Bloomington Progress, Volume 20, Number 37, Bloomington, Monroe County, 10 November 1886 — Page 1
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Republican Progress.
ESTAKUSBKD A. A. MSB.
PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY
BLOOMINOTON, 1ND.
MTF REAPERS. by win, WAI.UCC xahtsx. When th tired nan, with ftscraat ikenw. Coma on of the corn, M the an goeadown. And the iky is rich M the tailing leaves In crimson and purple and golden brown, 1 ait in th mellow ml marvelous eyes And watch, aa the loom OJ the sunMt mm Baelottof goM over oountry and town. And 1 think how the imamen bate come aad
Sinos we m the shuttle across tin Mae That wore the colon of dusk and dawn When the musk of the sleeping romeflew On the winga of the sooth wind over the lawn. And the evening shadows were longer drawn. And the ran waa tow, and the stars were few ; When libra was sweet in the Urea we led Aa the lesTen that lives in the latter ipring Tb grWtotheflowere, tbebooka weiead, Th9 remp and rash of the grape-vine awing, la words and work, to be filled and fed On brooks of honey aad wasted ""d, And song in the songa that wLed to ainf. And out of the ahadowe they coma to me, Aafloweraoftha ipring come, year by year. The lovers we had when to love waa tree, Thaataxe weiufew and the aktaa were clear, AnawakMW tfcwas bappiBesa Jurftofca, Through the aheavea of the eoort-land Mr t
Whuethewenrynorjara are drawing
Though the red aodwhtta rosea hare lost their leaves In the ashes of snmmers of long ago, They come, through tr mellow and maneloaa res. With the harvest of lowthat rre use to aow. As rich aa the garlands the annaet weaves VTbaa the Urea reapers witt. fragrant aheaTsa Cease out of ths corn and the aon is low. Bmrptr' 3fajaT'-
A SMF STUDY.
BT ULT CTJSSST. The first two weeks of September are OBdonbtedrr the finest of all the summer Jfor ocean-bathing. The water has at length become bearably warm, and the waves, though naming high, ma regularly and with a certain evenness that a fair swimmer can
oomprehend and const upon. At the resorts atom; the New Jersey coast, for instance, this is a season of absolute water revelry. The beach is peopled with thotwanda of figures, happy and jieluieeqne or grotesque, as the case may be. Child, youth, adult, ail are here. The strong swimmer calmly cleaving his way out throngh the breakers; the timid aevice shrinking at each new burst of ' salty suds, and the wonld-be brave one, prvacing defiantly knee-deep in the mighty bine, yet clinging at the same time with desperate grip to the life-line. ' It was not long since, at one o? these re.snrts, a heavenly morning the sky a sheer ' dazzle of son and palest azure; the sea ' booming grandly on the white sand, ami ;aH the merry thousands hastening down to meet it. Two lien and a woman left the fourth of their party, an elderly lady, who was not in bathing costume, as were they.
aafely ensconced with camp-stool and
fe-'-'" sjtnbiella, .where the sand was quite dry,
A REPUBLICAN PAPER DEYOTED TO THE ABYANCEMENT OF THE LOCAL INTERESTS OP MONROE COUNTY.
ESTABLISHED A. D. 1835. BLOOMINGTON, INDIANA, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1886. NEW SERIES.-VQL. XX.-NO. 37.
Republican
A VALUABLE
Circulates Among the Bert former
Monroe t
And is Read by EwyMpnber
Terns, U iirace W,
..i- : '-:
m
m
mm
.alsal tripped lighUydoicn to the first thin
I ofhe water. To be strictly accurate,
jfottwo of them tripped lightly; the wo
man, . who was young, and, in her own
Wray, beaotif id, and the smaller and less tnoturhtful avpearinK of the men. The
1
f! Xi V.i flu, m-ir ftJInml with a armttv of
m'i' autrotenanee that was almost absurd in
tfvA. ,M.t,nwag Uia rnarjiiiMl- Tfavm?
-amteied the water, they naturally separated. ihe yoimger man was of the slender, SwjjBpwy, graceful type; a blonde with r'gplden trots of hair and beard. Moreover array word and gesture seemed exjaearive f intense self-satisfaction and self- . graiincation, possibly relative to some late personal triumph.
.;; , . .: Cbmer' he cried, reaching out ioyonsly
;i ' ' otkegirL Bat she drew back; she could
t-i!" netewim. "No?" he said carelessly, and
-talnnged off leawine her there near the
This other was also fair ot
:Mi.r compleTioB, brrtlus ciose-anaven narr naa
ST V c ' Am' lalr Mtf KlMfciaii Vwt ftllfl tiiu laroA
wiolet eyes were fringed with lashes almost
Mack.
i, He had stooped to pat some water on '' Ida head, and lookiBg up he saw that the
yownglady Btbod alone, her gaze resting
iilnllj noon Urn.
. aanitakeyou out a little farther?"
as
; ffiieehaok her head, with a fretful curve
f the lip.
"Yoa look too sober," aha said. "Yon
Dffat want to drown me." ; He took' n notice of the closing pete
saSsiW
"Ton think I shoald not look sober, :.ter "I'm ore X think nothing whatever, Mr.
HuHtuii . Yoo have reUeved me of the
-He took a stn nearer to her. Hm face
rfSlV ' , fhahd. . There, in the edge of the oeean,
f ftk. :. waasat absurd place to show feeling. Bat
'M.gkih seaaerl to forget their amraachngs,
f j- a to see only her dark, uncommon
MXi- "be8ay,henashri)g,conquerii
jr.'- 'taBav"! said, quietly, "I have done vi-'vy ?a I have been
mmmu
, ' "O, yes; bat too much sincerity bores
one at times.
-The young man started, bio lips moved,
then he seemed to recall seine resolution,
and no sound issued from his tightly -set
f ' Thej-girl eoatmned to speak, however, in
stae same stadia aly insolent tone. "Why
aw we standing here? At least you might . lake me over to the line. I certainly shall have lessons when we go back to town. It
is absurd for one to feel so dependent.
. And these good swimmers are always so
selfish." ' He put oat his hand. ' "Come this way," he said, simply.
They made as pretty a picture as any of the taoawands of couples who had gone
down or were going down together.
Some of the lookets-on upon the beach
' singled them oat and discussed them:
"The young lady in white and scarlet?
With the Italian face? The tall young es
cort in blue and yellow ? Miss Warriner . Elma Warriner. Qtdte rich. Hash ! The
. mother is then with the red umbrella.
Theyonng man is Sad Benton; sort of
tJUrd coniri; used to be engaged to her.
bat I hear it is oil now; she is to marry
. some one else.
