Bloomington Progress, Volume 24, Number 5, Bloomington, Monroe County, 26 March 1890 — Page 1

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Republican Progress. TILU1BLE 4MERTISING Circulate! Among (he "Best Farmer in ' JL REPUBLICAN PAPER DETOTEB TO THE ADVANCEMENT OS TlUi tOCAL INTERESTS OP -And is QHtf, bufE4Mr;Mei&r a Each ESTABLISHED A'. t $LM Per Yttt

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GREAT SOUTH AIHSEICAH

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The M(, AtQjiisliIng Mdle Dtseovepy erf ?; , tlje iast One Hundrea.Yeara y - . It is Pleasant to the Taste as the Sweetest HeetaiDv -It Is Safe and Harmless as the Pofe;."T ' 1613 "H KjrraeTiifr;li ody rceeotiy beeu introduced

VUBOoannj ujruie ureat iUjkAencaa JttedKine.ypnipany.aad yet-its

acamtiwaitW .1 tnoi by. flio native inh-i

i katiu. ihwiw,,i ikij iy CJ w

'qoalities Mthefttt tiiknthrn -loHfce medical rabfe ' completelr solved, tie ttotilemof the cura of In2

Complaint, and diseases of the gaaeal NeWcfes

Kervine Ttwic -qualiti as -which " it imsseeses and fcv its neat curative wowpra

upuu uiuiuvauvu vtg.ua, uwBiamacn.TneiiTer ana xneDaweia. jmo remedy

aL. J5 x. . - a

wnpsr9 wiui uns womiexnury Taioatue nervine lomc as a Duuaer and rtrengthener oCtbe life forces of the bmnan body aid as a great remiwer of a broken doura const! tatkm. It is alw of more real permanent Talue in. the treatment and cure of diseases of the Inasa than anr 'ten-consumption rem

edies ever nsed on Has contzaeat. of ranalesof ailagea. liawho are

ma umco au oa, wnwu not. tmja. w was Hin grew xervui XOUC aunOBC comtawtly for the mage, rf Awo-or three years, it-will carry thenv safely owr the danger. TfcSs -greet Btreagtbener and 'enxatire fa inestimable valoe to the aged ami infiirm, because its great enenrianir croDeTties'will

gm tbemanevnold on life. It will avoir of theme wbo . will l a V : T i itii.-,-y- -XTWKiaUOB . , Kenoas Headacbe-aiid - Sick Headae&e, ,r . . .- ' Jecmte Weakaea, : ABDSteases of, Wojaen. KemwCliiB : ' v'. EnaljiBs, Hattw raruxyaias ima ' Knvuus- Choking - Bot3Ha&ea, falpitation of the Baas Meatai Ifecpandenej), . BL VkWs Bancs. liervonaneas of Fenitles. Kenraamess-of Old Age, , ' . Nemahji . .. " " Pans la'Aeeart, -j - Pans iamffiS Failing Healtb. Ail then and aaany otber oomplrinis

HERVOUS DISEASES. Asa core ftr evrayckasof Kervotis Diseases, noremedy has been abla to compare witfartle eTcwbiAfahamndrmsb dpnfoSoweTn.ntion and impaired digestion. W"8" inefficient sappb of nerve food in the lilood, a general state of debihty of the brai" msno nndaems the result. Starved Mrves,like at&rved mtscles, leeome strong when the rigbt land of food is supplied, and , flyaiaawAwmAiiMwnaand ailments diaappe as the nervea recover. As the nervous srsttm must snpplyall tne.power by Trbien thejital forces of the body are carried on, it b the first to suffer for wt of perfect nutoiion. Oonary food s ot contain a sufBcient quantity of the kind of nutaaent neeesBaryto repair the wear er present mode of living and labor jbipoks upon the nerves For treason it becomes necessary tbat a mmHfd. Tnmt prodnetionof the Booth Amerkwn Gontuientnas been foandTby analyst tocctaintheeasentialelemOTtsout ofwldcb nerve tissne formed. TJteaeeonntfoit(inagk power to cure all fonna of nfirvoaa

caassuiisiiiiii.Tsi,'ii ,tt.' Dkax 6am:-l dre to aarW joa lie I aarendbred form&ij Tanwttk away ktiom Mi fin nf Ihr rminriir ir Itoiea crayMelm I eaatd hear o( lm done ne aar appncl iMe rood untU I waS aJTonic and Mooaeh ia r Cnre.aafcwe AUtaig at Wawgglerfal i at iiinHBrnnin ! me maaMaot beshtoK) mppU Ez-TreaKMoaUoaerrOD,

a smm ontB fob si. YiTus s danc of chorea. j

Caawioanirnxx, lira., Svnm Ur mvgSet. twela jaas oHTUaTDtaa afticMd far aaveral atoutha with Cheese or St. low aaTtbiDsbotniinu :-l aad haaDe her like; k9 Infant- Ooeviraiid a. I commenced giving her eaa merviae Tooic: the efleeta wbto very otarJiUMb In three day she was rid ot the nerfwraeia. aid rajddly laRieovjd. -Foot totttea cured her com trie i. I think the Sodth American Serrlae the .aramlnt remedy ever AlaeoTered, aadwocld reeommend lf-to everyone. . laaa.W.&BfHI9BBC. 8akaarlbiid and sirora tobefomBtStUslsay ta, UBh : Ous. M.jLTia;KotaryPulUc. hidig: '''' - 'Hie

ESTIOJI

Waieh mt iiow cto o il tlia oei rcA lor tlwi nm-n nf TmVuwiirifHi Dvanensia. and the wast train of Evinptoms

and horrors which are the result of dfaease and debuTtf of 4he iaman atom--ach. Mb neaaan can afford to pass bv this jewel of incalculable value who -?

