Bloomington Progress, Volume 22, Number 30, Bloomington, Monroe County, 19 September 1888 — Page 1

Republican Progress. Rspublicia i A VALUABLE 1 DYERTWKG II a-cuiates Amm,) thtltest Tsrhm Jfburrw Cwitw. n And k Sm4 by Smjf Mmjm A EEPTOBLICAN PAPEB DEVOTED TO THE ADYJUiCEJDENT 0 XHi! LOCAL INTilESTS OF MONROE COUIiTX. BXiOOMINOTOM, JJJXX ISTBLKHEI) A. D. 1 BLOOMINGTON, INDIANA, WEDNESDAY, flEWEMBEB-"" 19 1888. " NEW SEKim-VOL. ai-NoT ' htb, Ji Aflra te Oily, Ji,J0 ftr'SI

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- ' w ' turns GIVES HSPAIEOHS lC&8tt9 PUlXMAK SX iEEPlH CARS ELEGANT jfARI-OR CARS AUTHAJAS RUN THUOUGH SCUD Tickets 8okl and Baggage - dwelled to Destination. O. MoCormlck. Q. Psae, Ajt, 108, IcarbcmBt. CHICAOO. OBCHARD HOUSE ! 0. IX Orchard t Soa PROPRIETORS. Resident Dentist. Dr. J. W. Office in the Now Stock, np-siatr, a" vlt Book Store. iUgdnnMM. LHe la the Oal Tfflasos; Tfce colleotiim of hnte about the average coalmine hardly deserves the name . of vQLukv In the anthracite regions coal is itng in some of the most bewttifnl vdleys of the country, bat nature is aot permitted to smile ia the; immediate vicinity of the homes oi the miners. At - th mootb of the pit rises si great cctalbreaker, tall ngly, bl&ci with dust, flUed with chattering niaclunerr. Its hard, bare walls are broken by a few windows, ho dirty that only a little diaBial light struggles in to those who work al breakibg the coal into the sizes of commerce. Kear the breaker, is- the eobn heap, a nAnutain of coal dust J. be calm Heaps intrude themselves into the laadscapc everywhere. They SB up ail the low spaces m the mounttuna, ted stretch themselves oat over the valleys, obscaring views, and sending" tbeir begriming dust whirlsag witn every wind that crosses thera. In the Tillatres thev block xip'the streets. Even in so large and imyortant a place as crantoa thev lie to.teetly in the roadway. Where the beantfe of the conn try are not -blotted ont by the rasighUy edifices of this prosperous linaines, or. by its still more JDMfhily refuse, the owners of the pmea rewkv The average coal Tillage is luce notiuofrm the pureiv arricultnrl regions. Occasionally a New "England smtniT&cttirni settlement gives strong videiBse-of' tie dire poverty of the people. But there is something to break the monotony of the signs of distress. The mill-owner or bis superintendent lives in the village, and the roads are taken care of by the selectmen of the town. As a rule, there is no street in th-coalvfllape.There is only a road "icu siraggies. along- De;ween tne houses. It is red with iron dost generally, for iron ore and cal do not lie far wait. Jfita its rough ditches the untidy people shovel the filth that has accamniatedm their houses until it becomes am almost unissabh m&sot of naalineas. IMgs and cattle stray over the vay at pleasure, bnt there is no verdnre along sues, x reea uo not snaoe it. xbo ir la thick with the odor of garbage. oaaztary devices are unheard of. There avre, indeed, one or two model villages m the wholo state, but they would not cicite iiie aumiratiou 01 tnose wbo are familiar with the work of the Chenevs. xbe WiUmaatic Thread Company, and Mr. Pullman. The miners live anart. Their employers are great niUroad andL sum vuiupiunes. mere m no one in tbeir neighborhood to look after their interests. The Company boilda some kits big enough to give a shelter to the riecesBHTy number of veonle. The runt is very JisK, and the accommodjitioas. aresqnsud. OccasstonaJlja thrittvand tidy Irish or Webb women will toy: to brightea her home by keeping it clean, bnt neither cleanliness nor godlaesj prospers nnder the blighting inrtnehce oh eoal mines. The degraded Poles and Hungarians make their neighborly od so completely wretched that all desire for a better state of things seems to be destroyed. The beer-shop is the wuiy piace tot recreation toat is found ta most of the villages. Sometimes the presence of an nnnsnally large number vi snsn miners win rcsnlt m the establishment of a Catholic chapel in a deserted store, or a rude building may be inn. up ior me purpose, it is very rare, however, even where the chapel exists. to find a priest in a mining; camp. The services of the chnrch are performed by some one front the nearest vilLige or owy. Ibe Uraauner 6ot Jtelt. A Scotch, story is that of a dimianti ve drummer in a local brrss banal, who was in the Jiabit, when out pai-ading with his eomrades, of walking by sound and not by sight, owing to his dnim being so high that he n unable to see over ft. The baud paraded usually in one direction, bnt the other diiy the leader thotigfat he would change the route a little, and turned down a by street. The drniamer, unaware of this movement, kept on his accnstomd way, dnanming as hard as ever he conld. By and by, after finishing bis part and n)t i tearing the others, be stopped, and pTishinpr bis dram aside, be looked to aeu wliat was the matter. His astonishment, rosy be imagined at finding tibat he was alone. "JBse!" he cried to some bystanderc, "has am- o' ye seen a Wfoveremtftiiae' self the;

