Bloomington Progress, Bloomington, Monroe County, 9 May 1899 — Page 2
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Republican Progress.
Mloominqton. ind. W. A. GABE. - Kdttor and FaoMslwr.
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1899.
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MAY.
1899.
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g2-3lVa) 9th. 9 l'th. 25th.
(HECIING THE GLOBE
CONCISE HISTORY OF SEVEN DAYS' DOINGS.
IatcUls-ence by Electric Wire from Every Ouarter of the Civlllxed World. Kmbracine Forelsa Affaire ad Boat Happenions.
IFicktlna Goes Uo. Tne War Departraeat is satisfied from iiapatebes received Friday from Gen. Otis that the American commander has put MUte the Insurgent temporizing over peace, and has turned bis attention to tt.A mM mfrMim taAtiiM. The wisdom
uv Mva B""."" of this courso is fully itpproved by the
OlUeiBIS, WHUUW.VO JUICJCOU MJi WW els needed lartber chastisement in order to bring tbem to a realizing sense of their position. The early disi atches Irom Otis etoarty defined the genual plan of his - . . . w, I . in n
latest movemeui. othmui aia columns. Ha. Gen. MacArthur is poshing straight forward over a nine mile streteh of eoontry between Calum?it and the latest rebel stronghold, San era an do. Ma. Gen. Lawton Is directing a strong force under Col. Sumner to prevent the insurgents from retreating from San Fernando into the mountains to toe north. Ja I- Whitco b Bile at Fort Wayne, lad. Mr. James Whitcomb Riley, the celebrated Booster poet, whose name is now a familiar one in every Indiana home, will be beard at the Princess Kink, Fort Wayne, In'!-, May 18, under the auspices of the Fort Way no Press Club. This will be the only appearance of Mr. RiteyJnNortbein Indiana this year. As insi years tnerais nuch 'interest attached to his appearance. The Princess Bink has a seating capacity of 2,500, and the many admirers of this great poet will probably fill the vast auditorium. Loyalty to the talents of lloosierdom should instill the reading public of Northern Indiana to turn out en masse to do honor to this noted songster. His poetry has made him famous and to hear him read him own effusions even adds a greater charm to his verse. Mr. Riley will read eight of his poem on as many different topics. It will be one of the most prominent literary and musical evens of ihe year In Fort Wayne aod vicinity. Ber ions Conflagration; At Philadelphia, fire destroyed the Triangle Clothing House completely. Part of the walls have fallen. Sparks were carried to adjoining property. The fire assumed alarming proportions. The fire gutted several residences, -a clubbouse and four business places before it was gotten under control. The loss will reach $148,000. Abraham Duncan and William Porter, firemen, were injured. The eanse of the fire is a mystery.
Tarker to Settle. The Constantinople correspondent of the London Chronicle says that the Sultan has authorized Mr. Oscar S. Straus, tbe American Minister, to telegraph to
President McKinley Turkey's promise to
pay the $100,000 claimed for tbe deatruotkm of the property of American missionaries during the Armenian massacres hi 183. Oil Destroyed by Fire. Twenty thousand bar rels of oil were destroyed by fire from lightning in an oil tank- near Morgantown, Pa. Loss, with tanks and Incidentals, was tSO.OOJ. The pumping station and a large number of booses in the vicinity were threatened at N time, but all danger is now over. A Boiler's Bad Break. At Hopkinsville, Ky., HcKnight's aaw-mlll boiler blew up, wrecking tbe mill and Instantly killing Barrett and Effie MeKnigbt, propriators, and blowing off John White's le? and T. T. ilcKnighl'i arm. Baraed to Death. Mrs. Joanna Da vera, ;i widow ) years old, was burned to death in a fire which destroyed her house at Cortland, N. Y. She was rescued from the building once, but returned to It to secure valuable papers and perished. Mrs. Ckllda Oisalea It. Mrs. George W. CbiMs has authorized the Philadelphia Ledger to deny tbe statement that marriage was contemplated between herself and Gen. Joseph Yt heeler. Goes to Chicago. Brig. Gen. Thomas Anderson, who has returned recently from tbe Philippines, baa been assigned to tbe command of the department of the lakes. Dashed to Death. John Fisher, a window washer, fell from tbe sixth-story window of the Rookery Building, Chicago, and was instantly killed. Wanes Advanced. The Chapman Slate Company, whose big quarries are near Bethlehem, Pa., announce a Hi to 20 per eenC advance in wages. Will Fight ia Beaver. Manager otto c. lotto of the Colorado Athlenc Association, says the Fitzsim-moos-Jeffries i?ht will take place in Denver. He offered a purse oi $25,000 and has received a dispatch from tbe principals requesting him to go to Mew lock to arrange the details. Kicked to Death. Akron (Ohio) special; Alex. Ganthiers, died at Camp Head of typhoid fever, as reported. It Is now rumored that be was kicked to death. An investigation will be made by his mother. eastern! New York has a Salvation army bicycle band. Sam X. Jack, tbe theatrical manager, died at New York, aged 46. Lawrence Tumure, tbe well-known banker, died at New York, aged 73 years. The H. C. Friek Coke Company, which employs more than 12,1)00 men, has advanced wages from 0 to 12 per cent. Tbe Lakeport Savings Bank, Laconia. N. H., has suspended payment and will probably liquidate. There is $227,000 due to depositors. A trnst to control the tropical fruit trade has been formed in Boston and a charter taken out in New Jersey. It is known a the United Fruit Company, and is capitalised at $20,000,000. At Mauch Chunk, Pa., by the premature discharge of a cannon used in the celebration of Dewey day three persons were badly injured. The cannon was heavily loaded with powder and stones. ' Charley Nayame, a track walker on the Kew York elevated railroad, was struck by a train and hurled to the street many feet below. Portions of his body fell on passing pedestrians, several being bruised by them. : Lyndhurst, the country home of the iate Jay Gould, It is reported, baa been pur-
V t
chased by Mlsslllelen Could from the Gould estate, 'fhe Lymlhurst property consists Of 244 acres, anil the price mentioned was $14,000. The charter of the Amalgamated Cupper Company, present issue of capital $75,000,000, with power of unlimited Increase, was filed at Trenton, N. J- Marcus Paly is president, and among the directors are William Rockefeller and It. 1'. Flower. Je-hn P. liina of Sharon, Mass., was sho. and killed by bis wife, Mary E. Ross, in the course of a quarrel at tbclr heme. Site says she acted in self-defense, as her band was choking her at the time. The pair had been married about a year and were- middle-aged. Fire wiped out a five-story brick building in Boston occupied by a umnber of manufacturing firms, causing a loss of $100,000. The ground floor was occupied by the Boston fire department for the storage of extra apparatus. The loss of this apparatus was almost complete.
