Bloomington Progress, Bloomington, Monroe County, 24 May 1893 — Page 2
BepublicanJProgress. BLOOM1NCTON, 1ND. W. Jk. GABE. Editor and Publisher.
1S93 MAT. 1893
Su Mo Tn We Ih Fr Sa 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31
LIFE'S UPS AND DOWNS VISITING THE GOOD PEOPLE OF THE WORLD. LakM of Water and Destruction of Property Everywhere tioTernmsnt Printers Discharged A Town Burned I Btaaoha Knocked Out. BIG HOODS fctt of Water and Destruction or Property Everywhere. Pittsburgh special: Only one life was loot in the Pennsylvania floods. At Erie the total loss is 8750, noa At MeadTille, 5260,000. Loss to railroads, PimSThranl and Ohio, put- at 1.000,000. Th; Anchor line steamer, India, went ashore, off Mill Creek, near Erie. The vessel lies 1,000 feet east of Erie. Augusta (Me.) special: Kennebec River is on a race. The wharves are covered four to ten feet and the water reaches the eaves of the freicht and passenger station ot the Kennebec and Boston Steamboat Company. An immense number ot Ions, and large quantities of wood pnlp are floating ont to sea. Fairfield (Me.) special: The river is the highest for ten years. The Fairfield boom has broken. Tonawanda (N. Y.) special: All low lands in this vicinity are turned into lakes. Wlndom (N. Y. ) special: Farms are all under water, and great damage results. Mount Morris (ST. Y.) special: The valley is nearly all under water. Warning too Missionaries. New York special: The Board of Foreign Missions has become alarmed over the Geary act and have cabled all their missionaries in China a follows: "Exclusion act constitutional; prudence urged; notify stations. The cable was sent after a consultation of the Mission Council in view of possible dangers which might threaten the American missionaries now in China in consequence of any retaliation which might be taken there by the inhabitants of the country. The Board also issued an address to the public, a copy of which will be sent to President Cleveland, in which it states that It regrets exceedingly the action of the Supreme Court, and pleads with the President and his cabinet to use all their power against the enforcement ot the law. YwiTif and Tneu Suicide. C Bohlingerof Temple, Texas, suicided at St Loots, taking the morphine route. Bohlinger a month ago went from Temple to Hot Springs and there met Mrs. Boss Peak, her mother and children. He followed her a week later to St. Louis as her intended husband. She rented a handsomely furnished house in a stylish part of the city and frequently received Bohlinger at that place. Be took a fatal dose of morphine at her bouse. He had given her worthless checks amounting to over 810,000 at different times and feard detection. The checks were drawn on the National Bank of Texas, where he formerly had an account but had withdrawn it. DeatJh of Blondln. Saranac Lake (N. Y.) special: One of the feats ot strength performed by Blondln, the strong man traveling with Cole's circus, which has been giving exhibitions in this section, was the holding together of two large hcrses that attendants tried to lead In opposite directions. The horses used had been lately purchased and were never belore in the ring. They became frightened and reared and plunged, and Blondln in his efforts to hold them ruptured blood-vessels in the head and chest. He fainted from loss of blood, and soon after he was carried from the ring, died. George KnBtaacne Knocked Oat. George LaBlanche, the Marine, was knocked out in the sixteenth round by Billy McCarthy of Australia, at New Orleans. The fight was for a purse of 2,000, before the Crescent City Athletic Club. McCarthy was the favorite In the betting, standing three to five, while LaBlanche was quoted at six to five. McCarthy was seconded bv Steve Brodte and Harvey Wilson. LaBlanche was seconded by Black, Lynch, and Vardeo. George Scott refereed the mill. McCarthy weighed in at 157 pounds and LaBlanche at. 161. Talmage to Resign. New York special: It Is rumored in Brooklyn that the Rev. T. DeWitt Talmage will resign as pastor of the Brooklyn Tabernacle unless the entire Indebtedness of the church is paid. 'When asked about the report Dr. Talmace said: "I really don't know what to say about my resignation. I am sick and tired going on in this way with such a big debt floating over that church, and I can hardly see any other way out but to send in my resignation." Town Horned. Fire at Montfort, Wis., destroyed seventeen bussness houses and residences. Loss, '$75,000. OoverswoBt Printers. About 333 employes In the Government printing office baye been relelved from duty and granted furloughs. This is the commencement of the usual reduction which occurs during the congressional interim. Chicago Fire. The five-story brick building at Illinois and Dearborn streets, Chicago, occupied by the Price Baking Powdor Company, was totally destroyed by fire. The Joss will be heavy. No one was hurt CRIME AND CASTJALTZ. The grave of Carlyle W. Harris, the only murderer ever burled in the Bnral Cemetery at Albany, N. Y., has been visited by thousands of curious visitors and most beautiful Sowers straws over it by his mother. No stone as yt t marks the grave, but it is easily identified by the surrounding tombstones, which Indicate the resting places of three generations of Jobs & Carlisle and Charles LattrelL murderers, died at Bhenaan, Texas. They wen hanged for assassinating W. T. Scharmasv The two died almost Instantly of Broken necks. Each smoked cigarettes till the black eap was placed. Secretary Hoke Smith received a telegram Monday from Lieut Johnson, at Fort Apache, giving an account of the killing of four Indians on Clbicu Creek. The report sayei Ah-Des- Pah tried to force his wife to drink Ms win. She refused, and told her husband to kill her. Her rather was present on horseback, and, believing his son-in-law Joking, also told Urn to go ahead aad kill his daughter, AJk-Des-Pah shot aud kiUed his wife. The father and a young bock rushed in to prevent ah -Dee-Pah from killing his wife, when the latter turned his Winchester on them and killed them both. An Indian named Johnnie bearing shots rode up and ttOMUtaft to get his (00, whoa Ab-D.