nt&eted bydiseaaoof the 8t'pnwich,becansetheexpeyietand testimony of

Inoasanaa go to jirovetnai nis is me uss anu use great. -cure m ine wwU Aaf thW.tmi mmImuJ jtpMtrtwiwr. Trrr ifl'TiA eaia of nnmalifrnarit diseasa

iif Jlai iliiiiuali aliii Ti run resist the tKeivine Tonic. i E. HiB, of VaynetowB..Xh&. sayw i air 1Mb to Tto eieat scuta American a I had han. in bed Jur months from the ettcctaat an exhaiuted Btomacc. In- !, JWirnaa nostnuon ana tsnu IttmauimmaX mr whole avatenai Had firSdrThM the Nerriae Toolo :im?roredmeaornf-h that I MaUawaIlcaliet4aaaaaw1tleacoied uairflriK. Mlmall lha tiMt xeadieiM in nmwaald. I cannot leeommendit Wa highly.' KnC BV BameTt eaor Creek,Tl r. XooL. turn iwil acnnsl iMitifra ttf The Snath Ainarteaa fi'ftvvina Tonie. and will eev I a several censider it tba bi adicine in Uorid. I aeuannBBveuKVsoxnaDoi.)iir:uana. They were down unti sotbinK appeared to do ' mem any gped n.itu I procured tma rea U wa very SBrfWainf mm rspidly ttey n&asovca on its tse. inasaM sine to aUasy aefchbeea. EVERY BtHTLE aPiettj Leje ISouivee Bottles, tr' and

- saniei

mm

uiiuurb wnouy upon lis Teat, weaicinal J

ujr waisp uKj JTB qye mep,; i inn Thitf medicine has sWRi". "vet. cures all it DerfbmiSTthia bv the Great .a . . -m .a. - a ,t . -. It' is a marvelous core for nervousness approadmigite optical neri add tea or fifteen years to

iMmif dtaea boitloa of the remedy gacly ygar, CURES 5

Debility .of Old Ago, . Indigestion Jand l)agWiaj Heartborn and Soar tftomacb, . Webt and Tendeine in Stomaob, Loss of Appetit : ' Prigbtful Dreams, ' :. J Dimness end Binging in. the ao, Weakness of Extremnies and ' - Impore and Impovensbd Blood, BoiW and Carbnncks, ' Berofola, liver Complaint. Chianic DarrhaBaj Delicate and Scrofolons Children, ' Sommer Complaint of Infanta. cared by tlw wonderful Kervine Tonic InvBblomoa Boad, a aiemoet of flie SocietycsnBerrineTonieaad Stomach and Liver Cure, and I consider that every bottle did J( mom Kot bad a StJpdnight'. d-JP jJVJ? i a account of irritadarvpainjStorriple dreams. and aeneial nervom prostration, wUcn aaa TpaiaaieStinBaCIi aad bra broken down jl rnndltinu of mr nenrous ayatem. . But now I ear wi ue oown ana steep au ni&n as irmiru rrrQ f I 4aa Ilka at anunrt wiiui. I da not think tkuHiiak Kai akvtti fwwan ft. trid tH fie In trTMUClBd flltO this countiT which will at aB fytrpMC with 1BV IICITilie 4auvwrtw- - way-; CaawsuausrnisvJnn June Xj dausuW, eleten years old, was severely arBlctedwith 8t VIfaDujoerChorea. Wa gave her three and one-half bettks o! South' ftmeriran Kervine 'andibe la completery roatoxed. I believe Uwfll cure aeery case ot St VMVsBaee,.Ih4vekept ittajnytarnnyfor two yearaamtmeure it is the greatest remedy In e wwSfftw IndiCTStforl'and Dyspepsia, forma of Nervous Msoedeni And aiilng Health Irom whatever cause. . . JdBifT. Han. State cfladtma, Jj..- - , .' iforJgoinery Cotsuty, j w . ., 8ntetii4e4ssd,prom to Pclore me this June -TT - loaatii,,

A1TD DYSPEPSLtV Aaaeriean Neryiim 'ronie' -v

wnderi&eanifive powers e the South - :.:. : Vrs. EBa JLBrsttoe. of NeW-Bcj, Indiana, aaya: "lean neexTr how muchi owato the Kervine Toaie. My ayatem was completely shattered, appetite gone, was coughing and spitting- up Wood; am son I was in the first augeaofeonaiuapuon,an inheritance handed down through several geneiations. I began taking- the Kervine Tonic and continued ita use for about six months, and' ant cqtiraly cured. It is the gmndeat remedy tor nerve. I -' 1Beaten naa neeuvurv mm lor vcura. was eaa everely. I only weighed 110 pounds hr n I using soutn American HMnriiA I have two bottles and now weigh VO pounds, and am much stronger and fe, 4f, litwa iMum-liir Sva veafa. Am SUra would not have lived through tbe Winter had I not secured tojs remedy: llv emtomera sea what it has done for me and buy it eagerly. It guves great satis faction." WARRAWTEa .. Trial Size, IB gents. Retail Agents

i:i Tiuwirii.