3u"
niand of the
WESTERN.
Charles McCnllongh, a farm laborer, was shot and killed by Mrs. Eunice Brown at her farm, south or Canton, S. D. The woman claims thut she shot him in self-defense. All tonnage records were broken on the Lake Shore Railway the other day. An east-bound coal train of sixty-five cars out of Ashtabula, Ohio, hauled by one engine, carried 3,000 tons. Timothy flogau, a notorious mail box robber, esci.ped from the peniteutiary at Columbus, Ohio, by having himself nailed up in a box and shipped out as freight from the cigar shop. The hospital building of the State Asylum for the Feeble Minded at Olenwood, Iowa, wns destroyed by fire. The origin of tbe fire is unknown. No lives were lost. Loss $2.1,000. no insurance. According to the Cincinnati Commercial Tribune, the administration has in
formation that arms and ammunition or
war have b.?en sent from American manu
factories to the Philippine Insurgents. J. H. Williams, aged 70, collector for the First National Batik of Upper Sandusky,
Ohio, for thirty-six years, committed suicide by shooting himself in the head.
Despoudency is believed to hove prompted the deed. An explosion of a can of oil' paint at Tiffin, Ohio, caused the death of Paul Hoffman, nged 14, and seriously burned Frank Bundage, aged 12. The boys were playing W'th the paint and touched a match to se it burn. Dr. Elcit:ior Lawney, a prominent woman phvsician of Denver, was fatally hurt
as a result of the reckless driving of an unknown maa. His vehicle collided with her buggy, throwing her violently to the
ground, friictnring her skull
GeTvrTStoplieiiS" Tr .uttauim " tms " Signed
JS?l!?i2L T-Xmi outran Lake Superior
non-residents as deputy sheriffs, deputy
constables or as police officers. The mens
are is intended to prohibit the importation
Df Pinkerton detectives into the State.
Seventeen farmers of Pemiscot County,
n southeast Missouri, nave been lodged in
the city jail at St. Louis by United States
Marshal Louis C. Bohle on a Federal in'
iictmeut, charging them with cuttiug the
levee. No denial is made by the farmers. Nearly 100 survivors of the Sultana dis
aster gathered in annual convention at
Cleveland, tbe occasion being the thirtyfifth anniversary of the event. The Sultana was a Mississippi river boat, sunk April 27, 1864. with a loss of hundreds of lives. Mrs. Samuel Blair of Edgar, Ok., recently sold a farm near Cuffeyrille, Kan., for $3,000 and with her husband went to Oklahoma, settling near Edgar. The family was accompanied by a hired man and his wife, who had worked for tuem for leveral years. A few nights ago Blair and (he hired man's wife disappeared and with them went Mrs. Blair's money, a fine sadlie horse and saddle and some of her clothing. At Cleveland, Ohio, two hundred lathrs struck for an eight-hour day and $2.50. Before noon they had secured what tbey
asked for and returned to work. Two
hundred plasterers also struck for $3 a
lay of eight boors. About fifty hodcar-
riers went out on a demand for an adranee from $1.50 to $2 a day. SeventySve structural iron workers also struck tor 33 cents an hour and an eight-hour lay. Harry J. Flammger, a St. Louis policeman, committed suicide because his wife lid not give him a clean suit of underwear when he asked for it. Flammger went some at l o'clock in the moruing after working a I night. He proposed to his wife that they go out early and return, so that be could sleep late in the day. Then be asked her for Ihe underwear. Upou her telling him that she did not hare it just then he walked into the next room and shot himself. Flammger was 3fi years old
md bad been on the force a year.
A fire which broke out from incendiary
causes in the big lumber yard of the A. Gebhart Lumber Company at Duyton, ()., resulted in tbe death of Thomas lwler, a Ineman, ml tbe severe injury of six other
dremen. A high wind carried blazing sparks from the burning lumber to the roof of St. John's Lutheran Church ou ESast Third street, setting that building on are. Lawlcr was standing in the church restibule when the belfry timbers fell on him. The other men were hurt by the
lames and by falling. The material loss
iggregates $i 5,000.
SOUTHERN.
The body of Mitchell Daniel, a negro.
nras found in tbe road near Leesburg, Ga., iddled with bullets.
Russel Sorver, a saloonkeeper of Coal-
ourg, w. Va.. was found dead on the Chesapeake and Ohio tracks with a bullet round in his body.
Willis Sees, a negro, aged about 30
fears, was taken from the jail at Osceola, irk., and hanged in the jailyard by a nob of forty men. Sees was in jail on a
barge of barn burning. Judge Martin of the Circuit Court at
Little Rock, Ark., rendered a decision upwiding the constitutionality of the uuti:rost law, but limiting its force to offenses jommitted in the State of Arkansas.
City Collector Max Mileun Sutor, nt
3an Antouio, Texas, committed suicide y shooting himself through the heart at lis residence. Expert accountants have
ately been investigating his accounts. The Greenwood Couuty, South Caroina, men charged with having entered nto a conspiracy to drive away or kill
lames W. Tolbert, the Republican assistmt postmaster at McCormick, S. C, have
jeen discharged from custody, the jury returning a verdict of not guilty. The Baptist Tabernacle in Atlanta, Ga..
was badly damaged by vandals the other light. Its pastor, Dr. Brougbton, receut-
y condemned the lynching of ham Huse.
He thinks the desecration of the church
ivas done by persons who feel aggrieved it his bold denunciation of lynchers. News has been received st Little Hock, irk., .of the assassination in Van Hureu bounty of the son of Hugh Patterson, who was murdered in December, 1807, by U Mills and Will Hardin. Mills was langed a few duys ago and Hardin was ihot to death in jail. It is believed that roung Patterson was murdered by friends f Hardiu for revenge.
WASHINGTON.