Pah fired two shols which missed. Ah-pe-i-Pah fled but Johnnie pursued aud killed him. All la quiet I have nt v -,pp tics to the seene to prevent the Indians from gathering In excit-sd groups. " Another lynching has been enacted near Bedford, lid., where Turret was hanged by a molt Monday evening. Lou Trenck is the second victim, and he died tor the murder 3f Henry Faedler. Tho avengers were largely the sau;e crowd that strung up Turret, and they went from 8eymoor. Mr J. E. dough, wife of the wellknown Baptist missionary, died In Evanston Monday morning at 4 o'clock. Mrs. Clough was klllec by a fold ing bed which closed upon her and crushed her body Into ah insensible clol while her daughter stood by powerless to prevent That she, too, was not crushed to death in the merciless embrace of the death-dealing machinery was due ;o accident, luck, chance or whatever one ulshcs to call it In one second less than that, indeed the treacherous mechanism closed on the form of the unfortunate lady ind before the daughter, horrified and het.rt stricken, could fairly realize the situation, her mother, with whom she had beim but that very minute in pleasant conversation, was a helpless, hopeless paralytic beyond the aid of human skill to save :'rom the death that came then none too swiftly. The victim lingered in a swoon lor a few hours and then died. Jack Williams, aged SI years, one of the oldest sottleri in Otoe County, Neb., committed suicide by taking strychnine. George H. Abbott, alias Frank L. Almy, was hangec, Tuesday for the brutal murder at Hanover, N. H.. on July 17, 1801, of Christie Warden. The execution was a bungling lob. Almy'sfeot touched the floor when he -rent through tho drop, and he was strangled to death Ten out of fifteen of the last rears of his life had been spent In prison, ills father, overcome by shame, killed himself years ago. The boy was ' bad from his 10th year, and after thefts and more serious crimes was sent to prison for a long 1-orm. He escaped, went to work for Christ.le's father, and fell in love with tho girl. Her sisters opposed the match, and In a fl : of pare brutality the ruffian shot her dead, in the presence of her sisters. Two members of the salvation army arrested at Sioux City have confessed that they belong to a sing of counterfeiters. At Graud Bsplds, Mich., Detectives Smith aud Darr were sent out to disperse a gang of tramps in the extreme north part of the city earl; on Tuesday morning. They encountered eight ot the gentry, and a lively bat-lo er sued, in which all hands emptied their retolvera One tramp was severely wounded, but was rescued by his comrades. The oldcers captured J. J. Wilson, and he la now in custody. Officer Starr hearing the iihots, ran to help the detectives. He was mot by several ot the tramps, who got the drop on him and relieved him of his revolver and handcuffs. Emma Smith, i Buffalo, N. Y., servant, charged with stealing a quantity of goods from her employe s. was found guilty, aud Justice King fined her $50. Among the spectators was Frod Rledman. Ho offered to pay partot the fine, and, in the conversation, proposed n arriage and was accepted. Aid Franklin and Butler were in court and Franklin married them. Then Judge King reduced the fine and the aldermen and other officials chipped In and paid it The newly married couple departed happy. At Akron, Olio, Charles Keenan shot and killed John H att in a fight over an account, THE FIRE RECORD. At Wilkesbarrs, Fa-, tho Wells Building was partially destroyed. The losses reported amount to 60,000. At Halifax, N. S, two six-year-old girls were burned to death near Amherst under precisely similar circumstances. Both were playing In fields where fires were alight to buru up old grass, Graham Brothers' foundry and machine shops at WortMnirton, Ind., burned. The loss Is $20,000. The fire was caused by the explosion of a barrel of asphaltum. Mo insurance. Garfield Wills, 31 years of age, was fatally burnod. Barlow's ice plant and electric light plant at Bockport, Tex., burned. l.os3 $52,000. Insurance about $50,000. . Fire at Tern Haute destroyed the Huduut Riverside elevator, with 100.000 bushels of corn; loss, $50,000.