Si ;ra NEWS EECQBD. SVUKARY Or A W1!EK8 KTKNTFDI. ' HA PI'ENiMnsi."' Qiiartfir of llwaokwortd-iltimi; Comi Acciant Crimea. Suiotdea. Klo. . Xt. V.1 laIo Qnaattoaa. Pittaburgh gpaoial: The resnlt of the th V4tntidi ( Ubo la Tw Yoife naajuat oeen made public here;' Vfoe rreuwm nunnm Martin Bays no one ordered toaemanS"' eiglftaourjaf, nor to .strike to enloroe the .dmand. Kr. ' Martin saH3iit vai'l left' entirely optional Trith each trade whether they desired or thought the ' eouTd Beouro eight hours for iraay's work. It.wiir.also be optional with the trades whether they will go into the question or not That they will do so is shown by the replies sent to the federation from most all trades, saying they desired to and were able to win for eight hours. As it is left to the strongest trade,'. Pittsburgh and 'Wheeling districts will be represented bv the earpenters.flrst HBklng a conference with the bni!ders;and refused,, demanding it. New Xork and Boston stonemasons will probably make the. jSrst.tbreak in those eitiesLto be "followed by other strong oiganbsations. - The VelUt Gaaa. " Lafayette (Ind.) special: In the habeas corpus proceedings in the Tettit ease Dr. J'. yf. Yeager, family physician, testified that when called to see Mrs. Pettit, she tpld him to trent Tier for Strychnine poisuains. 8heaaid there wasjioiaon in a cup of given her by .her husband. xu maamK a reoon to tne nenitb ottinn. L ikKaritaiasMis.,PeUit'a Aeathwas v.udcu vy tcuto uniaria. &a so ue poisoning he did not want to harrow the feelings of the relatives by stating his suspicions. He said that moral considerations had been brought to bear on him since, an,r he had; changed iiis opinion as to? the cause iof death. Hfe asked Mr.fPettit, why hefdid nof'refnt'e the eharires nreferred aminst him at the juetnoaia UnnSertmce; and Pettit ireplied that he could sot without invc Ivinft another person. Vneaaiaesa VhronKhoat Europe. The Detroit Journal has the following cablegram: From time to time there have several things loaked out which indicate there can be no donbt there, would; have been a rupture long before between Emperor William and Bismarck, but.f or two deterrent conditions. First; the Chancellor regarded himself, and was regarded, as the creator of the empire. Second, the burden of the debt of sratitude of the Hohenzollern family to Bismarck rested heavily on the aWe7ftnayclM8ni'teb -veai,. is it might place him in an unpleasant position before his subjects. Bismarck isfor peace, and William wants to- be - a second Frederick the Great. That there will be a war between Frinoe and Germany there can be no, doubt. The Fteode in the Santa. The crevasses' at Balaigb, La., and Offutts, Miss., are certainly, likely to effect seriously the railroads iu their respective vicinity. The Mississippi Vallev BailroaWWwe owsion, ls-nqw under water at Lamont, Miss., and the track is being staked dow ana wtrea to the trees to prevent them from being washed away. xne unatn crevasse causes this overflew now 600 feet wide. Unless it is closed very soon, tnis orevasse will flood large portions or wasnington. Sharkey and Issiqnentt counties, thegarden of YazoffrHtts.,-cOVering an inunenso area. .. a. .. . & ""4iSx4f I VOL Vr-Hnriiv. M ofrndttotor n the son t-bound LfluiivsHe andFKashviUe airia ahnf anM IrilledsthSh This happened on the' train 'near Bay Miuette, Ala- The negro refused to pay the .fare .demanded by the ponductor anfl te latter IriM to eieot him, bat Urod. hitting the conductor in tho rignt breast. The eonduptor tben.flred tour times, hittinjPrtie negto each tune, tbein stabbed him with a pooket-knife. The lec.di84aiino8t instantly. vj, The Gnnnaala' IHln,DIater,uishland, (1?a-)fc.spAii3: Thyos by the'6ermani.-. mine fire is greater than at first estimated, as the men had just struck a body of. rich ,ore just be tow the fifth ieveii. shaft No; 3, which isjminod bv cavins. It is understood now that the fire started from a candle dropped by a miner coming up 'for .supper at midnight. It is impossible to get down in tfte mine at present,and sevroUrng--for tf e bodies is yjvejn jnp nnti the. mine cae clearest sutoke and water, t jj t , ' I VVree an tha jpiovi r imt, - - A freight train on the Olover Leaf Railroad w wjceekodj offe.tftiel near Three cars ot merchandise wrecked and ethers badly demolished. A tramn was riding in a grain ear, one of the "destroyed, but was picked out alive. The delay was not very great. Closed Its Door. An advance of 153 per neut, iu the price of soda ash caused the Canton, Ohio Glass Company to dose its doors. Work will bo resumed soon to fill presi ' . ... . is not roduood. the company will go out ,pf .business. The ..factory employs iou men and .bff beeu. running, night And day for more than a year. a .' . A Elorlda Hlaxn, K- A disastrous fire destroyed two Mocks of buildings in La Villa, a suburb of 3aekgouvillc, Wn and a boarding housein tbe city proper, causing a loss oi nearly $125,XJ0, largely covered by insurance. - j. ' . i v . ' ' ' BI8XA SOU ItSTfSES. "Ax Uraat German gtataaiiyui Tenders lUa nesfa-natloH. Berlin special: Both Prince Bismarck "n4 bis son,' Count Bismarob&.have re signed, and Emperor William has ac cepted the resignation otthn Chaucellor and will probabry allov. the Count to retire. Various rumors are afloat con cerning the affair, which 'have caused intense excitement in Berlin. All the members of the 'Prussian Ministry e. sinned at the same time Prince Bis marck tendered bis resignation. Some' of the morning pabers sfttrm that theJJariorar iiiformsd-Jt'riiice Biamartk that lee if it wss his desire io retire to private life. A rumor is abroad to the effect that tho Emperor intends to ap point General von Caprivi, who is now commander of the Tenth Army Corps,; to the phanceJlorship, it is tumprsd in

