Bloomington Progress, Volume 24, Number 14, Bloomington, Monroe County, 28 May 1890 — Page 1
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GEEAT SOUTH AIIEEICAN
jufflylillfi --1Mb and Sfi)ihaehLivef Cure
Hie Host Astonishing Medical Discovery of the Last One Hundred YearaY $ ft Is peasant to the Taste as the Sweetest NectarO, '. It Is Safe and Harmless as Uie Forest Ki V . . " This wonderful Nervine Tonic has only recently been introduced into tins country by the'Great South American Medicine Company, and yet its Kt value as a curative agent has Ing been known by the native inhabitants of South America, who rely almost wholly upon its great medicinal powers to cure every form of disease by which, they areovertaken- .- oalities hitherto unknown to the medical wofessHMS. .This medicine has completely solved the problem of the cure of Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Liver . : v,Cmpiaint, and diseases of the general Nervous System, It also cores all ' Jbtaoaof fiulfag health from whatever cause. It performs Om by th Great .: - Nervine Tonic qualities which it possesses and hy its great curative powers . upon tte digestive oirgan No remedy compares with this wonderfblly valuable Nervine Tonic as a builder and strengthener of the life farces of the human body and as a great.reriewer of a broken down constitution. It i3 also of more real permanent value in tile i treatment and euro of diseases of the Long3 than any ten .consumption remedies ever used oa tma continent. It is a marvelous cure for nervousness of females of aftagw. Iadwho are aprawacWng the mtical period known, all titans in fife, should not mil to use this great Nervine Tonic almoet constantly for the space of two or three years. It will carry them safely ! over the danger. This great streagthener and curative is of inestimable a. .1 . . .3 t :zh t x ..
who w iwni kuu iBium, nowm no great eneigDing propenjes will grfetbem anewhoMoaBie. It will ao ten or ntees years to tiie lives af wry ;flet wh will nsa a half down bottkscf the remeoy each year.
CURES
Hotoubms ami HurwwiB ProstraUon, Nerreas Headache ami fiek Headache, . female Weaknesa, AO Diseases of Women, Nerroos Chills, Benoaa larox vsms ana Bat fmpi&Mm of &e Heart, JaeBtat ABspeadeBcy ibis's Dance, nsasnes of Females. lffenouanesB of Old Age, x Jams in the Heart, Pains m the Back, .Tailing Health. A hme andinany other eoimplaui
NEOTOUS DISEASES. As a core Jeeevery clasof Herrons Diseases, no remedy has been able to compate with tins Nervine Tome, which is very pleasant and harmless in
(ffTrrTt-fYpyportyt riiiM ual. Nine-tentiis of all the ailments
dependent on nervous exhaustion and impaired digestion. When there is an iiMBmitent supply of serve food in the blood, a generai'sesUtof debility of me main, spinal marrow ami nervea is the result Starved nerves, like .starveniusrles, become strong when the right kindfoodViff supplied, and a thousand weaineesesandailmentsoUsap As the
I system mnas snnpiy au me . t z It. l body are carried on, it b the first to
imuaary looa aoes not coniam a sumueafc auantn
-to xepair the wear our present mode of living and labor imposes
apoa the nerves. For th reason it beconies necessary that a jrvefoM avjfGedk ThisreeantprodBctionof theBouth AmericaaCoiitinent has been ftmt, by amdysis, toesntamtiwessential elements out of which nerve tissue fajbrmed. This.acooumlbriaBmgie,po
mtt ai to arte yaattail I faraaar jww wWva venr erlaenipmatMnwctinrtaCTM. l atea " U7 vxit&ne I eonld paa of tm nothing mHmrniMm mti amiUlwu dtMHtwu Qnmt SoukkAncrican Kenina losiq ua Htom&ch and Urer Cue. aacUtaice E(aKwniaI.lttlcaof tt ImmtsajtKat Im nwM MTWMginH poMif M cm) &4. m imti y'.'fui. Uwrmem fanr tlwrahieaf tbi remedy ail Uojou A SS02H CUBE FOSST. Wat tad'for sfiraraTmrattni'w with VttlMfnaiMSl aba a lednead to. i etwfl not wait, eoold not talk, catJAnMsamHr low bB&mllk. Ihad Kkaa." .. li Doctor and netgni can neryinb Tonic : toe efieeta wamwsrr yrtsfnav In Ouee days she was rid orthi ner- , an ntpuny improrca. oax potucs eomnletely. I think, the -Sooth rum toe ajrannen raasay WJm,
aaKCIlmmf3M
crew
I11DI(ffiOT0n AITD DYSPKPSIA. - Aty iGreat Sontt Jntnieam K(tln9 Toale . TieiTwem7W ofer yppjb the only absolnidyTtnfailing remedy ever discov-. aredihe cun?Jndkestioni Dvspeia.and the vast train of symptoms and hoorora which; are tneretofajaeanddebihtyof the human stomach. Ho person ean agbrd to pass by jhia jswolineaacolable value wfao-ia. afiected by dtseaee of the Stomach, because the experience and testimony of thousands got to prove that this is the ose and osiv one great cure in the world tat th nniverBsi destroyed There a nd case of unnuJigiialasease of the stomach whichiiesistthewoiKierMemve powers of the South
iliervineTosic. ; S. Ban. of WaTwitawn. hL ami "I.owe my life to The Great Sooth American Kerrino. I bad bass la bed for aa months from the enwemof an eatnansted SuhmcIi. Ina, jwrroos nostatum ana senenu IsondiUonof mrwhalHsntem. Had (tren vp all hopes o( gettincwelL Bad tried ndoetoawittiBoielrrhetatbotrjBof the IferrinB Tonic Ixnprored meso mocii that I was able to walk about, and a few bottles cored me entirely. I believe H the best medleinela awwotU. IeanmeomnieirfittoonJshly.'' ata. V. awmeB. Bngar Creek Valley, bA wrttes: 1 hay Wkw1 botttes of The South Amerfcan Kexrlne Tooie, and will ssy I eooskicr R the best medicine.ln thewwidl I betters itaayed the lires of twoof mrehildren. They were down and nothing appealed to do lawn any sned nntS I lmjamrftMa ssmafr- : was TCty surpristne; Sow rapidly tbey both EVERY BOTTLE re 18 ounce Bottlas,
i iiolesale antl
Broken CbmtiUitiflw, Debility of Old Age, Indigestion and; Dyspepsia, . Heartburn and Sour Stomach, Weight and Tenderness in Stomach, Xoss of Appetite .... j Frightful Dreams, Dizziness and Singing in the Ears, Weakness of Extremities and ' Fainting, Impnre and Impoverished Blood, Sous and Carbuncles, Scrofula, ScrofoJous Swellmg and Ulcers, Consumption of the Lungs, Catarrh of tWLnngs, Ikonchitisnd C3ironio Cough, Liver CVmiplaint, - - ChromVDmrrhBa,.v
Delisate and Scrofulous Children, Summer Comnlaint of Infants. tr tha fiMfst and most d dicate individ to which' UrS lmmmnly is letr, are power ny wnicn inevuax wraaui uio A at.' i. eL sufler for want of perfect nutrition. I of nutriment l Bond.a member of the Sodetv feot Ttte BRttimth AmpnletixuchaiMlLTCnH. and I coukter that every bottle did for me one hanrsddoBai.wortlLol good, beaqse I bays. not luB aJOoa l on aeeaant of firri mnA MMnl nnvoai nmstmtinn. Dees eanaed by enronic indigestion and dyapepala. of die stomach and by a broken down condition of my nervous system. Bat now I can and I feel like a aound num. I do not ' oeen ameaicuie introaucea into iej wurw u compare wita ouie as a eon for the stomach.'
