliation takes the form of leaving the mission vacant. Tho other government soon recalls its own Minister, and diplomatic relations between tho two countries are suspended. If eome time elapses before Mr. Sargent's place, at Berlin is filled, it may bo expected that an excuse will bo found for withdrawing the German Minister from Washington. So long as a Minister remains at a court, and the relations between hit own government and that to whioh h is accredited are friendly, be 's entitled to all the official courtesies whioh ar extended to tho representatives of any government. To withhold one of these would be more than a slight it would bo an insult to the government from which the Minister came. Yet, outside of tho purely formal courtesies, there are offered opportunities to a sovereign or a foreign Ministet to show special friendliness, or the reverse. For example, Prince Bismarck was forced, by diplomatic usage, to invite Mr. Sargent to the dinner whioh he gave to all the foreign Ministers at Berlin on tha Emperor's birthday But, while he shook hands with all hu other guests, he put off Mr. Sargenl with a courteous bow. The late Emperor Napoleon was an adept at this tort of business. At hit New Year's receptions he graded his reception of the different Ministers according to his disposition toward theii respective governments, and his smiles, nods, and frowns wore reported by telegraph all over Europe. Prince Bismarck seems to have succee led him in this trick, but it would be absurd for any one in America to be angry simply because a testy old man shows a lack of good-breeding. Youth's Companion. Curiosities of the Stage. The newest ground is, perhaps, opened in "Stage Doors," since in this portion of his work Mr. Dutton Cook penetrates into the innermost sanctum of the manager, and teaches the aspirant after honors dramatic or histrioni what is in store for him should he ever find himself in those mystical regions. Sorry consolation is hero for those who hope to win a position as dramatists by leaving their plays at the stage door. According to this latest authority, tho doorkeeper receives the packets ot manuscript, which are stored in a tin box, and "are never looked at by a man ger, who, when he wants a play, knows, or thinks he knows, where he can obtain one, and addresses himself accord ngly to a playwtight who has previously produced plays." The ultimata destination of the drama which once finds its way into this "tin box" is inevitably "the bnttcrman's." Among the devices adopted by managers to avoid the duns, legal and literary, to which they may be exposed on visiting the theater, one plan sooms sufficiently ingenious. A certain famous leasee succeeded during some time in getting in and out of his theater by assuming the livery of his own coachman, and so equipped dr ving boldly to and fro. Dnder the head of "Strange Players," Mr. Cook describes some curious experiments that have been made upon the stage. Many play-goers still recall Signor Donate, a one-legged dancer, who appeared in the dress of a Spanish bull-fighter, and danced with surprising agility. Foote furnishes, perhaps, the best known instance of a one-legged player. Suoh are, however, far from uncommon on the stage; and we conld mention, were it not a breach of confidence, one well-known actor, who is still favorably received on the London stage by a publio ignorant of tho fact that he has lost one of his two supports. Foote, it is known, lost his leg by an accident. He wroto Iris comedy of "Tho Lame Lover" to introduce his false leg, and as Sir Lnko Limp, in a vein of Rabelaisian pleasantry, dwelt upon the advantages whicli attended the sacrifice: "A log! a redundancy! a mere nothing at all ! Man is from nature an extravagant creature. In my opinion, we might all be full as well as we are with but half the things wo have." George Vnndenhoff mentions his dismay in finding bis Iago a man with a sleeve containing a simulated arm. In Anthony Parquin's "Life of Forrest," mention is mode of an actor with a paralyzed arm and a glass eye, who used te play Itichard III. Mr. Ira Aldridge, the African Boscius, was a black. Buck.stone in his later years was quite deaf, and learned from the movement of tbe lips when h's cue arrived. Elliston, and many an actor before and since, s painted. On one occasion the hero of "CEdipus" was performed at Drury Lane by a man totally blind, and in a Staffordshire company tho heroes of tragedy and tbe InvAva nf enmedv wore all ulnvoil bv an
j actor similarly afnictod. Fall MaU Qa-