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BT TEMPI

1CEW8 BUTOEfT. ftwA Intelligence from Every tlurt qf the Civilized World. Fcreifftt and Domestio ferns, Political Events, tortonal Rmts, Labor Note, Be l LATEST DISVATCBma, " - mMmmmmm . . f SteCL A. B. JCnentpaii. A Columbus special, dated the 14th inst,, says: At the National" Encampment this nothing: the election of a Commander-in-Chief fM ' fat order. After the nominations were made, Maj. William Warner, of Missouri, was elected. Hod, William Warner, of Kansas Citjy the new Commander-in-chief served, in the Thirty-third and Forty-fourth Wisconsin regiments, and' has passed his later life in Missouri. After filling various offices in that State, he was elected to the Forty-ninth Congress from the Fifth Missouri District and is still in Congress. . : There was a large quantity of routine business transacted after Mr. Warner's election. M- H. Neil, of Columbus, was chosen Senior Vice Commander; and J. K. Hatfield, of New York, Junior Vice . Commander. Geo. Sherman and Senator Man ders on presented Maj. Warner, Gen. Sherman recalling the fact that three years ago he phced Warner in nomination. All three of the officers elected made speeches of thanks. . On behalf of his .comrades,. Louis Wagner presented to Gen. Lucius Fairchild an elegant oil portrait oC'himself. A oommittee from the Woman's Belief Corps was given, a hearty welcome. Set. .W. Updyke, of Dakota, was elected Chaplain-in-chief, and B. M. DeWitt, of IowaSurgeon General. Keportad from tin NorthIiate advices from the northwest report great suffering and many deaths from starvation emongthe Indians of the Canadian northwest territories. From the Peace Hiver District several eases of cannibalism are reported, where, to save their own lives, heads of families have killed and eaten their children. Last season the Canadian Parliament voted the sam of $354,000 for supplies for the destitute treaty Indiana of the northwest, bnt from what-has been learned it appears that dishonest agents who were entrusted with its distribution, have appropriated the greater portion of the grant. Gabriel Ihuiiont, Kiel's Lieutenant, has again been attempting to stir up had feelincr amoni; the Indiars with. M-ia said, a considerable- degree of saacessv It Will o Hard wltU Him IT Found. A masked man entered the house of George Hay, a ranchman of Sabine Coanty, Texas, in the absence of Hay. Mrs. Hay seized a gun. to defend herself, whereupon the man slashed: her fae with a long knife; The woman knocked him down with the gan, and as he fell he stabbed her again in the shoulder. As he attempted to rise the woman shot him and he fell backVsrd out of the door. Hay's dogs then attacked the man, bnt ne rougnl tnem off and escaped, as he crawled away Mrs. Hay shot at him again, but missed him. Hay on his return; tracked the man half way up the mountain. Hangers are now searching f or the rnffian. Syrms' .Opera Bmue Barned, The Grand Opera House Block, Syra cuse, S. Y., was completely destroyedby fire, together with the stock and fixtures of five business firms. ""Owing to delay in giving the alarm, the are gained great headway, so that the fire department could do no better than protect adjoining property. . The burned block ex? tended from East Genesee to East Favettee street. The theater was located on the-seeond floor, and the fire broke out on the stage, makingits way through the roof. ATniouLatwrTfoket, The Ohio State Convention of the Union Labor party met at Columbus. They endorsed the National platform of the party, and nominated the following officers: Secretary of State, George Ebner, of Franklin County; Supreme Judge, G. H. Tultle, of Lake County; member Board of Public Works, W. J. JDrimniftaee, of Wood County; elettors at large, J. T. Croger, of Clark County, and S. 3. Scribner, of Knox Connty. A btate central committee was selected. Murder at Wfnamae. Joe Bobinson, an oil well contractor from Francisville, Ind., was .shot and killed by Michael Bhinehart, a barber, at Winamae, lad. Cause not known, Bhiaehart is in jail and a guard of armed men is about, it as lynchiug has been feared. BlamSsnA In tin? Cong Country, Advices received from the Congo country report that Maj. Bartelot has been murdered by native carriers. Prof. Jamieson, the naturalist, has returned to Stan ley "Falls and is organizing a new expedition. Bmmraait by Urn Church. A Borne cablegram to the New fork Calkolic A'eics announces that the de cree of the holy office on the Knights of ioor qneation is favorable to that or gaaisation. FINANCIAL AHD INDUSTRIAL The trade review of B. G. Dun Co., f oi last week, is as follows: Wol id iron tndmtrjea rasp-nl at lut, tuough with ojoo bed.ation rot, to tho tlialu aitordaa Uj good crop nrospec.n. In tho nonra- lM. " improTfuu domann la fI6 ta U dircetioiM, oxcaptluK In tho market (or f1 raila. The apscQlativo rnnrkow ara higbar, whoat twulr ut, with )!' of SI.'XM.000 iHnbolit, ana com abont a eont. In sui'o of asmUm, reporu u to the probable yield. S?"0? ri" Marly rao-hlt cent, though tho boat neent roportm from Tetn ma to too yield an connrail. Tho ootfce marint j ball a cent nlghar, with a Mttor demand. Oil ia on and thrao-nuarter coot utroqgur, and toreign hid ona-half a cent higher. Soev baa advanced a sixteenth and lard nearly ou.hIf a eont, though other imric prodacu ara ateady, aud bK(m lit cents i or 10 pounds lover. Tb stock siarkot hM ahai d rh upward tondonoy, abowins n advHnce of about OM-tuUfa dollar pr aharo aincea week ago. AXnorta from Now Vork f.u &i anmn v. i " TJ"- for tho week reported and 14 per cent. iMhind for tho iaat ttvo weoka. Tha aoconuia for in .? eontinoo d cldo'Ur favoiable. A to coUootlona aim. uhfTA hn,n Mmiil.h.f..n. fy' t;o,n' or of roporta la mora f avoraWe. Tbe buainoM failuroi uamhr2IM, is comparol with 22B lat week and 214 tno neek vrevkma to the last. Vae tha wwrMi.rfiMT week at teat year ih4 figure rer174, and 22 in Maw isyilUUtl'fll (JI -HTaVlft. A third division of the PittsburBli. Cln, cfnaati and St. Louis Eallroad, running from Anoka Junction, lnd., to Bad Bank aaotltia, hio, J7i mHs, rooently completed at a cost of f8.OOU.000, has gone Into afio with H, J. MUier, ton ot Gtmeraj