Lewis Baker, editor of the St. Paul Slobe and ex-minister to Nicaragua, died it Washington, aged 07. The President has appointed Col. Frederick Fnuston of the Twentieth Kansas a brigadier general of volunteers. This appointment was recommended by Muj. Gen. MacArtbur and supplemented very strongly by Gen. Otis. Rear Admiral Howell has been relieved
as senior member of the naval retiring
board. He will be succeeded by Admiral
Schley. Captain Cook has lieen ordered
to duty as a member of the naval examin
ing board. Commander W. W. Meade has
been ordired to the ci
Brooklyn.
FOREIGN. Edward Atkinson of the Anti-Imperialist Irfagne frankly admits that he lias been sending anti-imperialist letters and literature to the soldiers in the Philippines. , MM. Paul Deroulede ud, iarcel-Ha-bert, charged with offeunes nifinst the security of the state and with inciting the French army to mutiny, have beea held lu I'n r is for trial. The famous Newgate prison and tbe Old Bailey, or Central Criminal Court, both contained in one of tbe most ancient and historic structures of London, will soon be demolished to make room for a new courts buildiug. Owing to nil iurush of water at the Ktscliuar gold miue, near Trolzk, Russia, a shaft in which ninety-live men were at work collapsed. Sixty-two of the miners were killed and nearly all of the remainder were seriously injured. Great Britain and Russia have come fo an agreement ou their spheres of influence in China. Dispatches from St. Petersburg via London, which are generally credited, state that an international pact on the subject has been signed. The Shah of Persia has grunted a 20year concession to a Russian mining company covering the province of Ozorbaijan, the most northerly province of Persia, having an area of 30,300 square miles. The province contains rich copper deposits. Hong Koug advices say that Spain will demand a substantial laud indemnity from China liecnuse the Viceroy of Canton permitted the notorious Abby expedition to supply the insurgents in the Philippines with arms prior to the signing ot the peace treaty. Wireless telegraphy was first put to practical use when the Goodwin Sands light ship was struck by a passing vessel, and the crew, utilizing the wireless telegraph apparatus, notified South Foreland, England, that their ship was sinking. Tugs were thereupon dispatched to the assistance of the light ship. Information has been received at the War Department that the present customs laws of Porto Rico ore to be tested in the courts. The clnim will be set up that as Porto Rico is now a portion of the United States it is unconstitutional to charge customs dues for goods sent from one portion of the country to another. Gen. Henry, the American military governor or Porto Rico, has Informed the insular committee recently sent there from Washington that he does not believe the Por,to Ricans should lie encouraged to look forward to statehood in the American Union. He thinks they will do better under a territorial form of government, IN GENERAL.
through to Lake Huron.
Very Rev, L. Elena, vicar general of the diocese of Hamilton, Out., iB dead, aged 82 years. Exports of American manufactured goods during March amounted to $30,025,533, an average of $1,400,000 for each working day. The rumors of an immense combination of steel interests were practically confirmed. The combination will include practically all the big coucerns of the country ami will have a capitalization of between $700,000,000 and $900,000,000. Charles A. Walsh, secretary of the Democratic national committee, who has for the last year liecu digging gold in the Klondike, has arrived at home. From letters he has writtn it is believed be has cleaned up between $50,000 and $100,000 during the winter. It is understood at Skaguay, Alaska, that the Canadian Government has instructed its collector to see that all American convoys are allowed to proceed to Log Cabiu as formerly. It is further stated that the Canadian officials, iu stopping convoys at the summit, acted without authority. Dr. John Duncan Quackeubos, emeritus professor of Columbia University, bss become convinced by a series of remarkable experiments that hypnotism may be employed to n great advantage not only in alleviating pain and curing certain dis-i eases, but for the purpose of reforming criminals and the treatment of certain forms of insanity. Ferdinand W. Peck, the United States commissioner to the Paris exposition of 1000, has been officially notified of tbe allotment of 50.500 square feet in the Vincennes annex, divided as follows: 21,500 square feet for railroad exhibits, 4,300 for automobiles, 8,000 for bicycles, to be housed in a building erected by the American manufacturers; 10,400 for operating machinery, 2,700 for life-saving exhibits. This makes a total of 300.000 square feet of space allotted to American exhibits, or double tbe amount of the original grants. Bradstreet's view of the business situation is thus summarized: "Favorable weather conditions find reflection in reports of good retail distribution of spring and summer goods, and in fair Olling-in orders from jobbers. Demand from first hands for general merchandise is, if anything, quieter, in keeping with Ihe 'between, season' period now at hand. Industrial activity continues specially marked, a pleasiug feature this week being the practical absence of the unrest, particularly in the building trades, noted for many years past about May 1. While favoring retail distribution, the springlike weather conditions, however, have been tbe reverse of stimulating as regards quotations of two of the countries' greatest staples, wheat and cotton. In these and in hog products the tendency or values has been toward a lower range. Winter wheat crop advices have continued irregularly unfavorable. Cotton has weakened on better reports. The strength of the lumber markets shows little impairment. Wool as a whole is quiet and steady. Wheat, including flour,' shipments for the week aggregated S.02K.283 bushels, against 2,032,959 bushels last week. Corn exports for the week aggregate 2,615,079 bushels, against 3,001,940 bushels last week."