ViTUS'S DANCE OR CHOREA.
CnAWioxseTiuz, Iso., June 22, 1887. etemt yeaa old, was severely 1th 8L'Vites"a Danoa or Chorea. We avra bar three and oneaM botfto of Sooth Amwrlraa Kerrtoe and aha is comjrtetely ieI beileye It will euro eyery case ot St edV sta, all tonnaot Nervojis IMsorders an ... 4 . ; . JOHH T.iionr. SatetfTadlm:, , Xoxtgtmtn, Comfy, J SaoserUeditnd,awom to before nb this Jan JTrs. HUl A. Bmtton, of New Boss, Indiana, asye j "X can not carores how much I owe to the jl owe to ine com(i lately shattered, appetite gone, was eonghiog and spitting; up Wood; am sure I was In-the first stages of consumption, an inheritance banded down through several generations. I began taking- tlte Kerrino Tonic and continued its MS if nbont six months, and am entirely eared. It is the grandest remedy for nerves, STomach and, lungs 1 have ever aeon. KL J. Brown, Druggist, ot Edina, Ko., writes : "My health bad been very poor for years, was coughing severely. I only weighed 110 pounds nervine -some, ssy system was when I conunenceu nsiag oouut Amencaoi Nervine, I have used two botttes and now wench 133 Boands. and sun much stronger and better-than have been for are years. Am sure would mX have lived through the Winter bad I not secured this remedy. My customers sea what it has done tor me aad bay tt esgeriy. It grre ssitsfaetlon." WARRANTED. $l&Xf j Trial Size, 18 centa. Retail Agents
BY TELEE
THE NEWS RECORD. a hjiucahy of a ran bybntfvi. uAressaitm. tmVBigmm by JEtectrts Wire from Bvecy Quarter of tfea CMUaed World-rolltleal, . Ooaamarelai, astd Io4natiaI Rnrii Mr, JTSDSTinXBD. Tnvr Desperate Cosvteis la Jenltenliary rrnst rated In i the Ohio i Attempt to gfafca Their Bseasie. Columbus special: By a lucky discovery at the Ohio Prison the esoape ot five dospernte con riots 'from that iaett tution was prevented, just as it was about to be aooemplished. Four of the men were employed in a tool shop at snob work that they, were off duty early and found time to work in a tunnel under the walls, whieh the quintette projected for a half hoar or more eaoh day. in. 'the evening. They selected the building, for storing coke a the sits for the mouth of the tunnel and the earth they ' removed was concealed under another building in the enolosnre. They worked with only a piece of an ax bit and a broken shovel. The leader of the plot was Charles Iiockhartt a fifteen- year man from Putnam County for rape. He has had an interesting prison history. Last December he escaped in a suit of citizens clothes, out was re-oaptured about two months aeo ana wnue being urouoht back to the prison leaped from the train. lhe euani mot at nun as be lumped, badly wounding him. He but recently came from the hospital and was em ployed as a runner. This gave him more time to work on the tunnel than he wonld otherwise have had. IiOckhart's oompanionswere Lane, a fifteen-yqar man Irour .Logan County, for man slaughter; Kelly, a three-year mau from Union , County, for house-oreaking; Butler.'a three-year man from Hamilton vounty, for rape, and lj)tfagow,atwelveyear man from Hamilton, for robbery. They were much chagrined when a guard found au in the tunnel. A Urutal Deed. Advises just received from south of Pigeon ttiver, West Virginia, Rives de tails ox a most atrocious murder which occurred there recently. Jim Brewer shot and killed Ike Brewer, Jr., in the,tore-hoase of E. Walker. The shooting was caused by the re-opening or an oia ieua. xae jorewer, 'r., was sitting in the store when Jim Brewer came in and without a word ot warntnK struck Ike a blow with a Winchester rifle across the neck, breaking ii. After the dying man tell to the noor .Brewer nut the muzzle of the rifle to his chin, the fire scattering' the unfortunate man's brains in every direction. Brewer was. arrested and is now confined in the Logan County jail. Jim Brewer haa gained considerable notority by being a leading character in the killing of the e Brewer, Jr., was a cripple, being minus one leg. Her rartunfi Corae Too Late, ' Denver special: Several years ago, Winnie : Burton, daughter ot a wealthy merchant at Mansfield, Ohio, married a young nan- against her father's wishes, for. whieh she was never forgiven. The husband soon deserted her. since when she has bean drifting around, the world making her living as best she could. some months ago sue went to luesavme, Col., and is dying in the last stages- of oonsdmptiou.' She secured a rough house in the lower part of the city, and being too weak to work lived on the Charity of a-few people she knew: The other day she received word that her father had died leaving her a fortune of $130,000.. .This news came too late, as fghe ean live oat a short time. She wasapris to the train and sent to Hail and Lightning. Berlin special; Whilffthe people, of of St. Mnhlen. near Hildesheim, Hanover, we're as'geintile'd'ih the? church, whither they had repaired to pray for the cessation of the hail storms which have of late - prevailed in that locality with damaging effect, the building was struck by lightning. Four per sons were instantly killed, twenty were seriously injured and four- were per manently blinded by the flash.