Bloomington Progress, Volume 21, Number 8, Bloomington, Monroe County, 20 April 1887 — Page 1
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Republican Progress.
I-
r
HSTAHUSHKD A. D. 1835.
fUBHSEED EVERY WEDNESDAY
HLOOMKSGTON. 1ND.
:m(W)(.' "t-rograa Bloc," SStrrri ami CtMeQ Avmue.
ty
A REPUBIIOiN PAPER DEYOTED TO THE ADVANCEMENT OF THE LOCAL INTERESTS OF MONKOK COUNT.
ESTABLISHED A. D. 1835.
O
mo ft hississipp
BAIliWAY. -
BOM Daily Trains (ech way) let wen : CINCINNATI AND ST. LOUIS. i Solid Daily Train (each way) between I CINCINNATI AND LOUISVILLE. I Solid Daily Traim (each way) between i ST. LOVIS AND LOUISVILLE.
AUT
Chaacre wf Can for
jFirrf daw, Second Clan and Emigrant IPaesengert, all carried en Fast Express Train, consisting of Palace Keeping Cart, tUgani Pmrlor Coaches and comfortable Day Coaches, all nimuw THROUGH WITBOVT CHAN&E. , Only 10 Honrs Time jBWwem Cincinnati and St. Lam, r 8k
But Four Hours V-Bctte Gneinnmti and LotrinW. brhe Okie) . Mlanlsalppt R'way i is ike only Line beftocen B. Ironist and Oineinnivtl Knder one management, running all ita sin through "SOLID," and in consejquence is the only recognized list olaaa route between those cities, its iEasy Grades, Its Splendid Motivs Power, Steel Rails, Straight Track, and Solid Road Bed fcable the 0. 4k M. to make faster avee age time than any other Western Road. for' Tickets via O. M. R'y.-t For sale by Agents of connecting lines East, West, North and South. W. W. PEABODY. President and Gen. HVt JOHN F. BARNARD, 6al Pass. Agi. C1NC1HKATI. OHIO.
NEWS CONDENSED,
Conelse Reeord of the Week.
EASTERN. Columbia College has just celebrated
its lO.'ih anniversary.
At a crossing near 'Waverly, N. x.,
J, P. Taylor, aged 60, liis wife, and his li-year old son were instantly killed by a train.
Secretary Edge, of the Pennsylvania
State Board of Agriculture, killed five cattle
infected with plenro-pneumonia on the farm of John Frye, in Manor Townsh'n,
Because of the low stage of water
and the scarcity of boats, work in the mines
between XcKoosport and Brownsville, Fa., is
suspended. Six millions bushels of ooal are ready for shipment. High railway rates havo crippled the trade.
The continued heavy importations of
ironandsteelprompSatradojournvlof rhil-
adelphia to allege that there are undervaluationa in the Custom House at New York.
Mrs. Sarah E. Howe, of Boston, -who is once imprisoned for swindling women by
a woman's-bank scheme, and who rc-ostab-iiglied her bank on being released from prison,
fled with 50,000 intrusted to her. A war
rant has been issued for her arrest
sjwMsaaTicwcasotiHa
ns
XnaTunWozSxoi TirVl yr I SkatrXonartr t mXSkjfjJC SakSnar Sham TwffLiCLIndianapolis SH Ciaeuiiati g
PULLMAN SWSEPIHG CARS
BXEGAHT PARtOR CARS
Tickets Sold and Baggage
Checked to Destination.
1 Time TbT it yog want to be
a an naM4emmHMa
E. O. HcCormlCfc. Gn Pas,.4gt, ?-, MS, DearberaSt. CHICAGO.
ORCHARD HOUSE!
S. M. Orchard & Son PROPRIETORS.
W MrenwUU temnt emnmmemmUSU
Resident Dentist.
Dr. J- W.
CRAIN.
Office in the New Block, op-stairs, over
Cole's Book Store. Ail work warrants.
-v -w -rr- r -r ih X y""V
T TTATnvT Twm AMA wlTllNESriAY APRTT, 20. 1887. MW SEK1M-VUL. AA1 -iNU. e.
J3JLAVlMAjrXVi.-l, JL'AiXii xi, ' " " '
LINCOLN'S BODY,
RepuMican
A VALUABLE ADYEBTISIIG
Circulates Among the Best Monroe Counig,
And is Road by Every
WSSTEBH.
9bhn J. McGrath & Co. 'a great wall-
1886; of wines from 4,800,000 gallons to 33,000,000; malt liquors from 23,000,000 gaUons to &1'2,0JO,Oj0. An elaborate statement prepared by Mr. P. N. Barrett by request of the chief of the bureau shows that the present aterage expenditure in this country per annum, for malt and spirituous liquors: and beer at rot nil is 8700,000,000. The drinking population is ostuuated to be (in 1SSB) 14,925,417, making the average expenditure per capita 945.00. The wholesale cost of this liquor for which the retailer recoivoa 8700,-
000,000 is not more than S:ili0, 000,000. During the period from 1882 to 1888, inclusive, the consumption of eoffoo rose front &3 pounds per capita to ttll pounds, while the consumption of spirits and wine was deoreased, and that of boor increased,
POLITICAL.
The Legislature of Khode Island comprises fifty-six Democrats and forty-six Republicans. A Providence telegram says: Tho Democrats curried the new eloctions for fionators ctml Reprt'sontativps in Nowjort and East Ureouwieh Saturday, and tuo Kcpublicana secured one member Vu Warwiok. Too LeRi laturo now stands: lSenate Kepubllcans, 19; Democrats, 15 ; no eleotkm, 2. House Kepublionna, !i8; Democrats, 41; no election. 3. On joint ballot Uepnblicans, 47; Democrats, 68; no olectlon, 5. The Iiemocrats havo alroady ono more than onongb. memlwrs to elect thoir candiaates fcr Liontonant-Gorornor, Secretary of State, Sheriffs. State Auditor, District Judges, etc. An Anti-Prohibition State Convention wiU bo held at Dallas, Texas, May 4.
The Illinois House of Bepresenta-
paper establishment on Wabash avenue, Chi- jjyea i,a8 passed a bill prohibiting pool-selling
Writ VbJiare Hfn to Rnla,
Not many years ago a prominent
imjaif who afterward became Bishop, told me at the dinner-table of
zentleman. after the ladies hod retired;
an incident equally illustrative of the perils' of New York and of the simplicity of the man. He was walking through a side street sot very far from his par-
tonage, when, he observed a gill at the sidewalk crying. She seemed to be only about 12 yeais old, and the good
rtor felt moved to inquire what might her loss or irrief. "Oh " said the
irirl. "I have been looking to find
minister who will go and Bee my mother.