THE MAHKFTa
Chicago Cattle, common to prime, $3.00 to $5.75; hogs, shipping grades, $3.00 to $4.00; sheep, fair to choice, $3.00 to $5.25; wheat. No. 2 red. 71c to 72c; corn. No. 2, 33c to 35c; outs. No. 2, 20c to 27c; rye, No. 2, 58c to 0c; butter, choice creamery, 15c to 17c; eggs, fresh, 11c to 12c; potatoes, choice, 40c to 55c per bushel. Indianapolis Cattle, shipping, $3.00 to $5.50; bogs, choice light, $2.75 to $4.00; sheep, common to choice, $2.50 to $4.75; wheat. No. 2 red, 71c to 72c; corn, N. 2 white, 35c to 87c; oats, No. 2 white, 30c to 32e. St. Louis-Cattle. $3.50 to $5.75; hogs, $3.00 to $4.00; sheep, $3.00 to $5.25; wheat. No. 2, 77c to 78c; corn. No. 2 yellow, 35c to 30c; oats. No. 2, 28c to 30c; rye. No. 2, 50c to 58c. Cincinnati Cattle, $2.50 to $5.50; hogs, $3.00 to $4.00; sheep, $2.50 to $5.00; wheat, No. 2, 72c to 74c; corn. No. 2 mixed, 30c to 37c; oats, No. 2 mixed, 28c to 30c; rye, No. 2, 02c to 03c. Detroit Cattle, $2.50 to $5.50; bogs, $3.00 to $4.00; sheep, $2.50 to $4.75; wheat. No. 2, 73c to 74c; corn. No. 2 yellow, 34c to 30c; oats, No. 2 white, 32c to 33c; rye, tile to t!3e. Toledo Wheat, No. 2 mixed, 75c to 70c; com, No. 2 mixed, 34c to 30c; oats, No. 2 white, 28c to 20c; rye. No. 2, 57c to 5!)e; clover seed, new, $3.70 to $3.80. Milwaukee Wheat, No. 2 spring, 71c to 73c; corn, No. 3, 33c to 34c; oats, No. 2 white, 28c to 31c; rye. No. 1, 50c to 00c; barley, No. 2, 44c to 45c; pork, mess, $8.75 to $9.25. Buffalo Cattle, good shipping steers, $3.00 to $0.00; bogs, common to choice, $3.25 to $4.25; sheep, fair to choice wethers, $3.50 to $5.25; lambs, common to extra, $4.50 to $0.25. New York-Cattle, $3.25 to $5.75; hogs, $3.00 to $4.50; sheep, $.'1.00 to $5.75; wheat. No, 2 red, Sic to 82c; corn, No. 2, 42c to 44c; oats, No. 2, 32c to 33c; butter, creamery, 15c to lac; eggs, Western, 2c to 14c. i
ByJhe.Ducheas.
CHAPTER XVIII. Jovce, on the whole, had not enjoyed
iasf night's dance at the Court, Barbara hod been there, and she had gone home with her and Monkton after it, and on
waking this morning a sense ot unreality, at dissatisfaction, is nil that comes to her. Joyce, however, had not been the only
one to whom last nif.ht had beea a uis
tion you speak of, to come in tor the old lady's private fortune. Very considerable fortune, I've heard." "Who told you':" asks Mr. Browne, with a cruelly lively curiosity. "Lady Swansdown Y" "Oh, dear, no!" Pause: Dicky still looking expectant and Mrs. Hlnke uncomfortable. She is racking her brain to try and find some person who might have told her, but her brain fails her. "Have you heard," asks Mrs. Blake, "that Mr. Beauclerk is going to marry that hideous Miss Mnliphant? Horrid Manchester person, don't you know! Cau't think what Lady Baltimore sees in her, except" with a giggle "her want of beauty. Got rather too much of pretty women, I should say."
"I'm really afraid, says Dicky, that
nnuointment. Beauclerk' detc-mination
lo propose to her to put Ins fortune to me somebody has been hoaxing you this time,
touch and to gain hers fuiled. Either j jirt. Blake." genially. "I happen to know the fates were against him, or else she for n f(11.t that Miss Maliphant is not go-
hersolf was In n willful mood. She had refused to leave the dauelr.K r-wm w"1'
him on any pretevt whatever, unless to gain the coolness of the crowdcO hall outside, or the still more inhabited supper room. He was not dismayed, however, and there wns no need to do things precipitately. There was plenty of time. There could be uo doubt about tbe fac that she preferred him to any of the other men of her acquaintance; he bad discovered that she had refused Dysart uot ouly once, but twice. Well, she shall be rewarded now, dear little girl! He will make her happy for life by laying bis uame and prospective fortune nt her reet! To-day he will end bis happy bachelor state and sacrifice himself on the altar of lore. Thus resolved, he walks up throne the lands of the Court, through the valley filled with opening fronds of ferns, and through the spinny beyond that again until he comes to where the Monktons live. The house seems very silent. Knocking at the door, the maid comes to tell him that Mr. nnd Mrs. Monkton and the children nre out. but that Miss Kavaungh is within.
"Ah ! How good of you '." says be as she
enters, meeting ber with both Mnus out
stretched. "I feared the visit was too
early!" "Early!" says Joyce, with a lHle laugh. "Why, you might have found u e chasing the children round the garden three hours ago. Providentially," giving him one hand, the ordinary one, null ignoring his Dther, "their father and mother were bound to go to Tisdown this morning or 1 should have been dead long before this." "Ah!" says Beauclerk. And then with increasing tenderness. "So plad they were removed; it would have been too much for you, wouldn't it?" "Yes I dare say. On the whole, I believe I don't mind thera," says Miss Kavatiagh. "Well and what about last night f
It was delightful, wasn't ilf aecreuy she sighs heavily, as she makes this most untruthful assertion. "Ah! Was it'" asks he. "1 did not find it so. How could I when you were so unkind?" Then he precipitately launches into a proposal and is as precipitately rejected. "Ah, you'll regret this," he bitterly excluims. "I shall not regret it," "uiys she. coolly. "Not even when Dysart has sailed for India, and then 'the girl he left behind him' Is disconsolate?" asks he, with nu Insolent laugh. "Hah! That touches you!" It had touched ber. She looks like a living thing stricken suddenly into marble, as she stands gazing back at him, with her hands tightly clinched before her. India? To India? And she had never heard. Extreme anger, however, fights with her grief, and overcoming It, enables her to answer her adversary. "I think you, too, will feel regret," says she, gravely, "when you look back upon your conduct to ine to-day." There Is such gentleness, such dignity, in her rebuke, and her beautiful face is so full of mute reproach, that all the good there Is in Beauclerk rises to the surface. He flings his bat upou u table near, and himself at her feet. "Forgive me!" cries he, in a stifled tone. "Have mercy on me, Joyce! 1 love you I swear it! Do not cast me ndrift! All l have said or done I regret now! You said I should regret, and I do." ' Something in his abasement disgusts the girl, instead of creating pity in ber breast. She shake? herself free of him, by a sharp and horrified movement. "You must go home," she says, calmly, yet with a frowning brow, "and yon must iiot come here again. I told you it was all useless, but you would not listen. No, no: not a word!" He has risen and would have advanced toward her, but she waves him from her, with a sort of troubled hatred in her face. "You mean " begins he hoarsely. "One thing one thing only," feverishly, "that I hope I shall never see you again!" Two hours later Barbara has returned and has learned the secret of Joyce's pale looks and Bad eyes, and is now standing on the hearth-rug looking ns on ; might who has been suddenly awakened from a dream that had seemed only too real. "And you mean to say you really mean, Joyce, that you refused him?" "Yes. I actually had that much common sense." with a laugh that has something of bltteraess in it. "But I thought I was sure- " "I know you thought he wns my ideal of all things admirable. And you thought wrong." "But it not be " "Barbara!" says Joyce, sharply, "was it not enough that yon should 'tare made
one mistake? Must you Insist on making
another? "Well, never mind," says Mrs. Monkton, hastily. "I'm glad I made that one,
at all events: nnd I'm only sorry you have
felt it yonr duty to make your pretty eyes wet about it. Good gracious !" looking out of the window, "who Is coming now? Dicky Browne and Mr. Courtenay. and those detestable Blakes. Ton: my," turning sharply to her first-born, ' if you nnd Mabel stay here yon must be good. Do you hear now, good! You are not to ask a single question or touch a t!ins In the room, and you ore lo keep MnlH quiet. I am not going to hove Mrs Blake go home and say you are the woi-st-hehnved children she ever met in her lift-. You will stay, Joyce?" anxiously to her sister. "Oh, I suppose so. I couldn't leave you lo endure their tender mercies alone." "That's a darling girl! You know 1 never can get on with that odious woman. Ah! how d'ye do, Mrs. Blake? How sweet of you to come, after last night s fatigue!" "Well, I think a drive a capital thing after being up all night." says the newcomer, a fat little ill-natured woman, nestling herseir into the cosiest caair iu the room. "I hadn't quite meant to come here, but I met Mr. Browne and Mr. Courtenay, so I thought we might as well join forces, nnd storm you iu good earnest. Mr. Browne has Just been telling me that Lady Swausdown left the Court this mnrnlnir. Got a telegram, she Baid, sum
moning her to Gloucestershire. Never do
believe In these sudden telegrams myself. Stayed rather long in Ibnt ante-room with Lord Baltimore last uigbt."