- The uvngreRULiun w ere in ne niuifU.ue 01 prayer at the time the bolt fell. In the ensning rush for tho doors, the people betng wild with fright, two children were oruanea to aeatu. Undnftbe Wafer. Twin' Bake, a few miles north of Boann, Ind., was the scene of a sadaoci: dent. As Charles Leary, fireman of the Chicago & Atlantic push engine at Harriaburgi, in oompany with several eompanionSnWas fishing at the lake, from some unknown causa the boat upset and before bis companions' could reach him, young Leary sank beneath the deep waters ot tbe lake to rise no ware. Leary was a yonng man of 2? years and Died aiune. Theodora Keubance, a 15-yonr-old boy, for whom tho policti dF'Mndiios-l Wis., have .beon looking for several days, for the theft of $37 from his brother, was seen on the street. A policeman was about to arrest him when he drew n revolver, blew out his brains and fell dead at the feet of his would-be captor. Bobbins' Circus Train Wrecked. Bobbins' circus train on route to Epping, K. H., was wrecked near the junction of tbe Kashna and Uoohester and Boston and Lowell roads. One oar full of "carriages jumped the track and tho rest of the train piled np in a total wreck,. The loss to Bobbins will be heavy. A Terrible Accident. The 0-venr-old daughtor of V. O. Haney, of Mexico, Minmi County, Indiana, was caught in the mill machinery and orushed and. injured so badly that life is impossible. BOLD COM8F1RATOB8. An AUaawa Conspiracy Is Capture Lower California and Form an Independent nepablfo Annexallot to Foliew. The Saa Francisco Chronicle devotes four columns to giving complete details of an alleged conspiraoy to capture Lower 'California and to found an independent republic there, followed by annexation to the United States. A number of prominent oaoitalists interPasted in Lower California lands and mines and well-known citizens of Los Angeles and f an Diego ore involved. according to the revelations. San Diego appears to nave been the headquarters of the filibusters.. The general outline of the plan, it is claimed, was for the Mexican Land and Colonisation Company, composed f ivv)tt F.uUehmcu owning concessions on the i'nninmilti, to 5 lace in the hands of u Wftl Ulnunvii Han iego capitalist $im',u(ly jo bo iod in no"neinf tatnterets of the iUibuetera.
Two propositions woro discnsseV One wns to. capture Kuseuadn; the other was to introduce a large number of Americans on one peninsuln, ostensibly as railroad laborers, tocapturo tbe man-of-war lemorata, and at the same time give a pionio in honor of the Mexican officials, and in the midst ot the festivities capture tbe garrison and sieze the roads andteiegrsph lines. Simultaneous risings at the Alamo and 1 ia Juana were to take place. Several raeetiugs of the conspirators took place in March and April sua at one of these the facts became known to a newspaperman. Wbjip the peninsula had. been seised a tovis'ional government was to be deolarod on or about August 1, and martial law was to be enforood. The land ot the peninsula was to bo nationalized and n
peaceful order of things secured, and ne- t tot int ions for annexation to the United tates wonld follow. The names of the projectors are given. GATE TsfJSBX TU8 SUF. , Crawford, the Kew York ICx press Thief, Escapes la South A merles. Kew York special: Edmund Sturgtu Crawford, .the Adama express thtef, escaped from the Honduras Government and has taken to the woods. Ho had been taken down to Porto Cortes by a file of soldiers to await final papers of extradition. He was permitted to 5o into a oloset built over tho water, t was at dark and he managed to slip into a boat held in readiness by confederates and disappeared into the darkness. It is of importance for the Express Company to produce Crawford in any proceeding loading to a recovery of the 11,000 paid over to the bank. The method by which the bogus package of bank notes was substitated for the real one is as umoh ot a mystery as ever and whethor Crawford had confederates or not must still remain a question of legal doubt. Mr. John Hoev said that tbe Adams Express Company had not tho least idea of abandoning the pursuit. This season of the year in Central Amerioa was especially trying to Northerners, but the Pinkerton men, who have been down there for three months, are rapidly getting acclimated and have already more than likely located their game. Fifty Mou KiUed at Havana, Havana special: A hardware store in which was stored a quantity of powder, was destroyed by fire in this oity. When the fire was raging and the firemen were endeavoring to subdue it, a tremendous explosion occurred, bringing down the walls with a frightful crash and scattering burning brands for several blooks in all directions. Over fifty persons were killed and wounded, either directly by the falling debris or by the explosion' itself. Among the number was five chiefs of tho fire 'department, several firemen and tbe resident consul for Venezuela. The calamity is one of the most disastrous that has occurred to this city for many years, and has produced a feeling of general consternation and horror. AU business ia practically suspended, and every effort is being directed to an examination of the ruins and discovery of the extent of loss of life, which cannot be now estimated with certainty. Working-parties were at onoe organized, and it is hoped that in twenty-four hours full details as to the nainbsr of dead and wounded as well as the flaanoial loss ean be ascertained. Indiana Odd fellows. taetellsioTiTot tlie grand IjodgvotIndiana, of tbe I. O. O. P., herd at Indianapolis, B. F. Foster, Grand Secretary, reported a net ino'rease in membership of C3t for the term, making 1,073 for 1889.' The total membership is now aa,tBa; number ol lodges now eneeuve, 563. Four new lodges and ten Bebekah lodges have been instituted. The re sources of all lodges are given st Sl.806,880.41; reoeipts ot lodges, $102,896.45; total expenses, inelnding relief, $121,209.23. Nineteen hundred and twenty-four brothers and 102 widowed families have 'been relieved. The sum of $3P,029.