Meanwhile the young eoapte were oat waist deep. Mies Warriner had grown
more gracious.
Oo aad swim, Ked," she commanded
with a little laogh. "We wont qoarrel any
r-. enlT"&aiwpeafed. -loa taatk I
WoaHeaatrel with yoa? If, m you hare
told me, it has an been a mistake
for each other and yoa realty lore
do you think I wontdn't be man
to deayw welfare first of all?
oa ta wwaldlat any maaaory of
Jaaat aBBBBaaMKMBBfiMajaar
precious, stand between yon and your happiness V "We never lire over again our 'last summers,' " she replied with some constraint. "Ton are right," he echoed, in a lower tone almost too low to be audible above the water-clamor, "we never live them over There is only one thing I would like to say to yoa, Elma. Yon won't be angry. It is this: Be sure yon know your own mind." "You you think I do not now?" she questioned, sharply. "I cannot tell. I hope you do. Not all men are wont to take such disappointments philosophically. I do not think that Fielding would. Hiss Marriner's cheeks turned a shade paler. Her dusky complexion had a bluish look. "Are you getting a chill?" cried Denton. "Not at all. But I don't see Harry anywhere. It is atrange he should stay away so long." Denton put up his hand to shade his eyes and looked out over the water. Tho son was dazzling. "I do not see him either," he answered, and continued to gaze. "He is a perfect swimmer," said the girl, uneasily. "And he surely would not go too far out." "Can you stay here alone?" Denton asked, quickly, "or can you go in ashore by the Una? 'm look for him." "1-il go ashore," she had begun to say, when he had plunged out through a big wave, and could no longer hear her. She turned and slowly made her way back, clinging ever to the sagging rope. But she had not gone far, when something cheeked her steps and caused her to turn sharply and face seaward. A wild outcry that for an instant made her heart stand still! A bitter cry, and sudden hoarse shouts. Then the beach blackened with men and women by thousands other than the bathers.
"Man drowning!" That was all. That
was the awful cry. Elma Marriner standing statue like, with
eyes straining to know the worst, could not even feel the water thatlapped her ankles.
She was incapable of feeling anything;
cold as ice; frozen from head to foot. For now she knew half intuitively, half by circumstances that Harry Fielding was
out there beyond reach of the boldest, and
going down to his death.
She could not stir. She could only stana
there feeling frozen.
The shouts of outcries constantly in
creased, until the hubbub was maddening, it seemed to her. And still she stood there,
with capability for just one agonized idea:
"If I could only swim!" Harry Fielding, her lately avowed lover,
the man who had weaned her heart from
Edwin Denton. Harry out there, battling,
struggling, dying!
She fancied she saw his arms flung up
for toe last, last time; then hush! Why
should they cheer? What was that? Who was that out there? Could she see the gleam of orange and a paler blue than salty waters? Why should they cheer? Was it
because another risked bis life to save, her lover's? Was it because Ned Denton had
not waited, had not hesitated, had gone
oat there to save the man who had robbed
him of her love? Hush! Another cheer!
Was she dead herself ? Had her heart
ceased beating?
On either side of her some one had
caught her arms and was dragging her up
the beach. It seemed to her that she must
shriek aloud. Yet she was dumb, and grow
ing deaf and blind, she thought. Only her
mother caught her in her arms.
"Mother," she cried in a voice that
grated with its own agony; "Mother, will
thev both be lost?"
And now another maddening cheer. The
life-savers going out, and strong ropes
gradually uncoiling.
God!" prayed Elma Warriner on her
knees, there at her mother's side; "God,
if only their strength may last!"
Would the life-savers never reach them?
Every second was indescribable torture!
Yet the men had responded promptly. It
had been hardly minutes since the first
alarm.
"Mother, can you can you see the blue
and yellow? Oh, God save him for his
bravery !"
Then she shut her ears with htr fingers;
the men were drawing in the ropes; the
rhythmic, awful chant of the voices measur
ing the. length of pull, and telling when
to ease and let out with the ebb of wave.
They were pulling in what, whom?
Would the savers bring one rescued man.
one drowned, two drowned, two rescued-
or none at all, or not even a cold form
with the soul battered out? Who could
say?
She held her fingers in her ears. The
chant of the toiling men would have
crazed her.
And amid louder shrieks and hoarser
clamor the savers staggered ashore at last,
and laid two forms upon the sand.
Life - was in both as yet. But
Harry Fielding . needed much rolling and skilful manipulating to bring
him around. Denton, on the other hand, revived speedily and tried to standalone upon his feet. His face was as ghastly as
the other's, and had the same blue circles
around the month and eyes.
I am all right," he murmured feebly,
then his half-open eyes fell upon Elma
Warriner. She had turned from Fielding's
side.
"Yon "saved him!" she cried, with an hysterical sob. Perhaps her voice grated
again as a little while before.
The throng took up her words with a mighty cheer. Fielding had been carried
to bis hotel, but the rescuer was yet among
them.
"Give me your .hand," one man cried,
and then another, and ''God bless you!"
and the women sobbed aloud.
Elma Warriner sank dizzily Into her mother's embrace, and heard rather than saw Ned Denton borne home upon men's
shoulders a hero.
Of the three, Miss Warriner perhaps felt the shock longer than tho two who bad
been so near their deaths that morning.
For several days she remained almost wholly in her chamber. Fieldinc and
Denton went about as if nothing had hap
pened. Fielding, who was quite wealthy,
showed the other some extra little attentions, it may be, but neither of them al
luded in any way to the late almost tragic
occurrence.
Elma Warriner, on the other hand, could
not refrain from talking of it.
Fielding must have been ill-natured on
some other score when ono night he responded impatiently to a remark of hers
concerning Ned Denton. His answer was almost sneering: "Yon make a perfect
god of him for what he did!"
Elma gazed straight in his face for a
moment. She was silent, but her eyes
hada dnil, ominous gleam,
"If he had been lost," she said, very
slowly and coldly, "I should never have forgiven myself."
"Perhaps," said Fielding, angrily, "per
haps I am to take that as an indication of
a change !n vour feelings toward me. Per
haps I am to understand you would like
to end the engagement."
They had been sitting together her mauler's cottage parlor.
She arose at his words, and,
ere leaving the room, said: "You may take
it so, if you choose. I adore bravery, and
I loathe ingratitude!"
In this way she freed herself. That evening Denton came to her. They
sat for a time in the porch of her mother's cottage.
"Are you sure," he inquired, "are you
sure yon have made no mistake in breaking your engagement to Fielding?"
She drew more closely about her
shoulders a little scarlet shawl she wore.