teue. . This following prayer, composed by the ill-fated Mary, queen of Scots, is translated by a "correspondent of tho Boston Transcript, and also by the poet Swinbnrito: O D mine Deus. srcntvl in to! O care ml Jcau, nunc Hoorn met In dura catena, in ralsoia p ena dcsldere te! Laiifrncndo. ce a- ndo et genuflectendo, Adoro. Imploro. ut Itueres me) Travscripl's translation: 0 Hearenlv FathT, my trnst H in Theel O duareat Li rd -Tcsua. now liberate ine! A captive In chains, ra iked by misery's pains, do I lanptlHb tor Theel With sorrowful iodine:, I, most humbly kneelintt. Adore Ttioo, Implore Thee to liberate met Translated thus by Swinburne: 0 I-ord, my Ood, I hive truHted la Thoel 0 Jesus, my doir stone, Now sol ine free! In pricon's opproasion. In sorrotv'H possf sslon, I wearv for Tlice! With stablng- and cryluf. Bowed down as dying-. I adore TheeI hapot That,
A Cup r Tea. "Sitting in a station the other day I had a little sermon preached in the way I hko, and I'll report it for yonr benefit, because it taught one of the lessons thai we all should learn, and taught it in such a simple, natural way that no one could forget it: "It waa a bleak, snowy day, the train was late, the ladies' room dork and smoky, and tho dozen women, old and young, who sat waiting patiently, all looked cross, low-spirited, or stupid. I felt all three, and thought, as I looked around, that my fellow beings were a very unamiable, uninteresting set. "Just then a forlorn old woman, shaking with palsy, come in with a basket of ware and went about, mutely offering thorn to the sitters. Nobody bought anything, and tho poor old soul stood blinking at tho door a minute, as if reluctant to go into the bitter storm again. She turned, presently, and poked about th ) room, as if trying to find something, and then a pale lady in black, who lay as if asleep on a sofa, opened her eves and saw the old woman, and instantly asked, in a kind tone, 'Have you lost anything, ma'am T " ' No, dear; I'm looking for the boating place to warm me 'afore I goes out agin. My eyes is poor, and I don't eeem to find the furnace nowheres.' " 'Here it is,' and the lady led her to the radiator, placed a chair, and showed her how to warm her feet. " 'Well, now, ain't that nice?' said tho old woman, spreading her ragged mittens to dry. "Thanky, dear; this is proper comfortable, ain't it? I'm almost frozen to-day, being lame and wimbly, and not selling much makes me downhearted.' "The lady smiled, went to the counter, bought a cup of tea and some kind of food, carried it herself to the old woman, and said, as respectfully and kindly as if ths poor woman had been dressed in silk and fur : 'Won't you have a cup of tea? It's very comforting a day like this.' "'Sakes alive! do they give tea at this depot?' cried the old woman in a tone of innocent surprise that made a smile go round the room, tenoning the gloomiest face like a streak of sunshine. 'Well, now, this is just lovely,' added tho old lady, sipping away with a relish. 'This does warm the cockles of my heart' "While she refreshed herself, telling her story meanwhile, the lady looked over the poor little wares in the basket, bought soap and pins, shoe-strings and tape, and cheered the old soul by paying well for them. "As I watched her doing this, I thought what a sweet face she had, though I had considered it rather plain before. I felt dreadfully ashamed of myself that I had grimly shaken my head when the basket was offered me; and, as I saw the look of interest and sympathy and kindness eome into the faces around mo, I did wish that I was the niagioian to call it out It was only a kind word and friendly aet, but somehow it brightened the dingy room wonderfully. It changed the faces of a dozen women, and I think it touched a dozen hearts, for I saw many eyes follow the plain, pale lady with sudden respect And when the old woman got up to go, several persons beckouud to her and bought something, as if they wanted to repair negligence. "Old beggar women are not romantic; neither arc cups of tea, boot laces, and colored soap. There were no gentlemen present to be impressed with the It dy's kind act, so it wasn't dona for effect; and no possible reward could be received for it except the ungrammatical thanks of a ragged old woman. But that simple litile charity was as good as a sermon to those who saw it, and I think each traveler went on her way better for that half-hour in the dreary station. I can testify that one of them did, and nothing but the emptiness of her purse prevented her from 'comforting the cockles of the heart' of every forlorn old woman she met for a week after." Louisa M. Alcott.