SnpmistendontMUer, ot the Pan Handlo

Boad. as Suporlnbindont -iH' ih & Wood! or)', shoo msnufttoturers of Sni m, Mass., have assigned, with liftbUitif . of 175.000. i Tie Hational issoolstloq of Stationary Enghs'ters at Milwaukee elected B. C. Smitli . ot New 7ojfc, Presldont Tho stock of Charles Vogt St Co., one ot tho dest ohlna importing firms ot New XorK. nas been soieoa uytno euerin on judgii ents for S50578 Liabilities are fUOO,000; J; ommal assets, lt80,000. PERSONANOUS. -iCoL Horace Kelloctr, a prominent insur aaos titan of Morwalk, Ohio, is dead. For fifteen years after the war he was inspector ot inl mal revenue In tho South, -4l- s Grace Hanloy, of Boston, who hod been r cripple up to Aug. 18 last, and was suddenly and milttcclously otired While at' tendir gehurchi Kill become a nttiU -T' 8 BooabHean State Convention of Xassiijhusetts mot at Boston and nomii natec. tho following ticket: Olivtw Am as TJentABtUit Governor. larr of State, Henry B, Plans: Auditor of State. Chiirlea B. Ladd; Attorney General, A. J. Waterman; Treasurer of State, George. A. Harden; Elector at Large, Goorgo D, Bobinion, William F. Draper. In brief the platform Is ns follows: Declare forpufitection Of American Industrie and demand a a our So ;. otaviA Aims, loranderTalnationotim. oortt i. ratnm to stenmo dntiea whoreter praetioal jiad enactment, of law to correct tha yil: 'lndonm tho liquor legislation of the lut Legialatnro;- favor tho lubtniea n to the pospla of a prohibitory eonal mtionid amendment; oontraata the for. iga illciee of the Be)inbliean and Demooratio partki i ; denounces thi. SahcTlea treaty; pledgee the j'Wty to a vise expenditnro for pnblie choiic ; denooneea trneta ; favor a reform of Immigration law, an aonejt ballot, payment of naticcial dehte, a jtiat pension law, and the exemption of the oivU aervlce from partlaan. polii'i ion. The ( hie ago platform and oandidate tte In dorsad. 5 Ue DfrnocnvUt: State Convention of New York, in sesilo i at Buffalo, nominated this -r:cket: Goii rnor, David . II111 ; lieutenant Governor, Sldwaid K Joaaa; Court of Appeals Jndge, CUnUinOtay. Summarised, the platform is as follows: Ind rsea tha St LonU platform and candidates - eominends too President', letter ofao atpiai oe; approve 3f the nahertes' polloy reconi aienda a revision df the law so as to exclude foreign paapur and criminal ; Indorse the ifntl-Chineoe bill; condemn the United Rtate, Senate for its hostility to labor legislation ;.ienouncs trusts, demands legislation to aunpr.Mt thm, and eondenm tha last Republi. can ligtlatare for defeating such legislation; eondenn recent high-iioanao loglsintlon n tl;e HtsAe as "hypaorltical, 'nbt honeetly dnifnied to aid temperance,- auo inteiKled "for political effect;" farors pure elections, condemn the Saiton bill vetoed by Gov. HIU ; demands a la-eaumeration in tho Stato ; nrgea s eotistitattonitl convention; adrooates hom. rule ior cities and legislation to prevent tha,c.tDlteraUoa o! food; demand traoohiee for fnnislas of soldiers' he me : favors the maintenance i f tho canals and the employment of convicts -vitbout coniiioti'ilon with !rie labor ; ympathir .es Willi the I .-lab home-rotor, and indorse Gov. Hill's adminiitmiioa. The Mnsssoliusotts Prohibitionists met in Stte convention U Worcester and nominateil the following tioke:t Gov srnor, William XL Earle; Iiontenant Governor. John Beacoin: &ecr.arr of State. Henrv tin ,hl SBeaatuec 'f State, John N. Fisnocj Aiiasuey ueaerai, ausrn taenia ; Aimnoroi ataie, EiimiividM. Btowe , ITubkIcucuU fclootora, James U. Biiiiertson, John Black. The platform suminoriEed is as follows: It denounces the liquor trafflo arraigning the old'prtiei for neglecling prohibition ; demanding tint district attorneys be appointed by the Bunr Court ; dimaoding tha abandonment of govet runent revenue irom nqnor licenses ; xavorIng d' tie ailenaata to the nood of the govern. merit ; demanding -.he preservation of free pnblie ache i. a, reform of chll service, the aujipresalou of po ;rgamy, uniform morriago and divorce laws, a mtv'o jnat distcibtition of tha products of labor, arbitration in international strife and labor dit&ooltiea, too n enervation of one day in even as a day of nonhip, the improvement and better enforoemen-: of immigration law, liberal pens- ona, disfraneliisemont for Belling Votes, the resor ption ot pnblio lands for actual settler, fulfillment ot trcttty tipulation with Indians, and prohibition ot trusts, Iipandcnt suilrage of w : men i favortHL 'A'ue.Domocrutii) State Convention of Colorado was held, at Denver, and this tick' nominated ; T. Jf. Patterson, Governor; J. A. Porter, Untenant Governor; Amos G. Henderson, Treasurer of Slate; William K. Erhaidt, Secretary i f State; Leopold Meyers. Auditor of fita'; J. If. Abbott, Attorney General: IX. B. Gerry, A.J. Bislng. Judf.es rinpreuie Court; Thomas Macon, Contfresiu'jui : C. J. Hughes, ,Tr J, M, 6. El. (an. It. Harns, Presidential Elector. Tho platform, nfter indorsing Cleveland's administration snd the St Louis nomination and platform, domands the free coinage ot silver and tho prohibition of Chinese and pauper labor, favors tariff reduction and liberal pensions, denounces trusts, and indo-ses the deep-water harbor movement. (ten, J, B. Chalmers was unanimously nominated for Congress by tho Republicans ot tha Second Mississippi District. Tho DenvMrats ot the Seventh Mississippi District renominated Charles E. Hooker. he Bepublioanj of the Fifth Missouri District have nominated T. II. Uullono for Congress, Maj. Warner having .declined a rent'inination. 'Vf. E. Mason has been renominated for Con -'toss by the republicans ot the Third Illinois District. i eturns from all but three towns In Yennont give Dillingham (Rep.) for Governt . a majority of 26.570. B turns from nil bat nine countios In Artsnf iis givo the Demooratio State ticket a maj rity of 16,). The other countios will hoi viatoriiilly cliange this vote. The Lorriatnrs is Democratic . Nathan Frank (Bop.) has boon nominated tor Congress by the Union Labor mou in tha Ninth Misiiourt District. Congressman Jinn H. Bogors has boon rcniniainated by tho Democrats of tho Fourth District of Arkansas. t apt 15. P. Alien has been renominated by the Bepubllc&nsof the Second Michigan District, and Congressman Ford by tho Dsnioorate of th9 Fifth District I The Domocr.its of tho Fourth Minnesota District have renominated Edmund Eioo (or Countess, and tile Democrats of the Fifth District have nominated Oharlas Canning, a fanr.ir, and member of tho Farmers' Alltauoe. The Hon. Edward J. Gay has boon renominated for Congress, by the Domoorats of tt- Third Louisiana District. 'i ho Democrats of the Fifth Iowa District have nominated J. H. Preston ot Cedar Bop' ls for Congress. M ho Bopubltoans of- Washington Torritoi 'rhavo nominntod Hon. John B. Alien, of Seattle, for delegate to Coneross. -trt the Fifth Wisconsin District tho Bopablicans hayo nonUnatod Custavo Kuntoman for Congress. 'i ho Dmocrats of tho Seventh Wisconsin 7 strict have nominated Frank Cobtirn for dhgress, arid the Bopubltoans ot tho samt district nominated p. B. Howes. (ten. W. II. 3rirly has been nominated tor l ongreas by the Domoorats of tho Ninth Wise cnsln Distri et WIRE8 ANOJOCIOENTS. dlssstrouu flro occurred in the sash and door factory of Day. Hubor b Cracker, on Jiain street. San Francisco, Tho burned district embraces two whole blocks, which were entirely barned over, and three blocks whloii are almost a total loss, The flro starred from a spnrk which dropped itmoue the shavings. The loss is tisjknated at SMWJOft B9 pe.ro nflrlsbia In the fUUBfS, ' srA Cnlnnat) boaud freight irollli I WfU