She is poor, and none of these rich
ministers will so to see her." "I
minister," said the rector; "where is
vanr mother?" He took the child'
hand, and it hardly occurred to him as he went along the pavement that some individual perliara some policeman
noted him particularly in his careful and almost clerical dress accompanying a child evidently far beneath his own
station.- He went along the street, de
sceaded to Third Avenue and continned
beyond it. and the child turned into
house, going: through a LalL The minister went up one flight of stairs and the girl beckoned him further on. Something he saw or felt or had reflected caused him to pause. He now looked at the child's face again and saw a diftereiit light in it from what had appeared npon the streets. A feeling of fear took possession of him and he said: "I won't go up- there without some person I know-to accompany me." The child turned, and, running down a few steps, seized him said : "If you don't give me money I'll have you arrested for following me home." He saw in a moment the situation he was in liable to be paraded in every newspaper in the town next day for indulgences he had never conceived, his motives misconstrued, his family and congregation scandalised. At that moment he saw the bright badge of a policeman come up the ball, and supposed himself to be already in the meshes of the law. But the man spoke to him by name, told him that he had followed him under the belief that he was deceived, and thereupon arrested the girl and her mother, who followed that line of business and kept respectable men spotted, so to speak, so as the better to decoy them. In one of Ford's or Beaumont's plays occurs this very scene, dated back to the commencement of toe seventeenth century, where lewd family maintain a ehild no better than themselves to be sold to men for the purpose of involving them with ruin or black-mafl. Oath, in OmcmnaH Ennuirer.
The best nles to form aman'schar-
atr are to talk little, to hear much.
to reflect atone upon what nas passed m
eago, has been entirely aosiroyuu uj The stock and fixtures are a total loss, and
only the front of the building was saved m
badly damaged condition, ino loss on
stock and fixtures is about 8auu,wn, wiiho the loss on the building is placed at 81CO,CO0.
A vhrjlance committee from Brown
Comity, Nebraska, overtook two horao-thieves near Sargent, killing one and capturing the other.
Mr, Blaine is gaining strength rap
idly,'' says a telegram of the 14tuinst from Fort Gibson
On a farm near Lima, Ohio, Joseph
Burch lulled his wife with a hammer ana hanged himself by means of bark twisted into a noose.
The wholesale jewelry Una of Clapp
ft Baviea, of Chicago, confessed juagmeui for 137,557. Their assets are intimated at
85,000.
George Werner, teacher of a village
school near Milwaukee pumshad a refractory pupil named Henry Seugbusch by striking his wrists with a ruler, and the boy fell back in his seat unconscious. Supposing that he had fainted the teacher threw two pails of wat:r over him, bat the pupil was deid. Werner
fled, but subsequently gave himself up. Ihe formers of the community had been pursuing
him with threats of lynching, as the boy's
father claimed that his son was eho&ed to death.
The body of President Lincoln, which
has been secreted for eight years, was on the
14th inst. removed to the main chamber in
the monument, together with the body of Mrs. Lincoln, asd deposited in a grave excavated for that purpose near the atom f aroopbagus,
which is snppoeed to have held the body oi toe martyred President A dinpatoh from
Springfield, Bl, says:
Since tho. attempt to steal the hody made iobu years ago it ntis be3n conce ited in a cor
ridor reached only by traversing a winding
passage to which, there was no apparent access, as the entranes to it waa seal.d. When the funeral of Mrs. Lincoln was held ier body was placed in arecoivin vault, and public attention was not attracted to the aubsoiiaont disposition of it Only toe mambars of the Lincoln Onnl nf TTnnnr knaw where the bodies Wol'O
deposited, although the popular impression has been that the body of the 1'residnt was in view of The visitor
n ifaa monument. The vault in
which it has been nlaced was built ior th ut purpose underneath the floor. It is wailed with stone, arched over, and leveled so conform to the floor in tho central wins of tho monums jt. The grave In which the oody was secreted was excavated by members of tho guaid of honor In the stillness of night. Tee atmosphere . that naint waa atidinc. The members of tha
guard bound thesnsolves to secrecy with an
oatn, jsetoro flit, lucuw . uwj " mtmnlnd tho AO An waB ODeUCd &nd tUS body
identified. The hair and whiskers havo falloii
off and the face is very black. The contour is, hnvavar. nnrfftftt and the foes Is l aid to strong
ly resemole that of the bronze statue on the
jnonumons. SOUTHERN.
Heavy rains have fallen in Western Texas, and the confidence of farmers and
stockmen is fully restored.
The gross postal receipts at thirty of
file larger postofiioes in the country for the first three months of the present year, were 4,746,046, an increase of S3S1.18L over the corresponding period last year, or 8.7 per cent The receipts increase and percentage
increase at the principal Western and South
ern cities were: Total
receipts. Increase, ..$359,833 $18,93)
in the State-
The Governor of New York has ve
toed the Crosby liigb-liceiiHe bill
The entire Election Board of a pre
cinct in Jersey City was arrested for tamper-
; with the ballot-boxes. The Michigan House defeated, by a
vote of 5H tails, tho bill conferring suffrage at
municipal elections upon women.
A joint resolution proposing a woman
suffrage constitutional amendment passed the
Pennsylvania Senate.
A Lansing (Mich.) special says that
"a Republican legislative caucus, attended by fifty Legislators, appointed a committee to
draw up a bill establishing these liquor license
fees: For cities with 10,0.0 inhabitants and ovor, $703; under 10,000, $500; incorporated
villasres. 8-100: townships, SS0 So discrim
ination is propo?ed between wine and boer licenses, and no brewer or liquor dealer will bs allowed to sign a bond. After some discus
sion, it was decided that drug stores wishing to sell liquor should pay tho same tax as saloons. A proposition to have the new laws enforced by a State constabulary mot with fa
vor by a majority of the members present"
Chicago St. Louis Cincinnati .. San Francisco. . Pittsburg .: Cleveland Detroit , New Orleans... Louisville Milwaukee..... Kansas City... Indianapolis.... St. Panf. Minneapolis . . . Toledo
222,093
171,04a 136.778 96,110 89,407. 85,055 74,830 . 27,369 68,760 80,897 48,271 01,475. 62,232; . 29.312
7.i
5,703 6,013 11,928 9,984 4,517 4,410 2, (SB 5,032 17,937 S.3UB 10,981 10,888
Per
cent.
9.;i
3.6 ?.4
4.2 14.0
12.7
S.6 6.2 9.9 7.9 28.5 12,3
20.
21.
1.2
modated, and many aro compelled to camp iu
the street
ArohbiBhop Croke and all the priests
of his diooose have signed a memorial pro
testing against the passago of tho now Irish
coercion bill.