well-informed political eiroles present difference between the

and Prince Bismarck was irreconoilable. It arose. Iroin the Chancellor's refusal fo. accede, to ' a request made by Ir. Windtborat, the leader of the clerical party in Germany, to restore to the Duke of Cumberland, the oUimant of the tfiroue of Hanover, the larger portion of the Guel( h f uudU , . .' AN AWFUL HOBROK. Indianapolis the Scene of. s Shooklug Casualty Twelve Men Koanted. ; . A special trow u(luittpoijsJ; .dstedtho ,18th MissI, .kayss Mm fternVon art. fr.m si'furnace in the btaement of the Jarge book publishing establishment of ihajBowen-MerriH Comfiny. reaobid gonie pjpf er, and in an instant.tb, flames were'eanried by the elevator shaft to the fourth story. The building; a fine stone antriron structure, ' fronting - on Washington street, was stored with books-sad stationery-of all kinds.- This large stock was consumed, and the buildiucr r wrecked. 1$M e'o.lopk this 1(M -of moj'. 4hP lowed bytbe falling in of tho roof, which carried down more than twenty persons, including those who were working on thevariousfloors. The fire-at this honr bad be en driven to a comer between the oeilingof the fourth story and the cornice. Parts ottbefireeompanses were on fberast working- theipway downtothe fire. The roof seemed sound and the walls substantial, but sudden lv the wall 'yielded. A man threw -up his arms and sank into the seething ruins below. Another man dropped, and then the whole "irear roof, with fifteen men-. On it, fell to the top floor where the fire, was raging. Four men were on the 'upper floor under theroof. These were crushed beneath -the grinding timbers and all the men hurled throijgltho fallinp floor beneath, which gave way beneath the weight of the mass. One of the firemen on tho top of the ad joining buildiuor ran to the front of the building and shouted to those below: "For God's sake throw water into the upper windows. Twenty men are buried there." Instautly amb'ulahess were telephoned for and presently the crowd below moaned under the portentious developments. The scene on me neaps or aeons immediately alter the collapse was pitiable and dreadful beyond all-power of description. The limbs or men here and there were seen writhing, while thetrunksto which thev belonged were bnried from sight. A ladder lay across three men and was weishted down bv tons of brick anil timber. Another poor fellow, now beyohd all pain, lay. close beside his fel lows, a snapeiess ana mangioa mass. Thi ladder , lay across the stomach of one man, who was ' screaming with agony. Another man with a broken arm ana twisted bndy lay next to him. As fast as willine hands could hnrl awav the briek the weight was removed, but the ladder was too firmly held to yield. The man with a brokea.arnr was draeced -free and curried away. Under him. mute, but brsatbine, appeared the uo--tuiTfti'd face of a poor fellow not seen before. The mortar and dust were cleaned from his limbs, but he was buried so deeply that no immediate heln could come to him. On all sides blackened and bleeding faces, distorted, with agony or dreadful in death urged ! the crowd who had scaled the heap, to redouble their efforts. The debris leys uarSinrnyr. it-lay with a yalavauaoie sguaa twr wura raj-maw There was no place to deposit the materials dug from the bottom of the valley, except to throw them on the sides of the . i i .1 1 1 aepression ironi wnica mey cvuuuuiuij rolled down toward tne center again. All the worlt of relief was thus carried on with oreat difficulty. One by one the men nearest the surface were extricated, but as the workers went down further they discovered new viotiras and horror stea ifiy grew. The forward part of the buil ling stood high and burned fiercely and threatened evefy moment to fall dow i and bury the brave rescuers, but they gave no heed to the peril, un eithsr side the walls tottered and seemed ready to fall, but there was no time to thin k of them. As fast as the men at wort became exhausted others stood ready and anxious to fill their places, so theje. Wvanojt araqment of dolny in the labor of relief. Every moment was nuea with nn.wfu).- suspense f or, nil . were thinking' of 'the friends jrho lay buried beneath th"eoW NjilaeS whicji were inoui -ea alter were passea-vuroegiy.jroni Hp to liP suil people bent dow$ toucan oloiieiy tne oiaqiteneoano soarraju races. r erions wno cau inenuiyunuux uo uro men j, ot among ertwenwo werstsupnosBcrto have Oeen m or near me? ratm walls, became- frantic as time passed and they could eat no. word- As the wounded wMif aairiedVout of tbelruins tfiofwere met wjtiFembraees an, tears of ;oy, butTMn8novstill, broken-forms weie borne awav. motionless and limp. .then it "whs whoa the lull sadness and horror ox tbe calamity came upon tue waiting crowd, . TKUpPSltM TtW STRUCK Sism't frurribn tath Aflnr agfiig pr IstaTt on tne war Cherokee ntfeniera. ii speoial from Garthr!!!'' T.ated tho 20th. inst., says: The patrol of -t fie CierokeeVstrip by forces' of J'lie United States army began to-day. TJen. Mer rit:, commanding the department of the Missouri, issued' orders to the effect early yesterday morning, and all day ".yesterday aua a paitlS-day robps otj enrairy ,wer$on theymajtth to to -v place. Tt.e forces &oludod in be order were as follows: ' Troop t. atty mes,-rrom Ftrt Beno, Capt. E. M. Hays, commHndihgsfedop TCj sixty men-from Fort i Hji4o..Capt. A.' E. Woodsdg; oommaudtng; troop r , urty men, irom r on ouppiy. Capt. Georse H. Paddook. comminding; troop I, forty men, from Fort supply, Juieut. Andrews, commauaing. These troops were massed at this point this morning and from here will march to four different points equi-distant fiom one another along the southern boundary of tbe strip. Thence they will march in squads covering as much ground as possible north through the strip, notifying the "s'ettlera . who now Temattr'-fof the President's notice, and forcibly evicting those who refuse to go voluntarily. Aiter'tho full width of -.the strip has been thus patrolled the troops Vill return southwurd to different points in the strip, establish military stations and gaard'ibe land from invasion until it shall he legally opened to settlement by aot ot Congress and Pre ddeutiali'roc.lamatlou. Troop I will return to Keystone, troop FtQ Pouoa, troop G to Pon'd Creek and troop:. K to a point fifteen niles south ot Kiowa. It is not expected that the miHtagy will ei t ny resistance, for thef settlers will eucountor who re louiu are very few and-seem peaceably iuoUnea. A THIRD CRASH, Tbe Folllna Down of a tlangerons Wall Starts a mh Fire, and It Kagoa Until . After Mldafsht. An Indianapolis special, dated the 30th inst., says: About 1 o'clock this afternoon tbe east wall of the Becker Block, adjoining the burned Bowen Merrill 'building crushed down on top of the ruins of. Monday evening s ore. For a time the wildest rumors of disaster wore afloat, but after a full investigation it was learned that, but two men had been hurt, though many had narrow r-ananes. Those iniured were but slightly hurt. After the crash Mayor Sullivan inspected tbe ruins and ordered that the -front wall of tbe Boweu-MerriU

that the I bui.'diug WTo'fn Sown. THlfl'wlSiWf theiiww origiuatad st ItitMiil TKni lK! Y&kPPFA&VMTtQ EmDSror nnd a half hottl- .nt the BecltB KniMf I anit-imn hrnnvht (n iimI ocKr.nl I Ail 1A rill A 111LJl l9T i lj o.'