laden, dashed at full opoerl into tile John Robinson circus train. Which Was standing, at Corwln Station, flfty-ono miles northeast from .Cincinnati, on the Little Miami. Tha caboose at the roar ot tho ciroas train was split In two, and tho four sloepors ahead of it were telescoped. No damage occurred to tho animals Or the rjlrcus property, which were in the long train ahead of tho sleepers. Four men Were killed and eighteen wero Wounded. Of theioall vero canvasniett, except Andy Smith, who. was a contortionist Smith was mortally wounded, and, strange to relate, tho injurlcis' to the other seventeen are all trifling. Tho killod aroi John Ohurohlll. of Storks. Mo. I Ben Cisboy, Grafton, W tad Frank Smith, Richmond, lnd.; .Tack Lacy, Ohiea-. The injured kroi Andy Sirtiih. Petersburg, llM Wiltiara Edwatds. SowarM" Ohio; B. Browh. Hollidoy's Cave. W. Va.1 Jdhn Motti Cinolriuatl: Ftohk Lnrkln, Jac.ksdn, Tend.; William Wheoier; Elmore Fairbanks. Coolyllle. Ohio; Dovo Harrison, Deiawro.;Ky.i Wllltarfi Hopkins, Franklin. W. Vs.; John Gardiner. Martin County. Ind.; Goorgo Williams. Priheoton. Ind.; Albert McCarthy, Tipton, Ind.; Samuel Wright. Level Valley, W. To.; Louis Butler. Lexington. Ky.; Frank Monoetff. LaPiatte. Mo.; Ed Taylor, LouisvlUo, Ky.; DiokDpw, Mount Sterling, Ky.; George Powell. Beverley, Ohio, Mrs. Anderson, wife of the Bev.F. W, Anderson, was killed by a train at Phrlclisfille, Ohio, her husband and little one witnessing tho tragedy, Prairie Ares novo been rasing in the vicinity ot Bismarck, Dakota, and have done much damage, Near Wadsworth, Ohio, a freight train dashed into the rear of a passenger train carrying veterans and others to tho Columbus encampment Tho travelers had been notified of tho impending collision, and woro hurrying down tho embankment, buf the wrecked cars rolled down on thorn.; Four mou were killed instantly; two young ladies who were injured have, since died, and twenty other persons were badly wounded, Tho . unfortunate passengers woro nearly all residents of Ohio. The premature explosion of a blast in the south face of the Wiekes tunnel of the Hon. tana Central Railway, aouth ot Helena, M, T,. killed nine men and seriously wounded live. The aooident was caused by the concussion of the giant cap fired as a warning in the north face, the headings beingclose togoth er. This is tho first casualty recorded in tho tunnel, which is over a mile in length. Tho dead arc: William Vale. Thomas Patterson, Dais-Walker. James Miller, George Irving, Mike Walsh,, Frank Anderson. Thomas Peabody. and John Sunbery, Fire broke out in the coal-bunkers of the steamship Pembroke Castle, plying between Southampton. England, and Capo Town. Ten coolies wore smothorcd by coal gas, and six seamen who tried to rescue them were nearly suffocated. Tho fire was eitlnguishod before it extended to other parts of the ship ' THE CRIMINAL RECORD. The Hatfloids of Logan County. West Virginia, who woro tried for tho murder of the McCoy family at Jackson. By., have been aoquitted. GoOrge Van Huts, a prominent farmer of Groeuvitlo, Tonn.. quarreled with ona of his men. He received a cut in tho arm and bled to doa,Jh. . Colby Drew, fin&nolal manager for W. F. Monroo, a grocer at Lynn. Mass., has surrendered to tho police, stating that ho is a forger to the extent ot $20,000. Most of the persons who hold spurious paper are business men ot Lynn, Theodore Graub. a wholesalo grooer of Soymour, Ind., shot -and fatally wounded a colored burglar who attempted to enter his house. Ida Harringtonhanged herself at Greonfleld, Iowa, because her negro lover dosertod her. Josoph Breed, assistant -cashier ot tho Hartford (Conn.) National Bank, who recently klUod himself, was short (106,900 in his accounts as trustee, but the bank loses nothing. The suicide Stole so it is oharged, from tho estate ot Daniel Goodwin $86,000. The west-bound express train on tha Southern Pacific BailroaC was stopped by three robbers at Porker's Milts, Arizona,

but tiiej' secured no booty. MISCELLANEOUS NOTES. Thirty-five cases ot yellow fevor havo devolapad at MoClunny, Flo,, a town ot 1,000 Inhabitants, and seven of the victims have already died. The parade of veterans of tho Grand Army of tho Republic at Columbus, Ohio, was the grandest military pageant since tho review at Washington at tho elose ot the war. There were between 05,000 and 70,000 men in lino, and the procession took four hours and forty minutes in passing a given point There were 230.000 visitors at Columbus, and tho twen ty-second annual National Encampment was the greatest in point ot numbers and success in the history of the G. A. B. The evenings wore given up to camp-fires and reunions, at which speeches were made br many prominent men. T. W. Burrows, of 8t. Louis, has boon appointed Superintendent of the Chloago and Atlantio Boad, -Tho oorner stone of tho new Masonic Temple at Pittsburg has boon laid, and 2,600 Masons woro in tho procession. "LATEST MAKKKT QUOTATIONS. CHICAGO. Cattlb Choice to Prime fitoors.6 6.23 0 K.1S uooa 5.51) m 6.00 Common. . 5.45 D 4. Hoos nhipping Grade SHEr'.r Wheat No. 2 Bed S.75 Ml 0.50 !i.Gfl & 4.00 .oa a .(W'j .45 45 Ali M & MH .51 M M .21 5 3 .08H .09 .iSH& .1SH .35 & AS U.00 (11.50 .8J'.jJ .90'i .Is & .41), .8 IS) .29 .55 & .50 .00 S .68 U.00 011.50 CoriM No. a Oats No. a RveNo. 2 BtiTTEn Choice Creamery Cheese Full Cream, fiat....... Eons Preah Pgtatoe. Car-krt, par bu Pobk Mow MILWAUKEE, Wbkat Catih ConNNo. 3 Oats no. a White Bv-k No, 1 Babuhv No. a 1'OltK JtOfcS.... St. LODI& Whkat No. a. . . , , Conn -No. 4.... Oats No. i , Poita Mes CINCINNATI. Wheat No. 12 Red Cons No. 2 Oath No. 2 Mixed BUFFALO. Mi& .93! .43 m Mii .44 6 .45 M.7S ellfi.25 .89U .O0J4 .48 at .60 Wheat No. 1 Hard 1.09 Cobn No, 2 ,Q NEW YOltK. I 1.10 1 .m Cattce Hnos Srn'.ac WniiAT No. 4 lied Cons No. 2 Oats White Pons Now Mess DETROIT. 1.00 te.as S.45 & 6.75 3.59 & 5.00 1.01 & l.iwx, .67 (9 .33 .35 & AS 15.00 15.50 gXTTWi f.00 & 6.45 Jloaa , 5.00 6.50 hniiEP , s.60 8.75 Wheat No. 4 Bed M & VI Cnns No. 2 Yollow .40 m 4a Oats No. 3 White sg S Mn, INDIANAPOLIS. " " VATTJ.S Hoos SlIKBP Lamus TOLEDO. Wheat No. S Bed COKK Oatb-No. 3 Whits PUVKB 8EED EAST LIBEB'Py. OAtTl.Bf'rime Pair..., Common , 4.00 & 0.00 0.00 m 0.50 3.50 m i.2S s.00 e$ 5.25 .OOjllHlll,,,,,.!,!,!., ,,,, imiHiiiiiiiiiiMMiMi tiM

.95 3 .S3 .49 ev .47 .41 & .31 4.S5 & 4.95 6,60 0 0.45 4.75 ft CM B.00 f 4.00 0.25 5 0.75

4.00 as 5.0S

THE JffiLLQW SCOUilGE.