I suppose yon think that I don't know
my own mind," she said. "I suppose you
hink I haven't any mind of my own."
'It has very much that appearance, " he
answered, coolly.
She reflected for a moment. "I have alwayB known my own mind,"
she said then, quite deliberately, "except on
one occasion."
Denton was silent a little space. Then
he leaned closer to her. "Will you tell me what the occasion was, and when?" he asked, softly.
She looked at him with tears welling up
in her dusky eyes.
"Ion know!" she answered, tremulously,
and laid her head upon his shoulder, where it had always seemed to him to belong!
HUM DJC Iff AUCAniB. A "vaulting ambition -which o'erleaps
itself," says Cassell's Magazine, is by
no means confined to those who fill high station and are born to power and dignity. It may show itself in the cobbler as well as in the king. An amusing example was recently given by a member of a rural school board. A laboring man, illiterate and povertystricken, sought the suffrages of his
fellow-ratepayers as a people s candi
date for a seat on the local educational parliament. By a freak of fortune in the shape of the cumulative vote he was elected. The honor proved insufficient to allay his thirst for fame and for the conscious exercise of authority. He must needs conduct an examination on the following lines:
"Now, you lads, before you goes any
farther with the reading of this chapter, let me just see if you knows the meanin' of the words you have read. It says somethin' here about 'gross darkness.' Now, what is that? "What
is gross darkness?"
A chorus of youthful voices some
not without an inflection of scorn at the insult to their intelligence, convoyed in
the putting of so simple a query
makes answer: "Great darkness, sir."
The inquisitor shakes his head tri
umphantly. "No o," he says, "not
exactly. What's darkness, boys?"
The unexpected and bewildering re
buff seems to haVe inaugurated a temporary reign of silence. When the forward path discloses mysterious pit
falls it is well to walk with circumspection. But at last a solitary, piping treble, ventures a highly original definition.
"Please, sir, it's what there is after
the sun sets and before the lamps are lit"
"Well, yes" as if condescendingly
considering "you're right. Now, what's
a gross?"
The response comes with great vol
ume and more assurance. This, at
least, is solid ground of mathematical
fact.
"Twelve dozen, sir." "And how many is that?" "A hundred and forty-four, sir. " "Bight again. Now listen, you lads.
Gross darkness' is darkness one hun
dred and forty-four times as great as
that which the scholar over against the middle desk yonder described for us. Don't yon forget what gross dark
ness is in future."
jib Jtxew.
The teacher of the Sunday-school
class waa telling the little boys about temptation and showing how it some
times came in the most attractive guise.
She used as an illustration the paw of a
oat.
"Now," snid she, "you have all seen
the paw of a cat. It is as soft as velvet
isn't it?"
"Yeseml" from the class.
"And you have seen the paw of a
THE NEWS. ! IntelUgenco by Wire from AU the World lOSEIGJT. Tho Borlin eomi'OMtora have given thMr
employevir uiitilJaimary 1 to consider a proposed cliango in wages. A general siriko is
threatened.
It is hot said that tho reason tho Cuar
killed his Hid, Count Ueutorn, was booauss ho suspected tho Count of criminal intimacy with one of tho imperial ramily.
-Dr. Hers, an Antonoan resident of l'arw,
was Mauder Hl by J e Monde. Ho challenged the writer of the article, who printed ft satisfactory apology.
Seven native villages in tho Friendly
I-land group wore destroyed by volcanic eruptions.
The international double scullinpr race on the Tliamos was won by Teenier and Hamm, tho American contestants. Sir Michael Hioks-Bcaoh reports to thf British Cabinet that tliorc lias been a inarlwdt cessation of outragos in Ireland, tenants are; paying their rente under the landlords' redaenous, and that the prospects are good for a peaceful wiutor. M. Hcrbett, tho new French Minister to Germany, hi s been invited to visit Bismarck at Varzin. The Kin? of Belgium will announce at the opening of Parliament tho proposed introduction of a bu! providing for compulsory military service. John A. Hamilton, who has just died at Baraboo, Wis., lived a week with a broken neck. President Cleveland's namo was erased from the joll-list at Buffalo for tho reason that lie has ' removed from the district." James llussell towell is engaged to bo married to tho dowager lady Lyttleton, who is 40 years of ago and has three children. Mrs. Cornelia Stewart, of Sew York, after leaving largo annuities to relatives, willed onehalf the residue of her estato to her brother in Paris, and bequeathed the other half in trust to Henry Hilton, to complete and maintain tho memorial church and school at Hempstead Plains. FINAJWliTi JJD IHlTtrSTBIAL. Tho following is a recapitulation of the debt statement issued on the let inst (cents omitted): l.WTEnEST-3ElrNa DEBT, Bonds at 4 Vj per cent J25O,0OO,OM Bonds at 4 psr cent 73;.7;i,400 Bonds atSi.oreeut 86,84s, 700 Refunding certiflcatcf at4iorcent 191,30(1 Knvy pension fund at 3 per cent. . . . 14,000,000 l'aeifto Hailroad boodu at 0 per cent. G4,6),3U
Frincinal Interest ,
Total 31,102,430,078 DEBT ON WinYIS 1NTI:HE8T HAS CSASGD SLSCE 1IATUBITV. Principal 813,310,4:13 Interest 2tt,W2
"Yesem."
"Well, although the cat's paw seems
like velvet there is nevertheless con
eealed in it something that hurts.
What is it?" No answer.
"Tlie dog bites," said the teacher,
"when he is in anger, what does the
cat do?" "Scratches," replied the boy.
"Correct," said the teacher, nodding
her head approvingly, "now what has the cat got that the dog hasn't?" "Whiskers!" exclaimed a boy on the back seat, and the titter that ran around the class brought the lesson to an end. Boston t'ouric'' bacox vox.xsa up. "At an evening partjwn Chicago a Htnrary lady who witnt' w city to clothe itself in the "Tyriau ; X" that Miss Cleveland so beautifully 2kd tonchingly alludes to, turned to her neighbor, a successful pork merchant, and said : "Don't you think this Shakespearian controversy, recently awakened by the cypher revelations of Mr. Donnely, will result in a renewed interest in Bacon?" "Renewed interost in bacon ?" "Yes; isn't Bacon rising?" "Oh, certainly, madam, certainly, bacorii coming up every day, but lord is way down." Texas Sif lings. When you aro sick it comes easy to promise all sorts of reformations; but when you recover, it is just as easy to forget them. As a rule, the flower of the family does nothing toward providing; the ditUr bread,
.fl,133,4t3,112 8,9X1, I
Total ria,Sls,'.h7 DEBT DKABING SO INTFREST, Old demand aud legal tender notes. t310.7:i8.3,U Certificates of deposit 7.14-i.O.M Gold certilieates 8,211U Silver ccrtif eatca 10J,iWO,tWJ Fractional ourroucy Cess 8,375,934 estimated as lost or destroyed) . . . G,95'l,702 Principal 54'.i,433,a TOTAL DEBT'. Prinoipal $1,713,193,1 9 Interest, , , ,n,'3)
Total ,1,724.119,403 Lcfia cash items available for reduction of the debt Sil7,-28 1,313 Less reserve held for redemption ot U. a notes 100,000,000
Total.
