Bloomington Progress, Bloomington, Monroe County, 4 October 1893 — Page 2
Republican Progress. BLOOM 1NOTON, IND.
BAM, - Editor and, Publlshe M89S SEPTEMBER. 1893
Su Mo Tn We Th Fr Sa m 1 Y 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 "m m
NEWS OF THE WEEK. BOILED DOWN FOR OUR INTEL. LIQENT READERS. Mine Persons Killed ana Many Injured by Panic fat a Syn&rosu,, Big Four EmPioje Toted Not to Strike Cleveland In. vised to the Fair Desperado Kilted. READS LIKE A ROMANCE. Enaitw Tarpto's Brother Beta na to Delphi, i-Jfc.. aa from the Tomb. Delphi (Ind.) special: After being mourned as 4ead for over thirty-five years, John Turpie, brother ot Senator David Turpie, has returned to this city, to find the whole family dead except three brothers, one in Washington, one in Kansas City, and the other, Robert, occupying the old homestead. The story of John Turpie's life reads like a romance. In 1852 he left home In company with Robert Dickey. Dickey was taken ill at Hannibal, Mo., and had to return back, but Turpie joined an os train across the plains, bound for Salem, Oregon, and drove an ox team all that distance. For forty years he never saw a face from his home, nor heard from any one there. He spent three years hunting and trapping with the Indians and was for awhile a sailor on the Pacific coast. He is now residing at Astoria.' He says his brother, the Senator, visited that place four or five years ago, with a number of other Senators, but as he was busy at the time he did "not take the trouble to look Dave up." Unlike his brother, he is a stalwart Republican. The rise of values in Pacific slope lands has made him a rich man. ( Wild Panic In a Synagogue. A false alarm of fire was given recently in the synagogue at Culwayra Rean Sunwalki. The building was crowded with Jews at worship. All started at once for the two exits and despite the shouts of the rabbi that there was no fire, fought to get out. After a struggle of fifteen minutes, two-thirds of the congregation were still in the synagogue. As no fire had appeared they became calmer, and with the ai l of tbs care takers the rabbi eventually restored quiet. Nine dead bodies were found near the exits and twenty persons lay unconscious and bleeding where they haa been trampled. Fully 100 persons were injured in the rush. Fifteen are suffer ing from wounds likely to cause death. They Want Cleveland to Vtolt the Fair. Director General Geo. R. Davis of the World's Columbian Exposition, is in Washington. While there he will call on the President to pay his respects and will incidentally suggest to him the propriety of his visiting the wona's rair at the end of October, and be present at its close as he was at its opening. Colonel Davis thinks that the President and his family should see the Exposition in its entirety, and says the Chicago peeple would be gratified to have them come and see its wonders. A formal letter requesting the President's presence at the close of the Fair will be sent to him by the Exposition officials at a very early date. Pope and King. Rome special: There has been a new and more serious disagreement between King Humbert and the Vatican. The Pope refuses to recognize the King's right to nominate a patriarch for Venice and in consequence, the Italian ministry has decided to refuse exequatur to all those the Pope nominated at the last consistory. Voted No Strike. Terre Haute (Ind.) special: Grand Master Sargent of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen, is in receipt of a telegram from the firemen's committee at Cincinnati stating that the vote of the Big Four employes was adverse to a strike and that the trouble that has been impending is now settled. A Desperado Killed. Chicago special: Alter shooting and seriously wounding three men James McGrath, a notorious west side character, shot and wounded two police offiers who attempted to arrest him, and was shot twice and instantly killed by the police officers. Be Broke the Bank at Monte Carlo. Billy Deutch, famous as an all-around sport and the man who broke the bank at Monte Carlo, is lying very ill at a hospital in Denver. Ho went West several months ago for his healt i, having run into consumption from dissipation. Jack Conner Bound Over. Jack Conners and Eva Flint, charged with being implicated in the Kendallville train robbery, have bound over to court. Revolution Kits Defeated. Buenos Ayers special: The Government troops in Santa Fe after two days fighting defeated the revolutionists. a. Crank at the White Rous. A dangerous crank attempted to enter the White House the other morn ing. He said Mr. Cleveland was his father and he proposed to have the presidential chair at any cost. He struggled desperately when arrested. Preston for Director of the Hint. The President has sent the nomination to the Senate of Robert E. Preston of the District of Columbia, to be director of the mint. , w herem boats of an Embemler Known The chances are that Edward L. Go an, the Lima, O., loan agent who absconded a few wneks ago with $75,100 belonging to the syndicate he did business for, will be in the clutches of the law In a short time. Be haa been seen and If the persons interested want him he can be secured and aaade to answer for his wrongdoing Rational Banks to Resume. The First National Bank of Hammond, Ind., and the Milwaukee National Bank of Wisconsin, wbicb recently suspended payment, having fully compiled with the conditions imposed by the Comptroller of the Currency, and their capital stock being unimpaired, have received permission toreopen their doors for business. Lost on the Atlantic. . The steamship State of Nebraska arrived at New York from Glasgow with two shipwrecked sailors on board. They were Fred Abbott and Joseph Porter. Newfoundlanders and part of the crew of the schooner Blilppey. which tailed for the Ashing banks on Aug. 13. Cholera in Europe, At Hamburg seventeen new cases of suspected cholera and two deaths were re Reported during twenty-fonr hours. In the hospital there are nine eases said to be choleraic diarrhea. At. Altoua a case of icboiera has been reported.