-37 has been paid for the relief of brothers; $2,181.03 for the relief of widowed families; 517.95 for the education of orphans; $10,113.20 for burying the dead, and $3,043.90 for other charitable purposes making the total amount ot relief $55,214.44. Tbe entire amount of relief forthe year 1889 was $115,504.81. The number of acces sions to the Bebekah Lodges is 2,503; net gain, l.uti; total, receipia,,$o,uw; total assets, 9V,WJ.vi. iroagurer X. f. HnugljWa . report gives casX on, band . Condition of the Crops. Chicago speoial: The following crop summary appears in the Chicago farm ers' Revim: The reports ot our Indi ana correspondents show an increase in the acreage sown to oats in that State, in Atebraska and Wisconsin the area is about the some as the last year's. In tbe remaining states covered, by our report a decrease is reported. The in crease in Indiana is no doubt caused by the large percentage ot winter wheat area that was plowed under and sown to oats. In Michigan and Wisconsin considerable portion of the crop is net yet above ground. In none of tbe states is the conditio)) up to the usual average at this season. In the West And North the cron has languished tar rain. while in the Mississippi Valley and tho states east frosty weather and an excess of moisture have retarded germination and growth. Tbe average in Indians is 103 percent.; condition, 93 nor cent. In Ohio, average 924 per cent.; condition, 89 per cent. Michigan, average 98 per cent.; oonumon 00 per cent, Xd? JUvals a W'fui Miss Anna. Frances lima, a IiaIIa 'pretty and well educated, is the daugh ter ore wen-Known farmer living near Gaseonda, Mo. She has been arrested on aphargeof sending indecent letters through the mails. 8he aud Mi6s Quick wero rivals for the hand of a young railway olerK, JobnDremel. Miss Quick, whose father is 'sauire of the district. seemed to be getting the advantage, and -.uujf coiuquiu ue menus, a wo letters were written, one to Dremel and the other to Hiss Quiok. They were anouy mous and purported to come from inti mate friends. In the one addressed tn Dremel the writer professed to be a man with eight children; It informed the mailing elerk of Miss Quick's drawbacks and related many alleged doings at the quick domicile) family history also be ing thrown in. The letter addressed to Miss Quick described Dremel's flirtatiomi. Tbe objeot of tho letters was evidently to disgust each with the other. The ease will be heard in October. Anothnr Unknown. - A dispatch from Hamilton, Ohio, says that near Monon, Ind., a yonng womnn on tne vestiouie train, tiea a rope about her nook and fastened the other end to the railing of the car aud throw herself off. As soon as the act was discovered the train was stopped and an ongine sent back and her remains were found in a pool of water. No ono Snows her. A tioket to Cincinnati woe on her person. Sljo was seen to drink from a whisky bottle on tbe ear and was heard to say that she had no friends in Cincinnati. Am vVatvh Club Lotteries? CrawfOrdsville (Ind.) speoial: Tbe proprietors of the Ksriew, Argus-News nndifournni have been arrested oa grand jury ttannntb. fr mliiliing a wilch lotti-rj itdviTttBim-iit lr . I., li.mt, ttho is jjidif td'i on tliriic cli;'r.K fcr running n lottery. T'.ie 1. Im was fcr n oiub to pay 91 week, ftiui eseh week
tho member who drew the lucky number would got the watch, and then would not'buvo any more to pay. By this plan tbe first watch would cost 91, the second week 9, and so on until tbe last number drew, he having to pay 930 for his watch. Exit, Moasted Alive, St. Petersburg special: The eity of Tormsk was visited simultaneously by a conflagration aud a cyclone, and the result of tho combined disasters was the destruction of three-fourths of the eity and tliej loss of hundreds of lives. The scones during tbe raging of the fire are desoribed as horrible in the extreme. TheoSthedral was burned to ashes, and it- Mltcc wnlls. striking tuo 'buildings ot an aiix-ent hospital, rrnshrd thernm puM-es and buried (ho inmates, who wc-ro y:.stil alive. Tliu garrison ol Hnsjinn soldiery refusi-d to lt u.l the least ast-ist-