DEATH 6t l'BOf. fttOCTOKi THlt 'After Vistlliasjr Florida He Return to Mew York asm DUIs trf tho Black Vomit A kdyal Wo4dH tt Turin I tdmi .' tlHnu l ititiresti Heir Ifork ipeclatj " Professor Richard A. Proctor, tho ttstroh omor and lectut f i", Hied of yello feV( ir lit tliC Wlllnfd Farker t'rlfato hospital ill tills city. The I'rofegsor's dostb Was pr'ecddoc. bjf th elmnietoclstid Hook tonlit. whlcb Set oil doubts at rest. Professor Proctor" arrived in this city: direct from Florida by nUI, ana putiir at the Westminster Hotel. Ho had spent tho sUuimdr itt his place called Oak Lawn. Marion County, Florida, and was not known td have been oxriosod to the (Itaaasoi thcr.' had Won so eases in MaHttit Jo int', Uo woe on rtrtt for Bneland, where he W as to lecture thin f itll iind winter, and hid loft his wile and family In Florida. The day after his arrlv al be complained of fe tlir .g unwell, and It goo i baoamo apparent that the Professor wa vory sick, and health o.Tlcers wore oilllod in. Bis arrival from Florida made the a unploions. Lain in tho day the Professor bscuirt) better. He dil not belleVethat ho ws suffering from yellow feverj bht thouitht it was malaria. I: wus finally decided, in view of the bad sy.nttoms, to taltytho puticnt to tho Willard Parker hospital. Here a relapse set in. aid the trouble was complicated by tho apjiearnnco ot symptoms ot Itright's disease. At 7:15 doath occurred, preoeded by slight convulsions and tho black vomit of tho yoliow fever. His remains were placed in a mouillle ooffln. aceortllng to tha rules of the board c t health, so thera could be uo danger from burial in any cometory. Riohord Anthony Proctor, B. A., wi bom at Chelsea, IBngUNudi March 93, Itt37 and Srtt.luaied from life John a Coileje, Cam brklse, in 18C9. He wits appointed a fellow of tho Royal Af tronomicul Society hi I66S and am hono-ary fellow of King's College, London, in If 73. He edited tho Pro seedlngs of the Royal .astronomical Society in 1872-3. In 1860 he orcated great interest by maiutiiiuins, agatiiBt the almost universal opinion of astronomers, tbo theory ot :Iic solar sorona, and also that of the Inner complex soltir ittmosplicre. both of which hnvo since been accepted. In 1875 Prof. Proctor severed his connection with the Csthallo Church bacai.se. its ho said, the theologians Of the church had convinced him thitt the hrtlrfin,. rtf AArf.!l1n Qninniidf, viftwri -rhfplt ha ' hl i.i.-.-il .Jt Vtn n.i.mnl u InnntnoDl II, M with loyalty to thai; fnlth. In 1881 Jfr. Proctor was marirled at St Joseph, Ho., to a nlcce of Gen, .Jefforson Tliompsoi., of Virginia, " . Mr. Proctor had written much oh ioicntiflo subjocts. and was ;ho author of score than sixty books, nt.ost.iy On astronomical sub jeots. the principal, one beuig "Other Worlds than Ours." first published in 1870, and "Transits of Venus, I87 A K0YALWEDD1NG. Harrlago of the Disk of Aosta to Ii4i Prtn ceas Letllla Bonaparte, fTurtn ijpocial dispatch. Tho marriage of the Duke ot Aostaand Princess Letitia Bonapnrto was ct iabrated hero with groat pomp. . Tho civil cemraony took placd in the ;?ratid ballot thepalaoei in the presence of tho princes ot the houses of Suvoyi Brogansit. and Bonaparte; Gens, Monnbrae and Dcllaroci. Hig. Crlspi. 8ig Varini, and other dignitaries. At th eoneluJon of tho civil ceremony tho party proceeded to the chapel ot the palace. irl' ro tho religious service was performed. Ct.rdiuttl Aiiinonaa, Arcnotsuop 01 aunn, jeuvoreu the address. Aftei-ward the nowls eddod couple went to the Aosta palace. They wore escorted bv 600 nentlemen on horseback. The cavalcade presented a brillltnt spec tacle, and the tnouaanuetnat uneu (no principal streets cheered enthusiastically. At tho square of Victor Emmanuel th procession halted and the King and Queen and the Duke of Aosta and his bride saiitt'd one another. They wore accorded a popular ovation. .. Chicacd Theatricals, Intra Kiralfy's grand revival, of tha itavel fantomiirjc -mazuim, tns nigm Owl," at MdVickor's Theater, is no-vths Chief est attraction among Chicago thcatn Oals. It is a great production, over two hundrod people b-sing engaged in the various tableaux, ballets, marches, etc. Those who remsmber the porftirmaacos Of the celebrated "Eavels," bo great an attractio s in this country twentyfive years ago, will need no father introduction than to be reminded that it was the most nonular uantomiuio of their tan ortoire. Followiiig " Masnlm " the favorite actress. T nttfu and America s trreutest CO median, Jooph Jeffen-on, will fulfill theii annual engagements at McVicker' j; so that visitors to the We storn metropolis during the next two months will find a rire fsasi of attractions offered ti,m at MjVioker s popclar theater. flttaltas from the Wires, Mjss Laura Lent, a Brooklyn Bocioty belle, has been arrested for stealing diamonds. A large part of the business r istrict oi Huntington, N. Y., has boon ce'troyed by fire, which caused a loss of $UW,0G0. Fire at Cincinnati destroyed the office, machine hop, and foundry of John B. Brownell i. Co., (it a loss of $20,000, well insured. Sib Michael Hioks-Beachuu 1 Charles Bnidlaugh will retire from the British Parliament next mouth, the former 011 account of foiling eyesight and the litter beoaus of financial embarrassment. At a mooting of the St. Paul directors it was ro'olved to pay nothing on the common stock and to roduo3 the dividend on tho preferred stock to 2 per com. against 3J per cent, declared six months ngo. In the Supremo Court at Boston, Mass., William P. Harv.y & Co., of Chicngo, recovered a verdict of $2.1,000 against Z, T. Mo'rill and William Heald for losses paid by Harroy & Co. ou a pork transaction on the Chicago Itoarlof 'iWieiu 183. The RoHdinriKtors' Association of America, at Wsshington, re-elected J. V. Craig, of Charleston, 8. O. Prosidont: J. Buruott, of Joliot, 111., First Vice Irosident; and James Sloan, of tho Chicago i.nd Eastern Illinois, Second Vice i'rosido it. Six persons have recently died itt Franklin Fork, a small farm settlement in New Jorsey, from a disease which is b jliovod to be yellow fevor. Tho first victim of Um mulndy was a sailor who had jusl roturneO from a voyage along tho Southern coast. A Korel idea. Jack Allprey has a large fool. o phenomenally largo foot and he has also a plienonicnoUv cool way of rej. udintinc his debts. "Ye don't owe mo S!2?" sriu an enraiwA hackdriver to him. the otlioi dov. "Yo don't, yoch'Htm' th-if.? An 1 yC'WHi't pay it, yo wou't? "iVeH, it's ines'?lf wishes loud have tho ktaki.u' ye oil iivouu' tha blook wid Jpur (iwui IfutT' Hrptn''H tiamn