MANY LIVES IH MIKI) Ol-T. Awful Horror on the Wnliash Koad, Near Kingsbury. Ind. The second section of trntn No. 55 on the Wabash Koad tnet rlMt ii rrirful accident hear Klhgsbnry, tnd, nt tin early hour Friday hibrnlug. Twelve passengers ere killed and over a scoro injured. The Iruln left Detroit at 6:30 o'clock at night, and was due in Chicago at 7:15 o'clock In the morning. The first section of iho train went through Kingsbury at a torrllle rate of speed. A freight train was standing on a stdo track, and as the first section flew by the Lr:t kern an of the fretebt opened tho switch and signaled his engineer to come ahead. The freieht started up anil had just straightened out on tho main track when the second section came dashing along at tho rate of fifty miles an hour. There was a terrible crash and many lay dead, while others mangled and maimed writhed and shrieked In agony. The people living In tho vicinity of the wreck throw open their homes to the passengers of the ill-fitted train and nearly every house was soon transformed into a hospital. lii-llef trains were sent from Chicago and other points bearing surgeons and other aid Some of the bodies were crushod beyond all recognition, and the only means of Identification was by the clothing and contents of tho pockot Most of tho injured were lying beneath the bodlas of the dead, and the latter had to be carried out first A rigid Investigation has been ordered in order to fix responsibility for the terrible accident BIO BLOC lis IN BTINS. Bluest Business Structures In St. Joseph, Mo., Are Destroyed. Three blocks of tho ( nest business bouses of St. Joseph, Ho., aro in ruins and nearly $1,000,000 worth of property was destroyod Monday. A cigarette stub cast into tho storeroom on the lifth floor i f tho Townsend & Wyatt building by a careless clork Is supposed to have riglnatod the confla
gration. The water pressure was bad and the firemen fought at a disadvantage. A strong wind from tho north carried tho flames across tho street to the magnificent Commercial Bank structure, and it was soon in flames. The Central Savings Bank went next and then followed the Center Block. Assistance was asked from Topeka and Kansas City, and special trains brought detachments from those cities. The Eeinior & SIioup Crockery Company's now house was next to succumb, and ST5.000 worth of goods dropped ln'o the cellar. The Carbry Block was next attacked and then Binswanger & 'o,, the Hong Kong Tea Company, the Spencer Cigar Company and a dozen smaller Institutions went nil. At this time dynamite was resorted to and a number of buildings blown up. Allen Laird and Oliver Knapp, two firemen, were thrown from a ladder into a burning building and both badly hurt, Knnpp probably fatally. Chief Kane, of tho firo depart ment, was badly burned, and ayoung man, George Hunter, fell three stor.es into a cellar. He was little injured, two ribs alone being broken. HAITI'S NEW WAS SHIP LOST. So Sudden and Complete Is the Disaster That Only One Sailor Escape. A report of the sinking of the Uaytien war ship Alexander Poltou was received in New York Friday. AH on board, with one exception, were los'. The cause of tho dis aster Is unknown The disaster to the Pelton occurred on St-pt. 0. about fifty miles south from Capo Tiburon. The cruiser had just been put into commission. She loft Port au Prince Sept. 4, bound for San Domingo, She had on board many distinguished passengers, among them being General Mollne, San Domingo's envoy to Hayti; M. Cohen, the Hiiytlan Minister to Alexlco, and other well-known diplomats. The suddenness and completeness of tho disaster, only one sailor escaping, makes the affair trost mysterious, and It Is probable that the real cause of tho wrecking of the noble ship will never be known. Ac cording to the testimony of tho sole sur vivor there was absolutely no warning. Neither collision with another vessel, sub merged coral reef nor storm can account tor the occurrence. BOBBEKS COME TO GRIEF. One Would-be Daylight Burglar Killed and the Other Captured, One of the most daring attempts at robbery in the history of Northern Indiana was made the other afternoon In the banking department of tite Northern Indiana Normal College at Valparaiso. As a result one of the would-be burglars, C. E. liobloson, lies cold in death, while his companion, G M. Moody, is behind the bars of the county Jail wounded Both men after leaving the office, after their plans to rob the safe had been frustrated, started on a run for tho woods southeast of town, followed by about 1,000 students, officers, and citizens. Not a mlio from the scene of the robbery one was shot and killed by Nathan Ho..e of Michigan City and the othrr slightly wounded by himself In attempf.ug to shoot his pursuers. Wild Flight Through the Air. Here dead than ailve Prof. S. A King and Miss Jole MoVris were taken from the balloon. Eagle Eyrie, nour the Grosso Point lighthouse Friday night. The ascension was made from the World's Fair late in the afternoon. It was eminently successful, us far as the start wus concerned, but tho flight to sea was a terrible surprise to the thousands who watched tho great globe rise as straight as au arrow into tho sky. The people packed across a dozen acres enjoyeothe sight while tho danger didn't even seem remote. ITp nd up the ulr ship mounted until it seemed tho vulves must be stopped and tho fate of the two dots la the sky already sealed. The cheering multitude then grew silent The air ship was blown from the fair grounds at mad spend, and while high above the surface of the lake at too fast u rate for a rescuing party on board the cotter Andy Johnson to catch