Tho Berlin Post charges that the
French cavnlry evolutions at Luaovillo ap
pear to proceed entirely from a wish to ag
gravate and a'.arm Germany
England has assented to the Kussian
demand for that branch of the Oxus now hold
by tho Afghans, in exchange for uicu concessions will be made of territory on tho west
frontier.
The packet steamer Victoria, with
ninety passengers on ooard, ran on tho rocks at Dieppe. France, during a fog. Several of
her passengers attached life-belts to their
bodies, and then jumped overboard and were earned out to soa. Twenty of them wore
drowned; all the others were safely landed.
A commission of Bulgarian officers !
has been purnuttod by Austria to tal;o uiron .u i her lorritory a laro quantity of war material j
from Kruim's ordnance works.
In accordance with the report of Car
dinal Uibbon-, tho congregation of the haereu
Pol Inm) at Home has decided to rucognisi the
Knights of Labor.
GEEONIMO'S BAND.
How They Pass Their Time In Flor
ida Maugus au Intractable Savage
(Fort Tlokens (Fla.) cor. New York TribTrae.
Katohez, the true hereditary chief, is a
fine specimen of ludian nvinhood. over six feet hiah, erect, well-proportioned,
'grave, aud dignified under his ws ight of
30 years. The rest ot the nana treat mm
with pronounced respect. His words are
few, and his disuse oi tnac neroe iignt which beats upon royalty of all grades is
most emphatic.
The Bev. Dr. Alfred Lee, Bishop of
the Protestant Episcopal Dioceso of Delaware,
died at Wilmington, aged 81.
William A. Day, of Champaign, HI
will probably succeed Mr. Maynard as Second
Controller of the Treasury.
At Union City, Tenn., John Thomas, a young married negro, brn tally assaulted a
little colored girt He was anasted and arraigned in a Justice Court to answer the charge.
The negro failed to secure a lawyer, hut m-
trodnced several witnesses in ths vain attemnt to prove an alibi The little victim gave her testimony, which brought tears to the eyei of the many spectators with whom the court
room was densely crowded. An the close of the testimony, and before tho court
could render a verdict, a yell waa heard
and in an instant the officers were overpower
ed. The negro was seized, a rope was placed around hia neck and over a beam ia the courtroom, and a hundred hands drew him to a merited death. Not more than, two minutes were consumed in the act The body hung for one hoar and was then cut down, and a Coroner's Jury retnnrlng a verdict, to tho effect that "deceased came to hia dea .h by hanging at the hands of parties unknown. " It was impossible to find witnesses to twitify as to who they were. WASHINGTON. The' Postmaster1 General and the Superintendent of the railway mail acrvioo left Washington on tho 12th inst on a tour of inspection. They will inquire into the feasibility of establishing at Chicago, St, Louis and Atlanta depots for the distribution of postal cards and stamped envelopes. Thousands of Washington children rolled Easter eggs in the White House gronndi on tbelOih inst, in accordance ijttu an ancient custom, and shook hands with the President. A contract for furnishing steel-gun forgings and armor plates to the amount of 14,512,938, was awarded by Secretary Whitney to the Bethlehem Iron Company, of Pennsylvania. The quai.terly report of the Chief of the Bureau t Statistics shows that tho
I oonnunpuon of distilled spirits,, domestic and
THE IN3US'r.ttIAI. outxoob:
The Junction iron-works at Mingo,
Ohio, shut down because favorable freight
rates could cot be made with tho railroads.
The coal miners at Salem, HL,
struck because refused an advance of wages.
The contractors of Cincinnati con
ceded the demands of the striking carpenters
and set (50 of them at work.
The Knights of Labor have formed a
National District Assembly of Iron and Steel
Workers at Pittsburgh. It is proposed to lo
cate subdistriets at Chicago, New York, Cin
cinnati, and other points.
MISCELLANEOUS.
Theatrical managers have formed a
National Association to protect themselves against the evils threatened by the interstate
commerce bill, and are preparing a petition
for presentation to tho Interstate Commission.
Dr. HoGlynn proposes to turn his
notoriety to account, and to this end has ar
ranged a series of lectures to be delivered at the principal points in the country.
The missing steamer Eagle has ar
rived at St. Johns with two thousand seals.
Archbishop Taschereau, of Qnebec,
has issued the following circular letter bear
ing on the Knights of Labor quostion:
In September. 1834. the Holv See was con
sulted by me on the society ot the KniKhts of
Labor, coudomned It under pain of grievous
sin, and churgod tho Bishons to doter their
diocesans therelrom, as I did in my circular letter of tho 2d of February, 1835. After toe representations made by their Lordships the Bishops of ths United Stites, the Holy See has
suspsruoa until inrinor orasrs tne eitetoi mac sentence. In consoiiuencs, I authorise the confessors of the diocese to absolve Knights of Labor on the followiug conditions, which it is your tonnden duty to explain to thorn and make them obsorve :
1. That they confess end sincerely repent ths
grievors sin which tney committed by not obeying th s decree of September, 1834. 2 That they be ready to abandon this society as soon as the Holy See shall ordain it. 3. That they sincerely aud explicitly promise absolutely to avoid all that may either favor Haauuic or other condemned societies, or violate the laws either of justice, charity, or of tha state.
4. That they abstain from every promise ana
from every oath by which they would bind themselves either to obey blindly all orders of the dirMtors of the s jciety, or keep a solute 48-
creey. even toward tue lawiui auuioriuea. uses "Discipline," p. 217.1 The report is confirmed of the purchase of the Von Banks library for the pur
pose of bringing it to America. It was not
bought for tho Garrett Biblical Institute of Evanston, 111., however, but is going to the Syracuse Uoivowity. The library contains 85,0j0 volnmes and 75,000 pamphlets, and is considered tho finest historical collection in the world. Largely attended meetings, called by Irish-American citizens to express sympathy for Ireland and protest against the coercion bill now before the B' iii-.!i Parliament, were held in various cdios of tho United Stai:s on the Mth inst. lu Wa-h-ington City Coiigrewmau rfpringpr pru-
heraed over a gather.ng that tilled -Ma-
souic Tomplo. Bjxieohes wove mad by "ongressmon Springer, ( ruiin'f Icxas, u;l Suively of Indiana, (i.m Jio-eevan.-i, 0 Itivileriek of Virginia, Con. George A Siien.' in, exSenator Van Wyck, and 'iilier. 1. tiers expressing sympathy with tho ubj-vt of the meotirg worn read from Kor.ators John Sherman . ,ressman S. H. Cox. t' -i r . - e adopted. Gov. MoOUlpic : .t testing in St Paul. Spe.'ohos wt . . Congressmen Wilson and JtU-Donai I, .... , ttoruoy Gen. Piatt and others. Wympfth. ..ic lottors wore road fraiu rf mater C IC Davis aud Congressman Kiint N lion, and re-.ilutions were passed which stro "cly condemn coercion. Thoro were oiiu tar m .etMis m Now York, Baltimore, ami other rim, ai which tho usual resolutimiK were paf-.ie 1 and .n-lorod sent to Mr. Glalrttoiii-. Many prominent manufacturers of Canada oppose refiprrnty w.th the United States as iniv ' 'ji to th -ir int rests, and will resist unr such sulienns with all the means, in their power.
