Crawfordsville Daily Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 4 May 1892 — Page 1
Eat
126 West Main treet.
NOTA BKNTC:—Those
will
Mllff
onEETiivr..
91tohigone.KIcig..
Qimjaasr aa& (frrrrrt tfrrars cfSrrntUan.
'y Jirpt
Mr. Kline can always bo round ami will bcglau to see all who liave errors of vision at the Old'lioliable Jewelry Store or
MAT KLINE, 105 E. Main St Opp. Court House
"'^7'h/L. O. Barber Sliop! Weather Report. Ladies
Visiting Our Place,
either with theirchildrcn, or otherwise, I should conic duriu.k' the week, and not on Saturday, if possible, us we are very busy all day
Saturday and you will bo detained oiccrthan you like.
All kinds of ladies' and children's Imn dressing a specially.
Taggart Butter Crackers
The Best in the World.
For Sale by All the Leading Grocers.
The New American Steam Laundry,
At the foot of Washington Street, Guarantees
Work called for and delivered fret' of charge to all parts of the city,
CLEAN TOWELS AT BOTH OFFICES—124.East Market and 113 South Green.
Jjiicu Curtains 11 Specialty.
The Crawfotdsville 1 ransfer Line,
WAMtUl* &
INNIJKY,
mmm
tmmt
fcJTV*
AU
Work.
Proprietors.
Passengers and Baggage transferred to Hotels, depots or any part of the city. OMNIBUSES, CABS AND HACKS. Leave orilcis at I lie stables on Market street, or at the branch otlice at C. A. Snodgrass' store on Washington street. Telephone No. 47.
We All Eat to Live
AND LIVE TO BAT
Therefore when wanting first class groceries, oflee, Sugars, Tea, Apples, Tickles Jersey Swee« Potatoes, New Sorghum Molasses, Fresh Bulk Oysters, celery, cranberries, etc. call at
CashFry's,
Thompson &. Cates Have Moved.
Their stock of new and second-hand goods is now at
116 NORTH GREEN STREET-Dircotly opposite City Building.
Dom Pedro
OLD BRTAKT A
about to buy new furniture will actually save cash by coming to see us.
Sndianapolis Business UniversitV
BTBATTOH.
Ne\\,'t.Haiid-5Jad« n-Onl r. J. T. LAV MON KxcluMve Agent.
NORTH PMHBYI^ABIJL ST.. WBJ!K BWOK .OP POBITJ POST-OrrlCK.
'JT! UuiuBhort expeosoa low no foe for Diploma n»trlc0yBiulpcM8clioolluanunrivali^c"U 'icrclnl confer endorsed and patronised by railroad, indiutrial, professional and burincsi mc..
Tigr*osss™, cs*
VOL. VI—NO. M. ORAWFORDSVILLE, INDIANA, WEDNESDAY, MAY 1, 1892.
/SWEPT BY THE WIND.I
Portions of Kansas Visitod by Furious Cyclones.
A Nine OF LIVES HAVE BEEN LOST.
A (iri'ul Slimy Persons Injured
ru*lted und
FIKIK'K
rl
IIOUM-
IU OWII
Awny l.lve
Mock anil Crop* Deal roved.
OAI.KS IN KA\.\«'
OI'I.KA,
Kan.. Mav
I
-Tin- most ter
rible and destructive slurin that ever occurred in this section devastated the l.ynn creelc valley, southeast of Tnpelta Monday night. About r. o'clock a cyclone swept up tin: Lynn vii]N-_v. 1 roving i-vor.vtiling that came in its I'atli. territory S miles Ion},' ami varying in wiiltli from half a mile tu a mile sutlered a total destruction of everything.
Threo Are Dead.
Three persons were killed outright and over 100 were more or less injured. Three or four cannot live. Many others may die. Houses were blown down and in many instances were torn to pieces anil scattered over areas of half a mile in diameter. Trees were torn up by the roots and stone walls leveled to h*i earth.
he dead as reported are: The Victims.
Stephen I'laxton, of Topeka: unknown woman, recently moved into the neighborhood, crushed: Mrs. Sarah llurd. crushed by falling walls.
The seriously wounded art': .lames Mitchell, back thought to be broken, will die: Joseph licit, two ribs broken, may die: Kddie Heil, concussion of the liraiu, will die Silas Xieglin. seriously hurt.
The Storm's Approach.
The Lynn creek valley is the* richest portion of Shawnee county, 1U or II miles suuthcast of Topeka and near the Osage county line. About ii o'clock a heavy bank of clouds appeared in the •southwest, and almost at the same time another cloud formed in the northeast. The. storm advanced from both directions very rapidly, Between them was the main .storm, funnelshaped and one-half a mile in diameter, rolling und tossing. anil seeming sometimes to overturn, to work up and down and sidewise. and sometimes to scatter over a wider turrit ry. changing in color every minute and borne in a northeasterly direction at a terrible speed.
Its Work.
Iu a twinkling homes and barns were torn to pieces ami scattered in every direction. Joseph lleil's farmhouse was crushed like an eggshell and Mr. Heil was terribly injured in the back and ftbout the bead. It is not believed that be. can live. His little daughter had her arm broken, his boy was crushed in the falling timbers and all the other members of the family wen more or less bruised. Silas Zieglur was seriously injured. Ilis house was blown down tmd the family caught in the debris. They were covered with pieces of lumber and all injured., .lames Mitchell, a prominent farmer, was badly injured: it is thought his back is broken. His wife was unhurt, but all his five children were more or less injured. It is tliongl/l that Mitchell will die. lllown 700 KOPI. •Stephen I'laxton, a Topeka citizen, was instantly killed, I'laxton was visiting his son on the farm. The family were all in the house when'the storm struck it. The building- was broken to fnrgments. No one knows just how it happened, but the old man's dead body was found in the pasture 700 feet from the house ail/1 stripped of all clothing. The terrific force of the storm had carried him bodily through the air. wrenched and tossed his body, and the hailstones had covered it with bruises.