them. When tho resolute vessel finally caino near the balloon It was bounding along, alternately dragging Its car through the breakers and rising a hundred feet at a time. The passengers were returned to tbo fair grounds at midnight, tho Professor cool and collected, but thankful to get back, and the silly girl wild with enthusiasm over her trip, Hiss Morris is an Iowa girl, and this was her first aerial exporlencs. Murdered by Anarchists, Mrs August Reese was murdered and her tonsband brutally and serlcuslv beaten by anarchists at Calamity, a small mining town two miles south of Pittsburgh. Some time ago Mrs. Keese learned t ho secrets of the anarchists and her death was at once decreed. While returning from church Mr. Beese and wife were met by Muen Lalsen and August Brlce, anarchists, who at onco opened fire. Mrs. Keese was killed at the second shot Tho mnrdeerrs then turned upon the husband and left him for dead. Many Connterfelt Tickets Out. The Iron Mountain Railway has discovered that there aro hundreds of counterfeit tickets for travel on Its road frjm Memphis and Little Bock In tho hands of brokers. A.cfrcular to conductors ordering them to refuse the bogus tickets has been Issued, and a new form und color of tickets supplied. The loss to the company will reach many thousands of dollars. Base-Ball Record. The standing of the clubs of the National League la shown by the following tablet . W. Ii, e. W. L. Ve. Bostons. ...S5 ii . Cincinnati. fa 63 jmt Pittsburg.. 78 18 .lt Ilaltimores..w 63 Ml ClovslanOs .71 H ,sos Chtcaiios. .. .67 71 41 Philadeln'la.71 66 ,5c:i Bt. I,ml. . 66 74 .lit gew Vorks. .68 61 637 Lnuisllles..9 71 394 (Ooklyn,,e t .608 WaaM'gt'un.io b7 .all Broke Up the 1'icnlo. A riot occurred at a negro picnic at Latonia Park, South Covington, Ky.. In which o'er fifty shots wore fired, and tno white men, Joseph Llphart and John Kyle, were wounded, Llphart and Kyle are railroad switchmen and went to the picnic to break it up Will Pay for Deporting. Secretary Carlisle says tho Treasury Will pay as far as passible for deporting the Chinese under tho deary law. A Death-Itefl 'Repentance. The railroad played the hog completely In the early stag- the World's Fair, thiukios people r.puldgo anyway- Later,
they made slight reductions, and travel Increased. Still further reductions resulted in 91111 heavier traffic, and now thoy nro breaking their necks In an attempt, to gain a longer limp In which to reap their harvest. They are about to take stops to oiler still further reductions
ftir the first t wo Wret.s In November. This is to be done on the hypothesis that tho Fair will remain oy:o: for that period. A World's Fair director, who did not wish to be named, said: "The rail roads acted Iti the beginning the policy of tho dog In tho manger to a illsc.iuraging perfection. Some weeks ago they concluded to try tho p licy of de coney, and thoy have been making money hand ovor fist every since. Thoy now soo tho seriousness of the mistake Ihey mads In tho beginning. They fancy that by making a specious plea to the stockholders they can securo an exten sion of tho Fair. Well, they can do no Kiu'li thing. Tho Fair will bo closed Oct ill. "When cold weathor comes on there Is not a building on th ground that will bo habitable, and what few people might bo attracted by low railroad rates would bo disappointed, even if tho Impossibility would be performed of retaining exhibits and exhibitors after the period irrevocably sot for their departure. " RECOVERY IS8TKADY. Indications Point to (iradnal IluBlncss I in lirovcment. B. G. Dun ti Co. "a Weekly Keview of Trade says: There is no longer only a nilscroscopical or sentimental Improvement, thai cannot he moasi.rod. ron.e increaBO is seen both In production uud in distribution of erod ucts. True. It Is small as yet; but, after the worst financial bllz::ard for twenty years, it Is not to be expected that all roads can bo cleared in a day. liut all conditions, except ut Washington, favor gradual rocovery. Husinoss goes on In unquestioning confidence that tho general desire of tho people will tn some way prevail. Money has become more abundant and eaty at 3 per cent nt New York on cnll.and stagnant speculation fortunate ly favors greater freedom In commercial loans Hocks and products are dull, without serious fall In prices, the Industries are rap Idly rallying to make good tho scarcity of supplios caused by weeks of inaction, the vitality of the demand for goods shows that the wonderful consuming power of the people. If lessened for a time, has not cen9cd. and tho shrinkage in I lie record of commercial disease and mortality shows progress toward health. ROUS THE OLD COLONY. John M. tYashlmrn Confesses to Having Embezxled a Large Sum. At tho annnal meeting of tho stockhold ers of the Old Colony -Railroad Compnny, ut Boston, It was announced that the Treasurer of the corporation, now con trolled by the New York, New Haven and Hartford, John M. Washburn, has been for many years embezzling the funds of the company. Mr. Wash burn started In a small way soino years ago to tako money from tho company's cash to speculate with. He lost In these stock speculations. Securities in stock were turned in to the company as cash at the price Mr. Washburn had paid for them, and as they deteriorate! In value during tho last few months v on the money mar ket was tight, Mr. Washburn had to take ntwe money, and finally it could no longer be concealed from the auditors. The amount is not stated. CARDS IN HOTEL ENDEAVOR. An Inmate of the Religious Inn Stabbed During a Game of Poker. Eugene Klrseh was amen ; the prisoners in Woodlawn (III.) police court tho other