$U7,2tiH,tl3
Total debt less available cash items? 1. 1 J7, 131 ,U7 Net cash in tho Treasury W,T.-);,m9
Debt leas cosh In Treasury Nov. 1, 18SB A.Ui,3.T.9T Debt leaa cash in Treasury Oct. 1.
1886 1,307,549,507
Decrease of debt during the month. 13,301,019 0A8H1S TBI! TIIEA80B AVAILABLE FOH INDUCTION OF PUBLIC DEBT. Gold held for gold certificates actually outstanding 88,294,9j Silver held for silver certificates ac
tually outMtandiug. . 100,306, '00
uuira iwm jor enruncates or deposit actually outs':andlnn 7,140,00a Caab held fcr matured dabfc uhI it,.
terost unpaid 21,542.4 9
cnwuimsi currency 4,ua;
Total available for reduction of tho Mat BKSEIl'T. FUND. Held for redemption ol V. S. note, acta Jan. 14, 1875, tad July 12, 1S82. Unavailable for reduction of' 'the debt Fractional silver ooin Minor coln............,..i..........
$217,288,315
fl00,000,0(k
J2:
,'033S
215,121
$20.33.;, 7
SM09,7lSO 62,763,199
? otal Certificates held a cask Mot cash balance on hand. Total cash in Treasury aa shown bv
the Treasurer'a general account. . S451,06S,03J Tho Government re.-t ipts daring tho flrat four
niuiium oi tuo present iscci year ended Oct. 30 wero S127.8M 377, botag $14,1(18,891 in excosa ol the receipts during the cor oapomli g peii. d ol lost year. Tho expedi tores during the same period of 18H0wore SBi 254,035, being 811,918,451 leas than the expenditures during the same
yurwu ui latti. year. GEN3EAL.
-President Cleveland has selected Thursday, November 25, as a day of national prayer aud thanksgiving. Tie official proclamation
reads as follows:
It haa lon.2 been the c ustom of tho people ol the United States, on a dav in each vkat b.
pecinllyset apart for thJt purpose by their cl.if executive. o acknowltrdco tho cooducsa and
mercy of io;l and invok) His continued cave uud
protection. In oliservnnoo of such custom I, Orover Clove, land, President of the I'nited States, do horeby designate and gpt auart Thursdnv. tho 25th dn.v
of November, Instant, to be observed and kept
m ruijr ui luaunsuiviiit; mm prayer, (in that day let all our ucoiilo foroeo their ac
customed enjoyments aud uf-aomblo in their
umiui piacca oi wor.ni to give tnouM to tuo link r of the universe ior our eon. in :i en v.
merit ot the blessing .' a frtv jo.ermn. nt ror
u rcBBwiu or nusin S3 prosper.! tiir -i;-ji;;.t our I.iud, for tho return which lias" rewarded he labor of those wh3 till tho soil, and for ur pr.)'ji'es ns a i eoplo i:i all tli-1 main b n nt n ,re:;t. And while we i-ontcmpbitr the in -::te power of Ge l in earthquake, flood, and s. r:n.
l.t tho (ratefnl uearss of thoao v ho have beon shielded from harm ttroigh His niorcy lie turned in sympathy and
niij.iiivna uiHKra H1U83 WHO UttVO KUIK l'OU thiOU'.'h His visitations. Let us uls,. in
the uiHat of our thnntsgivlng, romcmbe.' ha poor and n ody with oheerful gifts and alms, so that onr service may, bv deeds of charity, bo made acceptable in ths light of tho Lord. In witness whereof I have hereunto set my
-:"- vmisvu mo netu or ma umteu bta&es to bo ullixod.
Pono at the city of Washington this I t day of November in the year of our Lord one th mo&tid eilit hundred and Uiihty-six ant ol the independence of th Uniti.a States of America
mo ono iiuiKireatu and woventh. By the Prraidvut: aauvr.n Cr.ivmsa T. F. Havaki), Beciet'iry of State.
Lieut. Cordon, of the t)om n:m ex 1 ivi:ij
steamer Alert, report that Hml'u ia Hay is
navigable for tho months of August and -p-
tcmlKT only. A syiid o.ite of Now Yorkers is a'to npt a
to olitim a lease of the oniiro Cberoicei -trip.
in Iml an Territory, for grazing pnrp iis l'i e.-dde;it (Movoland has given pub'ie no tic tiiat until ("ongrcw meets ho on i sob ir
v'h tor. exempt upon a.iinal public buiues
of importance, not e i-iiKOt.'l with (.111", sotking. CASUALTIES. - The extensive wnrlo id' th - Walker Henri.
shoe Company at llaltimero wero destroyed
by Sre, losn, 8K5,0uO; innured. Uy tho explosion of a boiler iu a eotto:
factory at Charleston a colored ilivuiim wa Iitonvlly boiled i:i steam. Tuo Arkeruiau Motol, at Loogootoe, Indiana, was destroyed by fiiu 'I hi ee guests per ished in tlm names two of them bo ny John C. dates itnd Michael Tracy, who had just been elected Treasurer and Auditor oi Ala: tin County. T the fiwtojy of libw, Codings Co.,
at Portland, Me., valued at $55,030, was destroyed by flrx
.Iu a sand-pit at Bcranton, Pa., four chil
dren wore smothered to death.
0BIMEI3 AND0EIMINAL8. -It is now claimed that tho amount stolen
from tuo Adams Express Company in Iho robbery tin tho Bt Louis A fc'an Francisco Kail-
road will reach SP.'O.OOO.
(hie Mulligan, a moonshiner, has con
fessed to tho murder of Janics N. Hamilton,
late JJeputy Collector of Internal Ileenue at pUlo Book, Ark.
-A discharged inspector attempted to kill
H. S Seattle, Surveyor of tho Port of Now York, Several shots were fired and Mr. Beattie W;is twice wounded, but not. dangerously.