BAY VIEW, MICHIGAN. Lire at TlUS IJcantllul SoramerBrsort Tha Asseiriltty Tula Var a Greater guscess than BvSr. SPEOIAL OORSISPdNtlESaE. Bat View, Mich., September, 1968, Five years ngo ot tho mention of Bay "View everybody asked where is it; now it is how can I reach it, for everybody wants to com httre, I att not surprised at th cli&ug), fof "Where bat pleai ors such a field Bo rich, so thronged, so well (spUed The beauty of lake and landscape, pleasant cottage tifo, and the gay throngs Of the Assembly season invest Bay View with a rare charm. Beautiful Hay View, one involuntarily utters a thousand times. No romance is stranger than the history of this delightful plaoe. Twelve years ago it was a dents wilderness nod thirty Indians and chieis united in tha deeds of transfer of ths S to on which Bay View how stands. To-day nearly 300 cottages, some as ornate" e Newport villas, nestle among llle aidphitheSter-teiriced groves looking Oat over the beautiful bay which travelors -Of tsn liken to the fair Bay of Naples. A few lays ngo the census was taken and over 2,000 people -sera found 'spending the season in this Bufitmer city, which has only tin eo familios who stay all the year. Besides, hundreds come every day from Pstoskoy , and surrounding resorts to enjoy the Assembly meetings. In two years tno populiition hts doubled and 6y 1800 it will be 000. s aid Bishop vincont when .uere s few days ago, "There is uo lim it to ths poailbUities of fhy View." Hundreds Of newspaper li liters have described the pl(.ce, its cultivated society and ths varied jUsem'dy attritions till iiltls can be written that is now. And yet tns Bay View Of this season is quite Another than the one of on.i and two years ago. Sooies of new edit ages, new avenues, new public buildings aud larger Assembly plans characterize the progressive Bay view af this year, "he pioneer days are gone and the period of elegance and perfection itt cottage and park, programmes and schools is comk g in. One is continually iraprcssod with the largeness and freedom of every tuiig. Ample Sublio buildings, spacious paiks, a beach ne a mile and a quarter ong, room enough tyr a city of twenty thousand, and plans unfolding for the largest mm. mr resoit and summer university in the land. Tha Assembly of 1888 went out on Wednesday night with fireworks "in a blaze of glory, closing the most successful season in the history of Bay View. The attendance was much greater and ths receipts nearly twice as 'ftrge as last" year, What days and nights of rare delight were enjoyed through that long three weeks' holiday! Song and eloquence and entertainment in the general programme by the most (lifted people in the land, supplemented popular schools in charge of able instruct ors. Every year new plans or evolved to extend the usefulness of the Assembly. Next year it may be a W. C. T. V. traiuiafi school, ara Bible school ot a Bociety of .fine arts 01 all three. This year tho advance was directed to three new departments whose success has been unprecedented, nd have attracted wide attention. Eight months ago the Summer School for Teachers was first announced, and this season the school teachers took Bay View. Loud Hall, the gift of Hen. H. M. Lend, of Oscoda, erected and furnished for I his department at an expense of over 81,000. excites the admiratioa of everybody.' It ia acbmbination of school, boms and dormitory, something entirely new, and a great success. Superintendent David Hoc-ell, o. Lansing, is at the head of this deportment, with a faculty of such strong educators as Miss Matilda H. Boss, Alfred A. Wright of Boston, Miss M. Louise Jones, Prof. Fall of Albion College, Prof. Lodemnnof the Stat4 Normal School, and Superintendent PerryE"of Ann Arbor. A more delighted company I hare never seen than the three or four hundrod cultivated touchers who congregated daily at Loud Hall. Each one goes home to recruit 11 large delega. tion for next year, and the leading educators are discu ssing the ques t ion of changing the annual Stats Association to Bay View during the summer. Another success was this new Normal School for Sunday-school workers. One hundred and fifteen earnest teachers from Congregational, Methodist, Presbyterian, Baptist, and Episcopal schools and seven States registered in the first class. What next in Bay View's widening plans? Nothing less than a School of Music occupying an entire building, with a recital 100m Beating a thousand-people, and illustrating daily by instruction, musical lecture;;, rehearsals, recitals, and concerts the best taste and highest art in musio.

It is said ths general programme was never finer. We have heard daily such eminent talent as Bishop J. H. Vincent, P. 8. Henson, Geo. P. Hayes, 3. DeWitt Miller, Alfred A. Wright, Boston Stars, Amphion Club, H. H. Bagan, and Frank Lincoln, Two davs were largely given over to the W. C. T. IT., which has always had a sympathetic welcome here. Five missionary days of great interest were sandwiched in ths middle of the gen. eral programme. Every diy was full of good things, from the beautiful Kindergarten to ths Church Congress in swift succession passed inspiring devotional and happy children's meetings, Bible readings, sweet vespers and impressive Sabbath eventide services On the beach, excursions and rooeptions, lectures and concerts, olassos in art and oratory. Evory night I retired with a conscious joy that a day of rare privilege had been well Bpent. The summer resort is on Amorican institution that has come to stay, and so fai as I know Bay View is the best of it kind. C. L. S. C. Men of Great Memories. As an illuntration of how the memory may bo cultivated in retaining, a long list of numbers, one has only to observe the freight conductors, and very often remarkable examples of retentive memories will be found. One of them recently talked to a St. Louis Globe-Democrat reporter as follows: "1 have been on the road as a freight conductor for fourteen years, and in that time nty memory has had a careful training- in the particular line of rotiiir iug tho numbers on tho cars. 1 start out on a run and know tho num. bers of all the ears with which the train is mode tip, and whilo some cars will be left at stations along the road and other .cars will be taken up, yet at the end of our run if an officer asks me if I havo a cor number so-and-so I can invariably tell him without referring to my be ok. "Now, when it is rememberod that ithe tntin may be made up of forty cars, and that the numbers run all the way from the hundreds to tho twenty-flvd and thirty i;hon sands, and that it dozen oars anay be taken off and tmothor dozon taktn on along tha rond, my statement undoubtedly seems incre-di-blo to thosa not familiftrly acquainted with this particular department of railroading. But it is a fact, nevertheless, and I have known quite a number of freight conductors who havo meuaories of equal retentiveness. "Noting the numbers on the cars daily for years, a conductor becomes so familiar with the work that his memory holds these large numbers with but little difficulty. The style and poonliar finish of rh "-- from difft rent roads ... ! . !t-i-r . ', and ft conductor at a (.iiustc . an the road to whlil) ft o( belongs m j h Oft MO U."