ing, n nararirTbur story structure oeelt pied by a uction store, fell aowhina heap. Thim tne flames broke out again in the rutin - and up to 10 o'clock to: night bafeet be n-wheily extinguished; though iwa of watethasbeea poared into the wreukage. There is no fean-of furtber lbsetof lilfe, though the threestory stone front building occupied by George W. loan., druggist, is regarded as unsafeytnd there are fears that the dry goodq&ouse of H. P. Wasson way alSO SUCcftub. . . V ig'n specMab.tfrauk Grqer, German, siiviiMl , -i ..A(llegheuy i!itv) killed histttertessUd, tittle girl area 10 years, with" Sotiie shatp idstrumefit, suppossitte Savh bee'n1 . hatchet, No cause forihe jminler is known. The crime wacr committed daring the uigtit, and the child's" remains were discovered in her bedroom by her mother. The, room presented a . most horrible sight. The fnrnttujte, ceiling and walls wore bespiitterf dgwith. boed, and from tufts f bir and on the walls it is thoueht rou,.v Hook theJifisJ ju.ii tiiiBUbn ner orains out. me little one s haa ws erusned in and one arm wb irfK.?n; uroettner waa round se creted iu the cellar. He resisted aries aad it icnuired three men to force him into the patrol wagon. He refuses to give any reason for the horrible deed; The littlb girl's name was Annie Heffner. ' Husband Won and XJaat. Miss Siillie Griffin, a 'wealthy spinster of forty-five, of Martin's Ferry. Ohio, advertised for a husband last summer and was successful. Sherman Bice, a good-looking young man, aged. 28, residing at Marbletown, Ohio, wrote to her, proposed, was accepted, and married . her soon afterward. He went into the express business, she furnishing the funds. He sold out and got the money the other night. After succeeding in getting her to call on a neighbor, he pooketed all the money in the house, amounting to $140, took all his clothing and lelt for parts unknown. It is said he went to Kentucky. Mrs. Bioe, who is a member of the Presbyterian Church and highly respected, is heart-broken. Her loss is about six hundred dollars. Mobbed a Womaa. Mrs. Margret Sheppsnl, of Boston, lectured at York, Pa. In the afternoon her lecture was to ladies on the "Secret of the Confessional. " At night her lecture was to both ladies and gentlemen on 'the "Bomanish Priesthood Exposed; Shall They Control Our Public Schools?" On leaving the hall, accompanied by her husband, she was bit by a stone thrown by Victor Segnor. She was stunned and badly frightened. Policemen gave chase to Segnor, add one, nftor calling to Segnpr to stop, without effect, shot after him, the ball hitting nini in his left side, coming out near the heart. It lis not known how serious the wound is. Take What Tou Can Get, aad Kot Seek Impossibilities," Commander-in-Chief Bussell A. Alger made a speech at the Wisconsin Department Encampment of the G. A. B.j in which he said that on a visit to Washington recently he discovered that the Coneressme-a and Henatovfl wai-a

irrevojMMgri'igv:; vLAiJi- - saiSttk&tmi

V&ZZZZXZXZi ehcal sforaooui S3fi.ooo.fl00 annuallv additional, he was eonnaent wuuia oe pussou uum ton weeks. He favored the veterans taking what thev could cet instead ot asking something that -vas impossible. Another lUIlroad Wreck. On the Madis.on Division of the North western road, at Lav-alle, Wis., a vesti bule train which left Chicago atO o'clock was late and ha'd orders to meat prssenger train No. 4, at Lavelle, instead of Union uenter, tne regular nwmnn point. While No. 4 was heading in on the sidetrack the vestibule train came along at almost fall speed and struck the rear end. ot the smoking car, derail ing it, ana tipping it over on tne siae. The locomotive then ran into the next passenger coach aeveral feet. No onewas killed outright, but nine persons were injured. An unknown woman was taken out unconscious. Revolation. St. Petersburg special: Intelligence has just been, received here from Cabal, the capitui of Afghanistan, that a .evolution against Abdurranman Kabn, the Ameer, broke out j in that country. Among tbOBo concerned -in it were a nnmber.pf the eourtiors. of the Ameer. Soverai.pf them were coptured by the troops, who remained loyal, and were beheaded by the order of the AmeerOther courtiers -implicated iu the revolt flodto Bussiau tei-ritory. At he last accounts they, with a number of other revoltira who aino fled to ltussia, were gathering on the, frontier, of Afghanistan, t . A Mine Fire, Hurley (Wis.) special: The first serious niilfc fire in the history of theGogebeo iron ranee" ts iii progress at Germania mine, with no prosree of extinguishment short of an eno.-mons loss of property. Five men are known to have lost their lives, . and this number may be increased by tfce discovery of the bodies nf nthercr.Ti-.bcn the wreck caused bv the fire is cleared away. Tbe loss will reach fa into'' the thousands, atfd the extent can only bo known when the mine is re opened. ve ooaieB nave ueen tcouv ered. The others are still iu the mine. 1 ' KllUxl Scholar. - Perry Goff, aged 10 years, waa stabbed to., death by. Morgan Hose, a sobeolteaehor, in the Beach Hill school-house, hu. fVmitv W Vn rinflr waa IaIa aillt the teacher attempted to correct him. Goff resisted, and the teacher knocked him down with a club. Goff then left and returned with his father and two otherA. The quarrol wns resumed and Boso stabbed young Goff, killing him almost instantly. A general free fight ensued iu which the elder Goff, Hose, and several others were injured. ' A attehjgan Mine Ablaze. Advices from Northern Michigan" are to the effeot that the fire iu the Norway Mine is still ro.giug. At last accounts tho flames were si ream ing from the main shaft, threatening- the pump-house, shaft-house, etc. Five miners, caught in a skip, narrowly escaped death from tho cold. General Superintendent Kelly, Captain Bond and a party entered, the mine. They were overcome bj smoke, and when found were iuBensible: The money loss is f30,000 to $40,. 000. Should Met Have Harried Bis WUe't Sister. Pittsburgh special: Dr. B. P. Ewing, for twenty-five years pastor of the Sixth V. P. Oburoht this oity, was arraigned before the Miinongahela Presbytery, on complaint St bis marriage with bis deceased wife's sister. It ended after considerable debate, in a resolution ot censure being passed by thirty to two. Ewing's resignation was unanimously accepted by the Presbytery. ". Tho 1 Able In the i-oliools. ' In the cose brought up from the Circuit Court of Jiock County, the Wis consin Supreme Court decided that the Bible had no place in our common schools, Tho opinio", wai unanimeni,