At Neuvo Laredo, Mexico, Viouto liecen-
Jez Ijoarded a train and killed his wil'o aud step-daughter, who wero going to Monterey.
-James Ilindle, alias MeDonal'!, was. arrett
ed at Minneapolis for passing dangerous cottnterjoit silver dollars, a large amount of which wavf cijHid recently in a cave near Cedar Lake, Iowa. Hindlo has eonfo-s.ul that tho conuterfoiting is being done by an organized gang at Oruala, and al eges that a band had been formed to rob the promiuent banks and busi
ness uouge3 in St. Paul and Minneapolis.
PEOPLE. OF AFFAIRS.
ITEM? Aim TH V.Tl V Quebec special says: The Salvation
Army, ia anticipation of more serious trouble, save adjourned their meetings.
it appears that the disturbance of the other
night was of a inoro serious character than reported. After the meeting was over Hev.
Mr. Mtobo en ilea tor three cheers tor the Mayor, aud they wero given with a will. After leaving the hall tho assemblage kept
up thsir shouting. The police formed into
line, when tie moo assailed them witn stones and otker missiles. Three or four officers had been severely injured when tho order to charge was given. The crowd rallied and charged on the police, who, iiqwerer, acted bravely, the result being scvenil broken bonds for the mob and two arrests.
A body was found in the roadside near
Winchester, Ohio, which proved to be that of V''- J. Ellison, a farmer and school teacher. Ellison lived two miles north of "West I'uiou, and was engaged in teaching school in Scioto County, whither he was Koiug when he met his death. Ho was one of the oldest school teachers in the County,
having taught for tweuty-sevn successive
years, l hero are several cuts nod bruises on tho face and head, which indicate foul piny. He loaves a family in comfortable circumstance.
A wsrATCH from the City of Mexico,
savs: it is announced here that (.ten.
Unrein de La Ceding, the author of the
abortive revolutionary t lan at razaticas,
who was recently captured by Government
troops in the interior, is now on bis way
to the city under a strong guard. 1CI Tieinpo,
a church ni ity paper ol mtiuence, urges
that tho same magnanimity be displayed toward him as the Queen of Spain recently
Bhowed in tho case oi tuo rebel Uen.
Viiacampas.
Mamovs, the Apache chief, on his way
to Florida under custody of a detachment of co'.cred troops, altempsed to escape by
locking the door of the closet, breaking the glass out of the window and jumping
Ironi the train wnue going tony miles un hour. The train was stopped and backed un an 1 Mangus was found insensible with
Mbrcis broken. He Hevtvcd after get
ting itt the car and made a desperate struggle but was finally seemed by winding
the beucord alt the way up ms tegs ana
body.
William Cramp & Sons have made an
arrangement to construct for the Govern
menl a dvnnmito eun cruiser which will
be cajiable of making twenty knots an hour and of firing a 200-iound dynamite shell
every two minutes. The vessel is to cost
not more thon $35l,U0!.
Thiktv-sevex Apache Indian children
have arrived at the Indian training-school
at Carlisle, l'a. They wore brought from Fort Marion, Fla., and are of the Apache band captured by Gen. Miles in tho fat West, They will remain at the school
until thev have eoinpiotea use ruu courses.
Joseph Laxuehb, a little 0-year-old bey living at lirookline, Mass., was attacked end terribly mangled by four dogs with which he was playing. One of the dous made a slicrhl wound on the wrist of
the boy, so that it began to bleed. The sight of blood aroused the ferocity of the four ausmtds, which sprang upon their little pla fellow and almost tore hiul to pieces before he could be rescued. It is
aouuuui it lie win recuiur Is the superior criminal court at Lowell, Mass.. Marv J. Davis, the 11-year-old col
ored girl who attempted to poison a family in Wilmington, last summer, was sen
tenced to seven years imprisonment.
A special from Morrow, Ohio, says the
death of Mrs. Green, at first supposed to
be faiicido, is now thought to be murder. Sirs. re.jn is the wife of Jim Green, who
four year! ago killed Father Donahue, a Catholic piiest, at Morrow, Ohio, and on trial was acquitted. Since then he and his wife have been almost outcasts and have frequently quarreled. Mrs. Green was found wila her throat cut and a pruning knife by Le:r side. Her husband was arrested in Buspicion of having murdered
tier. The New York Daitu CommiTrial-liuUe
tin estimates the loss by fire in tho United F-tales and Canada' for October at $12,00(1,0'K), which :is 50 per cent, more than the average October fire losses during the post ten t ears. This niake3 $95,0U!,000 as tho
fire waste for the leu mouths of lb(.
THE MARKETS. HEW YOBK. IlBEVES St-SO S-73 n,.m, - 4.00 ( 5.75
WuKAr So! 1 White Si .85 !j No. 2 Bed 6 C0BS-N0V2...: .J4
OATS-WhitC . Pork New Aless W.n (3U.W CHICAOO. Beeves Choice to PrimoHtoers S.00 S.a GokI Shipping. jj.00 f i.M Co: union... 3-00 ( 3.50 Hoas Shipi) tin,' Grades 8-5S v,,.- ui.V s.,rinri 4.00 c4 4.50
Wheat- Na. t Ked ..14 CoN -Xo. IS 30 3 .!4 Oats -vo.3 8 5 -54
BuTTEB-Clwh'o Creamery S -2 Pino Dairy 10 .28 Wotbs (full 'mum Olieddar.. .U'-Wi .14
Full Cream, new 12 w .12'4
Egos Fresh nli&
Potatoes doles, porbn u ' Pobk-Mo. 9-00 9-25 MILWAUkKK. WnviT- f'aul. 71 & .72
Cokn-No. VJ.. . .