"Didu't know she had been in any ante
room," says Mrs. Monkton, coldly. 1 dare say her mother-in-law ii ill again. She has always been attentive to her."
"Not on terms with her son, you know;
ao Lady Swausdown hopes, bj the atte'
ing to marry Beauclerk,"
1 h well, reallv
he is to be congratulated, I think. Per
haps," with a sharp glunco at Joyce, "I mistook the name of the young lady; I certainly heard he was going to be married."
"So am I, says Mr. Browne, "some time or other; we are all going to get mar-
lied one day or another. One day. In
deed, is as good as another. Yon have set ns such a capital example that we're
safe to follow It."
Mr. and Mrs. Blake being a notoriously
i:iihappy couple, the latter grows rather
led here; and Joyce gives Dicky a
pronchful glance, which be returns with one of the wildest bewilderment. What
can she mean?
"Mr. Dysart will be a distinct loss when
be goes to India." continues Mrs. Blake, quickly. "Won't be back for years, I
hear, and leaving so soon, too, A disap
pointment, I'm told! Some obdurate fair
one! Sort of chest affection, don't you
know, ha, ha! India's place for that sort
of thing. Knock it out of him iu no time,
Thought he looked rather down in the
mouth Inst night. Not up to much lately,
it has struck me. Seen much of him this
time. Miss Kavanngh?"
"Yes. A good deal," says Joyce, who
has. however, paled perceptibly.
'Thought him rather gone to seed, eh?
Rather the worse for wear.
"I think him always very agreeable,"
says Joyce, icily.
A most uncomfortable silence ensues. Barbara tries to get up n conversation
with Mr. Courtenay. but that person, uev
cr brilliant at any time, seems now stricken with dumbness. Filially Mrs. Bluke
rises and takes her departure. She car
ries off Mr. Courtenay. Dicky goes, too,
and Barbara, with a sense of relief, turns
to Joyce.
"You look so awfully tired," says she,
"Why don t you go and lie downr
"I thought, on the contrary, I should
like to go out for a walk," says Joyce, in
differently. "I confess my head is aching horribly. And that woman only made me worse." "What a woman! I wonder she told so many lies. I wonder if " "If Mr. Dysart is going to India," supplies Joyce, calmly. "Very likely. Why uot? Most men in the army go to India." "True," says Mrs. Monkton, with a sigh. Then, in a low tone, "1 shall be sorry for him." "Why! If he goes" coldly "it is by his own desire. I see nothing to be sorry about." "Oh, I do." says Barbara. And then. "Well, go out, dearest. The air will do you good."
Btand before me" she grows almost magnificent in her wrath "and declare your
infainv aloud! Such a thought was be
yond me. There was a lime when I would have thought it beyond you!"
Was there?" says he. He laughs
aloud.
"There, there, there!" soys she, with a
rather wild soil of sigh. "Why should 1 waste u single emotion upon you? Let me take you calmly, casually. Come
come now. It Is the soonest linns "
world to see how siie treads down the pas
sionate, most natural uprisings within her against the injustice of life. "Makes me at least au courant with your movements, you and she will go where?"
Well, you will lie disappointed as sar
as she is concerned. It appears she doesn't think it worth while to accompany
me." . .
'You mean thnt she refused to go witu
you : "In the very baldest language, I assure yon. It left nothing to be desired, believe inc. in the matter ot lucidity. 'No,' she would not iro with me. You see there is
not only one, but two women in the world who regard me ns being utterly without charm."
I commiserate yon!" says she. witn a
hitter sneer. "If. after all yonr attention to her, your friend has proved faithless,
1 "Don't waste your pity," says be, inter
rupting her rather rudely. "On the whole, the decision of my 'friend.' ns yon call lier, was rather a relief to me than otherwise.
I felt it my duty to deprive you or uer so-
cjt.tj-"-ith au unpleasant laugn nnu
so I asked her to come Willi me. ueu she declined to accompany me she left me free lo turn to sport." "Ah! you refuse to be corrupted?" says she, contemptuously. "Think what you will," says be, reKtrnininc himself with determination. "It doesn't matter In the least to mo now. Your opiniou I consider worthless, be
cause prejudiced ns worthless as you consider me. I came here t u-ll you of my
determination to go abroad.' (To be continued.)