EATER NEWS ITEMS, A telegtiam from Wabash, Ind., says:
A serious epidemic if: rasing among the students ot tho Normal College at Valpa- .. JL. 1 J.. P
raiso. A law days since mo uuuj v. Charles Purdy, an estimable youn g man
TmTr, tl,ia nnnntr. WAR lllOllL'ht 1)01116 IrOlU
tlm Xnrrrml School for burial. He had
died from cerebro meningitis. Mauy of the students aro down with tho disease, and the closing of tho school seems inevitable.
At the Indiana fiiate prison at Jeflersou-
ville Maoy Marner, a convict, cut ana moilally wounded Frank Harris, another
convict.
The Board of Trade of Indianapolis
adopted resolutions a-king the Inter-State
Commerce Commission ior an luiuieuuuo
inteipretation of the second, third, and fourth sections of the act, for tho reason that the j-reseut uncertainty is disastrous to business. D. Bitlll, of Dodgeville, Wis., who
was arrested a few weeks ago on a charge oi having poisoned his wife to secure an insurance amountinK to $10,000, died in jail, and it is supposed to be a ease of suicide. This note was found on him: "I
feel as if 1 was about to take a change of venue to ihe Supreme Judge on high. If on ihnt Jndn is mst and more inclined to
mercy. 1 am feeling very badly; my heart to havo i.uit work lo-uuy. Don't
t.,i iiinin remove m to the iail to uie." Dr.
llruil was a leadiu". physician a id politician.
Tnu Executive Board of the lrou Moulders' Asseinbly, Knights of Labor of
Detioit, held a meeting lo-nigbt to consider
the irnesiionof a strike i cat.e ihe tabooed St 1 onis natterns are tiven out 1 y the
store conii anics. It was ordered that the men l;ee to work on whatever is given them until they receive further orders from
the executive, uo.nu.
The twentv-oecoucl anniversary of the
death of Abraham Lincoln was com-
meinorated in the hall of Representatives
at Springfield, III., the sonice3 being under the direction of the Lincoln Guard of Honor. The exorcises continued over
two boms nnd were lim ply attended. Ad
dresses were delivered by liishop Seymour,
of tho Sminctleld diocese nntt non. w.
H. Cullom, member of the House of Itep
resentatives.
Mus. Hakes, living near Lima, Uhio,
locked herself iu her house this after
noon and set fire lo it. The crowd forced
the doors when the woman attacked them
with a pitchfork. She was finally over
powered and the house saved.
A passengeI! train on tho Little Miami Railroad struck aud killed a man who was
walking on the track beyond PluinviHe,
The body was taSeu to Cincinnati where it .1 ll. t I T m.L-
wiio recuimi&tsu uo wtu u nunj . ,.m
of Chillieolhe.
S. Gebstmasn, of St. Louis, a rabbi, has been' granted a pension nnd arrears, amounting lo $8,000. This is probably
tho largest pension granted to a soldier engaged in any of the wars before the rebellion. Mr. (ierlsmnun was First Lieutenant in tho Florida War, and was
wennded in the battle with the Seminolcs
at Fort Hattruff. Tho wound resulted iu
permanent injury, for which a small
pension was allowed, but arrearage of over
thirtv eors maao uie amount reacu uie
figure named.
A consthitction train, with workmen,
ou the Ohio and Mississippi Iiailroad, who
had been removing a land slide, started from Bavenswood, W. Va., and just after
passing Wild Cat trestle the tender jumped
the track and drew with ic the engine and ten cars, which were piled in a mass at the
foot of the declivity. The casualties were
Bobert Evans. euniiiee:r, Chillieolhe, Ohio,
fatally injured; John Holden, brakeman,
lielpre, kiueu; josepn iveese, laoorer, Clifton. W. Va., killed: Fireman Hogun,
badly injured; Wash Weeks, laborer, and . 1 , 1 1 , l " -.1 . FT '!; .1..-
l wo uruinerb, uuuiy uijurcu; i. x lunuie-, conductor, and Ernest Cole, sliehlly in
jured. The accident was attributed to fast
running.
cmr.r makous. Mnntraa is an intractable savage. His
arm is" still in bandages from the effects of
i linrir received while on bis way to fensa
cola. When nearing that city at tho rate of forty miles an hour, Mangus suddenly sprang through the car window, and was dimmed bv Budden collision wilh tbe
rn-nnnd. Iioeaiuinsr consciousness simulta
neously WKU reeaptnre, ne was put in uuus until the filial destination was reached.
Two dmgv old casements in the interior
of the fort, each containing a large open
firenlace. furnish comfortable accommoda
tions to these uncomfortable nomads. Here provisions, consisting of the regular army
rations, are prepared uy au xuuiun ouuk.
assumed to that duly. triad to be bevond tbe reach of Arizona
justice, every member of the band is quiet, submissive,' tractable and industrious.
Shovel, rake, saw and ax have already ne-
come familiar tools. The wheelbarrow proved to be as intractable at first in the hands of Geronimo as a bucking broncho in those of a metroDolitan dude. But ho
is said to have achieved complete triumph over tho singular implement. The dex
terous grace wun mr online the sounding ax is not exceeded by
that with which he was wont to
fling tbe tomahawk. Work as yet is simply amusement. No more fantatitic toilers than these willing Apache warriors can be found in all tho sunny
South. One of the undistinguished braves
evinces considerable artistic ability, and
delights in making colored sketehea of the sergeant of tbe guard.
Observers ana it iiimcuii to regam mo
prisoners as criminals worthy ot aeacn. Visitors cordially slako them by the hand,
and wish to possess puoiograputi or tuo group. Bribery is often necessary to overcome objections to the camera. Mangus is the only "Barkis" among the number. The happje possessor of an old blouse with Captain's shoulder-straps, he is more than wilUn'' at every opportunity.
The Martyr President's Bemains Re
moved from Their Secret Grave.
The Face Easily Recognized Mrs. tlu-
coltu'tt Itemains Lnid by Her Husband's Side.