day. Ills arrest was caused by certain at tractions not In the till at the Hotel Eir deavor, near the World's Fair grounds Ho and William Simpson, both employes of tho tho hotel, eiuarrelcd about the results of a game of draw poker. Hotel Endeavor was founded lo tako care of religiously Inclined meri and women who tea red c nomination by residence in tho more v.orldly quarters of tho city. But the game of cards Insinuated Itself aud a stabbing affray resulted. Kirsch cut Simpson in tbo right aide, but the wound was not dangerous. ATTEMPT TO WRECK A TRAIN. Cincinnati Express, at Staunton, Ind., Is Thrown front the Track. A daring and successful attempt at train wrecking was made Tuesday morning at 2 o'clock by which tho Cincinnati express on tlio Vandalia Iloa l was derailed near Staunton, Clay County, Ind. A rail had been taken up and so placed as to throw the train down nn embankment ten feet high. Fortunately tho engine did not follow tho rail, but every car except one sleeper left the track. The train was running forty miles an hour aud was delayed over throe hours. Xo ono was serious'.y hurt, but tho passengers were all shaken up and scared. To Do Away tvlth Red Tape. Representative Dates, of Alabama, has introduced a Mil which. If it shall be enacted I.nto law, will be popular. It provides that hereafter money orders shall be Issued by postmasters upon verbal requests, and abolishes tho uso of written applications. The applicant Is to sign a receipt for this order, however, which will be filed 1). the postmaster with his accounts aud bo necessary to securo a sottlomont, Canada Nut toiinlng. Immigration Into Cunudu this year has proved a failure. For the first seven months only ::,400 homesteads were taken up In the Northwest, a docroase of 35 per cent compared with last year, while the number of settlors arriving foil oil' 21 per cent The largest decline Is In the number of cmigrt-nts who leave Great Britain and Ireland for Canada. Wisconsin Game Law lTnconstItutIonal. Tho Assistant Atteirnoy General of Wisconsin has given the opinion that the State game law Is unconstitutional. Bismarck Is Suspicious, Prince Bismarck Is said to bo Irritated and suspicious, thinking Emporor William's attention a plan to extinguish him. Meat Must lie tlnrked. Secretary Morton has ordered that meat for Interstate trade shall be marked the same as that f r foreign ports. Arrested for Anarchy. Sixty-eight members of a socret society In Briienn, Austria, have been arrested for complicity In an unnrchlst plot MARKET QUOTATIONS. CHICAGO, Cattle Common to Prime. . . . Hofis Shipping tirades HHT.Br Fair to Choice ,. Wheat Xo. 2 Spring Corn Xo. a Oats No. 2 kyb No. 2 Dt'TTEB Choice Creamery E(t(iS Fresh Potatoes Sow, perhu INDIAN AP0U9, Cattle Shipping I! wis Choice Light Hiikep Common to Prime Wheat No. S Bed. Cobs No. 2 White. Oatk No. 3 White ST. LOUIS. Cattle Hogs Wheat No. a Rod Corn No. 9 Oats-No. a RXK No. 2 CINCINNATI. Cattle lloos Shkep Wheat-Ho. ailed Cobs No. a Oath No. 2 Mixed ItVE No. 2 DETROIT. Cattle Ilo.is.. $3 60 a; f 70 1 00 & 7 00 2 25 m i r-o co ert r,G'i 4l!4 28 47 27 27 (g 46 ef 3 00 t 10 4 00 i$ 6 50 a on c5 a mi oi tf e.i'6 41 m 413 29 (J 30 8 00 m 5 00 5 O r 0 75 111 M 62 33 SS'j, 21) & 27 47 $ 49
8 00 (ft I SO 3 00 C 7 00 3 00 (9 4 00 Ut CS 04 13 l!i 41 as tf 29 40 & bi. 8 On (iS 4 M a no m a oo 3 00 (iim r,f, an 07 9 43 ,01 44 32 (3 :u 4:tV!t 44 ' 2s r 2 43 & 4'.l 72 lli T2?4 44 0 46 !i at vi 3.", 50 t 62 63 64 8tl!.ic 401$ 2H Die W4 40 ($ 61 60 t,7 16 60 I'iiH 00 a oo it 25 S 7.1 8 1 25 3 25 (it no 73 (! T3i 51 -VJ 3:1 (it ci 27 '4 1? 20 mi 73
Wheat No. 2 Red ,. Cok-v-No. 2 Oats No. 2 White tolkdo: Wheat No. 2 Red CoaxNo. 2 Yellow Oats No. 2 White Rye No. lil'FFALO. Wheat No. 1 Spring Cokn--No. 2 Oats -No. a White Rye -No. MILWAUKEE. Wheat No. a Spring Corn No. s Oats No. 2 White It ye No. 1 IIarley No. 2 Poke New Mess NEW YORK. OA TILE Hnoa , Kit CEP Wheat No. 1 Red Cons Xo. 2 Oath Mixfr I Western 11 t!T El: Creamery PoiiS NewilcOS ,,,
BAGGED THE BANDITS
MISSOURI TRAIN ROBBERS ARE FOILED. Attempt to Rob a Kansas City, St. Joe and Counril Muffs Train nt Franrls, Mo. Pind the Kxprcsa Tar Filled with Police O Ulcers, Two Killed and Three ( aftured. Joy reins tin-confined in railroad Circles nt St. Joseph, Mo., over tlx? clever mo of tho Kansas City, St. Toe anil Council 1 Huffs Railroad officials, which resulted in tie death of two and capture of throe express train, robbers a mile and a half from that citv. information eame to tho t fieials lato at night that train No. 3 would le held up near Francis, a village in the midst of a derolato waste. Actiiii was immediately taken and n dummy train exactly liko No. 3 was mado up. Tho chief of police and sixteen oiieers were put aboard and tho train pulled out. When two miles out tho etgineer saw a lantern signalling th train to Btop. Ho Immediately glowed up and When tho train was brousrh; to a standstill a masked man jumped aboard the enrino and held revolvers at the heads of tho engineer and fireman. Five others ran to tho express car and demanded admittance. The door was opened nnd, two gnardiiu without, three of tho bandits jumped into the car with revolvers drawn. When fairly within the police slepoed out of concealment und called upon .he robbers to surrender. They wore taken by surprise, but opened lire. A fusillado of shots was exchanged and when the smoke cleared away Kd Kohler and Higo Indal) were lying dead upon tho floor of tho ear. ' Fredericks, Hersh, and Harvey were placet? under arrest and a posse start eif It pursuit of tho robber who was in the engine. Not an officer was hurt, and tho train returned at onco to the city, where tho three prisoners were locked up and tho two dead men taken to tho undertaker's. It was the most successful rout t he officers have ever given a bund of robbers, und there is gieut rejoicing over the result. All of the train robbers lived in St. Joseph. shotThITrobber DEAD. Masked Men Attempt to Boh the Valparaiso, Ind,, Normal Sehonl. The sensational attempt at robbery at tho banking department of the Northern Indiana Normal School at Valparaiso by two masked men. which resulted in the killing of Frank Robinson, one of tho robbers, and the wounding of his oompunion. Claire M ody. as he gave his name, is still the main topic of talk in the vicinity. It was ono of the boldest acts ovor attempted in the northern part of tho State, and was in a place surrounded by hundreds of boarding house.