POl-JTICAL. The National League of Bepubhcan Clubs closed its convention at Louisville after selecting Denver as the place for the next convention In May, 1804. By the election of a Senator at North Smilhneld the Rl.odo Island Bopublicans have a majority In the State Legislature, thu? enabling thnm to elect Republican State officers. The hitch about the visit of Infanta Eulalla to this country is said to hinge upon a matter of courtesy whether or not tho President shill return the Infanta's call after she reaches Washington. Tho United States Supreme Court, through Justice Gray, sustained' the decision of tho New York ;ourls In favor of the constitutionality of the Geary exclusion act. Justice Brewer dissented. Dissenting opinions were also filed by Chief Justice Fuller and Justice Field. FOREIGN. The Queensland National Bank and the Bank of North (Queensland, two of the largest financial institutions in Australia, have suspended oving to the panic and the resultant heavy withdrawals of deposits. The deposits In t ib Queensland National last December amounted to (41,000,000. The subscribed capital is $,000,000, of which one-halt Is paid up. The reserve was 52.500,000. The bank has branches at Sydney. N. 8. W. , :ind various other places. Thoy have also su ipended, Tho Chinese government Is said to have decided to deport all Americans from Chln:t In case the Geary law excluding Chinamen from tin United States Is carried Into effect MISCELLANEOUS. During the Maximilian holiday celebration at Duran zo. Mexico, a desperate affray occurred between a mob of Intoxicated Mexicans acd tho police, which resulted in the killlc g uf five of the mob and ouo policeman. The new Cuou d Line steamship Campania made the p tssage from randy Hook to Quecnstown in days, 1? hours aud 42 minutes, the quickest passage eastward yet made by any steamer. The best provious reci.rd was that cf the American liner Nw York In August last, and was 8 days, 10 hours and 57 minutes, Tho annual report of the W.'stlnslious? Company shotis Oat tho profits of tho company for the year ending Murch 31 were $1,004,583. Monday mOrn!ng, in the United State Court, Chief Arth lr, of tho Brotherhood of Locomotive Engl leers. Died his answor to the petition of the Ann Arbor Kalltoad Company in the $100,000 damage suit. Mr. Arthur acknowledges that the Ann Arbor Is a railroad compi.ny, also that it Is a common carrier, anil admits lots of other things lhat have little if any bearing on tlio case. Tho o lly thing of Importance that he does admit is the existence of the boycott rule of the brotherhoud, which Is given In full. Th answer -ays that of tho lo.ltinctlons of thf court mentioned In the pot It ion he knows nothing, as he wits not served. Each and every allegation in the petition is denied and Mr. Arthur asks that he be dismissed with his cts'.s. The Grand Trunk Railroad Company Is tleirouf :hat Its passengers should bo iiiolested by quarantine Inspectors ns little as ssihle, and If It. can convince tho Hh higan nfXeluls that tho disinfection at 1 i.ini Levis, near Gueboi', Is adequate, it sill l.e unnecessary for baggage disinfected there to he again disinfected lr Mlebi.-an. 'J he State Hoard ot Health sent a ropro.cntat.lvp. to Point Levis, where be will remain Indefinitely, and so long as the regulations of the Michigan board are adhered to baggage disinfected at that plaee will not bo detained at the Ulciilgan border Small-pox suspects rrowd Hoffman and Swinburne Islands At the hitler observation station there are already 400 steerage passengers who w ire et posed lo the contagion on the steamships liein and Liilm. which arrived las', week, ud Tuesday more
(har i,0.i n :.. ! th ) ii. ee vers and crev f Uh i:rev.:!". sto-t Ate... i. were trans I'l-.-i-ed to su rburre IliiI. ihere was s verltabla :.oid day oi precautionary wort at quarantine Monday. The Alesla arrlvofi on Sunday morning from Naples. She had been twenty days at sea. Her captain reported one death from heart disease and ono mild case of small-pox. Dr. Jenkins at once decided on nit Investigation. Ins fow hours a second case was discovered and the patient waa removed nt once. This increased the necessity for extreme precaution. Vaccination was beitun at once. The Alcsla carried 40 steerage passengers and forty-two officers and seamen. With few exceptions tho passengers wore vaccinated. In the Court of Appeals at Kansas City, Ma, Judgo Cilll rendered a decision holding that a Sunday shtvo is not a necessity. Tho decision was on the appeal of a Moberly V arbor, Mho Has convicted in tho lower court of shaving two in-sh Sunday in violation of tho statute which makes work other than household offices or of necessity a misdemeanor. The ludgment was affirmed by Judge Gill, who holds that a man might shave himself, but where a barber did the work in his own shop It was a different matter. Witli only two dissenting votes the World's Fair Columbian Exposition Directory Tuesday afternoon voted lo open the entire Fair on Sunday and to return to the Federal Government all the money received under the act of Congress couplod with Sunday closing. Religious services will lie held on the grounds In halls and pavilions having a seating capacity of many thousands, and eminent preachers will be invited to conduct the worship. All the buildings will be open, but the machinery will not run. The price of admission Is 50 cents, samo as on week days. Tho amount of money rcturnod covers tho entire net amount of the Government's loan. John L Sullivan was arrested at Bangor, Maine, for an assault upon Lawyer M. L. Lozolte, of Blddcford, eomm .tiod on the train. The wife of Professor Koch, the celebrated bacteriologist, recently procured a divorce from her husband, and the Professor has now been