brought to compel

distr ict board ta prohibit teachers from reading tne iuoie to scholars. Rallw av Watchman's Fate, Patrick Beilly,'night watchman athe xsaixitietn ,tteef jftfdsaiigg ovtMt'i xwpnie ana i v; rosasj at lioignp Unto, was run' down by -ah eawb Pan Handle freight and neaajy g-rind to atoms. JttiB neaa was completely severed from his body, left footcut efJ who arms crusnca. ana; a is lntestinesj strUDg-along the track. 4 tie hd-bee-in' the,,, employ of the .coin years, and leaves'seven chi chlldrk-tfkof mother died a few mouths ago. Acquitted. After having been out for sixteen hours the jury in the eas'a :tfhe 8ta)e against Mrs. Doctor 'ea1rttylqia, Peru,Ind.,returned a verdiot of acquittal. Mrs. Taylor was charged with criminal age, aSpf-'min'enT ' parentsbut nothing was proven against her which W6uld convict her, although she ,pkn?wlerli-!i-iineotion with the XmWhimmm acquittal tos a like offense. A ftiir la Karlin. -iin special: The National GazetU says that farm linr linjnrivi, the new Chancellor, has also beehKJPPOinted President of the Prussian Mimsl The. Gazette says . that Count Herbert Bismarck persists in resigning the post ot imperial Foreign Minister-- and that he will be succeeded bv either Heir Von Badowitz, German Ambassador of Con stantinople, or Count Von Hatzfeldt, German Ambassador of London. Saved bom the Burning, The dwelling house 'occupied by the families of John Nadoa and Thomas Lozc-n, gt Bay City, Mich., was discovered on fire. Mrs, Logon in trying to escape fainted away, but was discovered by her husband who, in bis excited condition, threw her out of the window to the sidewalk below, fatally injuring her. The 7 -year-old dauchter of Kadou was overlooked and perished in the flames. . Itaby Bound and Boasted. Mrs. Rachel Green, a colored washer-' woman, of Indianapolis, tied her 2-year-old baby girl in a chair, leaving her near the stove, while she absented herself to deliver washing. During her -absence a policeman discovered smoke and flame issuing from the bouse, and upon forcing his way inside he found the child burned to a crisp.-' The house was not materially damaged. Killed the Wrong Person. ' ' At Biaidwood, III., Joseph Koiak Shot and killed the 14-year-old daughter of his brother-in-law; Miss Statsta Sokoloski, instead of, the intended victim, her father. Kodak was drunk and crept up to the window of Kokoloski's bouse and fired through the window, where he supposed bis victim was sleeping, instantly killing his daughter. Nodak was arrste-l. A Defaulling County Clerk Caught, a W. Teagley, the defaulting Clerk of Hillsdale County, Michigan, who left Feb. 3, has been captured by Sheriff. Banker and is now lodged in jail. The ma, ha justW a coght him. Mangled by a Bnratiarg Kmerjr-vVheel. An emery-wheel thirteen inohea in diameter, revolving 2,000 times a minute, burst at J. Miller's carriage shop Bellefonntaine, Ohio. A two pound pieee struck Kiley Barringer, an employe, over tbe heart, breaking three ribs and forcing two frightful outs into the cavity of the chest. His recovery is almost impossible. rands for the IndlananplU SanXvra. A bttbsoription fund has )een started at Washington for the . relief . of the families of victims of the fire at Indianauolis. President Harrison sub scribed. $200; Attorney General Miller, $100; United States Treasurer uuMon, Evsrv member of the IndUna delegation in Congress subscribed. Three "Lives Taken. At the Michigan Central Air Wne crossing at Jackson, Miob., 'Henry Purdy, a-scompatiietl by his wife and daughter, while attempting to drive across the titack, were struck by. an engine and all taree killed almost instantly. Mr. Purdy was a pioneer of Jaekson County." Murder and trnehlng. A double tragedy- oocuvred at Branfield; a small town eighteen miles from Hastings,-Mich.. A. J. Ktrattpn shot and instantly killed W. W. Lewis, and in one brief hour was hanged by a mob of infuriated citizens, many of them among (he leading citizens la the place, Brakeman Quarrel with Trampa, . In a quarrel with tramps, who were trying to beat their way on a freight train on the Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad t Youngstown, O., Brakeman Peter Gardner was thrown under the wheels and instantly killed. Gardner was 24 and unmarried. . - -'A Ming Caused It At Indianapolis, Calvin Vorhees and Edward McAfee, who bad quarreled about a ring, met in the open street and Vorhees was dangerously shot iu the the leg. Both colored.- - THE MARKETS, CHICAGO. Cattle Prlne. SMS 3.50 9.39 3.15 3.C0 .79 .38 .30 .43 5 a.s3 6 i.is IB 3.50 & 1.150 & &00 0 -W5 a :2a & .31 A9 Uotu ComtnoL-Hoos-Bhlpping Grades.. Shkkv -. Wheat No. a Bed Corn wo. a I 8s-5l.o" ilfm-TKR tfknioe Creamer..... .33 W a mlChebsb Full Cream, flats iOS'jiS Eion FreBh W (9 tn-ri -rottRChfileo new. norbu.. .38 m .is ,43 Poftll-Mees 10.B 0.33 . M1UWAUB.KJ5. WHEi'r No. S Spring Coax No. 3 Oats No, 3 White; HVB-No. Si Dablev No. 1'ouk Mess DETROIT. Caitlb Uooa Sukrp..... .... Whet-No. 3 Red Cobk No. 3 Yellow Oats No. S White TOM30O, Wheat r. Conn Cash Oats-No. a WW t NEW XORK. Cattle Hogs Phbkt Wnr.T-No. 3 Red Cord No. 3 Qats Mixed Western , Fona Prune Mess .79 o .274P .23 it Si SI'.. A'i AO 10.23 10.7S m 4.50 4.S9 3.00 8.00 .1.50 .79 .33 ,sa .61 .30 ,33 i .soy, & -Si) .at;, .31 .! 4.00 & SM ( 4.7S 4.S S.60 0.43 .SB SO .UU .snr .?! ' .VI IB) W ii,3s mhis 4.49 S.09 8.75 M 4.95 Cattle Hogs WheatNo. 3 Bed. Cons No. 3 : Oats -No. IIvk-No. .-. INDIANAl'OUB. CA1TI.B 'ShiiipUic .Steers Hons Choice Ueht Siiebp--Common tofriino Wheat No. 3 Red Cons-No. 3 White Oats -No. 3 White CINCINNATI. Hoos ."V Wheat No, 3 MBU i Cons-No. i Oats -No. 9 Mixed Bre Jio. 2 .77 S .77) .34Si W it ,!U 3.00 -0 4.75 XM S 4.95 8.00 5.75 .77 .7.1 .31 H .31H 3.50 4.91 .17 & .77.' .30 m .31 J&4& .94j MUtfFAM). Oattw Good to Prime (MM Hoos 103 AVbbat No. I Hard. . . ., .90 ConH-No.3..,. ,, .Si & 4.75 St 4.30 9 ?