-, where over 2.5X1 students wore within a stone's throw. Two masked men armed to tho teeth came into tho tanking office of the college shortly after 3 o'cl ck in the afternoon. Tho only occupants of tho room wei o the Secretary, Miss Kate Corboy, and her assistant, Miss Emma Jonos." The women, although covered by the robbers' revolvers, screamed aiid fled. One of the nmn fired point blank at Miss Jones, the bullet missing the girl by only a few inches. Realizing that their plans were frustrated and that any efforts to force the huge safe would now bo useless, with the alarm pi von, tho two desMradi. e-i walked coolly out of the ofliee and down the steps, revolvers in either hand. Thoy were confronted by Mail Currier Arnold, whom they covered with their weapons. Unabashed tho latter began to yell fire in a stentorian voice, while students poured out of the college buildings and the big 1 arding houses and dormitories, which cluster all ubout. At the first shout the burglars wheeled without firing and ran to tho fence, which they leaped. They ran through the campus, and started down the track of the Fort Wayne Road toward the east, while behind them fol lowed a yelling and constantly growing moo ot students, xiio crowd oi pur suers must have mini bored l,ih 0. The students wero ircnerallv un armed as to fire arms, but carried cluband stones which they had picked up on the way. The robbers answered with shots. Tho other pursuing party now came near cnouch to open fire, and a regular fusillade followed. Nathan O. Howe, of Michigan City. Ind., was driving along the road with a wagon load ol peaches, ana was nrea at by one of the twain. Ho alighted from his vehicle, deliberately sighted his Winchester across the fence, and brought Robinson to tho ground with a horrible wound in the breast. The man expired instantly. His companion knelt over him and took his revolver, throwing away his empty weapons. But before he could use it he was shot by Howe from the roadside. He was then captured and locked up. 1' ranK ifoolnson entered the school Nov. 8, 1SSI2, registering frim Cincin nati. He returned there about three weeks ago and again registered from Cincinnati. Clairo arrived a few days ago and inquired for Frank, and is now believed to be bin brother. In an iuterviow Claire said they expected to pot about $.'10,000, as they supposed lirown & Kinney kept all their money in the safe. Howe, who brought the robbers down, was reloaded on bail and is tho hero ol the citv. His entire load of Peaches were sold on the streets and over $1,000 was realized. BANKS THAT HAVE SUSPENDED. Of tile 800 Institutions Which Fulled Sev enty-two Have Kesuineti. Statistics compiled from fficial data show that from January to September this year otill State and private tanks in tno tnitea states tailed, aud that seventy-two havo resumed business. In tho same time 155 national banks failed, seventy of which have resumed. Tho following tablo gives the number of failures, etc., of State and private bunks since Jan. J, 1893: AlatismK New Jcrncy Nt-w Mexico... New York North Csrolia's. Nortli Dakota. . Ohio Oklahoma. OlfttOU Arkansas j I' t alifoniia. Cnlf.ratio IMnwnre T)lst. of I'olu'liia Florida. r 6 41 36 1 !t (onriji Medio . ; IV-iitiylvanla. .. 1 jltllO'ie Inland. . . 7 South t'aroliua. . South Dakota... ;t TpimcKfU'e i Texan . iUtah . Vt rojont .'.Viivlnla . 1 W'ah.!iRlon i West Virginia.. t! AVlsi onsin 3 Wyoiiiinn i: Total illi'iols Indiana Indian Terrify lowa . . KiuihS3 l.oiitNiiinn. l . l'. 3i. in! 31' Si 0 , 'JS r, . hitne 7llO-HHhUHCt ts.. Ml 1,1 .nn liimMOt.n Missouri Montana Nnw iliimpsliiro BOMBS IN BARCELONA. An AnareliUt ilurlt n Deadly MutBllo Aiming NuiiKli Siildiern. An anarchist tried to kill l ai tain 1 General M.'titiez do Campos at Bareelona with a Immh. There, had lven a review of all the troops in tho dist rict early in the morning. Shortly befoiv noon iho captain general and lnssiiilf took their places on one side of the large square near the middle of the city and tho march pa-1: began. The head of the column had hardly passed the i aptaiu general when a boinb was j thrown from the crowd. It struck j among tho staff officers and exploded : almost directly under the captain roneral's horse. Tho captain general li as thrown to the ground und his horse, ith its legs slmtte.eil. rolled ovor bolide him. (Ji-neral I : te!l i. chief of afT, also fell ivumn'ed f in hi horse. 4 soldier of the civic uai'd was killed (
instantly, and five others were injured so soierely by pieces of shell that they probably will die. Tho name of I he anarchist who threw t! e bomb is 1 'alias. He glories in liii di ed. He Miys ho intended to kill Martinez do Campos and his whole stall'. He will ho courtmartialed at once. Tn his house tho police found, that night, u great quantity of the most violent revolutionary literature.