Maple Sugar. Maple sugar-making was an important matter on farms in the good old times. The settler usually took possession of his bit of wilderness in the early sprang, and rarely failed to have, among his few household affairs, a large iron kettle to use in sugaring before other farming could be begun. Tue kettle was hung on a pole which rested on crotehed posts, or living trees, if they stood handy ; and the fire was built underneath without further arrangements. Tapping the trees was then called "boxing." Tho farmer went at a tree with an ax as if he meant to chop it down, and took out a ehip half as large as his head, and of such shape that tha sap ran out at the lowest corner of the ent. Through the bark, under this, he made a cut with a rude gouge called a "tapping iron," into which was driven the end of a wooden spout, of course shaped like the iron itself. The sap waa caught in a trough two feet lonjr, made from a small bass-wood tree with the ax, and carried in buckets with a neckyoke, through the snow to the kettle. There, it was boiled down, in company with cinders, leaves, bits of bark ana miscellaneous foreign substances without end. And finally came skimming and straining; and the product, black as night gritty, and of unknown flavor, was still maple sugar. But maple sugar-making is entirely changed. Poet try and dirt have given way to profit and an edible substance. The old chopping of the tree is replaced by a small auger hole, tho clumsy wooden spout by a little tube, and the wooden trough whioh lay under the tree from year to year by a tin bucket kopt scrupulously clean. The aap is hauled by teams, ia great tubs, to a substantial building, then carefully strained, and boiled down in a great evaporator with constant attention to cleanliness, and as rapidlv as possible, because cooking tends to destroy tho flavor which gives maple sugar its charms and price. Close Coll. "So you were not drunk" asked the Just:oe. "No, sir," replied the prisoner, "I wa sober." "How do you know you were?" "Because, when the officer arrested me I had $U in my pocket and was afraid to go home," stoutly maintained the prisoner. The Justice mused a momentt holdbis venerable head in his folded hands. Then he spake : "P, isoner, you are correct You were not drunk. But yon were very liable to get drunk at any moment Go yonr ways and don't shave the statute so close another time." Burlington Haw key c Wait on God. There is no hurry in eternal things. Wo must indeed run to do the commandments of God, but we must run cautiously, and look about us while we run. If we are not slow we shall miss things. We shall miss seeing God, and miss heoring Him also. We can hardly bo reverent unless we are slow. F. W. Faber. A Pioca young lady, who married the only son ot a wealthy but vulgar speculator, ou be ng reproached for it by her aristocratic relatives, meekly said: "It is sometimes tho duty, you know, for a respectable Christian girl to marry into a rich family of questionable antecedents, in order that its dubiously acquired wealth y be gttided into righteous cWwK"
MTHEETERS & SHOEMAKER,
North Side of the Square. East of Postofitee.
WaaoleaMtlo axtd Retail Dealers In ZmmW AND BUCKSMtTHS' i HARD W .A. IR, 33. County Headquarters for THE BEST PINE AND POPLAR SHINGLES AND LATH. DOORS. SASH, J3 renvois, GLASS, MOULDINGS. LOCKS. HINGES. NAILS AND SCREWS. The Early Qrea;lXa,at COOKING STOVE AND THE GRAND OUTER CHILLED PLOW ARB AMONG OUR SPECIALTIRS. -Cet Oar PrlceCM
ELEGANT NEW DRUG STORE Is in the North Room of the New Block, And lis Worth Visit to OlMterwo Its Neatness. Every article kept in a first class Drug Store can be found at Bowman's.