CUT -No. it RrK-No.l -saJa
PoIUC-Sfoss Hv.m
TOLEDO. Wheat - No 2 7? 9 -78 CrSSCash f -S'4 Oats-So. 2. 26 .87 DETROIT. Deep Cattle .i & Hogs 3.M $ -M KiniEP 8.M & 4 81 Wheat Mlnhigan Bod 77 .TiiJ Cobn-No a...? 88 & .89 Oats -No. 2 White .30 .3014 BT. LOUIS. Wheat-No. 2 .71 & .75 Coitsr -Mixed W .S DATs-Mixed 2 -J4 Poiik- New Mess 9.23 i5 0.TS CINCINNATI. Wheat No. 2 lied 70 ( .70H Cons-No.. 80!ssS Oats-No. 2 S -28 Ponii- Mesa V.-2S mQ.73 Live HotiS 3.7S & 4.23 BUPffAIiO. M . , Wheat-No. 1 !Iard .83 .81 Cons--No. 2 Yellow & .43 Cattle .S3 & fl.20 tNIUANAPOWS. Peiw CA-1'n.E 3.2a isS 1.0) Himib 3-SO 1.25 fiHBKP 8.-W 1.00 Wheat No .2 Bed 73 .71 C'.utN -No. 2 t . ,3ljj Oats 23 i .20 EAST mukiity. CAT-lUi- Post 1.2? 4.W t'liir :i.73 i' 4.2J Co iimon 3.03 i'. 3.73 Hoas 4.23 (fl. 4.73 gBEEP , 8.50 w 4,90
Killers or tho Russian Kmpire. The Emperor of Russia is tho central figure in the negotiations and intrigues now in progress in Europe, and in which such
Immense possibilities of war and bloodshed are involved. Alexander III. is a Bomanoff, this being tho name of tho family whose lepresentatives have been the reign
ing power iu Eiissin since the early part of tho seventeenth century, and have indeed
been the most conspicuous rulers of Russia Kince tho Tartar invasion. The first of the Romanoff dynasty Was Michael Fedoroviteh,
Who was the graiKltatner ot l'eter tuo
Great, one of the most prominent figure in the world's history. The family also uumbered among its members Alexander I., who was the first to break the power of Napoleon, and followed the latter to Paris.
Upon the monument on tue oatue-neia oi Borodino is the following inscription: "Napoleon entered Moscow 1812, Alexander entered Paris 1814. " Alexander III., the present Emperor and Autocrat of all the Russian, succeeded to the throne after the murder of his father by Nihilist conspirators, March 13, 1881. Alexander III. was born March 10, 1845, and since his elevation to the throne,' has seldom appeared in nublio. but has lived in the closest retire
ment nt Gatehina. He w.;s crowned at
Moscow. Mav 27, 1883, amid great pomp
and splendor, and the coronation exercises were chronicled even to the slightest details by the newspapers at the time. He is noted for his sympathy with the old Russian party who are prejudiced against all foreigners. His younger brother, the Grand Duke Alexis, visited the United States in 1871, and waa received with the greatest eclat.
IN A FIERY TRAP. Appalling Accident Hear Bio, Wis., on the Milwaukee and 8b Paul Bail way. From Ten to Twenty-six Persons Burn to Dea th in a Flaming Passenger Coach.
The Czarina of Russia, Marie Feodorovnn (formerly Mary Sophia Prederica Dagmar', is the daughter of Christian IX. and Queen .Louisa of Denmark. She was marrifd to Alexander III. in the year 1868. Her father, Christian IX., in seeking Una alliance for his daughter Mario Feodorovna, knew that he was securing her the position of reisning over the largest empire in ihe whole world, European Russia alone comprising a vast area, w-ithout taking in Asiatic Russia, which itself comprises several immense domains and provinces, including Siberia. Three children have been the result of this marriage between Alexander and the Empress, all of th m being sons. The Grand Duke Nicholas Alexaudrovitch, who was born on May 18, 1868, is heir apparent to the ctown and throne. He is in very delicate health, and fears nre entertained as to his ever living to become the successor to the throne.
The Minister to Colombia. The appointment of Dabney H. Maury to bo United States Envoy and Minister Plenipotentiary to the United States of Colombia was announced by the President to the Senate during the latter part of the last session. Tho Senate failed to act upon his confirmation, the matter going over till , Use next meeting of tho body. The country
Fearful Sufferings and Shrieks of the Victims Bishop Whipple's Escape Harrowing Detail. (Milwaukee telegram. ' Tho most fcppalling railroad disaster that ha ever occurred in Wisconsin resulted from ths collision shortly after midnight ot a passenger train on th Chicago, Milwaukee and St Paul Hallrood and a freight train at Bio, a small i tat ion fifteen miles this side of Portage and eventy-nve miles from Mirwiukee. By the coimitAi it is believed ihat twenty-six were either crushed or burned to death, while a number ot others were injured. Eleven charred corpses have been taken from the wreck already. the passenger train was a lightning express rom Chicago for St. Paul, with baggage and mail cars, one day coach, and three sleepers. At Bio two freight trains were side-tracked to allow the express to pass. One of them had just drawn onto the siding whan the expresaoame thundering down upon it. Either through negligence or bocause there waa not time to close It, tie switch was left open and the passenger train, rushing at the rata of forty-live miles an hour, dashed into it and at onee left the rails. The lidlngs are In a out where the road curves so that the switch-light cannot be seen from the Bast until u train is within a few rods, so the engineer ot ttie limited could not see the swltohIlght was turned wrong until too lata to atop. The engine left the track, ran a short distance, and brought up against tho side of tho cut, toppling over Tho baggage and express cars and the day coach followed. The sleepers did not leave tho truck. The persons in the coach were imprisoned by tho tolescoping of the oar. Fire broke out In the wreck and rapidly spread through the debris. Of all those thus caught in the awful trap all but two chllilrea perished those who were not killed at once by the collision dying a more horrible death by Are. The wretched people, shrieking for aid, made desperate efforts to escape the tortare of tho dames, but In vain. Mrs. C. B. Soberer of Winona, handed her children to a brakeman througn a window and then tell a victim to tho Aery destroyer. The names ot the dead so liar as known are :
Mrs. C. It. Scherer, of Winona, tunn. Mrs. Boston Johns, ot Winona, Minn,, lbs. Bcheror's mother-in-law. Louis Brinker, of Columbus, Wis. Emil Woltersdorf. of Columbus, WU. Dibble, a traveling man. Mrs. L. Lowry, of Milwaukee, Wallaoe istuart, of Columbus, Wis., aged 32; on his way to Idaho. In the pocket of ono dead mas taken from the wreck wa an envelope addressed, "J. Tourin Lincoln, No. a Forty-ninth street, Chicago, HI." One of tho victims Is believed to be Mrs. George A. S'.arr, ot Chicago. Her iaentlty is, however, uncertain. Two other bodies are those ot Sisters of Chanty, ono of whom Is believed to be Mnt.liAr Aliviii. suDeriorof a convent at Winona.
Minn., who 'aad been In Milwaukee establishing
a convent. The injured are: Cnnduetor Lucius Searle. of Milwaukee.
badly hurt about cheat, but probably not fa-
Wodo Clark, of Oconomowoo, baggageman, leg broken. , , , V. . . r. iu. . in r .. 1 1. .......... m,l
oago, broke a arm and wrist, face cut badly by Hrnlrim miuu fcftAlefl.