Tlie Man Who Captured Chief Mangus. Chief Mangus was captured by Captain
Charles L. Cooper, in the fall of IbSb,
after haying resorted to every strategy which his industrious brain could invent, defying authority alter his capture and exerting himself in every way for a means of
escape, it was a most aarmg exploit.
.TOIBSaaiy, WtBHfrnrouwauwn twiws, I fnnnrtad. in this country has increased from
enalvafaieathsn tsdeserreie mogoeo gaUons in 1840 to 7a,w,0W in
FOREIGN.
A general feeling of antagonism to
tholr.sh coercion bill ben;; manifested in
Engl ut. Majss meetit.i potesting against tho biil are being held eveij-whore, and tbe Libert 1 press is iimiig its bo-.t efforts to keep up th agitation. Mr. Olndtstone has issnod a nanif'ttiio to the minors, urging their assist
ance t defeat Mie coercive policy of the Tories. Lieutenant, Goreff, a Itusaian officer, has been suule.iced td Siberia for revolution.
ary conduct The Czar's life has once more
been it:-.tnp1
J'.- n..' oi, .( ii portrait painter
in J . . '
'Lk u.. i! - ' : grant gathered
at Qutooetovii is greatei oan be aecom-
THE MARKETS. NEW YORK.
Beeves s 5.00 s.00
Hoos 6.80 I 6.UJ
Wheat No. 1 White 9i & .05
no. 2 ned .J H .'a
Corn No. 2 ,5U & .61 Oats-White 88 .4-1 Pobb. New Moss UUW 18.50
lHICAOO.
Bbbvjes Choice to Prime Utcors 5.25 & 6.50
(iood bhiuning 4..io ! 6.W
I'omuion a.7o iffi 4.5J Hoos -Shinuini! (iriulOB 3.5U 0.00
Ftoun lt..d Wiiitir 4 2i m 4.i0
Wukat Ko. 2 Spring. 8 J ' S .81)4 Oonx Ko.a 38 l .38!
oais no. a m m .'
Buiteb s'hoice Creamery 2d w .27
Fine Dairy. 21 (B .24
Cbebse -Fall Cream, Choddar. .H! ! .11
Full Cream, new 13,'i 'i .14 Ecos-Freah 12 .13 Potatuks Choice, nor bu 56 tfS .GO
Pork 1104S 20.5D , 21.00
MILWAUKEE.
Whevt Cash 77 iS .77
UOIUJ MO. 3 31 (5 .3 Oats No. 2 Whlto 31 i .32
KVE No 1 39 & .61
Pouk-Moss 18.25 c'I.7a TOLEDO.
Wheat-No. 2 83 & .82!a
Coiw-Cash 3 & .4U
Oats-No. 2 29 J .30
UKTltOIT.
Behw CattZjE ,. 4.25 6.00 HHiS 4.00 lit 5.10 Hhkki- 4.23 & 5.60
WiiEAT-Michtgan Bod H3 f .83H
Couk No 2 41 & .42
Oats Whito 3 & .3JJ BT. LOUTB. Wheat No. 2. .79)4 ti .80J4
Cobh -Mixed i .au Oats Mixed .28 . .29
l'ORK Mess 17.73 118.23
C1NCIN-NATL
Wheat No. 2 Bed 83 . .83!i
Cons No. 2 41 (31 Oats So. 2 80 s .31
PbRB Mess ..16.75 .17.2S Live Hooi 6.25 J 9.00 BUlfFALO.
Wueat No. 1 Hard 89 & .90
CnuN No. 2 Yellow. 45 9 .41
Cattle 4.50 & ft TNMANA POLML
Bbef OAirr-K 8.75 5 S.2i fioas 3.9' 0.00 Sheep 3.60 4.T
WiiciT-Nn 2 Hod .80 .' .81
COBK-No.2 80 ,3 .86)4
flATS )4
EAMT T.inEUTV.
Tlo.t 6.00 (tit 6.21
Fair . . . . 4.50 & 5.00
Vmnnn 4.00 ffl 4.U
Unas U.O0 iL6.
SUKKP M0
CAPTAIN cooveu. Captain Cooper left Fort Apache, Arizo
na, on me I4tn oi uoiwoer, jooo, sighted the Indians on the evening of the 17th, they being on the top of a mountain and he at its foot. He at once gave pursuit, chasing the redskins over live mountains and fifteen miles distance. The In
dians in their flight abandoned their stocic and sought refuge in various places. All hunted out and surrend. red. Cap
tain Cooper was born in New York in
March, 1040. upon me creasing out oa
inn war he enlisted in the Seventy-nrst
New York Iteciment, twina then out
ciiteen vears of nee. After his dis
ehnnn be re-enlisted. At tho age of
twenty he became First Lieutenant of itiB On Hundred and Twentv-flrst Rem-
ment. United States colored troops, nnd
soon afterward was given a position on
fien. Birnev s stall. At Fetcrsourg ne re-
COind tha command of his men. however.
mm participated in the closing battles of the war. At the close of the war, through
the instrumentality or John a. utx, A'nui' low Weed, A. A. Low, and other prom (tint man. he was made Scoud Lieuten
ant in the United States regular army, and assigned to duty in the Thirty-ninth Eegi-
tneut. United States inramrv. ne waa
lwomoted Oct. 6. 1867. to be First Lieu
tenant, and iu January, 1871, was assigned
to ihe Tenth united States t avairy, ana
shortly afterward waa promoted to a cap. tainoy.
CHOP PROSPECTS.
ISpuikuvibi.o (Ii-ui connEspoisnnscK.1 For some yeais in fact, ever since the
attempt was made to steal the remain of Abraham Lincoln there has been a mys
tery as to the exact place where tbe ashes of Ihe martyr President are lying. That mystery has at last been removed. On
1 uursttixv last, the anniversary or nis ueutn,
the remains were brought out from tho quiet and teerey which they have so Ion occupied, and deposited hiially and forever by
the side or luoso or .urs. iincoiti at a point in the, ui muuient bj b can be made known to everybody.' The wor of removal was in elinrge of Hie Linco'n (Jnard of Honor." This organization was formed soon after the attempt to steal the remains of Lincoln, and the dnst of the martyr was
turned over lo its charge by the Lincoln
Monument Association in November of
that yew, the Guard of Hcnor binding ilB-lf to keen the trus-t with all care and
diligence. There were present at the monument on
Thursday moruinj? O. M. Hutch, George
N. Black, Lmcoln Dubois, John W. iiunn, C. C. lirown, Jacob Iiunn. nnd James C. Conkliiit', representing tbe Lincoln Monument A..soeiation, and the following representing the Lincoln Guard of Honor:
Genera!. Jasper.N. lteese, J. Carroll Power, J. P. Lindley, Colonel N. B. Wiggins', E.