inri ui saving thf liv.-a or nioperty of ! tl'.; residents, whom thoy styled "worth- 1 U-hri exileB." Almost lief oro the lire aud ? l.-ne tiariconipMedtlK'irdestrat-tiott, the - !.v ns a sadUu fall iu tho toinperaPf, And . lioavv siit'Witoim lod to rs ot i) nni-ttuiatlo v;-tims. jorn'is'tho",ra'pitai c "cttvof Western Siberia, and is inhabited almost wholly by exiles. JBsIn and Ball. A cyclonio wave of rain aud hailstorm passed over parts of Congress, Canan, Chester, Milton, and Chippewa townships, Wayne -ponnty, O., doing tremendous damage. It swept a section three miles wide and eighteen in length. The most serious adamage was done in anu near tue villages or uoncress and lloweburg. In CoagreSs every pane of glass facing north and west, unprotectedby blinds, was broken by the hailstones, wuion raugea in size irom a pen to a hen's egg, and fell to a depth of eight inches on the level. Entire orchards were blown down. Many honses, barns and outbaildiniis were- nnroofed or blown down. The hailstones were so large and fell with such force as to be driven through iroofs covered with oak shingles. At Rowsburg hail fell to a depth of eight to twelve inches on the level and to u depth ot thirty-two inohes. Hundreds of sheep wore killed by hail. Defying the .People. TopeVa (Kan.) special: The dealers in original packages are becoming more and more defiant. The other day six of them hired three carriages. In the rear seat of each two of the saloon men placed themselves. On the opposite seat they placed kegs of beer and grouped around them oriRinal packages of whisky, brandy, and wine. On the seat beside the driver was placed a keg of beer and on top ot it a foaming gloss or tne coverage, xnus eauipnea tney drove through the principal streets ot the city,nnally halted at the entrance to the Capitol grounds and under the very shadow of tbe State House. There tbey offered for sale to the State officers, pass ing in ana out, tneir original nacaages. Secretary of State Allen became so en raged that he telephoned to tbe ohief of police to arrest tbe men for disturb ing the peace. At the approach of the blue costs the saloon men drove on. The Cronln Prisoners. Joliot special: Another Oronin sen sation is evidently brewing, but the officials are endeavoring tokeep it from reaching the public A report is oarrem mm more money uas oeen touuu on Bottfe ot tue convicts, ana tnrougn fear of punishment a Oronin prisoner has squealed and revealed a state of thinBiifthat has thorongbly alarmed the prison authorities. If the report should prove true it would appear that the underground route was speedily re paired' after the recent exposure and that the communication between the Oronin prisoners and their Chicago friends was renewed to some purpose. A sum of 91,000, in addition to the smaller amounts discovered, is said to have jbeen smuggled into the prison, and according to a story of an employe, the warden and his men are busily en gaged in hunting it up. So far their efforts have proved unsuccessful. . 4.uieksllvr Mine. - Tbe United States Consul, at Peru, has notified tbe State Department that theiPeruvian Government has loased to an English company the famouswiuick silve! mine Santa Barbara. When in activ I operation these mines were the mostiroductive in the world, but have not been worked for more than half a centtitjy. Under the terms of tbe lease it is necessary for the lessees to fornr a company in Europe with a capital of .200,000, and a deposit has olray been made as a guarantee for tbe nerformanoe of the contract. The leases for fifty years and the Govern meatreoeives as a compensation 25 per cent, or the full paid snares ot tne capital of the company, f 1 His Onion Card Wave Him Away. New York, speoial: Charles Jackson, alias Bncoonan, who murdered Franois Murphy a tew weeks ago, and who has beeajieaptured and brought back here, himself furnished the elue whieh en abled the detectives to arrest him. He waswtnable to get work as a printer in Muskegon, Sliob wituout a union card. The one he had waS made out -in the nante of Jack-son, by which ho was known hero, was of course useless to him, and ho wanted one made out in his new alias Ubarles Arthurs, lie wrote a friend in this oity to get such a card for him, out the friend turned tne letter over to Inspector Byrnes, and the capture followed. " Ilti Wishes Fnlfllled. Four years ago James Green, a colored barber in Winchester. Ky., and a leader in Colored society, was arraigned before the church of which he is a member on the charge of adultery. His guilt was manifest and he made promises of re form, supplementing them with the sol emu wish that God would paralyze him the instant the offense should be re peated. By a strange coincidence "his imprecation was literally fulfilled, and from that time until bis death, whieh occurred recently, he was a paralytic llis trade was abandoned, bis wire ob tained a divorce and he was Shunned by tbe colored people as one who bore visi ble marts or juiviue wrain. . A Collision on the Lalcn. Sanlt Sto. Marie (Miob.) special: The Siberia collided with tbe steam barge Ohio, in Bind Lake, and the latter sank in thirty-five feet ot water, six minutes sfter tbe accident. The Siberia steamed over" to the Canadian shore, leaking badly, but did not sink. The orew of the Ohio escaped. The Ohio is owned by L. 1'. Mason, of East Saginaw, and is valued at $50,000. She was loaded with eoat from Cleveland for West 8u iierior, WJs. The Siberia is owned by tbdUee, of Cleveland, and .is valued at $05,000. She is loaded with iron ore from A wo Harbors for Cleveland. Surnrtaol a niirglan, Mrs. Jacob Loreb and her daughter Llxsie, wbilo engaged in housework, at her home in Louisville, Ky., heard an unusual noise in an upstairs room. The daugbtr, aged about . 15, investigated. and found Thomas Btookdale, colored. ransaokiug a drawer where the family v ! !!! k w kfpt. Slic j.r.tv it the f II w, ului ,ui ttli tiiiHi'i'l In 1 by 1 rov.-rftil blow, 1 tit) tbfii inn-! iu st 1 1 mpt ti. rn inh Her 'in scrum a sf I tracced the attention of livi ixotL. snd
the brute fled, bnt was captured and jailed after being clubbed by the police in a terrible manner.