CHAPTER XIX. It is far into the afternoon, still the spring sunshine is streaming through the windows. Lady Baltimore, in a heavy tea-gown of pale green plush, is sitting by the fire reading a book, her little son upon the hearth-rug beside her. The plnce is strewn with blocks, and the boy, as his father enters, looks up at him and culls to him eagerly to come and help him. At the sound of the child's quick, glad voice a pang contracts Baltimore's heart. Tbe child He hud fnrgotteu him, "I can't make this castle," says Bertie, "nnd mother isn't n bit good. Hers always fall dowu; come you and make me one." "Not now," says Baltimore, "Not today. Run away to your nurse. I want to speak to your mother." There is something abrupt and jerky in his manner something strained, nud with sufficient temper In it to make the child cense from entreaty. The very pain Baltimore is feeling has made bis manner harsher to the child. Yet, as the latter passes him obediently, he seizes the small figure in his arms nnd presses biiu convulsively to his breast. Then, putting him down, he points silently but peremptorily to the door. "Well?" says Lady Baltimore. She has risen, startled by his abrupt entrance, his tone, and more than all, by that last brief but passionate burst of affection toward the child. "You wish to speak to uic again." "There won't lie many more opportunities," says he, grimly, "You may safely give mo a few moments to-day. I bring you good news. I am going abroad. At once, forever!" In spite of the terrible self-control she has taught herself, Lady Baltimore's selfpossession gives way. Her brain seems to reel. 'Hah! I thought so I have touched her at last, through her pride," thiuks Baltimore, watching ber with a savage satisfaction, which, however, hurts hiui horribly. And after all he was wrong, too. He had touched her. indeed! but it was her heart, not her pride, he bad wounded. "Abroad?" echoes she, faintly. "Yes; why uot? 1 am sick of this sort of life, I have decided ou Dinging it up." "Since when have you come to this decision?" asks the, presently, having conquered her sudden wenkuess by a supreme effort. "If you want day and date, I'm afraid 1 shall not be able to supply you. It has been growing upon me for some lime tbe idea of it, I mean and last night you brought it to perfection." "I?" "Have you already forgotten all the complimentary speeches you made me? They" with a sardonic smile "are so sweet to me that 1 shall keep them ripe in my memory until death overtakes me ami after it, I thiuk! You told me, among other wifely things if my mind does not deceive me that you wished me out of your life, nud Lady Swansdown with me." "That Is a direct ami most mulicious misapplication of my words," says she, emphatically. "Is it? I confess that was my readiug of I hem. 1 accepted that version, and. thinking lo do you a good turn, and relieve yon of both your betes noires at ouce, I promised to Lady Swansdown last night that site should accompany me upou my endless travels." There is a long, long pause, during which Lady Baltimore's face seems to have grown into marble. She takes a step forward now. Through the stern pallor of her skin her large eyes gleam like fire. "How dare you?" she says, la a voice very low, but so intense that It rings through the room. "How dare you tell me this? Arc you lost to all shame? You nnd she to go to go away together! It Is only what I hare been anticipating for fuouths. 1 could see how It was with you. But that you should hare the Insolence to
SLAVES IN ANCIENT GREECE. Alexander Fold All the Inhabitant of Thebes Into Slavery, In the second installment of Prof. Beiijamlu Ide Wheeler's "Life of Alexander the Great," In the Century. Prof. Wheeler writes of Alexander's efforts In sulHlulus the rebellion that followed the assassination of Philip. Prof. Wheeler says: At last, after much long-suffering, the strong band of the Macedonian power, contrary to all Its purposes and policy, bad laid its.elf with violence upon one of the great Greek cities. Once and again it had forgiven, but Thebes had transgressed "he bounds of endurance and could expect no mercy. She obtained none. The city was razed to the ground, only the house of Pindar heine snsrwl: the territory was distrib
uted among the allies, and the Inhabit
ants who survived, some ao.ooo iu number, excepting only the priests and priestesses, the descendants of Pllldar, and the guests, friends of Philip and Alexander, were sold Into slavery, mak
ing a slave market so vast that, as we hear, the standard price of slaves in
the markets of the Aegean was serious lv iloni-esscd lu consequence.
The ordinary price for a slave was from twenty to thirty-five dollars.
Abundant sunolv kept the price low
Society was built on slavery. Slaves,
nr ns lu Snarta and Crete, serfs at
inched to the soil, were the farm-labor
ers; In manufactories they took the place of modem machinery; they were n form nf investment, being often rent
ed out In gangs, as for work In the
mines: large numbers were useu, too
for domestic service, seven being an
nverase number tor an ordinary house.
1'orintli Is said to have had 400.000
slaves, Aegina 470,000. and a census of
the year 309 B. C. showed 4UU.UW in men. These figures have sometimes
been doubted, but other known facts
iro to confirm them. Most of tbe slaves
apparently came from outside Greece, as from Lydla, Syria. Bilhynln, Thrace and lllvrla. but there were also aiuonj
them Italians, Egyptians and Jews.
The supply from outside was main tained by the slave-traders, who ob in itu.,1 them either in barter or by rob
Iimi-v nloii the coasts of the Aegean and
the Euxlne. Tbe slave-market was a feature of every city agora, and espe
cially of the temple fairs. Captives In war were, like the rest of the booty.
treated as merchandise, l ney were iinnaad of chletiv bv the professional
traders nnd sold mostly abroad. Thus
iiieu of culture1 ami education olteu ap peared iu the condition of slaves. Em nlovil i9 teachers, readers, secretaries
musicians, they often served the purpose of spreading the knowledge of art,
manners, and life among other peoples, and aided iu mixing the soils and forwarding the Interests of cosmopolitan
ism. At the Public Expense.
It is stated that one morning recently a young fellow who had just secured a clerkship lu a Government office was considerably startled by a little scene
which he witnessed. An elderly man,
one of the senior clerks In the room,
suddenly rose from his desk, dragged the comfortable chair ou which he bad
been slttlug Into the middle of the room,
seized a poker, and, attacking the chair with great vigor, succeeded lu breaking one of Its legs. When It wns doue the official gave a sigh of relief, and fluug the chair luto a corner of the room. Tbe budding Juulor's first thought was that his senior had sueldeuly taken leave of
his souses, nnil be almost expected that his colleagues would forthwith put hlui under restraint. But, to his astonishment, the other clerks hardly raised their eyes while the work of destruction was lu progress. Before the office work was over the new-comer sought Information from one of his fellowclerks. "Can you tell me," said he, "why Mr. Dash carried on In that extraordinary fashion? I menu, of course, when he broke a perfectly sound leg off the chair In which he had been sitting." "Oil. that was all right!" replied the other, with a meaning laugh. "A. caster had come off one of the legs of the chair, and, yem know, 'my lords' will not provide us with uew casters; tbey will attend to nothing less than n broken leg. So De.sh had to break one of Ihe legs in order to get his Chair put right at the public expense." IliKamy in Hungary. Bigamy Is punished in a peculiar manner iu Hungary. The Hum who has Ik'CH foolish enough In marry two wives Is compelled i,v law to live With both of tlie-ui In the same house'. Whi'U It coiiies lit the ivtineuieiits of torture the Hungarians are mrt so slow.