ordered by tho court to pay her one-fourth of his income. It is announced that Professor Koch will marry a young actress. The Corruack-Coilier duel at Memphis is off, friends of the bloodthirsty editors having patched up b settlement by which both promise not to mako faces at each other hereafter. Louis Anderson, a carpenter of Chicago, was arrested tor drunkenness. When taken to the station a common brown envelope was found in his pocket and In this was S2.6G9 in bills. Anderson said he became afraid of the banks and drawing his savings, amounting to $4,000, went on a spree and squandered $1,431, The charge against him was dismissed by Justlco Bradwell and the money turned over to Officer Hogan to deposit to Anderson's credit in some bank. Ludd King, of Now York City, is In Denlson, Tex., making arrangements to tako to tho World's Fair a band of fullblood Choctaw Indian ball-players. The game is of thrilling interest So great is the excitement that tho players frequently lose all restraint, and the result is broken limbs and heads aud a regular pitched battle. A battle was fought on Friday between Generals Telles and Tavales near Quaraby, Brazil, which tho nationalists recaptured. The insurgents are now marching on Bage. Tho Uruguayan troops are driving over the frontlor numbers of fugitive nationalists who are attempting to enter Uruguay. FINANCIAL ANDTnDUSTRIAL, It is explained that tho disappearance of James Gordon Bennett's name Iroru the title page of tbs New York Herald Is due to the fact that tho proprietorship of tbe journal has been vested in a stock com; pany. Mr. Bennett foels that In case anything should happen to him It Is deslrablo that the property bo put in shape for proper preservation. The liabilities of K. R. lloblnson & Co., the suspended Wilmington. Del, banking firm, are placed at 5c.2fi.000 and tho assets at 204,000. a J. Wllley, Supreme Master of Exchequer of tho Knights of Pythias, had S70.000 of the order's money In the bank, but it Is fully covered by collateral. Reliable information is that tho report of Isaac L Rice of his examination of tho books und accounts of tbo Reading railroad shows an actual money loss of $1,000,000 to tho company by the purchase of the control of the Boston and Maine and tbo New York and Now England railroads Tbe Sionx City (Iowa) Street Railway Company's property was placed in tbo hands of a receiver. A. F. Nash, a heavy stockholder, made the application beforn Judge Gaynor, and James F. Teavy, president and manager of the company, was appointed. Bond was fixed at 850,000 and furnished. James R. Keeue Is reported to have been the mysterious bear behind the recent slump in Cordugo. Ills winnings in tbe deal are placed at SI, 500,0.0. Two hundred operators at the Overland Cotton Mills in Denver quit work because of an order from the proprietors Increasing the hours of work from sixty to sixty-six per week. Mauy of the operators are children, ranging from eight years upward. Tho Ontario Coal Company, of Toronto,
has assigned The Molson Bank holds paper amounting to botneen (250,000 and 8400.00U The Ontario bank is interested to tho extent of over $100, 000. William H. Mygutt, banker and real estate dealer at Denver, has assigned. He schedules assets of S501.8G0 and liabilities $507.88(1 B. G. Dun Si Co.'s weekly review oi trade says: he smash In tbe Industrial stocks, the failures of some firms and of the National Cordage Company, and the largest decline in stocks known In any week since 1873 have been followed by surprisingly little disturbance. Business has shown remarkable soundness and strength under such a strain. Bank failures at Chicago and Indianapolis and rumors of others reflect large losses through Chicago speculation In real estate and grain, aud at Indianapolis through the falluro of the Premier Steel Company, but commercial credits are not as yet materially affected. Interior money markets are growing ttshter and more cautious but uo such stringency is yet seen as to check general trade, which appears to have Improved. THE MARKETS. cmcAoo. Cattle Common to Prime.... Hons Shipping Grades Sheet Fair to Choice Wheat No. 2 Spring Cobn No. n Oats No. 1 Rye-No. 2 UuiTtii Choice Creamery Egos Fresh Potatoes New. per I n INDIAN A POLLS. Cattle Shipping Hoos Choice Light Sheep common to Prime Wheat No. a Cobn No. 2 White. Oats No. a White ST. LOUIS. CAnxt Hook Whkat No. 2 Red t orts No. a Oats No. 2 Ri'ENo. J CINCINNATI. Cattle tloos H'iKEI' Wheat No. 2 Red Coi:n--'o. 2 Oath So. a Mixed ilJE -No. 2 llHi'ROIT. ('ATTI.K. I iOOS . . Sheep Wheat No. 2 Ild ( DBS- No. ! Yellow . Oais No. 2 White 'iOUODO. Wiirat No. 2. t 'urn--No. Yellow oats No. 2 White 14YE BUFFALO. f'ATTTL roTimion to Prime.... Hour Best tirades Wheat- No. i Red No. 2 White MILWAUKEE. Wheat No. J spring conx No. 3. Oats No. 2 White Rye-No. 1 Habi.sy No. S. Pobk Meas HEW YORK. Cattle. Hooh finest-Wheat-No. Red Cobn No. a Oath Mixed Western BufTKB-Creamory. POSK-Ntw Mens