Killed Bis Rrotlier-la-I.aw. Joseph Butcher and bis brother-in-law, Frank Perkins, were returning from Mount Vernon, Ohio, both in a drunken condition. When near Bangs Station tbey had some difficulty, and Perkins, going to tho side of the road, cnt a oiub from a willow tree, and returning 'to tbe baggy, , struck' Butcher on the head, killing him instantly. He then went to a neighbor's and informed him a drunken man was. lying in the road, and then went home and went to bed, where he was found sound asleep at daybreak, and was arrested by thi Sheriff. A Kentucky Alnrdw. At the village of Staffordsbnry, Kenton County, Ky.. FA. -Steers, of ( oviiiKiou. was killed by Tom Adams. Btvi M-bml married a few days before and tteru vpua a party of frinnds cole1 1 itini' th' event at his m.Ui'r's t.wine. KteerK wt ut lo tseiti-' vsiua ..-lOi-m ior vnu. ciuutK .md fc.ii'n'l ArinniH tuu'v. He accosted him in a friendly luttnncr, but Adams immediately drew his revolver and shot Steers, from the effects ot wh'eh be died. In the excitement Adams eecaned. It ia not known that there was any previous trouble between tne two. Strange Disappearance. William F. Triemert, bookkeeper for the Bank of Commerce of Indianapolis, hss mysteriously disappeared. He went out from home on an errand and did not return. His books are said to be correct. He has been married one year. is a member ot ohuroh and regarded as perfectly sou are man. ao cause is known for his disappearance. His family think he has been murdered. Mr. Triemert began work in the bank as janitor six yeaia ago and showed so much ability that h was rapidly pro moted. To Connect Aanerloan Cities. The Preuident haa sent to the Senate a letter of the Secretary of State submitting ths plan for the preliminary survey for a railway line to connect the Srinoipal cities of the American hemiphere in accordance with the recommendations of the pan-American conerenoe. the i' resident recoinmenas prompt action by Congress to enable this government to participate in the promotion of the enterprise. The share ot jtfae United States in the cost of the survey will be 965,000. Two Lives Lost. A disastrous freight wreek occurred at Elizabeth Furnace, three miles east of Altoona, Fa. A freight crashed into a stock train as the latter was crossing a switch from one track to another, completely demolishing fifteen cars and the engine and also killing many head or stock, engineer William nova, ot Harrisburg, is reported dead in tbe wreck and his orsman, name nnsnown, fatally injured. A Victory for Dressed Beef Men. The United States Snpreme Court has rendered an opinion holding to be unconstitutional ,the law of Minnesota requiring that all fresh meats sold in the cttare nnaii oe cut irom nuduh langutered within the State and inspected twenty-four hours before- .slaughter. Tbe case is entitled "state oratinneeota against Henry D. Barber," and is of great interest to dressed beet men, who win the ease. A Flahtn Boat Lost. The steamer Karluck has arrived at Saa Franeisoo from Kokiao, Alaska, Bringing the information that the bark Corea, Capt. W heeler, had gone ashore at Cook's inlet, and with the cargo was a total loss. No lives were lost. The bark left this port carrying supplies for the salmon canneries March 27. The vessel was owned by the Artie Paeking Company, and was vsiaea at io,uw. A Losaniport (lent oa. Henrv Winkelbleek, a lumber dealer and saw-mill operator of Logansport, Ind., is believed to be in Canada, having perpetrated extensive forgeries. Ten thousand dollars of fraudulent paper has already come to light. tx-Attorney General Baldwin holds 93,000; H. S. Mnrdock. 94.000; the National Bank, 94,000, and more of it is out, Winkel bleek s family is len uestuuie. OflMtearer Killed. Will Zink, a single man, aged about forty years, was fatally injured while working at Wilkerson's saw-mill, at Markle, twelve miles east of Huntington, Ind. He was helping to off-bear a plank, wbioh struck the saw revolving atia rapid rate. The plank was thrown upward, striking Zink in the face. His skull was crushed and his face smashed toapaltV- ; . Youthful Depravity, Two young girls, one aged 14, the other 15 years, one of them colored, stole a horse and baggy at Benton Harbor, Mieh. They drove the outfit to Elkhart, where they disposed of it The girls were captured by, a Benton Harbor officer and at onoe taken back to that plaoe. t To Equip a Steamer. London special: Henry M. Stanley suggests that the committee on the Em in expedition apply tho Stanley fund to equipping a steamer for service on Victoria Nysnta for the benefit' of the tribes. - , T11K SIARKETS. CHICAGO. CiTTtS-Prime 5.00 m Fair to Good ISO 3.00 Common S.00 iM,60 Hoes-Shipping Grades 3.75 4.80 Sbebp 1.50 7.00 Whba? No. 4 Red . 3 . Cons-No. J . M .S4J4 Oats No. a . Rye-No. a ,SS Boti sb Choice Creamery ' .15 & ,17 Cubese FnU Cream, flats .OS 9 MX Eoos Fresh .13 & .IS Potatoes Choice new, per uu. . ,47 9 .6S Fomt-Hess M.2S &1X1S MIIiWATJKBB. Wheat No. Spring SO A .S Corn No. 3 83 m .M Oats No. S White JH S .80 Rva-No. 1 S3 0 ,BH Baw.et No. 3 .SO . roan-Mas U.35 01S.7S DETROIT. CATTtiB. 8.00 0 1.50 Boos 8.00 m i. so SHEEP Wheat Ne. Red Cobn No. 3 Yellow 0ts-M.S WhiU.. Wheat ,., Oobn Cash Oats-No. 8 White NEW TOBK. CATTI.B Hoes Shkkp Wheat No. a Bad Oobn-No. 3 White a.uu o o.ss .97 .88 .83 M .80 .SI S .8114 Si M M & .S0J4 4JI 0S.OO ,. 9 4.7S 4.9b 0 0.00 l.W 4 LOS .AV,9 MH .si .ae 14.00 (814.30. t.00 vf s.00 SI M 03 :?o8 'M Oats Mixed Western...... .... Pob New Mess ST. IfOUIS. Catixs Hooa Wheat No. 2 Red Conn No. S Oatb No. 9 Km NO. .at . 3.00 8.00 8.00 0 4.SS 8.00 0 S.95 .90 m ,9S .S3 0 3H 0 MH 8.W 0 4.S .93 0 ,7 .88!i0 .89)4 ':S8 4.50 0 I.tS 4.00 & 4.40 1.00 0 1.41 1ND1 ANAPOLIB. Cattle 8hlipiufl titesn Hoos Choice LljUt.. Siibsf Common to Prims Wheat No. 2 Hod Coav-No. SWlitte.,.. Oats-No. i White CINCINNATI. Hook Wheat No. li Rod Cork No. 4.. Oats -No. S Mixed IWe-No. s BUITALO. OAfn-B flood to 1'rinw ., Hoes Medium nnti Heavy tVaAT-No. J Hard,.