INDIANA STATE. KJ5WS.

A CHHOKICCE OIF MAFl'BSWiaS XX UOOSIJCKMOK. Shocking. Ilea ths, Terrible Acrtdent, ,'orrlblo Crimes Proeedlnss of Courts, Bo crot SooloUei, and, In fact , Hlverj-tlili lj of Jntereat to Uto HoosJors. The Ooron ir's inquest Seveloped the particulars ii tbo terrible flouble tragedy at Montgome ry. John Keplinger tostified that John Brady went to Montgomery to sell ensue hogs, for which lV reeeived $180 1 1 money. On bit way home hs passed St. Michael's Church, wtmel Was at work, Mr. Keplinger was a sontractor, nnti invited me to accompany him home to supper, which I did. After supper we concluded to sit down b' the stand-table ia the eorneir of tbe ioom and have a (jama of cardi, Mr. Brady sat with hi? back against! toe wind ow, sill, and J! with my side ineitr the table directly In :tront of 'hinn We plsyed cards fora good while, when he anked his daughter Kate to bring in tome peaches from the kitchen. Shortly nfter the girl stepped ont, as I was resting toy elbow on the table, I heard a shot and saw Mr. Brady fall. A thought flashed through me that some one was shooting from the road . I started toward the window when this next shot came through the window .and struck mo. The ball struck me in the mouth, and, all bleeding and wounded, I tattotit of the door and heard some one galloping away on a horse. My jaw is shattered and mouth terribly lacei-ated. Keplinger is very seriously injured, and it is a question' whether he recovers. Wounded as he was, Keplinger ran down to his bearding-house and gave the alami. Friends at once rushed to the house of the tragedy and i!ound the daughter alone with her dend father, who was lying prone upon the floor. The" crime wss the most dijbolica! thai has eve;t occurred in Dh'riess County. The Deadly Dysuunlfv. The citizens of Cutler, a small town of Carroll County, were terrified one night recently with a loud explosion that seemed to shake the earth' for a mile. Some fiends had placed a dynamite cartridge under the postotSce and it went off, with terrible effect, totally destroying uhe entire building and blowing the contents of the postoffice into unrecognizable fragments. During the past year five attempts hove been made to blow up this same building. Fortunately, no lives have been lost. Whether these attempts are aimed at the postmaster or tho owner of tho building, there is a difference of opinion. Some miscreants placed two pounds of dynamite under the hotel a few nights ago, but for some canes it failed ia its intended mission. A, great deal of excitement is manifested, and the citilenj are determined to bring the guilty partis to 4uatioa4t;iai!h.at thing is;pMiili.v. -. Badly Burt by a Train. Wilson Prtwson, aged ('4 years, was struck by a Bee Line passenger engine at Anderson, and received injuries that will probably prove fatal. Dawson at the time w&s walking east on tha rail? road track, apparently in deep Study. The passenger train, with Engineer Leeolair at the throttle, came arouiid a slight curve from the west. The engineer instantly blew the whistle bnt seeing no attention paid to the warning, reversed the engine and put on the airbrakes. Bellore the train could bo stopped, hcvever, the pilot of the engine had struck tjie old man. Dawson's left leg was crushed at the ankle, the bones protruding through the flesh. His right arm wan broken between the shoulder and elbo-ir, his head and face badly bruised and cut. The physician .expresses the opinion that the foot will have to be amputated, an operation that may cost the wounded man his life. Fatal Quarrel Between Farmer. As two farmers, James Surlier and James Bailsbaok, were returning horns from Pendle!;on they became engaged in a dispnte over a woman, a relative of Surber's, whom be claimed Bailsback was on terms of intimacy with. Both were in an intoxicated condition, and when about five miles from town Bailsback struck .Snrber with a club. ' A scuffle ensued, but they were separated by a companion named Beedy, who persuaded them to shake hands, and both men were apparently on friendly terms again when Bailsbaok suddenly renewed the attack. Both leaped from the wagon, and Snrber, drawing a large knife, plungediit IntoBailsback's neck andthen twice into his side, piercing his heart. Bailsbaok full and expired in a few momenta. The murderer is stillat huge. Killed by n Bolter Enploefoou The boilei: of Bennett Glover's Steam thresher exploded with terrific force, while at work on tbS farm of Edward Green, ten miles northwest of Seymour, William Bennett, one of the owners, who was acting as engineer, was killed. Two employes, Wesley Alexander and Honry Kern, were badly injured. The Erfnt'no Democrat has the following additional particulars: George HcBlfresh received several bruises on the head; John Lamport, legs, side, and abdomen bruised; Brtizil Weekly, severely scalded; Ambrose Thompson, severely bruised; Charles Dabb was blown ono hundred feet, but was not seriously injured. William Bennett's body was hurled 160 yards. He was a man of family, as wore also Khe nieu most aeiiously injured. Survivor of a l'owerful Tribe. Col. W. H. Tallmage, General Indian Agent and payee of tho United States Government, is st Peru effecting a filial settlement with the Eel Biver Miami Indians of this counts now numberi ng twenty-two persons."! This is the last and final payment to be made to them tinder the treaties of August 3, 1795, August 33, tm, and September 30, leOO; aggregating i total of $122,000, 'or a per capita ot $rtiG.I5. Considerable trouble is being experienced regarding appointments of guardians, etc., of the children; The greatest amount to any o&e family is that to Louisa Godfroy, wife of Peter Godfroy, and daughter of Shiu-go-quah, wha received f 5,076.90, This bare handful of twenty -six persons represents a onoe great and powerful tribe. An Unknown Dlseasa Kill Huband nod Wife, and Leave a Child Tatally III. One of the saddest incidents on rec jrd is that of tho death of Mr, Isaao Woolley, ona f ! 'U'npTletow of tho Cutty' vtUo .'- .oiHj..,.iy! mt Ihetbeni,