BL00MINGT0N BAB. BUSKIRK DVSdAN; Attorneys, Of flee in Now Corner Building;, up itnirs. Will practice in all courts of tbe State. Special attention given to Probate business, and to collection and prompt remittance of all claims. LOUDEN MIERS, Attorney. Office over First National Bank. All business of a legal nature given caieful attention in sll courts. Real estate Titles Carefully examined by aid ol Louden's Abitraet. A specialty made of the collection and remittance of claims of all kinds. FniKDLET, PEAIiSOS t FRIED LEY, Attorneys, Office over McCal la's Store. Settlement of estates a specialty. Collections promptly remitted. Cspt.G.W. Friedley or Judge Pearson will be in attendance at each term of circuit court. MVLKVt PITMAN, Attorneys, will practice in the various courts. Especial attention given to collections, and to probate bonnes. Office, Fee's corner, epporite the Progress Office. ROGERS UENLEY, Attorneys and Collector. Office In Mayor's Office building. Special attention given to settlinic decedents' estates, and to all kinds of probate business. Also, abstracting. EAST & EAST, Attorneys, at Lsw, Btortnington, Ind. Office, in Waldron'a Block, north side square. Probate business and collections given prompt attenion. Will practice ia courts of all 'fining coiintip-. business solicited. J1.VBS F- MOUGAX, Attorney. Office, West Side block. uo stairs. To w piobato and vt'ileition business he will give special and particular attention. Business attended to in courts of surrounding counties. WILLIAMS M1LLEN Attorneys, Office live doors south of Hunter' corner, up-stairs. Do a general collection and probate busines. Will practice in court of adjoining counties. CA WORRALL, Attorney. Office . in New Mock, up-stairs, over MeCalla & Co.'. Will practice in all the courts. Special attention given to Pension Claims and probate business. RA. FOLK. Attorney- Office in Al- , len $ MeA'ary new block, up-stairs over corner room. Special attention will be given to probate business, and to the prompt collection of claims. JOHN OK AH AM, attorney, real estate and insurunco agent, abstracter of titles, and claim collector. Office upstairi, over corner room in the Alien f HeXary Block. Business solicited.
JE$Iolcsiiitla Sliop WAGON BUILDING WORKS, And General Repair SHOP. West or tbe Old E.effler BIIII. We make a specialty of HORSESHOEING. A large and convenient Wagon Yard is attached to the Shops, with a plentiful supply of good stock water. Wagons and Buggies carefully repaired or built of the best material. Examine our Premium Wagons. r. 13-81 ' GH'MOKK BROTHERS.
Eph. Hughes Cmnnofc rait yon in the matter of HAIR CUTTING, SHAVING, Oris the other sreo'a'tlfta of ths Hairdresser's trade, anon as ebampooing aad Colorini, yen are certalnlv hard to pi ass. lis always keeps nrst-clssa workmen, and hia towela an clean ami bis tool the host t'mt can be lmht. Bo rnna a Clear Btand In connection with the business, keeping (be most popular brands of CIGARS AND TOBACCO.
X ENSIONS. Rcnl IGstate ARonoy, AND NOTARY PUBLIC. Farms and Town Property bought and told. Honey loaned on Beal Estate at 6 per sent. Five years' successful experience in obtaining Pensions. Can hurry you claim through; blanks alway on hand. Blank for conveyancing, all kind. Deed and mortgages, and all writing, promptly and correcily executed. .Good Kirs Insurance, cheap. Buiinea solicited. Call and oe me No charge for consultation or advice. 3. R. WORKALL; Attornoy.westsido Fquare, over McCallas.
PBINTING! THE PROGRESS Job Printing Oifio! Mth J TV, SmfrttH', en fntlrflv Xins JVo-(.-( il cf all Uailis ii vr.fiarert to da rtlnHna tn a eblorq ialt ) lbs best ia lb eouutry. CarUoular attsntiou paid to COMMERCIAL PRINTINO, IntKline JHU Iteat, Hand Bill., Letts? heads. Wots K;ul, Circular, Cards, Pouter, fco. FineprtiiUOf a tally . Orders from a distauca wilt raeelr prompt allontlou. ORCHARD HOUSE !
S. Orchard & Son PROPRIETORS.
Opposite tho Depot, Bloomlagton, Ind.
o
HIO & MISSISSIPPI
RAILWAY. JL
4
Solid Daily Trains (each way) betarw CIXCINNA Tf AXD ST. Lb VIS.
O Solid Daily Trains (each way beta
O CINCINNATI AND LOUISVILLE. 2 Solid Dailv Trains (each way) betweem ST. LOUIS AND LOUISVILLE. SO Change or Cars for AMY Class of Passenger.' First Cfaas, Second Clan mud Emigrtmt Panengers, all tarried en Fntt Exprms Trains, eeruuiiny of Palace Steeping Cars, ttegant Parlor Coaches and eomforinUa Day Coacket, all running THROUGH WITHOUT CHANGE. Only 10 Honrs Time Bettcctn Cincinnati and St , sr f LouU and LauittUU. But Four Hours ' HBehoetn Cincinnati and LomisttUm, Tbe Ohio A Mlafclaslpol tVwajr is the only Lint between St. Xouin and Otnoinnasi Under one management, running all its trains through "SOLID," and in ceass quence is the only recognized flrst class route between those cities, its Easy Grades, Its Splendid Shtm Power, Sleet Rails, Straight Track, and Solid Road Bed Enable the O. & M . to make faster average time than any other Western Road. 8rSAsk for Ticket via O. & M. R'y.-fMl Jfor sale by Agent of connecting lines Eatt, West, North and South, y. V. PEABODT. President and Oen. Ml. W. B. SHATIXV, Geo. Fas. Act.