SaOTfa AD INCIbKNTS THAT havb X.ATBXI OOCUKBKU.

LMotnoWtlaa Huuimarj'.of ! Mm IaH)rtiiM)qSiB or Our thlfiri-v3-: SmwaSSlwra , , Ili ulai Murdor. Mrs. Ohttlcs V-flRtad wJ -found rmtall'v nr,lnaarayjtha dt,nz- of XmiaA.had been evidently done with n hatchet. A fright tul gash in the head told the story. Mrs. Whelaud had been living with her sister, Mrs, HenrvBittera and the letter's bnsbau&Wou.eaf nbyl'vfre thaiuraW&iVoman ws fWndjflr was arrested and lodged in jail, saying: "I was too drunk to do anything like thtrt,"-'beierieay. -eaime-r waa oharged. . He bears the marks of scratches, as if the woman had defended herself Mrs. Ritter, who la illJu one room of the cotftgc.whito the murderadi ejbrpsa less in! the only other one, after refusing to say anything, at last stated that Bitter and Mrs. Whelnnd quarreled early, lathe morning, and she fled, he follow ing her, and returning in a few minutes to bed. is is all she will say, but tbe braised bodyTeTltho tale of awful brutality, and is marked ail . over ith blue spots. It is believed that tbe attempt at another crime led'to the murder. Bitter I e.irs a hard name. 'The dead woman's busbaird is of good Kentucky fam'Iy. which, has always refused to recognise her. Ue only visited her on . Sundays and bis whereabouts are unknown, Minor stsia Items. t The endowment -fund of. Wabash College is now over $200,000. Albert Slatter, aboy of 12 years, waa killed by a train at Huntington. ' Eighty old soldiers have thus far been rcoeieve-i at the Marion. Home. Frank Edwards , of Evansvlllei was drowned-while ratting in Green River. A plumber named Bradway, at Fort Wayne, sneezed so hard that he broke a rib. - August Larsen, of' Durham, was struck by a train on the Lake Shore road and killed. . . ' Fort Wayne is making an effort to secure the National Convention of Bailway Surgeons in 1891. " A son of Deputy Surveyor X. F. Meighan lost a leg at South Bend while attempting to board a train, i Henry Meirs, employed in a fretsbt'house at Vincennes, was caught between bumpers and badly crushed. William T. Duubar, a - druggist of Colfax, was kicked in the face and seriously injured by a Texas pony. John Peterson, an aged citisen of Jackson Township, Allen County, was run down and killed by a train. The Thirtieth Indiana wilt hold ita seventh annual reunion at Albion, April 3. Ah excellent program has beeu .i ocasvii auspic tion of that place. Mr$. nmenne uasn tell to the floor at her home at Richmond and expired ia a few minutes. Congestion of the lungs was the cause of death. Prof. Hsrvoy Young, of Hanover College, has just completed analyzing the -water of the Madison gas well, No. 4, finding valuable medicinal qualities. John Wells was precipitated one hundred feet. by, qj breaking of a rope while he was being lowered Into, a coalbole near Vincennes. He struck forty feet of water, and was but slightly injured. ' The charred remains of sn unknown tramp were found in the ruins of a bara belonging to A. C. Dixon, of Seymour, destroyed by fire. Three horses and two cows also periled. Los, on ..barn and contents, f 5,000. - . John Baker, of Daviess County, was recenty bitten by a rabid dog, but hydrophobia has not developed. Several horses and hogs have-been lost through rabies there, and abpntj fifty dogs have beea,slaughtered. :l .. While workmen were engaged in tearing down the old Trow building, at Madisdh, a portion of the third floor gave away and fell to the ground, carry ing with it Fred Spoo and Daniel Montz. Both men were considerably braised, and, it Is feared, seriously injured internally. ' ' Mrs. Henry Hamer, or boutn Bena, was fatally burned by tbe explosion of a gasoline stove, caused, by filling the stove with kerosene instead of gasoline. Her back, arms, thighs,' ana tower limbs were burned nearly to a crigR tbe nails' and 'akin an bar hands and wrists com ing off. William Watson and Sum Davis were arrested at Columbus whilst iu the act of robbing a farmer named Lowe, who it w as thought had his pension mouey with him. the police appeared on the scene and put the menin jail. Watson has just finished a term iu the pen, and Davis does not bear a very good reputa tion. . Two drunken ruflUns, named John WeddellandWm. Scott, attemped to force an enttanoe into the residence of Thomas Martin, a farmer living near Evansville, and attacked Martin with' a knife, when the latter shot Weddell through the jaw and lu the leg, inflicting a probably fatal wound. Martin was arrested, and will be held to await the result ot Weddell's injuries. Tbe large grain-cradle and scythesnath factory of T. O. Fisher, which buraed at Anderson, will be. rebuilt and enlarged at once. Mr. Fisher began life 1 there without a dollar, and he is to-day one of the most successful business men j of the oity. On acoount of a mad-dog scare at Corydon the Town Council has passed an ordinance empowering the Manual to kill all unmuzzled degs found running at large upon the streets. A number of dogs la the town and vicinity hav become rabid, and were killed. John Milton bteenberger, -who tame to Bartholmaw. County, witihis parents in 1820, and who has resided in German Township for seventy years on one farm, died at his family residence, at the age-of 74 years. Mrt? George King, of Columbus, has brought suit agitqt the Pennsylvania Bailway Company for being forcibly ejected from a oar because the limit on her round-trip tiqket had expired. She took tho next train on the road, the tioket being accepted by the Superintendent. She claims $S0,000 damages.