8. Johnson, Horace Copm, and Clinton L.
Conklmg. The gentlemen mentioned met
promptly in the memorial nan or ins
monument nreoaratorv to the work be.
fore them. The trust papers sivon by tbe guard to the monument association at the time the former took cbnrgo of the remains were spread out on the
elass cases in Memorial Hall and exam.
ined by all prof ent. While this was going on Wash Irwin, one of the men having the contract for doing the masonry work
ureDarntorv to the reburial, came into the
hall currying with liini opair of mason's chisels and a hammer. Ho was closely
followed by half a dozen men carrying
workmen s tool!. A brief consultation followed and Custodian Power then an
nounced that it was time to beain the work.
The masons opened the entrance lending
lo the dark crypt in tho very ceuter or the monument, umnediatelv under the obelisk,
and began to cut a' d chisel awny at the cement which held in place the
stones bamne Use way to the
secret resting-place of the remiins of Abraham juincoln. As one after another of the workmen became tired from working
in the. cramned and narrow recess they
came out aud gave plaoe to others, who pressed on with tho work. Tho labor was continued for more than an hour, at the
end of which time the coffin, with the sacred
rRinniiis of Lincoln, was handed out by
the workmen and received in the htoids of
pioht- men belon insr to the two associa
tions, who laid it upon two rests prepared for the nurnose a li tie to the risbl of the
centar of the hall, placing the head to the north and the ieet toward
the door. The casket consisted first of
a laree nine box inclosing a red cedar box
Within the latter was a walnut coffin lined air tiaht with load an eighth of an
inch tbi k. and this inclosed all that re
mains to the world but the great name aud fame of Abraham Lincoln. The encasements were opened, and here, twenty-two
years from the day ot nis aeatn, was nis hndv tdeurlv recO"ni?able as such by the
gentlemen standing about, all of whom, but
one ot two, naa icnown mm miimuieiy m life. Tho silver plate on the coffin lid was
perfectly bright, as was toe lettering
SIXTEENTH r-ltKSlDENT OP THE UNITED STATKS,
Born February 13, iwj; uioa Apai , io.
F.vervthiise about the casket and tho re
mains was in on almost surprisingly perfeot state of reservation. It was now made
clear that" the marbls sarcophagus had not for vears contained Lincoln's Body, as the
public supposed. When the guard tooic charge of the body in 1878 three wools nights were consumed in properly disposing of them in this secure place under the base of ihe obelisk. Next the casket containing Mrs. Lincoln's body was brought out. Her body was inclosed in cases almost exactly similar to those inclosing Mr. Lincoln's. Then papers weie passed between the two associations as follows: The Lincoln Guard of Honor gave to the Lincoln Monument Association a certificate signed by all its members setting forth that it hero nnd .-now turned over to the latter associa
tion the casket and contents precisely as-1
received in trust m .November, lows; ana the Lincoln Monument Association gave to the Lincoln Guard of Honor a certificate Digued in full setting forth that the former this day received foom the latter the remains of Abtahum Lincoln, unmistakably recognized to be such, and that the fiuard is now and hereafter relieved from all further trust and responsibility in tho premises. Both theso documents are directed to oe spread at large on the records of the two associations. The eofiin wos then sealed up and carried to its final resting-place in the vault in tho north hall of tbe monument. Immediately in front of the entrance to this north hall, and in the very center of its floor a tomb had been sunk fivo feet deep, six foet wide, and eight fo-t long. This is lined with stone securely laid in cement, and (his stone casing similarly lined with brick. Imide of this casins tho dimen
sions are as given atove. Into this tomb the coffin containing tha dust of Lincoln
was lowered, being placed on the
west side that is, to the right as
the visitor enters the door of tbe north hall The bead lies toward the door. The cof
fin with the remaius of Mrs. Lincoln was
then brought around Irom the south ball nnil lowered into the tomb by (ho side of
her husband's bodv. Tue masons imme.
diately went to work, and a low brick arch was sprung over the caskets. This vas covered wi:h hydraulic cement, and above this rui b!e and slag mingled with cement were filled in, bringiug tho surface of the tomb up to the flour. The stones of the floor were Ihen repluced, and tho work was Anded.
At the memori.il exercises hold by (he
Lincoln Guard of Honor on Friday, the euanl presented in full tho history of its ?.l,;.r.. i.. 11, !... tln IVnttttlaiif.'n
Is a native of Pennsylvania. His
father, William Hiislon, was born September 3, 1801, v.t the old homestead near
Bocky Springi Church, four miles distant from Chambersburg, Pa. Iu 1837 ho
married Isabella E. Duncan, and removed
to Greencaslle, -fa., vmere, on aiay n,
1849, James K. Huston was born. The mother died when tho subject of this sketch was twenty days old. William Hustou - . t it,, -Mfi,,;
novtr oeaiu mamea. in iojh niumai,
J ASSES H. IliUSTOlT
and James, bis brother and partner, concluded to move to Indiana, whence had already gone several of their brothers and sisters". Ti.ey sotSled in Connersville, Jayette County, and were
ferns, In AdTiuiee Oilr, J1.50 Ptr Tea
INDIANA STATE S8W8.
A few weeks ago, at Bichmond, Jonaa Bennett nnd Jonuie Kilmer, who had long been lovers, were married. Es' oua. -morning recently she arose, .ftVM her lawband an evasive answer that led him tojbjaj.lieve she was necessarily golWdown for a few moments, and proesodsd fc bridge across White Biver, where she . leaped about seventy feet anl broke Star neck in striking the water, where . , subsequently found by tor .ItnabanA. wft became alarmed at her prolonged absence and instituted search. She was crated by tbe death of her mother, about five years ago. Developments leave little doubt tfff the act was premeditated. . ' For a number of vears Amos H. H(S".i
of Deeatnr Township, Marion OoiMfttfeK
actively ing, etc.