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l I V.' :Ti HI. TTRACTION D'S FAIR. AT : WkI. r.. .al itway I'lulHam-e is 'ountl the World K as in the Orient I' .oi,.-,-. . : XutluiiM. - ... - i: nee: V!..i I nee in Iho WotM'b ' - -. iv... !. , ono if the grefttExposition. The ' : . , iro, merely means ' witii buildings in which ontertalnmcntB are given, and lo witness those extra faros will ho charged. This side show avenue is a mile long and 600 foi l wide. Near tho entrance to tho Plaieancc a Tower of Babel is built, having a height of 10!) feet and a i dtametor nt tho base of 10(1 feet. This ' tower deviates from the plan of tho I original t.y having a double track electrical circular railway from tho baso to tho lop. A chime of bells is installed at tho top, from which n good view of tho glotinds is had. The Irish Villuue. One of tho attractions of the l'laisaneo is a oolloption of houses, representing an Irish village. Towering over them is a reproduction ot famous Donegal CCH'RT-YAED IN castle. Lady Aberdeen, living iu one of the cottages, will preside ovor tho little village. Hero are specimens of the work of Irish peasants and of some of tho people themselves. Laces, shawls, embroidery, etc., will l o made and sold. A Kerry cow makes tho center an Illustration of Irish dairy work. Threo of the cottages form a national museum, containing rare manuscripts, books and works of art. The City ! 'aim. Another Plaisance attraction Is represented by a street scene in Cairo, in which 150 Egyptians figure. Dark-brown beauties from tho banks of the Nile, who dance voluptuous measures, look - eoouettishly upon the Yankee, their big eyes winning his attention as aoon as EOVPTIANS AT I.rKCH. they flash them upon him. They wear spangles, chains, beads and gilt bunds. Arab traders, donkey boys and camel drivers are there- While the dancers are performing in tho theater the merchants sell beads, turbans or shells from tho Bed Sen and other curiosities, all ut ( hlcaao prices, and tho snake charmers subdue reptiles and the magicians show their familiarity with the black art. Thero arc performing monkeys, too, and parrots. An old priest goes up into iho tower of the mosque at daybreak and calls upon all believers in .Mohammed to pray. Tho people perform their ablutions aud then bless tho prophot. When they have done this the long-bearded merchants tako tholr pipes and souat in the bazars, looking indolently at the passers-by, while the women ami children gazo in wonder and smile knowingly at the igaornnee of their ways betrayed by tho Americans, yho are ns great a show to them as they are to purchasers of admission tickets. A Street uf Stiiiutioitl. One of the old streets of Stamboul is reproduced and tenanted with people from that city and Irom Constantinople, who show pretty much the same sort of entertainment as (heir Egyptian neighbors. One of their features is n lire department such as is in service at the City of the Golden Horn. Tho Are pump, which has a large rapacity, is slung on polos on the shoulders of the natives, who trot through tho streets astonishingly fat. When they reach tho flro the water is supplied them by carriers, who bear leather bags that are refll led from the well as fast, as their contents ere used up. A silver bed, owned by ono of the Sultans of '1 urkey, is on exhibition. A Moorish palace, modeled after one of the old-style temples found in Spain ami in Northern Africa, is another side show on tho Plaisaneo. AroMaurant(nc ommodating EiiO pcoplo In the palace show that the Moors are a practical race. In tho building is nn immense collection ol gold coins. An Algerian merchant, has put up a building In which are quartered a largo supply of natives who maintain a bazar, in which are displayed precious stones, swords, pistols with antliti Hint locks, .ia -'gers, laces, brocades, cushions, mid tnble covers. In another store are found perfumery, sergnllo pastille, atlnr nf roses and sweetmeats, though these are not. half as sweet as the dreamy damsels who roll t ln-iri to you. A liei ouin camp, presided over by a real Bedouin chief, who, of course, would cut a throat with no compunction, is shown. Tho dnneitig girls who sway and tremble with simulated emotion keep the hall crowded with epoetators, The .l.iVMiit-e VIH-kc. Javanese, to the number of seventy, have built It village 'li the stylo of tholr country on the liidwav I'laisanee. It is made of bamboo pole -, split bum! on and palm Iimw and (hatched with native (iiiibseo. A v iueu ol split bam-
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' !ot ndl Icnvos enoirolos the villa),'"' tfl ; kl,e,, out thoBo who linven't iiid. The ! .In van esc girls dunce i the music of
an orchestra and puff tigai'(ttii. i hey am little oils ot crcntura With tiim-k shiny hair, lit tin1 center of Uic sct'luinplit arc two An bamboo pol"t,vith holes out through thorn. V h"ii Unwind whistles through llioso holes u THE AWIKUIAN VII, LACK. strange melody is produced that makes tho Javans feel homesick and romantic All sorts of bilious and maudlin thoughts travel through their brains while the music is being played by the galo. They get mote of Iho music in Chicago than In Java, as thero is a greater eupply of wind. A remarkable diBpl iy in the Plaisaneo is that of feminine beauty. A building has been put up; and in It arc stalled lil'ty GEKMAN VILLAGE. young women, who renrosent the style of face of various cations and their fashions in costumes. Thoy were got together 1 y a Chicago beauty collector, who spent so.tc months in Europe advertising lor types of tho different races. Lovesick Komoos linger round the beauty building and make the air resound with their mournful lamentations. Thero is a tacit agreement that none of the girls are to get married until the Fair is over, and then they will be able to select any kind of men they prefer from the wild scramble that will tako place for their hands. Germany has n village in which the artistic and mercantile tastes of her ' people are combined. The Germans town of tho ! have put up a model of middle ages, and there are houses of the Jllack Forest and the other divisions oi the empire. Tho houses are filled with original furniture. I'r. Vlii- .iiilni, of Berlin, manages a German ethnological museum. A MoikIi i- iiI Wheel. The Ferris wheel is the real triumph of the Midway l'laisanee. It represents better than any other exhibit the genius of Amoricnn invention. It looks something like the paddle wheel of a steamer, multiplied, however, a hundredfold. Instead of the paddles it bears passenger ears, and when it revolves the passengers get something of tho sensation that a lly must have that sits on the side of the cart wheel and feols it revolve. The wheel is 'MM feet high and 21 feet In diameter, it bears Jtii nasj songor cars, each larger than a railiood coach, and with a sealing capacity of i CO persons. When iho wheel is "loaded " ! it contains 2,Ii0 citizens. They arc ! carried up and down like bir is sitting I in their nest. I A modol of St. Peter's, of Borne, is ! exhibited. It is of curved wood, coated with a substance in imitation of marble, (and is onstructed on a scale of one- ! sixtieth. This makes it about :)l feet ! long, 1 feet wide, and lo feet high. It i is placed in a building of Human style. which coutaius besides iho models the portraits of man .