NOW A WAR TO DEATH
INDIANA INCIDENTS.
FAILURE OF ALL NEGOTIATIONS
FOR PEACE,
The Filipino Proposition for a Three
Months' Armistice Abruptly Rejected by OtU-UehcIs Were Worklnc for lime-Kishtinjf Hencwed with Visor, The negotiations for peace in the Phi!
pines faile-d. The Filipino envoys in conference with Gen. Otis made: practically
the same old proposition. They also ask-i-il for a three months armistice, covering the entire an hipelago. Gen. Olis abruptly refused the request and the conference terminated. The feeling in Manila that peace would come as a result of
the Filipino overtures was rapiJIy dispelled. The Filipinos are strengthening their lines wherever possible. This and the persistency with which Aguiuablo and Luna have sent in the same proposition for an armistice leads to the belief that the Filipino leaders have been simply working for lime in which to collect their forces and to iH-rmit their soldiers to recover from the state or demoralization in which the repeatcd victories of the Americans had thrown them. The offensive operations lie-gun by Gens. Lawton oud Hale shows that Gen. Olis shares this belief. The news from Manila regarding the failure of peace negotiations came as a surprise to Ihe War Department. The rampnign will he pursued with the utmost
Some years ago there was a search for the heirs of a Frenchman named PliH-ro Fusil, who had emigrated lo this country some fifty years previously. At last they were found lu Kentucky uniler the name of Cuiin. Their nuceslor had been translated luto English as Fetw Guuu, and bis grandchildren were Ignorant thnt be had ever borne another name. A single stone 115 feet long, 10 feet square at one cud and 4 feet square at the other, has been successfully cut from the sandstone quarries ut Houghton Point, Wis. It Is supposed to be the longest monolith ever quarried.
flEJi. LAWTON'.
OENEIIAI. 1.1'MA.
vigor, and it is not likely that the rainy
season will offer any pen-eptible che'ck to the aggressive movements of the Ameri
cans, if aggressive action shall again Ix1' eome necessary.
Although the Secretary of War and Adjutant General had hoped for a speedy,
peaceable solution their eyes have from
the beginning of the negotiations been on
the other prospect ns we'll, as evidenced by the disposition to hurry more troeips to the Philippines as re-enrorcements for Otis. The latter, it was firmly believed.
would not allow himself to lie led into any trap, and the ruse to gain time, if such
was the case, seems to have failed. Bout the Rebels.
Advices have been received from Manila
that Uen. Wbeaton enpture'd Santo Toinas after a severe: fight with the insurgents. The insurgeiits were routed. The town was nearly destroyed by lire. Lawtein's brigade has advanced toward Maasand, crossed the river nnd charged the enemy in
strong iutreuchnients, driving him northward and indicting considerable loss.
Both When ton and Hale of Mac Ar
thur's division found the enemy in force,
RECORD OF EVENTS OF THE
PAST WEEK.
BIk Story from Graiitsburtr Aboat a
Mountain of Iilacksaakes 160tn Keglmeut Receives Warn Welcome Home-Prisoner Goes to Work.
is IT M'ARTHl U'S IIBAPUARTERS, CALOOCAJt
strongly intrenched and commanded by
('oinuiuuder-iu-Chief Luna, about four mile's south of San Fernando. Hale on the right, dislodged the enemy; and Wbeaton. ou tbe left, leading iu person, made a brilliant charge, scattering Luna's forces and indicting great punishment. Several officers anil enlisted men were seriously wounded.
WAR NEWS IN BRIEF.
Gen. Otis finds it impossible to maintain telegraphic communication with Gen. Lawton. Small bands of the enemy cut the wire's as fast as the signal corps can erect them. Gen. .too Wheeler will not go to the Philippines. That has been definitely ile-i-ide'd. He will probably be place-d iu command of t he-department of Texas, which is to be revived. A Spanish prisouer brought iuto the American line's state's that Gen. Hale's brigade iulli. ted terrible losses on the Filipinos during the light -at Quingiia. He says that more' thau 200 Filipinos were killed iu the fight. The three brigadier generals who will go to the Philippines are Gen. Frenl Grant, who is now on his way from Porto Rico: Gen. Bali's, recently military governor of Santa l.'lara province, Cuba, aud Gen. S. M. B. Young. Official dispatches from Manila say that the Spanish garrison at Baler continues to boll out against the insurgents. Gen. Otis deelined lo accept the proposal of Gen. Rios to s.-nd Spanish troops to the relief of the beleagucre'd garrison. He dw'.Jed to send an American fore-e: to rescue the Spaniards. At i'lililnn, a few miles east of Calunipit, Wheeler's troop of the Fourth cavalry, while reccdiuuitcring, ene'omitered a small body of insurgents, who failed to reinru the fire of our seildiers. Instead they raised a white- Hag, mid in the parley which followed explained that they had strie-t orders to stop lighting perilling the negotiations for an armistice. The Americans gave them half an hour to get away.
f?etes of Current Evcut. A burglar iu Detroit stole the piauo and a stove from the house he robjed. Senator-elect Queries of Wisconsin is one of the truest sportsmen iu the Northwest. Tin- Saivath ii Army has provided a woe-d yard and a free- labor bureau for needy applie-auls iu the Klondike. Samuel 11. Thompson of the Missouri Pacific is the oldest railroad traveling passenger agct t in tbe country. He is 02 years old and has been with the Missouri Pacific for thirty-six years, during which time he hns traveled 1,440,000 miles. The United States transport Nero, a strong ship, bus been entirely refitted at the Mare Island navy yard, San Francisco, for work in t be exploration and survey of a route for a Government submarine cable from Honolulu to Manila. The route between San I'Yaucisco and Honolulu having been thoroughly surveyed, the Nero will be Honolulu and make soundings f r" V the Island of Guam, and t ou. .. .-
Abrnm Robeson, uear Grantsburg,
while- huuting for a stray horse, which had been missing for two days, noticed a 'large black sunke. which retreated toward a cave formed by au overhanging ledge of rocks in one ,r the high bluffs surrounding
his pasture lands. His horse was found lying in this cavern, but covered by what looked to him like u mountain of snakes,
so numerous were tne reptile's. Kooeson
lied to bis home and secured his shotgun, with which he returned und opened tire until his car riiiges were exhausted. After the battle: he counted the bodies of 41H snakes lying cround and over the body of his horse, which was dead.