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INDIANA HAPPENINGS.
nrVKBITS AMD INCIDENTS THAT VAT LATBXX OCCIJBKED, an Internal! a Summary of the sf ere Important Dotnaa of Our Neighbors Wed ding and Doaths Crime, Qui analtlas aad taaswral News Mataa, Olwnt Find ot Sand at Pendleton. A layer of the finest sand in existence was discovered at Pendleton, by workmen drilling' for water. The sand resembles the celebrated Lanesborough sand, of Massachusetts,' in many respects. It has been pronounced by experts to be just tbe thing for tbe manufacture of lilute-vUrtS and nil kindaof glassware. The layt r is I roia fi-nrteeu to twenty foot thick un i covprs aTfS of ground. It can bo easily reached without removing the top rnsl oi limestone, as it crops out nloufi the banks of Fall 'rc-:X ml tn.. bo 1 il: .1 tt'.IU tfitlitu witlior.t (uiioR to lhA 1 iponsr of rei.totii the vast laji-r ot solid roelslbttt. nature has placed between it and the world. It has been estimated that it can be plaoed upon the market at 80 cents per' ton, instead of $3, as is now charged the glass manufactories in this gas belt by an Illinois syndicate. There 'is an; immense fortune in thisi sand for some cspitalist who has the means to develop the mines and plaea the market.
article ojit''r'ic.itovsh- isr!.ped i iivry. ' f. vxec tisA Tit", n-fi
Rewards or Genlovs. ' t Patents have been granted Indianians 1 follows: Aaron B. Albert. Indian- ' apolis, folding ehair; Louis Bell, Lafayette, lightning arrester and system of electrical distribution; Oharles F. Blandon, C. A. Boss, and 3. 3. Lumm, Michigan City, combined castor socket and corner brace; James W. Bridge, Young America, plow attachment; 8amnel Bufkin, Anderson, straw-sUcker; Edward M. Colles, B. C. Kitohell and p. C. Applegate, Princeton, washingmachine; Edward 0. Hopkins, Maxwell, bee-hive; John B. Lamb, GoodviewJ post-hole boring machine; Leonard Logan, Plymouth, washing-machiae: Joseph B. McKeely, Brown's Valley, wire stretcher; Winfield W. Mullen and F. M. Mullen, Bunker Hill, . cultivator; Sigonrney Wales, Terra Haute, assignor to Whittmore Bros. & Co., Boston, Mass., safety paokage; Lewis Wallace, Crawf ordsville, combined joint bar and railway tie, railway cross-tie and metal pad for railway ties; Frederiok A. WUke, Blchmond, china firing kiln. Minor atata Items. Edward C linger, of Logansport, was killed by the cars at Leroy. i The Newman paper-mill,' at Kokomo, is being greatly enlarged. A. S. Bright, of Huntington, lost both legs while switching ears at Kingsland. -The electric-light plant of Bockport will be in operation by the 10th of June. A couple of horses owned by Henry FreUiRhr -hear New Pnlesitterr.were killed by lightning. Mrs. Charles Sixes died at Frank fort from the effects of an accident seven months ago on the Monon. An empty house at vinoennes was blown up by unknown dynamiters be cause it had been rented to obnoxious t enants. Kmightstowa hss secured another important industry in a handle factory, to be erected and.operated by local cap italists. Lightning struck a tree in tbe. yard of Thomas McKillup, at ' Muneie, and tore it in pieces, hurling a heavy fragment through the roof ot the residence. A costly freight wreck occurred at the janotion, near Delphi, a Wabash freight crashing into a MonOn freight as it was crossing. Nobody was injured. The corner-stone of the new Crthollo St. Patrick's Charch at Fort Wayne was laid with appropriate ceremonies. All the Catholic societies of the eity and vicinity marched in the procession. At Bobo, six miles east of Decatur, Robert Bright, a freight brakoman on the Chicago and Atlantic Railroad, caught his foot in a switch frog. A ear passed over him, cutting off both legs. He will die. Four milk cows in one locality in Columbus died very suddenly, and in a manner indicating that they had been poisoned,' and the dead animals' stomachs were examined and found to contain poison. While plowing a garden, m aortu Sheridan, Michael Orr turned oat a paokage of counterfeit silver dollars, twenty-seven-in all. 1 bey were wait executed, but short in weight. Etta Wyant, aged 14 years, was per haps fatally shot by her little sister Mary, at their home in Forrest. It was a case of "didn't know it- was' loaaea," the ball taking effeot just over the right eyei . Charles Millen and David Kellnias, two desperate characters, indulged in an impromtn duel at Derby, ia which Kellams fired the first shot and" was in tarn killed by a shot through .the breast. Ko arrests. Clint Lucas, a driver at the'Crawfard Coal Company's mine, at Knights town, was injured in a very peculiar manner. He was riding on a hitehing between two loaded bank ears and, iu osseins throufth the trap -door, his head was cautrht between the cross-bar and the loaded car while the mute was pull inn at a rapid rate. His injuries are verv severe and may prove fatal. The new catalogue for 1889-J0, of Wabash College, contains soveral litho graphs of the college buildings and ot the museum. The attendance during the yerr was 358, divided among the olassee as follows: Post graduates, 5; seniors, S3; juniors, 30; sophomores, 31; freshmen, 67; senior preparatory, 40; j unior preparatory, 52. One senior has died during the year F. H. Boudinot, of Terre Haute, on April I. Two true tees! have also died within the past year Moses Fowler, of Lafayette, and Bev. . t Kendall, u. u., ot Ajar one. Town Marshal Datloy, of Charles town, probsbly receives the lowest salary ot any one acting in a similar eap&olty in the State. He is paid $1 per annum. George Burke, living near tbe Ohio Biver at Jasper, was called to his door one night last week by a band of" White Cane. He responded, with pistol in hand, and immediately oommonoadflrlag" on the erowd. He fatally wounded one of the band, who was left lying on the nround anable to get sway. The others fled, leaving Burke master of the situ tioaa.