- of the Popes. There are models of the Cathedral of Milan, the Piombinol'alace, St. Agneso Church, and tho Bonian l'auttie n o' Agrippa. Tho attendants in this building are , m I d tssacdressed in the uniforms of the Vatican guard, World's Fair rieh-l'pH. Tin: blarney stone is on the ocean and will reach Midway Pluisuiice next week. Tun elevators are running to the rooi ot the Manufactures Building. The promenade there has a capacity of l'i.OtlO persons. John Boyd Thachkb ia getting tho committee on awards in condition to begin tho examination of exhibits ns soon as tho jurors have been appointed. The material for tho Batnoau village has arrive I on the grounds. It took the material about as long to got from K.VTIIA.NCK TO OKU MAX VII.I.AOK Chicago to .Iiii-'ksou Park as it. did from Samoa to Chicago. Vsi.kks the courts intervene, Jitekaon Park will be open the world on Sunday, I ut the great buildings of the exposition v.'ill be closed. Tho price of admission t3 the grounds will bo a" oents. IlAitLow Hkiixiiotham, President cf tho World's Columbian Exposition, Man donlod admission to Jackson Park ly one of the zealous young gateloopurs en duty at the Fifty-ninth Mroi-t i ntnuioo. It was not so much Mr. Higinliothitii- that the gatekeeper i lijeeted t a-, it vvn . ihe -.-orgeocs tallyI o coach in will- h that lltcinl at'i llipti d t,i enter the park.
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The Most Astonishing Medical Discovery of the Last One Hundred Years. It is Pleasant to tho Taste as the Sweetest Nectar. It is Safe and Harmless as the Purest Milk. Thin woihIctIViI Nervine Tonic has only recently been introduced into this country 1-y the proprietors and manufacturers of tho Great Hoiith Amoricnn Xtrviitc Tonic, and yet its great value as a curative aent ha long been -n-;v.:i by a few of tho most learned physicians, who have not brought ios kicrits and value to the knowledge of the general public. This medicine has completely solved the problem of tho cure of indigestion, dyspepsia, or.d diseases of the general nervous system. It is also oi the greatest value in i ho euro of all forms of failing health from whatever cause. It performs this by the great nervine tonic qualities which it possesses, and by its g " 't curative powers upon the digestive organs, the stomach, the liver and the bowels. No remedy compares with lliis wonderfully valuable Nervine Tonic as a builder and strengthcner of the life forces of the human body, and as a grea.t rcnewer of a broken-down constitution. It is also of more real permanent value in the treatment and cure of diseases of the lungs than any consumption remedy ever used on this continent. It is a marvelous cure for nervousness of females of all ages. Ladies who are approaching the critical period known as change in life, should not fail to use this great Nervine Tonic, almost constantly, for the space of two or three years. It will cany them safely ovu the danger. This great strengthener and curative is of inestimable value ; the aged and infirm, because its great energizing properties will gi- them a new hold on life. It will add ten or fifteen years to llie. lives of many of those who will use a half dozes bottles of the remedy each year.
IT IS A GREAT REMEDY FOR THE CURE OF
Nervousness, Nervous Prostration, Nervous Headache, Sick Headache, Female Weakness, Nervous Chills, Paralysis, Nervous Paroxysms and Nervous Choking, Hot Flashes, Palpitation of the Heart Mental Despondency, Sleeplessness, St. Vitus' Dance, Nervousness of Females, Nervousness of Old Age, Neuralgia, Pains in the Heart, Pains in the Back, Failing Health,
Ail these and many other complaints cured by this wonderful Nervine Tonic. NERVOUS DISEASES. As a cure for every class of Nervous Diseases, no remedy has been able to compare with the Nervine Tonic, which is very pleasant aud harmless in all its eltects upon the youngest child or the oldest and most delicate individual. Nine-tenths of all the ailments to which the human family is heir are dependent on nervous exhaustion and impaired digestion. When there is an insullitient supply of nerve food in the blood, a general state of debiiity of the brain, spinal marrow, s ::id nerves is the result. Starved nerves, like starved muscles, become strong when the right kind of food is supplied; and a thousand weaknesses and ailments disappear as the nerves recover. As the nervous system must supply all the power by which the vital forces of the body are carried on, it is the first to suffer for want of perfect nutrition. Ordinary food docs not contain a suilicient quantity of the kind of nutriment necessary to repair the wear our present mode of living and labor imposes upon tho nerves. For this reason it becomes necessary that a nerve food be supplied. This South American Nervine has been found by analysis to contain the essential elements out of which nerve tissue is formed. This accounts for its universal adaptability to the cure of all forms of nervous derangement.