engaged in . farming, raiUand subsequently for many years
were engaged m banning, neiug in part
owners ot the iirst isauouai Bins or iiunersville, and also principal o-vners of the
Citizens Bana or the same pince. xne Husion :!aniily were of Scotch-Irish descent, and originally came to America at an early date, as the iccords show that William Hudton, Sr., was a Ca tain in the war of 1776. He ia buried in the churchyard at Rocky Springs, and his old family pew has inscribed on the door his birth and death, acd the fact of his service as Captain in the war cf the revolution. The family have always bome the Presbyterian faith, being active members and libeial supporters. William Huston died after a short illness in C'onnersviile, J anuary 5, 1876, leaving his only child, J. N., his sole heir. J. N. was early sant to private schools, and afterward to tho public school'?, and was under private ins'.ruction from Hon. J. C. Mcintosh in Latin nnd Greek. In 1863 he entered Hanover College, and subsequently attended Miami University at Oxford, it being so much nearer his home. He did not graduate, tut instead commenced the study of medicine. In the winter of 18(57 and lHi8 he matriculated at Bellview Hospital Melical College, but not desiring to graduate so younr, ho did not return to the college tho suteeq -ienlyear, bntcommenced the studv of law in the ofiico of Judge
J. S. Me d, with whom lie remained about
ono yean. Then with his cousin, J. H. Ferris, he embarked in business, opening a cents' fnrnb-hiiier store. This not satisfy
ing tho t.otive and restless temperament of
our suDject, ne soiti out ana movea to Kansas, when he oneaced for one sum
mer in the cattle business. In the fall of 183 J. N. went into the Citizens' Bank as
bookkee aer, t.ubse;tfrntly acting as assistant cashier, and in about six months from tho time ho ontered the bank he was elected cashior. Upon the death of William Huston, who was President of the bank, the Hon. J. C. Mcintosh was elected to fill tho vacancy ami continued as such until his deatli. -J. N. Ihen bought out all holding any interest in the bank, and has since very successfully managed the institution, being the sole owner. Our subject has been an active business man. alvaVs evincing an interest in any
thing that won Id tend to the growth and
prosperity ot tiie town, no erected quite number -if buildings, and greatly improved
by modernizing his numerous store rooms.
He took an interest m tanning ana sioonraising, and foi." vears has managed his furms throughout Fayette County, and also the old homestead, which he stili owns in the Cumberland Valley, Pennsylvania, as well as Lis farms in tbe State of lliiuois. ail of which he has now under cultivation. He has been and is still identified with many of !h institutions of the city. He was President of ths old Colfin Company; was President i'or several years of the County ivgricultural Society; was director in the First National Bauk: was Director
in the Indiana Loan Company; also of the
Couuersville Gas Light company, ot wmcn be is the principal owner nd now President. Ho is also President of the Conner8ville Buggy Company, and personally superiutsnds his lai-ga breeding farm adjoining tbe city. Mr. Huston was married in 1(71, ami uis family nsw consists of a wife and three interesting children two daughters and a son. pin politics he has always been a llenublican, and fcramaaof his years his advancement las bcea remarkable. In 1877 he held iiis first office, that of Councilman iu Conn'irsville. He was re-elected in 187!). In 1KK0 he was elected Kotireseutativo in
the Stab Legislature from the counties of
Fayette and I 'uion, nnd was re-elected in 1882. Ia lb'l be was elected State Senator f'om th s district composed of Ihe counties of Fayette, V'uion, and Ilnsh. and made a splendid record in his four years of service in tbe upper house of the General Assembly. H'i wa eleoted Chairman of tbe Fayette County Kepubliian Central Committee iu 1880, and served in that capacity until the spring of 1886, when ho was elected as member of tic Stale Central Committee to represent (tie Sixth CongresHionil District and was subsequently elected (. biiirrnan. Personally Mr. Huston is an aoreeable gentleman, frail in stature, but possessed of an enormous nmonut of energy. Notwitbstand ng every moment of his life is demanded by his immense business interests, he is never "oo busy lo refuse a respectful hearine to anyone who may desire to see him. He 1s a brilliant and foroible speaker, aud a gentleman of the strictest integrity and correct habits.
turned for taxation $9,000 iu money, 1
he said was buried on his farm. He
lores nrnmntlv nn it. bnt last June he 8W J&'iSW-d
,., . - i-M -j- -fafcf'ai1iaa'ig"?
wnnou. giving any iuAomm"ji-?-w "?rj:
tho money lay. Ths administrator j
every part of tin arnt,Udug i dwellins-housa and onUbuitdin
The widow had no other mean time a small judgment was tajken.af)ellst her. Under attachment her buggy -and
aorse were uuten Notices have been recelTedi;
S ninnmni nt thA Central Hnionr
phone Company, by wiaornsir-tjflj;'. Wabash exchange thaV Whig tft0$rc slrictions imposed upon tbe busjib4irjr: law, they will be compelled to iefiw fhp 'j, exchange in that city,. Mr,'- OtopmjMjMltv V that in case anv accommodation eja-l(fc;,
rendered by private line or ptbW4oIi
V
service tho eomnanv IrUl cheoJly
Some years ago the old. Vmft9E-
Tippecanoe County Commisstonora xm2,..'
Auditor and county t-iere, w o otifji-j! indexing of records. The foi wsi'dwai and proved more expensive than iripianticipated, and the new Board f vGajipis sioners refused to allow the bffls. Ap peals were taken, and Judge vlnten held that the county must pay.'- ' ' On petition of citirens the BJclimond City Council has passed a issetMifcfc . propriating $10,000 to be used In borjng for gas. The object is to thorongh&teijjt, the field near Richmond, and perftapa adjacent towns, and determine ' whejf'ff is necessary to go to the hnewn 9M?WbA-; pipe to the city, as proposed in organiairig a oitizen's association, with tatMOOO oapital, i it proves necessary. .. i :. , As the Bradford train was Bpw8'.
through the Panhandle yard at $&mfc.
port, Joseph Austin, a rosident;of
Hill, Ind., fell from a phttfortn
switch engine moving in rcction. Mr. Austin was
the wheels of (he passenger
stantly killed. Austin "was a
man, and wasproprietor of a'lunch at Bunker Hill. '
A 13-year-eid son of John Jofajsett of
uecaiur, wnue ixuig w ffu .
pulley of a grindstone in . his nlnninf.milL was cansht bv the
belt of the mill, and carried . Uf1&1ier
snaiting, ana wuirieui rrauu w until every bone to Ms body was birf. One of his arms waa ton) . from jUsshew.
at the shoulder. His death wis jiTwifjyi
stantaneous.
emmmrr.-s:
counter -
!s-i
ProRirlont Waisnn. of tbe VincewteSi
and Now Albany KaOroadj qw jt' ' t
mm
asn-ln
Illinois. iSpringflold speclal.1 The renorts coniinc to the Illinois De
partment of Agriculture from nearly every township in the State indicate thot the area of the growing crop is not quite as large as that- harvested last season. The best pros
pects for winter wheat are reported trom the central counties, in which nearly an
averaee (U6 nor cent.) yield is expected. Jtn
the northern counties tho condition gives
encouragement for U2 per cent, or an average yield per acre. The condition of wheat in the great wheat bell of the State is such as to give hope for but little over three-fourths of an average yield p.r acre.