CINCINNATI, OHIO; .
The Great Tlifough Business Urs LOUISVILLE, NEW ALBANY 1 and CHICAGO RAILWAY. MONON ROUTE. Short, Quick, Safe, Jte&ftto. - DAILY THROUGH FAST BOaW !a TRAINS LOUISVILLE to CGICtCD. i No. 1-CHICAGO DAT KAIL. . '
ijenMvuie. nioomrostoa. l.to am Xl as a m No. a-CHICAGO NIGHT K 7. SO n m 11.13 d m
Connecting rforoly with tbe Dwafmf.gd m? trains out et Chicago on the Great Tareeaa
usasa
Unas Went aad Northwest.
SS-aVsasH.
T.sspaa aQJj.
' 4-LOCIrnrKPNrGHT atWsUW? sm 3.40 s sa rJMasa
4T DAILY Fast CToaa-Coarieotta GreeneaaUe Juactioa and Gree
INDIANAP0LISKdST.LC3.
Btcominfttoo. iBllananaas. 11.88 am S.M p. aa " ll.Xtpm atoaaa Connectina? closely wtth all 1 Fast ont of Indianapolis, sad all '
West oat et SU Louis.
DAILY THROUGH Fait. TRAINS
chicabo to LcrsraiE.
No. -LOOIBTLLK SAT Itm
vnicag awgwinaw
l.Htai
No. 4 m . h -
connecting- ctosnr """vWBr tag tranw ont ot ISTUleom Ow QftajaV ani and Honthwcstera Lines; '
thou a Bloominstoa to Ctiieasn r hours Bloomtnston tLoUavUsBi
Only one oaawreat ears t aS the oltfft in tbe North, Booth, Bast or We)
teii mrousu iraaonaiu oonwrnmpsriuaFw and to all towns and elites, and ohock 1st afchssi MM thHW.)i tA HfMflMtlin dtt Ml HliaM.il
ticket, avoiding trouble aad wotrf o nekeoa lair, and dancer ot deity aad i prase. Whasi desired by persons atarelor on Ion evraey. will eall oa hem with Throagh ttefeet aad Check, and will ticket paa-eogaes Bad Sana, targaoe through from residence, sar Low-Kate Hound-Trip Tottrtrta Ttafer on sale to all t-etitnero Winter Saaorta, goad returnlna nntll Jani let, lfS. liaflroad Time-Curd, Folders aad Hap far-
K B. BOUT HARD, Gen. Vast. Acs., Louisville, Ky.
CABTEB PSBTSa, ; Sutton Ticket Area,' Blooming-tea, lad.
Resident Dentiot, ;
Dr. J. W.
CRAIN. i
Office in the New Block, op-statrs.
Cole's Boob Store. All work warranted.
gw- A. raint viii f span ft amad las
usfste fflwts.
jdT
LYON&HEALY
Stat A Monroe SU.,CMcaaa.
it tssiANiswnU. a ansa.
111,, BtiBtiry ros umi, mi wi.Xltertjart, al Inrttrttot lftrr
Ian-fee, fnr Antrnr Baaa. amata
I Carta Mis
ft
aw- saaaw' as
M3 V
1U
c o. TuawBa.
T. H. BT!lWOBT v
Turner & Sudbury, Dealers In all kinds at FURNITURE! Doth Fine and Common kept to etprk. We have the best assc rtmeut ever brought U we ;ty.
aad protH) e to sell as low as yea oaa get la any
p ace tome aa see s before you boy. Ho trouble to t
Boom on North Fifth Stree, to Attw
0.1 HOW sBOCC.
psoas.