Plainfiord lias been aalecteit as -

permanent local ion for what ia known as the Friends' Annual Bible School Assembly of tbe Western Yearly Xeting. The wife or Albert Constant M two ch'iUtren were poisonad srovi ioi$rora opaty oy bleak stmsage. Tbe doctor theirs lives by using a stomach pump. The bologna, will b analysed to determine if it was disiassd or.poisoned. k . A stranger sick Jrith -tbe niefsbjfj stopped' off at Union Mills, ' Laporle County, a sUort time ago, and before bin ailment became known he had spread.' tbe disease broadcast over the village. There are now about fifty-six well-developed cases of measles reported, and the Pblio schoois have been closed in .consequence. Miebaol DoCamp, n Sullivan bracti V smith, jiold his shop ' bo otber day, let his family, bade his brother good-bve, ' .went toTerra Haute and cut bis throat 1n threW i la -t Ho liad 1 nrrb-adud re ' door orais vMeel ro-.t- i-it r;. gulfed after nates: tho rnr.or. and opcuiog the. door 'sailed for help. His wounds were-' dressed ijutT ho will rccocr. Befrt t.'. Htine, a well-known character, c imoionly kuoi;u as. "Bob Denny, "was killed in Wilson Co.'s mine, near' Washington. He wasantaaa tight shot, aad the coal, beeonfv loose, fell down upon him. One httge's-' lump pinned his head against a prep la the mine and crushed it in a jelly, 'fie died shortly after being found. Thomug Hutaet was killed in the old McCoy gr:st -mill near Warren r cently-a In putting the belt an tbe wheel which turns tl-.e bolter his- coat was caught by the shaft aad wound up unti" he was choked to death. He was dead, when found a few minutes afterward. Be formerly lived at.ltoch. ster, and was an old miller by trade. A wife sad eight children are left. Wa. Cravens committed suioide bytaking poison at Mt,' Vernon. Ha was a member of the f. A. B-, and had teen despondent over the fact that his claim for back pay had not been allowed by the Pension Department, coupled With the fact tb at he was in love with a young lady who had given himeaaouragemeut, but who refused to narry hint until hispension cane. - ' A rery singular accident occurred on the J., M. A south-bound freight at Peters' switch, near Columbus'. Engine No. 609, hauling a heavy train, waa fast pullia? out of the siding at thatpleee, autl running at tbe rate of about eight

een milvs per boar, when one of the" .?'1

lare drive-wheels broke an xle, left : the track, and run down an einbaaknwnt into an open field. No damage was done, . Martin Bich, night watchman at the factory of the LaPorte Wood Manufacturing Company, was found dean in the engine-room, with the side of, his head crushed in the other moraine;. He is the second who has been found dead from falling off a ladder while a valve over the boileri ' Sheridan 8tonr, the man who atardered William Bolletf at a Farmera' Al--lianee meeting, near Lexington, a , tew weeks ago, received hie death blasr at " the jail at Seottabuvg, at the bauds of a fallow-prisoner, John Bayburn, awaiting trial on the charge of forgery. Bay-, ; burn had improvised a caw and waa at-, tempting to cut his way out whenStoaergave the alarml Turning about, Bay , bum struck a savage blow oveg taor head, fracturing his skull. ' - - A terrible disaster - occurred at Indianapolis da ting a lire in the large book establishment of tbe Bowes Xf..il1 rinmnanv. Whan tllA Ur WU

; - fcnnt Avtinoniahed the roof fall In ' 'I

Carrying with it the three floors' to the basement below. A large foroe of fire men were on the reef end inaid the building at the time, and twelve werekilled outright and twenty-five iBMed, many of whom will die. This is the worst oslamity that ever befell tint oity. ' The Supreme Court has rendered a.decision in the three ceses cohiihgup from as many circuits, and eaok involving the constitutionality of some part of the school-book law, the Judges be ing divided in their opinions, .but themajority sustaining the constitution,-? ali'.y of the la. Judge Elliott wrote the majority opinion, and held' for the; law on the ground that it in no way inter5'

feres with local self-government. JuJga V

Berkshire dissented on the ground that the constitution deolsrta that tb Gea eral Assembly shall aot grant so any citizens or eissprivilegea or immnni'ties which, upon the -same seams, eaeu not equally ueiong to an oir.meusThere is a genuine curiosity at the livery-stable of 'Walter Brothers ia Crawtordsville, and hundreds of people are going to see it dally. It is" a 3-yeaf-: ' old horse tiat has a thick, curly growth, of. hair alt over the body. The-hairia brown, and resembles the wool- on a. sheep, and the bai ia jvery fine and atosey. It was boeght by a man .named Charles Spitxer, who obtained the animal near O'Dell Corner, the price paid being $60. Now he is being offered large sums of money. A dime-rauaeuuv man is trying to buy the animal, and a telegram has been received fiom Bat. num's agent at Bridgeport. Conn,, making an offer for the animal. The skin of the horse is white, and even the neefs are covered with wooL Gen- Lew Wallace has presented Eddie Brandkampt, a blind musician at Crawfordsville, a copy of "Ben-Hur," printed in raised letters. The work, makes two volumes, e-ich the atsa of Webster's Unabridged Dictionary. The right eye of the .i-year-old eon of Joseph Mouiso was burned out, at his -ttoiue, in String! owh, Clay County. The little fellow was playing with a number of other children, end was peeping,, through a small hole in the door, when one of his playmate'' pushed a hot pokei through the hole. Michael Smfth, jr., a young barber of Deeatnr, while attending a trial In : City Hall, accidentally fell backward over a banister to the stairway below, s distance ot ten feet, fraoturing his skait at the base of the brain. Smith ia serionifly, If not fatally itojured. - -MissLissle Millor, while waiting upon Mrs. 3. W. Clapp at New Market, Clavk flnnntv. fainted and fell into tl

fire-place, and she was horribly mVffl

fatally burned. Bobert Clapp, aged: finally saeeeeded in dragging her the fire-plaoe, and itt extinguishing I biasing clothing.

was

8

v..