A" passenger Irate rtrnnlug north n
ihe Louisville, Newfglbal and Chicago road ran down J oh a 'Burns, .living near Bedford, and he was so badly injured thofnb will die. He was is well-known citizen. fames Elliott, of Harmony,-was seriously injured by falling slate in the Peanut mine at Knightptown, operated by the Watson Coal and Mining Company. His- injuries are very bad, but not necessarily fatal. Mr. Elliott is a man of family. ' J. B. Bird and Bert Bird, father and son, residing nonrBlountsTiHe. quarreled over the'possesfion of a eoaxplanter, and the son fatally stampedraiB father about the breast fie is himself dangerously ill from no other known cank that i union.. (,'harles Harper, a yonth, while attempting to get in a road vnrt at ScoUaburu'. lost his bala&ce and felt beneath the horse's feet. Betore he "inW b' romovod fr.iiii 1ii (.HirilcfUS position tho animal steppe-1 n pun Ms ' face, cruchiug bis features in u frightful ' mauser. The Kokomo Nataral-gss Comr'T' 1 has opened- another teonetnr gMpcU, near that city. So powerful wan: the . i I! "10 feet of foar-lncteast-ah Mow, s:.d .:,i..-ir . o:.v ,a. Hi hiU' r.r. .'ii' ..? -V '-tv. our woimii -t ahd t-cvrt iijfsta t" m tus .- U thafji.pi.:i.s thet -n aHe. fc flscapins -iR ij; . f . buined do -n the dorr.. and i - ; i - --i8e, involMng a" loss ? Tne eitiai.- of Swayzee wi . 1 . burn wood nntil Uvi well cai - -1 t'i trolled and the damage repair i A young man, apparently about twenty-one years of age, who . as ete lingaride on afreight train oa the PU-r burgh, Fort Wayae and Chicago BiH-ji.t' roao, 1011 nnaer toe wnaeis a row mites ? east of Warsaw and was horribly sorA,men, but lived only a few minutes thereafter, during Which time he staseAjthitt his name was George Ansonvaniiuve fcisvrestdeoee as Liverpool. Kaalslw'. -The large farm-house and jNgfe of Thomas J. Harness, living near JfeJ&iu-o, were burned to the ground, 'wgptber with all their contents, the fanj()f(ing able only to save thomselves-Seveu valuable horses perished in- the 'fliioeB, The total loss will aggregate flrWt 00 which there was only $2,100 iajace. The buildings were large weY-nW, and the contents very valuable.' wlP is plainly the work of incendlaW, the tqroh being applied to Xho steajt-ire simaltaneously- Mr. Harness,!) a brother of Senator Harness, of Kokomo. Joseph liOng, aged ae years; ?smi a highly respected eitizen of Vernon, w. run over by a Madison passengerflniin, and both legs out off. In actdMjpn he received injuries about tbe headfifeansing his death almost.jnstantly. . l-onjj aaP.emiaovojyeJ., ,M. Js section-hana ana naa laMW j((sjmmvery deaf. When discovered oy;1tfce en gineer be was at work in the earn er qf the traek. The whistle was sowaAed, bnt nndeeded. by Long until - toeff lato. The engine and baggage cat,..ftes..'d nvpr him hafora the train IT .- At the April eleotion the Be; audi Democratic candidates for of Clinton Township, Decatur "' A.nl. hmiaIvmI th a urn, ntimher'o! The Board of Election adjonrned sln die without easting lot to aetermme taa winner, as provided by statute. A suit was begun by the Democratic candidate, asking a mandate against the Board re quiring it to re-assemble and east lotaJ.' To this a demurrer Was ftled. and aftejr exhaustive argument the court, Judge Stndy, held that mandate 'would lie, and ; the Board will be directed to east lots.. As this question has never been de cided by the Supreme Court of thnt State, an appeal to that court will n taken at once. During a heavy rainstorm at Wiaa? mao, lightning played havoc with the residence ox J. N. Brown. It struok the-' roof near the center, followed the eonej(i demolished all the ehimneys, scattered : brleks and boards hundreds of feet and . left the house in every dilapidated. eosa d it ion. Mr. .Brown who was out of; doors at the. time, waa thrown violentlyto. the ground, while his wife, who waa " in tho weaving-room, wnion- waa without any" siding, was not even Shocked. Their daughter 'IS lie. who was at work in the kitcheniwas rttvoct on tbe hip, her dress and soe;ings and shoes split in two pUces slsornroia her foot. She is in a irery fliwgnl onditioa, with very small hopes far her eovery. ' Avouna man; whose staani gauge registered a jag of 800 PoasM wal wd into Thomnson's restarsaflgi'-r North depot, at GrecnoaSei and in formed Frank Bill, the oler. tut.t be was a cowboy aad a very bad? mau when v he started out to paint. Jtte aUv ex hibited to the astonished $rk nu ugly sear on his bead, whiph togjaid was a relic of a hand-to-hand sfSfcnnter and terrifio tableau death Strangle ih the great Apache ohief, Ifwvr-Mis--Drink. He finally iasaltOeVooie 'dy onstomers and Hill pushed 'Mini out of ioor, A rattling ftgM.4AooK imoe,
eouJd be
1
pwAilioan
TniHtees
Wluutv,
aad when the mill ended, -ttet .cowbo-y.-..-had lost three teeth aud received an- .
other ngly out on the head. No one a. . ;
the depot knew his name or where he hailed front. .
Milo Maudlin aad hit divorced wife, :
Louisa, "made np at Kokomo and sum- . moned a justice to re-marry them. With .:j
the offloial came Hiram H. Varaes, an other saltor, and at the eleventh hoar Mrs. Maudlin changed her mind and . married Varnes. The Diamond-plate Glass Company,f Of lVOKOmo, nas oommenceu in ereotiwpa ot another large additional twobriok building, 200x217 feet, to be as n foundry and macUina-sh op. Oi completion of this over twelve aorea ground will be under roof. The Odd Fellows at Greene have purchased the old Voss build! on the north aide of the square, willproesssi to erect a new bnil for nee as their hall and business ! Tbe consideration was $MKX. Mrs. Hits, wife of John Hits, carriage mannfaoturet, of FranMi commuted sniotde by hanging.' escaped the vigilance of her attes took a long towel and hanged herself the wood shed. Death resulted. Btiangc lation, as her knees at! touohed the floor. She had bean' sound in mind tor several yeit.
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