Jamos Phillips, brakeman, cut badly about the head. . . . Thomas Little, of Portage, engineer, cut about
tnetace No passe ngers In any pf the sleepers were killed. Mm. Soberer, whose children were res.
i'iimI hv n. hrakeman from tho burnlnE car. waa
pinned down by a seat, and could not follow her
utxie ones torougn cue open vuiuuw. raw already enveloped by names. The hands of the man who rescued the children were badly
burned. Conductor Searle. of the nassenoar train, says
that the occupants of the car where tho frightful incineration occurred Included a woman
with a lituo girl oi aoout e years, anomer u.halred woman with a babe less than a year old, a blonde woman of 30, who seemed to be a companion of the former, both bound for St. Paul, lsiH tm fitatsni of Charltv traveling onla nass.
He can recall no description of any others, but
says, there were not to exceed urteen aitogemer.
Ho has lost nis ucKera, aim bo moto us uu w ord. Tho burning of the baggage also hinders i.a !rlantlfl,.ntinii nf the cornses.
District Attorney Armstrong, assisted by Coronor Allen and a lorce of men, has been at
work all day at the rums or cne wrecaeu train, hunting for the remains of the dead or to find some clew to Identify those who perished. Up . (.nr., tn.niilit tbnv h&va succeeded in
raking out trunks and other fragments sufficient to make up eleven bodies. All the bodies wero burned beyond recognition, and it will be days before the names of all the victims are known Conductor Bankey, of the freight train, who fled to the woods immediately after the catastrophe occurred, has been found wandering around in a raving condition. He Is likely to
become a hopeless maniac, on,., ham nt thn cntARtrnnha was the ensineer.
who, in th face of seeming death, held his hand on the throttle, and thus saved the lives 01 all the passengers In the sleeper. Then, when the 'train stopped, he crawled out from beneath hie engine, bleeding, and alarmed tho
Sleepers ot cne danger rroui uru. Vvnm nil nennnnta there must nave been a
frightful icsne in the car in which the futilities occurred. The pressure caused the coach to as-
,imn the, nutrition of the letter A. "Lauktis were
broken and the stove ororturwd, scattering tire and flames in ali directions through tho coach. Mangled and bleeding, nearly all the passengers wero pinned securely by broken scats, laauy heaped ono upon tho other. Their agonized shrieks told the story of fractured limbs, to which was added the horror of cremation. Itia
positive taut only tnreo escapea. v-nrie n. Kmith is a medical strident ot Chioago. His mranti iw,i in Charles Vitf. Iowa. Mrs. Soher-
ar's two children, whom she reached out of a window a tho Homes surrounded her, are four
years and eight raontus out, respectively. AU tho coaches and cars were burned exoopt the last sleepor, "N'ashota," The trainmen, fix. two frnteht eijeineers. worked vicor-
ously to K8.VO the sleepers by pulling them out
ironi tue uamee, uuv won iwoiwwua duvu i, thAr ...mid nnlv imcoirolo the rear coach.
Mail Agent John Beach, of Vlatnflold, with his
four assistants, anccoouou m itaviug mnii l.vthniwinir it outside and drawing it up
thfl banks from the flames. About sixty sacks of paper mail for Minnesota and Dakota wero destroyed. The men escaped themselves with . . . Lml... TO... InM fe, .1im ra.ilmH
UUU1BIUUB wwif 9. - -
company is placed at $30,000.
BUKXEU IN THEIR BEDS.
INDIANA. STATE
-A1t Hoard and Jcfhn Paxton. i
boye and rivals in tore flood Jata Jfjpjj
Mew Frankfort. Their itMSMH tl
bv. coino to school. JfoariT t&rew i
to her, and P niton, enraged, imOclMd -
In the head with a stick, naraa
MVnll ll,.n intwJ ilia 1 V 1
Faxton seemed a madman ana mmmt,
tared rusnea to me wooas, wwivuig
hands and shrieking. Hoatd wtU i
li,H .ru BAna of mnvminaiitL '. fitnnArat
Soott County. n-ml. $S;ffPgMi
at the bedside of her dylrg loyer. .v -. 4'J
The disease whieh has hrieri SO'
amonc the hotra in Benton Cotintt, i
lieved by a great many oe the Jarssets i a kind of throat trouble which reMen
diphtheria atnooc cUTdteB. H Wmf
does in no particular
symptoms of cholera. The 'kfamiUQm
I
dyina from the malignant mayr :wss tjSA ever it may be. The lmMgm)iam connty will teach many .iSimmmmgi t ' i, law. An effort will be made to nive tt J.
i . e a, : L . InJ , vr' -
A Hvervman of Kukbmo. il
im, lost a valnable toamot l!-iM4 bis livery stable by MritoiMI anneariuD individnaL whtt jiever . retmwd. fgifc.
BecenUy he m 3$ty.fL0&f J
ation that the stock was held '' OsninOlvi jffj
Kas., having been found tohi Jilskfl
of one A. H. Hoff, who is accose .ft -Iff,
me stolen everyining iroin wa tntjow . '
IHHII1 L(7 Mi IIBIKUfe . ..... mm .SHiSMimi . r m
Kansas for bis crimes.
A Bloomingdale doetior
water from ninning or fillrittg
i DHL me wuii in uiwni w m.ww sn
diameter than is needed, beinniacM - , i J.. ' ' ' StAV
sonace ana continuum uuwn i . iiajiMi,i i
tance into the bine clay. The weUwvojiSiS-)i
walled up, and the Bpaoe between tWSS.g;
and the earth filled in with aeonrto.msaf & at clean emivel and cement. thS'.'.Bint.i. iyti
ing any water from leaking In Ho
nate the water. - 'MZ"
. , - .'Jiii-lifiitSac-i:
x ne wooos in toe vuuuny .oj.
are on fire, the flames swoonhut'
before them. The famnrshs no nt avtitietnishinD' 0M flaiiisa. ajntd iko
of dollars' worth of nrooeW. JtSiH
neen aesiroyeou ah . wuto, v
worked on a farm and- slept in v
it is feared he has beta $mpinfema; A serious accident ooiasstMttJit
a saw-mui m lnaepenoencnkt. fiv-wheel in ihe erLcine-ioom I
in motion, and tore one entt oc tne
out. Several men lis.'-.fMgiw93CrU
their lives, yet no one was hurt. -Wlrl - IV. in i.i (k.ilhaA.rku -u
RUieer 111c umu wipuun w ?wm
been defecUve for some eme,imni
een cwiBiueRu wwhbwm AVhile working on s bam
south of Franldin, a
oronnd and reeeiyed hMMHsiM;
thouirbt fatal. His
which divided Us left
scalp, and fro tared his brain to ooze from ttfe
.Mn,.n .tut AMWriff
-A very reunwiuMuo
to which Mr. Maury is accredited is a republic in tho northwestern part of South America, and consists of nine Slates. It is through the territory of this republfo that the grent Punuma t'anal is to run. Mr. Maury's official residence will be nt Bogota, the capital, a fine city of a hundred thousand inhabitants. GUILELESS SAVAUKS.