HUNDRED AND SIXTY DROWNED. Rnsslan War Kltip PoiiMtlka Founders lit the tStilf nt Finland. Fragments of woodwork, coats and other wreckage havo floated ashore in tho Gulf of Finland, showing that the Russian war ship I'ousalka. witii ten officers and 150 seamen, has foundered, and that all hands are lost. She sailed from Hevel, in tho Culf of Finland, for Ilelingsport, in the same gulf, and has not been hoard from since. The lVu-ulka had four and one-half inches of armor, carried four nine-inch guns, was of 2,000 tons displacement, had 7xt indicated horse-power, und was classed us having a speed of twenty-eight knots. She was built in 1807. The body of a sailor who is supposed to have belonged to the crew has been washed usbni-e in the Culf of Finland. It is known that severe gales swept over those waters soon after she left port. There is no doubt, as tlje admiralty states, that tho I'ousalka has foundered. Statement of the I'ennlnn linire. The weekly statement of tho IVn-ion Olliee shows that the total number of claims now pending is 7U,27. di vided as follows: Act of Juno 27, IS! 0, III,451: Indian wars, 4.047; old wars. 3,022; rcrvtcc since March 1. ISfil. LOVMKi; additional to prior applications. 123,$04; incrca-ed and accrued widows, 7,057: increased claims, 211,220: army nurses, 703. The total numb -r of casus rejected during tho week was 2,317, and those allowed 1,771. Government Ofllclnla Drifted. Bogota is greatly excited over tho discovery of bribery and general corruption among some of the Highest dignitaries of the United States of Colombia. Tho Ant ioquai Railroad Company, it is said, purchased favors from tho Government at a cost of $500,000. Huriictl with Sixty on Hoard. The Northern 1'aeifie steamer on arriving at Victoria, B. C, bi t light word of the but ning of the Russian steamer Alphon?o Zeevecke with the loss of sixty lives. How the tVurld Waira. The Armour strike at Kansas City is ended. There are now 102 cases of smallpox at MuiK'ie, Ind. Am. the Chinese have been driven ou. of Burbank, Cad. Tm: big iron mills in the Pittsburgh district are le-umiug. The factions of tho Iron Hall aro Hearing a compromise. Yet. taw fever now pervades every part of Brunswick, Ga. A waterspout in Madison County, Virginia, did considerable damage. The Huckleberry stump mill near LeadvillerCol.. burned. Loss $20,000. Frank Murphy has been in-iicted at Wim na, Minn., for tho murder of T. IU.:h. Thkovgh freight trains west-bound from Chicago aro in a demoralized condition. An effort is being made to nrransro another fight between Fit.simmons and Jim Hull. The Rocky Mountain Dime and Dollar Savings bank, Denver, Colo., has resumed. THE imperial army maneuvers aro being continued on a grand scale in Hungary. A daily steamship line is to be established between Southampton and New York. The Pope has expressed himself as satisfied with the work of Mgr. Satolli in America. Gov. LEWF.r.UNO, of Kansas, has decided not lo cull an extra session of the Logisliiturc. At New Orleans Johnny Van Hoest knocked out Xapier in "the twentyeighth round. James IIalliday, a miner at Pittsburg, Kan., fell down a shaft and was instantly killed. A heavy rain, hail and thunder storm struck St. Paul. Two men were killed by lightning. Pickpockets hae been reaping a harvest at tho World's Parliament of Religions at Chicago. . The big glass works at Hartford City, Ind., have started up giving employment to 500 men. Success is attend in? the insurrection in Brazil. A monarchy will probably follow tho final victory. Little business is being transacted on tho New York stock market and tho outlook is not bright. Robert Philips, of Coalburg, Ala., aged 80, committed suicide by hanging. Domestic troubles the cause. The Louisville or Nashville shopmen at: Louisville are st ill out on a striko against a reduction of wages. Arthur Hazel, of Philadelphia, was bunkoed out of all his money by a man ho met in Galveston, Tex. At Fort Scott, Kan., Mis. Virgio Wool in attempting to save her child from burning to death, wa fatally burned. Lake lines have not carried 50 per cent, of their usual coal tonnage, and mil lines will bo unablo to make up the shortage E. S. Simpson, said to bo export bank robber and confidence man. has ieon arrested at Chicago on a charge of forgery, COLLECTOn-OF-TIIK-POHT WlSE, of San Francisco has refused to app tint twenty deputies without pay to eutorcu tho Geary law. Five prisoners escaped from jail at Lit. hiield, Ky.. by cutting through a brick wall and letting themselves down with a blanket rope. Another dispute has arisen between the Italian Government uud the Roman Chut ch authorities. It may re.ult in the Pope leaving Iti mo. In the Circuit Court at Moborly, Mo., George Halliburton, who had his tees mushed, was awarded $1,500 damages against the Wabash road. Xewfouudluml ami Nova Scotia. There is plenty of game in Nowfottndland. but not a reptile of any kind - snake, toad, frr g, lizard, or oven turtle. Another queer tiling ulout the province is that while some wild animals are abundant there no one ever raw a squirrel, porcupine, mouse, or lynx anywhere within its boundaries. This is all the more singular because the adjoining province's of Nova Scotia and Cape Breton have all of those nnimals and many kinds of snakes and other reptilos. On the other hand, tho aret ic hare is abundant in Newfoundlaud, but not in Nova Scotia, or i'apo Breton. Tho summer nights of Nova Scot io aro made brilliant by fireflies, but no lirelly ever lights up a Newfoundland nocturnal landscape by its sparkling light. Yet there are swamps and bogs innumerable in Nova Scotia which one would naturally suppose would lie the choicest kind of breeding nlaces und retreats for reptilos of all Kinds, to say nothing ot in-eets, of which there is a remarkable scarcity in Newfoundland. Now York Suu. A Proverb Disproved. The maxim "murder will out" is disproved by statistics. In the ten years ending with 18K(i there wero 1,708 murders committed in F.nghtnd ami Wales, and in l.3)4 of theo eases no trace of the criminal was ever found that led to his apprehension.