Oiuwfobdbvim.v., T.'.ii . Aur. CO, S. To I he Grfiit South. A;trlc.j;i il-.i; Iieah (iKSTit; I desire. ti aav-Aa you t have Mlifi-ri-,'. for tniiny yenrei i.itli very s. ;u 1 I , iliai-aae uf the i.tomie.-h anil n.-rus. I tri il i vi-ry ineiliriiie I i'..uld Lear of. but u ithin .!nn- ine any appreel.tble Rttorl until I was nilviscil to try your Oivat South Ainrru-aii Nervine 'i'onie AndStouifi-li und l.iver Cure, and nince tiding peverul bottlt-Hof it I lllllflt aay that I am surprised at ltri wonderful powers to cure the ritomach and (reni-rrtl nervous Hysteni. IT everyone knew tin; value of Ihl remedy as I do you would not be able to supply the demaii l. J, A. IIiiuli;, Ex-Treas. Montgomery Co.
A SWORN CURE FOR ST. VITAS' DANCE OR CHOREA. ( 'rawfokdsv i l.t.K, Ind., June 22, 1SS7. My daughter, eleven years old, was severely alllieted with St. Vitus' Dance or Chorea. We Rave her three and one-half bottles of South American Nervine and she is completely restored. . I believe it will euro every ease of St. Vitus' Dance. I have kept it irf my family for two years, and am sure it is the greatest remedv in the world for Indigestion and Dyspepsia, and for all forms of Nervous Disorders and Failing Health, from whatever cause. State of Indiana, . Montgomerf Count)), ( M " Bubseribed and sworn to before me this June 22, 1SS7. Chas. W. Wright, Notary Public. INDIGESTION AND DYSPEPSIA. The Great South American Nervine Tonic Which we now oiler yon, is the only absolutely unfailing remedy ever discovered for the cure of Indigestion, Dyspepsia, and the vast train of symptoms and horrors which are the result of disease and debility of the human stomach. No person can afford to pass by this jewel of incalculable valu'i who is alfeeted by disease of the stomach, because the experience and testimony of many go to prove that this is the one and osly one great cure in the world for this universal destroyer. There is no case of nnmalignant disease of the stomach which can resist the wonderful curative powers of the South American Nervine Tonic. ILtBttiET E Hall, of Wnynetown. Ind.. nays: j .Mb. Ella A. Bujttos, -r-f New Rnm, Indians,
1 owe niv life to the tirent South American XerviiiH i mm won in whi wrnr mourn rnmi the effeetrt of an oxhMu1ed rKomat h, IndiKosiion, Nervous Iroptratlo:i, and a p ier;tl nhutUred condition of my whole HyitU'in. Had Riven up all hope of jretliiiji well. Had tried three doetorn, with uo relief. The Urn I bottle of the Nervlne Tunic Unproved me no inneh that I wan able to walk nbnut, and a ftw bottien cured me entirely. I believe it i.- the IwMt medicine tn the world. I can not reenmmeiid tt too uig-uly No remedy compare with Koirrn AucmcAS
pare with SoutU Atnenrnu ervmp as ii nondrout eiirciortne MAirwcii. o remoy wtntti. nn rompiir. with South American Xervine nn a curt for all forma ol fiiilmc health- It iuver fmls to cure Iudlftion and (t,VMiHpia. It never falls To mm Chorea or St. Vitus' Pancp. It power to hulld up the whole iy are wonderful in the extreme. It rnren the old, tin; vohuk, and the nittldleael. It in a Kreal friend to t he aped and itiflrm. Do not nejriect to use this preriou loin; If vou do, ou may neglect the only remtMly which will rentore yntt to hetiith. South American Nervine m perfectly nafe, and very plertsnut to -.he taste. !?Hcat" In-lies, vn not fail to iiKthU j:rat cn, Im cause it w tll put the hioom vt (ccshiits mul t.ieauty upon your and la your check, and iiuiekly tirive away your disabilities .utd wejikiu-frtes. Price, Large 18 ounce Bottles, $1.25; Trial Size, 15 Cents. EVERY BOTTLE WARRANTED. Every person purchasing six Inrgd bottles from our advertised aitront at Sl.-'o each is entitled to one bottle live. If not kept by druggists order direct T o . , . nn Dr. E. DETCH0N, Crawfordsville, Ind. Six Bottles for $6.00 ' ' FARIS BROS.
Wholesale and
-FOR-
RHONROE
jjJivci vurc Broken Constitution, Debility of Old Age, Indigestion and Dyspepsia, Heartburn and Sour Stomach. Weight and Tenderness in Stomach, Loss of Appetite, Frightful Dreams, Dizziness and Ringing in the Ears, Weakness of Jtixtremities and Fainting, Impure and Impoverished Blood, Boils and Carbuncles, Scrofula, Scrofulous Swellings and Ulcers, Consumption of the Lungs, Catarrh of the Lungs, Bronchitis and Chronic Cousrh,
Liver Complaint, Chronic Diarrhoea, Delicate and Scrofulous Children. Summer Complaint of Infants.