Where Afrie's Sunny Fountalnii Roll Dirn the CSohlen Stuid, London oablegraui.l Details havo Veen received of the massacre of native Christians of Uganda, Africa, by tho order of King Mwanga. Tho massuere began in June, and was directly due to the refusal of a Christian lad acting as the king's page to commit a came. Many ChrisUnns wore tortured, mutilated, and speared, and thirty-two were burnt alive together. The appeals of the missi maries for a cessation of the atrocities were unavailing. The fate of these unfortunates did not servo to frighten candidates for baptism, and within a week after the massacre many natives were baptized at their own desire, leaflets containing extracts from tho Scripture, prayers. ai:d hymns in the I'gaudn language are freely bought by tho iieople, although their possession involves danger of punishment. 'Die diary of Uisliop linimingtttii, who wiw put to death by ihe King, will soon be published in London, It i-i a thrilliut; und paibotio nirrauva of his Mperieuepg ill Uganda up to the day of his death.
Sight Ferions Perish in Kentucky log
Cabin. (IxjutnvtUe dispatch.
A Tinu'U special gives details of the hor
rible burning of eight people in a log cabin
near Plat Hook, Knox County, Kentucky.
The house was in an open field, a mile from any other residence, and the Are was not discovered until the day after the house had burned up with its inmates. Those
who lost their lives wore: Mrs. Pone, agod 33 years.
Five oh ildren, the eldest 9 years old, and
she youngest lo months. Mary C vrnes, aged 18 years. T.izxie Adams, aired 13 vears.
The house was a log one, one-and-a-half stories high, with entrance at one door. It was composed of two rooms, one of whioh
was used ov the lamuy as a Kttonen, wtters it is supposed tho fire originated.
The family had all retired to the other room, audi, shutting the door, had gone to sleep, only to be awakened, probably, by falling timbers, when it was too late to escape. Vrom tiie position of tho remains after the fire had died out it seems that one had reached the door and fallen back into tho
fire. Nobi where the window haa been tins
bodv of tue mother was ronnd, by her sldf.
her four helpless children, while the babe lav ncrosB her breast. Remnants of bed-
olothing encircled all, indicating that the mother had fought the flames bravely in
the vain ettortS to save the lives of herself
and children. Nothing was found of any
of the bodies except a few of toe bones and nol.no Tiiat v.ir carefiillv nlaced in a
box and brought to Williamsburg and
buried, all m one grave. William Pone, tho terribly afliictod fath
r, is one of the bett-known men on tho river, connected with the log business. He is about sixty-flve years of age. Business has not prospered with him for some years past, and he was compelled to retire from a more comfortable home and seek shelter
for his family where best it could be found, until drairn to the lonely spot where scarce.
ly anyone passed. H is almost erased
wungns-
gftaUemsn, anaJ;-,i
living in liawson wnmtyswp
ofCorydon. Isaiah MitchewitMte
name, ana ne is we imwiw
healthv children, seven of
larly licensed sshool teachers.,
father is a hale old
practicing physician O?
ing.
One day recently tho
principal merchant WasOlStes..;
IBCA.CU UJ It VMiXOWtmxmm .Wfj ,
wno mane vigunnoi . vy
and shoulders. Thesduol-ms
fore the Sauire. mifa-msM)tm&BmVi&&
pleaded guUty to an assault, was fined tffig&J
and costs, and paid it vim wwmgpr
side of the road nearPikoe iaJ?r5;? County, with his Omwm!TJmW&eS
be said he was tiled eiMkSlSSi
80 years of age. It is fnl nnrsinc he may recover. bovOw'WS:
his age, chances are against hinu
, iA young im m.ymmmmmwue
J t v8 v . - Ship, Madison County, took a
arsenic ana veneaa
L-oidal intent. He?:
come unbalanced 0.1b
aud while under I
m-rA mftkinfrfnni
A Dike bridne two mils BOCthlol
erty was tue scene or a irippuw
recently, it gavewaywun ; wacon. Tho fall was fifteea
driver had an arm and leg )
badlv crashed alnt the
The two horses 'nerekflled. -
A voung lady ol Terre. '
tried to hurrv the DrooeKS Of
nor l.v the use of oil fat the StOV.a
the injuries she then Mtmilff.
iM.mf ami her nlouiinir canffnt BMcv r
suffered severely from tho Hiqt
dent nnlil her death. x-.
Thieves entered the mhMt ii
at Elwood, ana roooea tnonflnoM
: t . rinrtnmii AtmtnmMimiiMr
VUK.uk - ... vsvf "MilfME-" y-"
clot hlBg to a consiaeraoie -wmmmm&.j- ?
Wabash Connty bormto ifHs
ot S9,00 were dtsposea or w. Kfrnw.i;
Co.. of Toledo, at a 'MMHllisX 1WmWBkC
There were eight Woaor ,i
Kedkey postomce was uqrgisM.om ..i ,1.. I'sm.ll knnWAi'Af 3
Bignv rcwvj . w?- -?tJ"Hir' t.Von. The DMtmstee.jhu. .elannsi i
and registered letters 6rto4Abw,"p
mitled suicide by Wowing, of J3! his head with a ehOtKah, M
dustrious young man, mm mmvm . UfJ it MM ttunkiuM''l ViSCT
act WWI Hiwwww -wj'-nw. -j f . . . . .A. jlu. .V
bronchi on ov rBwam vtuvwr, ,
-According to ir i.w; tnem. . i
issioners of the new mwKMMwm? Jq
missioners
. . . a 4W. I iu4whi
$1,71,730.3. H itym$0jL$m
oe retvuy wwr 1
General Assembly moessv,. i;';, A new mVmmfmff0
at 1-K.uiienew. - -3 i4;
Welt Ko. , w ; uimiiw
drilled to a depth of l.flCO i
.n nf (Mil waa strink.' ln onaa. 'f
i h. RnBelent tc. Biirvliaoa 9-
With gas,
One night rS
Is
a. l -v , CrS.
1
Fanl wcitt to Ma ba) ns the building he Was kjriCS'dwbytir7f
men, ana roowu nrfw.wrwwi
watch. . vt2 rjffmm The SalvaUoa Arinhar' nstWittsfliatVa
Itself in MMMifK '-ZTSSmmWkW