THE GREAT SOUTH AMERICAN;
mm
AND
StomaehLiver Cure The Most Astonishing Medical Discovery of the Last One Hundred Years. It is Pleasant to the Taste as the Sweetest Nectar. It is Safe and Harmless as the Purest Milk. This wonderful Nervine Tonic has only recently been introduced into this country by the proprietors and manufacturers of the Great South American Nervine Tonic, and yet its great value os a curative agent has long been known by a few of the most learned physicians, who have not brought its merits and value to the knowledge of tho general public. This medicine has completely solved the problem of the cure of indigestion, dyspepsia, and diseases of the general nervous system. It is also of the greatest value in the cure of all forms of failing health from whatever cause. It performs this by the great nervine tonic qualities which it possesses, and by its gr".t curative powers upon the digestive organs, the stomach, the liver and the bowels. No remedy compares with this wonderfully valuable Nervine Tonic as a builder and strengthoner of the life forces of the human body, and as a great renewer 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 aro approaching the critical period known as change in life, should not fail to uso this great Nervine Tonic, almost constantly, for the space of two or three years. It will carry them safely over the danger. This great strengthener and curative is of inestimable value to the aged and infirm, because its great energizing properties will give them a new hold on life. It will add ten or fifteen 'years to the lives of many of those who will use a half dozen 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, tailing Health,
All 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 and harmless in all its effects 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 insufficient supply of nerve food in the blood, ii general state of debility of the brain, spinal marrow, and nerves is the result. Starved nerves, like starved muscles, beoome 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 sufficient quantity of the kind of nutriment necessary to repair the wear our present mode of living and labor imposes upon the 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.
Ckawfobdsvh.lk, Ind., Aug. 20 'SC. To the Gretlt South .-!.-.rjVirt JJtdtcine Co.; liEAK :knth: 1 desire lo suy to you tbat I have uff,T-il for many yonra with a very Heriaus Ji'ri-Mif the ttoniacb ami nervew. I tried every me'lk-im- I could hear oi, but nothiuK done mo any appreciable K""d until I nan advised to try vour Ureat South American Nervlue Tonic aiid'stomai b and I.iver Cure, and Hince usintr aeverul bottle ol It I muttt eay that I am surprised at Hd wonderful powers to cure the Btomach and general nt'rvotm njtem. It everyone knew the value of thin remedy aft I do you would not be oble to xupply the demand. J. A. II.iuube, Ei-Treas. Montgomery Co.
A SWORN CURE FOR ST. VITAS' DANCE OR CHOREA. Crawfokdsviixe, Ind., June 22, 1887. My daughter, eleven years old, was severely afflicted with St. Vitus' Dance or Chorea. We gave her three and one-half bottles of South American Nervine and she is completely restored. I believe it will cure every case of St. Vitus' Dance. I have kept it in my family for two years, and am sure it is the greatest remedy in the world for Indigestion and Dyspepsia, and for all fornw of Nervous Disorders and Falliug Health, from whatever cause. , John T. Mish. State of Indiana, gg. Montgomery County, f Subscribed and sworn to before me this June 22, 1887. Chas. W. Wright, Notary Public. INDIGESTION AND DYSPEPSIA. The Great South American Nervine Tonic Which we now offer you, 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 atomacii. No person can afford to pass by this jewel of incalculable valuo who is affected by disease of the stomaeh, because the experience and testimony of many go to prove that tjiis is the one and oxlv one great cure m the world for this universal destroyer. There is no case of unmalignant disease of the stomach which can resist the wonderful curative powers of the South American Nervine Tonic. Harriet E. Hall, of Waynetown, Ind., nays : Mns. Ell A. Biuttos. of New Bobs. Indiana. " 1 owe my life to tho Great South American avs- " I cannot express how much I owe to the Nervine 1 had been In bed lor five months front N , TonlC- My ,vgte,n wbb completely hatthe effects ol an exhausted stomach, Indigestion, " ..,.. i,n,. Nervous Prostration, and n general shattered tered. appetite gone, was (..iKhlnS aud siuttlnur condition ol niv whole svstetn. Had given up up blood; am sure I wns In the next stages all hopes of (n-tting well. Had tried three doc- ol consumption, an inheritance handed down tors, with no relief. The first bottle of the Nerr- through several Reiterations. I began taking Ine Tonic