Ohio. Columbus special. The State Board of Agriculture is receiving very discouraging reports of the condition of winter wheat from nearljr all parts of tbe State The present indications are such as to justify the statement that the full average will fall off twenty-five per cent, in the wheat-growing counties in the central portion of tho State. The plant is badly winter-killed in tho northwestern part of Ohio. Where there was good snow protect an there promises to 1 e a fair crop. The same may be said of the indications in tbe southeastern section of the State. In tho central portion much ot the plant is mined, aud motof (he land will havo to be
plowed up and used for other ojujVh.
relntions to the keeping of the President's
remains, detailing tno reasons ior us organisation and what its entire action in tbe matter has been. Thore was very little in the history, however, beyond what is outlined aoove, that would bo of any special public interest. ( Tlie Plot to Steal tli- Itemains. The night of Nov. 7. 18?(, Mullins and Hughes, two Chicago thieves, made an unsuccessful at'cuiid to cte.il tho body of the late President Lincoln. Tbe marble sarcophagus in which it was inclosed, and which was exposed to the view of visitors through tho iron grating on the north ride of tbe monument, was taken out; but at this point Ihe robbers were interfered with by curtain persons secreted in tho monument, who had re -oived information that tbe lobbery was lo bo attempted, and abandoned their strain e booty. Some weeks afterward MulliuS und llngbos were arrested in i hicago, taken to Springfield, tried, convicted, and sentenced lo short terms in tbo penitentiary for larceny, thero beinij in llliuoiB no law against bodysuatching. At a result of this attempt the Lincoln Guard of Honor was in a few years organised. One night six of tho guard went to the vault, removed the casket from tbo sarcophagus, and buried it iu ono of the narrow a sages mid; rncatli tbo monilmenl to prevent another ntleuii t of n like character proving successful. Th members bound themselves by the solemnity of an oath not to reeal what had been dona until tho proper time should arrive to do so.
Why the tlovoniar of Ohio Has No Veto Power. Whil Ohio was yot a Territory and Arthur 8r, Clair was ita Governor, his
salary, which was a small one, was supplement d by i revenue derived from marriage ltceiises. The tax for that purpose was regarded as onerous and unjust uy tho people When the Territorial Legialahtro assembled one year it was represented to Gov, St. (. lair that tlere was considerable dissatisfaction among tho people on account of the tax on marriage. He admitted the force ot thoir representations, but said that the salary of his office was so meager that ho could hardly afford to lose Irs me me from tho licenses. 'I he legislators ropl od that the would arrange "ho ma tor to his satisfaction. Two bi Is were introduced, passed, and sent to the Governor for h a approval at the same time. One of them increased the Governor's salary by a sum equal to tho estimated yearly receipts from t ie tax on marriages, and the other repealed the tax. The frugal Governor promptly approved the bill to inert ase his salary aud vetoed the one which would deprive him of the fees for the issue of marriage licenses. This in !? such an impression on tho people that when the constitution of l.s a was formed;, the Governor was deprived of the voto power, and tha provision has sino- romaiuetL
longer any question as to the ;
built. He states that the
veying party have found an
from New Albany to Faoli,
tumu1 fnramnte from Paell it
The entire line oan be MB;tit.iq sonable sum per nrito. . ' The boy, Jesse Helmbaugh, of Iipjfjipi n wt,y. n Ei Kv manv HaMmvWI tfl lk. W.t
been killed by bis mother daring her fyrTjffiS?
sanity, has been found at lawopo, wnpnghe had gone to visit wlafiveV ' Tlfi mother's talk about a strange mitt Wlin her boy and her having buried Mm lonely spot, gave rise to tto tteetrj aiife murder. ' - f -.v - The Governor has appointed David
Chambers, of New Casue, as Trostevito
the Deaf and Dumb IustKnte,in place Sternum E. Urination, the mmmMi
who resigned his trastaeship 'dtt'-JtjOfc .-.p;! Andrew Hagan haa been 'lMi State OiL Inspector, and Enoa B. tlfp.r State FisnCttrmnissioner. . ' Dr. K. H. Williams, recently -pointed postmaster at Qpe, disgusted wilh the poMfoi his resignation to the Posthuster fleiiarakr.fevf'1 He assigned as a reason for i&iitt1il&gfi$0 .H Ihe pay of the office was ttiflHpnfc tofS labor and rosrfeihiUty. mt'iU&il0i$ft March last was 45 cents. . ' . , ; ';'
Information received from warrsjte .. . . . s , 11... .1. ' .' . -
juummgion vouoy, bmw piwmi ajiiFT, sion is abroad that the item e6tmjf-
ployed to "snoot" me ou weu xoop wgsF, "influenced by sgMia WgW'jglipll lnttiaa1 nf incrflRRinir the flow totanxlenabTvv Ki
destroyed the well, which is now
less. ,. -Mrs. J. W. Long, a liWIilHfn lliliS Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne and qftfdH lit&JB road train, n tonto to tojfrfrQ im dmriK. dlad within a short ntjfbanef i9 3 ft
Sort Wayne, of 9m-)S$
mains were taaen ok a max city pro
pared for burial. . .' rsWK Mrs. Philas Seely, of -'XaPM
83 years, died recently. Bhi.j. and one of the beat-known .ohaf.s that city. She ni very ptomiBM; . iic.,;, r,t lh. Pirat XT 13 - fllinmh. aif whlkdl :..:' ''
she had been a member over sfady XeWfilj The Miller school-durase, 'fm mW&'?S$k
8DllUlwUMWiVia.wTM .w.w rf -; by fire. Loss, $1,300; insured. jtwiiSf ,. i As the house had not been in usb for tome : ; h
I . . T. -1 m& ' V. -
time, some person mw nfrz .
are. t -.
Tho Waahinston Common CCrUOCU na '
granted to the Washington Street V&ijtyg Company an exclusive franchise for thirtjf -
years, ine company waa orgaauea -ww days ago. J. C. Lavelle is President '. , The Niekel Plate people are imUdtng one of the finest wrought-lrop bridges fla the State over the St. Mary's Biver at Fort
Wayne. The improvement will not be ahished before the 1st of June, ' Folly Ward, of Columbus haa recelvad a telegramiadvisittg her of the death of tor brother in Colorado, leafMf-- tltoh heir to his estate, worth'ovfl,0fl0,0ou i - ir-n asaa'rltaS8i.M. s&tia.
hunting on Uie KimkaW eoaapany Hf': Jr&i
Charles Herbert. Jr., p-, JWsoa, ojv
UrtiEli, snot mi isaii smwt wwproprij wm
left a wiuow iva.jax(uitk . -
At Hi.UvUl,.Oah 'OmiK-
elerk in Self's store, wbm oaraia linn r. revolver, dwhtrged it
hole through his head above Mm eye.
died soon after.
A ga and oil-well
formed at South Bend,
well as President
prospeot and bet
i aisoifattoQ haa't