TIebecca TVu.KtNsov, ol P.rowusvalley, Itlll., ivh : ' 1 li.'iil ln-en in n ilUtresnetl eouUitlon for tlli-oe. year from Nf-rvocBiies!!, WeaknenH of the Stomtu-li, DyHiK-psla, and iiiili.?e9tltn, untli my lit-iiHli wjiii prone. I hail lieen iloeMrinjy eonfitantly, u-Hli litt relief. 1 bought one bottle of s,Mi(h Ainerteau Xerviue, niiiiii done me more Knoil thmi any $50 wortl!: of dnetnrin I ever ifil In my ll'e. i would nflvitw every weakly i-r-80il to uxe OiH vnliiahle end lovely remedy ; a few hot ties ot It lias cured me completely. I vou&lder It the grandest niiMlicfao in the world." j nvtt: ! cannot exureiw hnw much I cm to the K. a,.utl,m rt,intoU. j.m j tcivfl, nppettu gone, ww couyhftiff it nit jifttlnji 1 up blood; am Hurt I wns In firm ttjipv of coiiKumptfon, nn fnheritauce IiamU'd down ; through wvernl p;iiHTati nt. I in-jrnii taking j the Nervlm Tonic, mwl continue! I(k hw for ! nbnut nix rnniitliM, iul nm entirely rtirerl. It Is the prime ten I remedy lor uervo. Kfoiiuirh mid I lung I have ever seen,' Xervisk nn a euro for the XerfM. No remwly ronj. Retail Agents COUNTY,
JEt.esid.ent Dentlat
Dl'.J. W, GRAIN. OFFICE rcmoTcd to the building north of th i Fes Corner, North College At et side, ground floor. C. C. TURNER , THE LEADINGUNDERTAKER ; Furniture Dealer. I oars the largest and bst selscfctt lock erer brought to Bleomingtoo, W ; will sell you goods cheaper than any on I have a fine diaplay of Chamber Suites PARLOR SUITES, LOUNGES Fancy Chairs, Babt Wagoh Carpet Sweepers, Mirrors, . PICTURE FRAMES. ORGANS kept in stock, and sold on monthly payment. I hare the Household Sewing Mavhin the best Machine muds, and the cheapest. I also keep Clothing for Funerals which only costs about one-half as raudr as other clothing. Come and tee m,north side of square, in Waldron's Blnr.k TUG FINEST OH EARTH. The 'Cincinnati, Hamilton A Dayton R. R is the only lit running Pullman's Perfected Safety Vestibuled Trains, wit Chair, Parlor, Sleeping and Dining Car service between Cincinnati, Indianapolto and Chicago, and tl.e only lice running Through Keclining Chair Can between Cincinnati, Keokuk and Springfield, Ills., and Combination Cliair and Sleeping Car, Cincinnati to Pcoris, Xlls.,1 , And the Only Direct Uae between Cincinnati, Dnyton, Lima, Tola-' do, Detroit, the l.ak ) Keeions ana uanaas. The road is one of the oldest in to State of Ohio and tbe only Una entering Cincinnati ovor twenty-flva mllaa aft double track, and frum its past record MM more than assure itii patrons speed, comfort and safety. Tickets on sal everywhere, and see that they read C. H. A D., eith'er in or' out of Cincinnati, Indianapolis. orToied. E, O. McCORMIOK, General Passenger (nd Ticket Agent. 1 ALWAYS GIVES ITS PATRONS Tha TuXl Worth oil Taklntr Therm. sfef6ly.md Quickly DoKwaim Chicago - Lafayette Indianapolis Cincinnati Louisville PULLMANS) -PINGCAR ELEGANT PARLOR CARS , ALL TRAINS Mi THROUGH SCUB Tickets Sold and Baggag Checked to Destination. IsT-Oct Xsps sb& ta Tsblsslf yea. wan am fully tofbrmad-sll TtekM AfMM MOMffB JAMES BARK Eli, G.P.A CHICAGO nrtuaneot potltion. uoodecmnoe I advAuceineni. fixclmlro territory. . I n rav.-r. irmtss-stTO cif Nil rsnrT attfrir. WU SJ-SMUJ WW 11 mutaion 10 ivwi (pare jiom failure, in tbteMoCSr I lino rv,r,Hrw,nt 1 NuraerlM. ChieaicOW-l toBOUM)UirelibIii. jiim thto paper.-Ett.)J WM. B. BURFORD, XjlthofirfapKioi-, Printer, Statlmei Mamifticiir!r of Xilii niv Books, ICujj-i-n. voi and Binder. NO. 21, WEST WASHirtlTON ST.. IDIA!V.4l(OL.IS, IND. Don't forget to direct your attorney to bring advertising to the Progress office, n cases where you have any business as administrator, execntor or guaniian. Rates very low, and work done correctly. AN OLD FRIEND In a New Shape! a Dr. yon Peters: liquid SULPHUR C n I nUriD I 8 f orlte cure all llll I III 111 i luce Rnmdmoihers time, inn horemrnre It wouldn't dissolve In tho stonuch; wouldn't 'tick to tha skin. Nevertheless it purified the blood, healed the skin. Dr. Von Polcrs, en eminent German chemist huKdlwovereA how to dissolve Sulphur. Now It can he absorhed by the system; taken up by the pores and is ajKWiYiw destroyer of BacilU, 1.1 yt: 1 1) S I' I.PIU' R " Internal "For tun Blood, stomach, Liver, and Kidneys. LUJIUI) stLI'HUtt Lotion" For nil diseases of the skin. LKft'lO firLPilUB 'Forthe Bath" Nature's mil cure for rhec matistu. Ligrm sulphx'k "Sssour For sit th . dleeaaw of women. For Sau r iu. Dbvmims. FARES BROS., Agents. FINE JOB PRINTING AT THIS OFFICE.