jfo::ii!i prominent bnimees twin. !!!-(! ci me so sudden, that, its ;rS fcin'jjQ t rious disetiSi! is not kno'i n. Bi' ii"! h mra afterwai 3 lis wife and iewlirfis. p: red, although she had boon i&jnimi wnll. and both t.niiina lie- in thostrinlltS home at tho sumo time. One nj!,tfi children is no-r at the rente of ovtn A tar at tits but in fatal rliueeai 'J'i.ll-t st ems to be no explanation of tha l:ti nu scourge. : s CannoTieis Badly Injured, . ;gM A terrible acjident,tind.jno rhiclt iU probably prove ftitnl to one com n Saisd, owurred on the hill sotith of !MW 3 hree men T .Bodcroatteiv J. Fu-.bBt a nd V, Smith "rore firinff a eanii'litl finU himorofn Detiocxatic pole-raihiiig occur. Jrrom tome reason tl ert- f4 I irematuire exp lesion, in wb ich f Intll t lad the grcate t portion of bis hand tjj tif. Fichtner, however, w.iivedu fag force of the cljirfi, it tearing off lMi 1 rands end frit lit tally maas'li: lg th V I t tim to the. ehciilder, alKci, btrainif 111 i least, face, and bliu dine the eyes; us lecorery is doubtful. ;odft9iako (jscaped unhurt- ' . S ; . Cni'ihwlto Death. A frightfuloodfistal accident oo&mtli

w sioh occuTwic. recently.

iiiiar Crawfordjville. Woritmea wrt; repairing the iron bridge over Haftir'-: : Orei.k, and We w using a largo derrick, to imise heavy n.ck. The den-iok friin iiome cause btame"urimanttg. b!d, s.ttti .; in falling struck San Mar ley, one of ilitf men employ d. Hs wis crusted to 'th? j .round by the hugo beam nd botti 1 ja'' lnroken, besides sutitaiaing a bad Wotmd ji the side, '..'he injnred ma r Iivd'!'t i few hours. Hs was a stendy. hardr i i vorking citizen, and leaves one ohiljV m orphan, as his vtfe did severalyets SO- ' . : "

Kltlodbya: . A distressing ace idouti(tr.epirtedfr' Braytown, Btntierlaud County, as ossosKring on th farm of Mr. Alb'ttt Hants. His little 3-year-old son wat bitten en tlae head by a vicious horse, U aving the brain bars ana exuding frOia a'-eionnd nearly two inches equate.. Chs .little fellow had medical attention et soon o possible, but death followed in a iuV hours. He via the only a id of bis parents, and It is sudden death ban be en . severe shook to them. 'mmBieotrle Hallway at TsssM4ls'. The sew elKitr le street-car Hue i now in successful c pcrntjon mLai'aycttisi ni cars are propo lie d ap the ste p grades of West Lafayette to Purdue 'University, and up the giasdo to Oakland. Helg'.iia with the grenliest ease. Xkn tw siop and start without any troubls, nsjoV 1xaaette is feeling s&nak wp" ever the only-electric Btreet-car iiwais Iadiaiio. Mfiuar-mat Itoia . - Thomit Stevens, of ITonroevir-c, has brought unit for $BN,090 din?es iffainst Diiar'us A. Mill idniTieotli"T ifoi having IvBa, a4d'.fBil(.B. i and deprived or his liberty. Typhoid fever is fcavfag full btV ng at Brownsbui' J and Clermont, r A boy naoied Foyuigf aged 18, lost both of his lens by the car, -tiilak-"ing a coupling at Elwood. M i Um Wnnu mrl itano-htofL rsfStltlison County, while riding in a ipatpige near Blwood, were thrown down th?bankment by uheir frightened l.orse bud very seriously injured. ; . At Coxville, a mining toun,,ji few miles north of Terre Haute, Jell' Jffverson shot and instantly killed N. K. Jewell. Boh parties are colored. The murder grew out of the rivali-r of tha ' men for ths hand of a prt tty colc red,; girl named Ilia Madison. - As Levi Evans wss riding a hois along a highway in Harrison Ooniyx.. the animal became frificed--sl.' threshing mttohine and dropped snd- ,. denly dead. - ' ; '.- The Ninety ninth Indiana trill hvli their first annual reunion at Peru, Tataday and Wednesday, Oct. and 10. A ; large attendance is expected. Address ' all communications to IraB. Myrs, Se retary. ; James Chamberlain, who disappeared, from his "home near Plainville, i)Ti days ago, was found hanging to atf At Terra Hante. Frank Moibtair. ai barber, shot and killed himselt in. pmb ence of hi sweetheart, who Aatl carded him. Mrs. Getd-ge Larkins, who lives bsfe tweec CrawfordsviUs and Waynetown, was thrown from a buggy in a runaway, and her left i.im was broken i a two placoa, the bones protruding through the flesh. A child In tho buggy with her escapsd uninjured. Hog cholera is raging near Thoratowa. Many farmers have lost their Satire crop. Others are selling for fea;.-of the disease. Eugene Bank in a yonng man while feeding strow into a baling Biachlne-, near Thorntown, had his leg caught ind crushed. About one year ago Ma. lather was pnralysod by a stroke of lightaing. ; Edvard Chamberlain, the Monticello murdere r, who has been t onfined in the Northern prison for sevoral' months for safe-keeping pending his trial, bids fair to defeat the ends of jus tloe, for he is gradually starving himtielf t a death. He has not tasted food of any kind for two weeks past, and refuses ven delicacies. His appearance is f really changed, and unless his trial cccurs soon he wiH succeed in making sway with himself. Andrea' Woodfill fell dead QMr his I arm, nine miles from Madison. The bear that has been running round near B luff Mills is no w in the vicinity of Crawfordsville, aud waaoou I y several person. ' 5 Samnel Wheeler, aged W, orttlf ith terrible death near Staunton. Ia sliding from a wagon-load of hay lie was impaled on the ragged end ot i p4t hfork handle. He lived but-about an ' hour, dying in great agony. Freddie Walker, aged 10 years, wliUe playing ball near the Wabash, Ball way track, at Columbia City, stepped inroat of a passing train and was run trter snd to badly injured that he died is, a short lime. The Crawfordsville Kattral. Gas t'ompauynow have f 5,000 stock uibi oribed, and au asr -ssment o t per cent, has been ordered. It is proposed to purchase tools, ropes, etc., and proneed to drill. Probably the tools of the Lebanon Company will be secured for H,000. Land will be leased aud work lornnjenesd at once. Hotsl ble wi wit oo tho Sui

' v 4,-tH' 'V-' A:'- . 'iHfnTreri-rr-' J "srHiin t