Improved meso much that Iwasnbleto the Nervine Tonic, and continued its use for walk about, and n few bottles cured me entirely, about six months, ami am entirely cured. It I believe It is the best medicine In tho world. I Is the grandest remedy for nerves, stomach and can not recommend it too highly." lungs I have ever seen." No reined v c ompares with South AireniCAS Nervine as a euro for t he Serves. No remedy comtmreswitii South American Nervine as ft wondrous cure for the Stomach. No remedy will nt al! compare with South American Nervine os a euro for all forms ol failing health. It never falls to cure indigestion and Dyspepsia. It never falls to euro Chorea or St. Vitus' Dance. Its power to build up (he whole svstem are wonderful In tho extreme. It cured tho old. the young, and the mld"iie ajr'-d. It is a rreat friend to the aged and Infirm. Do not neiffleci- to useful precious boon: II Vitii do, vou mav neglect- the only remedy which will restore you to health. South Anu-ricnil .V'n-iue Is iierftvllv safe, and very pleasant to the taste. Delicate ladies, do not fail to use this great cure, hecnusc it will put the bloom ol freshness nnd beauty upon your lips and In your cheeks, and quickly drive away your disabilities and weaknesses. Price, Large 18 ounce Bottles, $1.25; Trial Size, IS Cents. EVERY BOTTLE WARRANTED. Every person purchasing nix large bottles from our advertised agent at SI .:lo each la entitled to one bottle free. If not kept by druggists order direct T M. r nn Dr. E. DETCH0N, Crawfordsville, Ind. Six Bottles for $6.00 ' ' FARIS BROS.
Wholesale and
FOR
MONROE
Ell
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 Extremities 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 Cough,
Liver Complaint. Chronic Diarrhoea, Delicate and Scrofulous Children, Summer Complaint of Infant3.
Rebecca Wn.tnraos, of Browtwvalley. Ind., says : " I had been i:i a ilistretfsed condition for tlirw: years from Nervouautwii, Weakness of tho Stomach. Dyspepsia, aud indigestion, until niy health was gone. I had been doetorlng conBtnntly, tvltu no relief. I nought ono bottle ol South American Nervine, which done me more gooi1 than any $50 worth of doctoring; I ever did in my lite. I would advtae every weakly pcrboii to uiw thl Valuable and lovely remedy ; a few bottles of It nan cured me completely. X consider It the Krandest medicine In the world." Retail Agents
COUNTY.
Resident Ieixtit
Dr.J. W CRAIN. OFFICE removed to tba building north of the Fe Corner, North Col legs At cut lids, ground loir. C. C. TURNER, THE LEADING ! UNDERTAKER I Furniture Dealer. I have tho largest and beat Hloetoi took ever brought to BleomingUa, a will sell you goods cheaper thorn any oaf I have a fine display of Chamber Snites, PARLOR SUITES, LOUNGES Fancy Chairs, Babt Wagon Carpet Sweepebs, Mirrors, PICTURE FRAMES. ORGANS kepi in stock, and sold on monthly payments. I have the Household Sewing ilschino the best Machine made, and the cheapest. I also keep Clothing for Funerals which only costs about one-half as maeb as other clothing. Come and see m ,nort h tide of square, in Waldron'i Block THE FINEST OM EARTH. The Cincinnati, Hamilton A Dayton R. R. is the onlv line runnier Pullman' i Perfected Safety Vestibuled Trains, with Chair, Parlor, Sleeping and Dining Car I service between Cincinnati, Indianapolis j and Chicago, and the only line running 1 Through Reclining Chair Can between j Cincinnati, Keokuk and Springfield, Ilbk,' ) and Combination Chair and Sleeping .Car Cincinnati to f eons, itls And lUe only Direct IAae between Cincinnati, Dayton, Lima, Toledo, Detroit, the Lake Regions and Canada. The road is on of the oldest in th State of Ohio and the only line enter, ing Cincinnati over twenty-fire miles f; double track, and from its past record ajj more than assure its patrons spaed, ooflOfort and safsty. Tickets on sale everywhere, and , that they read C. H. A D., either in out of Cincinnati, Indianapolis, r Toledo, B. O. McCOKMICK, General Passenger and Ticket Agent. imam mi i ti --- --- f f-H,, M I ALWAYS GIYE$H i ITS PATRONS Vb Fun Worth Off i Tceir ony oy Tak.?Dff Them ftaffely und Quickly Chicago Lafayette Indianapolis Cincinnati LouisvilleL PlJLLMAN r-i -PIN CAR ELEGAKT PARLOR CARS ALL TRAINS RUli THROUGH SOUS Tickets Sold and Baggag Checked to Destination IVXtot Maps OB Hn Tablaa It re '"MB mm fuUr tnorma sll Tlirtrn fcqSs qtOww ftottoao kaia oadnss JAMES BARKER, G.P. A CHICAGO WH. B. BURFORD, i . ' i Printer, StutioiMM. ainiiiifliotii-oi- of" Ulnnl Books, Kingrravor and Binder. NO. 21, WEST WASHINGTON ST., INDIANAPOLIS, IND. Don't forget to direct your attorney to bring advertising to the Progress office, in cases where you have any business as administrator, executor or guardian. Rates very low, and work done correctly. Buy One Of Those Choice Lots In Prospect Addition