Indiana F oldler Return. Tbe lOOtb .'udiauu volunteer infantry.
after just one year of service, has returned to Indiana, having been mustered out
at Savanna :i. Tbe regiment was one of
the first ord 'red to Cuba after the evacua
tion. It was stationed at Matanzus. The
we'lve companie-s scattered to their re-
iee:tive tovns at ouce. Every town that
fi.rnishi-s an organization extended a pub
lic rece-ptioi:,. Th colonel of the regiment.
George W. Guilder, lives nt Marion, and most of the staff officers are from that city.
Kx-Prlsoner Tarns Oat Well. Henry Berner, twenty years a prisoner
at Jefi'-rsimville, and for the- last year a guard, has lut-cp cd a position at Dayton.
Beruer was au expert machinist, having had charge of the machinery at the institution, and a genius. He once made a clock frame inlaid with 2,500 different pieces of wood, which he sold for $100. He was sentenced to life for killing a man at Vincennes, an l daring the twenty years b was confined his wife sought continuously for a pardon.
Within Our Borders. Good prospects for fruit around Delphi. Terre Haute has decided to have a street fair. Gale Richards, 2, Kokomo, drowned in a well. Fresh outbreak f smallpox at New Albany. Highwaymen robbed a farmer of $28 near Marion. James Halpin of Evansville committed suicide. Out of work. Hartford City pnstofflce turns in $10,000 a year from 9,000 people. Two ten-inch ijas pipe mains will be laid from Greentowii to Chicago. Glass works at Swayxec is the only nonunion factory it the gas belt. A buzzard wts killed near Shoals that had a sheep's bell tied to its neck. John Doenges. Connersville, fell from a ten-foot ladder aud broke his skull. E. H. Peters, Snmmitville, lost an arm in a premature explosion of dynamite. Westerman-S rewart rolling mills at Marion will raise employes' wages 10 per cent. The old projc :i of a railroad from Fort Wayne to Indianapolis, by way of Marion, has been revived. Kokomo factory received an order for several motorcycles, to be used in carrying mail in Porto Rico. At Valparaiso, John Lcnick, aged It years, was instantly killed by a telegraph pole which fell an him. Frank Woodiiiausee, Seymour, bankrupt. Liabilities $0,477, assets $8.50 ia cash and a $10 watch. Fire did several thousand dollars damage to the Indiana Brewing Company's' $300,000 plant at Marion. Victor Mann, 22, Elkhart, who was a member of the 157th Indiana, is dead from an overdose of morphine. Deputy internal revenue collectors seised 12,000 cigars ot Terre Haute and 4,000 at New Albany. Had counterfeit stamps. Henry Weber, aged 20, and one of the best known young druggists iu Evansv.de, committed suicide by taking prussic acid. Program is announced for tbe tenth annual convention of the Indiana union ot literary clubs at Terre Haute, May 17 to 10. A 2-year-old child at Logansport was found slee'piug lie-bind a door, after bait the town had been called out to assist in the search. Charles E. Williams, of the firm ot Wood. Williams & Co., furniture dealers, was found dead with a brokeu neck at Terre Haute. Paris green was discovered in the flour being used by M rs. K. D. Ferrau, wife of a Shelbyville grain merchant, who had been out of town. Little son of S. D. Oldendorf, Lebanon, while playing with fire, threw a can of blazing oil on James Smith's son, and he was fatally burned. .lames Hatpy, aged 35 years and single, committed suicide at Evansville by taking morphine. He was despondent because he lost bis position a month before. The Allen County grand jury returned five indieti-ieuts against J. F. Schell, alleging embezzlemieut and larceny. Schell was until ree-enlly president of the Schell Loan aud Investment Company. Cora G. Comer of Chicago has filed suit iu the Federal court nt Indianapolis against Michael A. Jordan of Logansport, de'iuanding $110,000 for breach of promise. Miss Coiner is 20 yeors of age. Jordan hi worth $100,000 and is a physician. Gov. Mount has appointed as new members of the State Board or Education Joseph J. Mills, preside-nt or Earlham College; William T. Scott, president of Franklin College, and Euoch G. Machan, county superiutendent of LaGrange Couuty. Dr. J. H. Forest secured a judgment in the' Superior Court of Madison County against the Sterling Oil Company of Chicago for $5,000 and $800 interest. As the le-nst's for which the debt was incurred did not yield as rich returns as. was expected, the company refused to pay the note. At Evansville. Mrs. Mary F. Karsch sueel for an injunction to restrain her husband, Heury Karsch. from killing her. She brought suit in the Cire-uit Court for divorce and asked for an injunction to prevent her husband carrying out his threats to murder her if she sought a separation. The injunction was granted. Fuurte'en-year-okl Freddie Limp, who a few we'e-ks ago in a fit of anger killed his playmate' ami school e'ompailion, Lee Patterson, by cutting his throat with a knife, at Washington, was eleclared guilty ot manslaughter by a jury and sentenced to the Plainficld prison to remain until he bee'omi's of age. The late'st and decidedly the most novel cure for diphtheria has just been discovered iu Anderson aud successfully tested, it consists in using chickens as poultices. Children who have been unconscious have bevn brought out or danger by aa tew as four ef these poultices. The testa v have he-en so sucevssful that the chicken cnr is now .accepted by all. Twins bom to a gypsy woman at Elkhart will be named after Pe'ter Turner, Mayor, ami John Williams, Street Conimissioncr. A disastrous wreck occurred on the Bal- .
tlmure and Ohio Railroad near NamiHiee.
in which one man lost his life and others ''
recmveel injuries that may prove fatal. A west-bound pnssenger train ran into the
rear end of a freight train that was taldua"
the siding. Several or the freight cart? wev ' piled in a heap aud the engine of thai
pas'cuger tram was greatly dam,
The engineer remained at his post a:
eclved Injuries that will probably ratal. Tbe fire'mau. Miller Ray,
aonie is in usrrcltwas killed
.4
1 a
3.
.m
aaaed.'t?