Mrs. Sarah Html was caught, under a faiiing stone bouse and fearfully bruised. She died Tuesday. The rest of the family were, all injured, but none dangerously.
Two barns on the Philip Ludd stock farm in Elmereeli valley were destroyed and the roof was taken from his house. Tin I.inn Methodist church is wrecked.
The house of Thomas lirooks was entirely destroyed, not a vestige of it being left except the foundation. TwcntyKvc farm bouses and barns were destroyed and nearly a score of families were left homeless. Aiil has been sent out from this city.
Ill Oklahoma.
KINOI-ISHEII, O. T., May 4.—A cyclone, with its accompanying death and devastation, passed over the northeast of King-fisher Monday .t. Charles Bidwell, of York, Nel., .vi killed, being crushed in the ruins of his father's house. F. A. Bidwell. the father, is seriously injured and may die, although there are hopes of his recovery.
Hidwcll had just completed house and was ooeup3'iug it with his sou' Charles. The family hud been telegraphed for anil were to leave York, Neb., their old home, Tuesday. The storm struck their house, lifted it and carried it they know not where. Hidwcll was found :i00 yards from the house with three ribs broken, insensible. The boy was carried about 100 yards farther. When found the bones of both arms and his left leg were protruding from the flesh and his brains bespattered his clothing, while his face was covered with mud.
SrHttortu! I»y tho Winds.
No less thun ten farmhouses were struck by the galo and in every ease destroyed and scattered in every direction. The sloughs filled from the heavy rain preceding were absolutely 'emptied of water ami mud by the cy-
I'lone.aud the accumulation precipitated on the higher points in its patli.coverinir everything to a depth of from 2 to 0 inches with mud and debris. (Ireat holes were scooped out of the side of hills as the immense loads of debris could be hurled against lli^m. In two noticeable instances the storm cloud raised anil whirled a half mile before again ap
THE DAILY JOURNAL.
proaching the earth. A windmill on a farm 8 miles north of town was lifted from its foundation and curried a ijuarter of a mile. The wheel was found 1 miles away lodged in tlu» limbs of a big Cottonwood tree.
Hlowu Into
II
Trri'top,
KANSAS CITY, MO.,
May •!.—Near
Auburn. Kan.. Monday night a storm carried away the house of James Drake and took his 14-vear-old daughter and longed her in a trcetop unhurt. Dralre and his wife were both injured. II. II. Buckley's house was completely destroyed and the Pleasant Valley schoolhouse was torn to pieces.
Olio Killed N«'ur rmpntlu.
KMCOHIA, Kan., May 4. —A torriiio windstorm passed over the southern portion of this county about sunset. Monday evening, the particulars of which arc just eominy in. Much cluin-
NJRC NVIIS
done to property, but so fur as
can bo learned the only death was that of Mrs. William O'Donnell, who was blown against a barb wire fence and so badly injured that she died a few hours afterward.
MOMNK, Kan., May 4.—The home of A. 1). Lakin near here was ruined by a cyclone Tuesday morning nnfl Lakin killed. His body was carried II miles and crushed flat on the ground. Mrs. Lakin may die. One of her children is lost. Lakin was a ranchman. The storm did little other damage, hcin^ confined to a narrow strip.
SteamtioHt Sunk at Mttle LITTLE KOCK. Ark., May
4.—A
severe
windstorm prevailed west of here MonJay night. The steamer Robert Lawson encountered a small-sized cyclone miles up the river from this piace and was swamped In Vi feet of water. All the crew escaped iu safety. The boat carried a cargo of 3,00U bushels of corn and 100 bales of cotton, nil of which was lost. The steamer was valued at £,000.
CHINESE EXCLUSION BILL. The Confercmh'c Itcport to hv th« Semite After Soinu Uleiissslon. \N ASIIINCI i1o.\, May -J.—The conference report on the Chinese exclusion bill wits laid before the senate Tuesday As soon as it was read Senator Sherman (O.) stated that although a member of the conference committee he had not been able to sign the report, lie was very willing to provide any necessary legislation for the restriction of Chinese labor. and thought that the senate bill had done so very broadly. It had proposed to continue in force the existing laws, with penalties for their violation by Chinamen coining into the United States, especially through Canada. He looked upon the introduction of Chinese laborers through Canada as an insult to the I,'lilted States. They wero allowed to enter Canada on payment of a charge of S.10 a head, and with the privilege of, entering the United States in violation of law. That was not courteous treatment 011 the part of Canada. It was just incidents lik that wh.cli tended to create excitement, and irritation aloiiu- the border, ami which would so 1 in* day be the cnuse. of great dirti eiiltv. Those who believe thill the I nitcd Slate* had a right to trample on the treaty and to disregard it. might vote for the conference repen without compunction but, for his pari, lie did not feel at liberty to do so.
Senator Frye (Me.) spoke oi a visit which he had made to Rock Springs. Wyo where he had seen about 101) Chinamen—quiet, well-behaved, cleanly people. There were also there two companies of infantry, and when lie iniuired of their commanding otllcer why the troops wero there lie .vas told that their presence was necessary to protect the lives of those fjuiet. unoffending hinamen from horde of unnaturalized I oles and Hungarians who worked in I lie mines.
Senator Punier (Mich.) said that there tvere two reasons why he could not vote for the eonfeucrence report, (ine was that a Chinaman sen-king to come into the L'nit».l States was not to be. admitted to bail. That was an unnecessarily harsh provision—one not consistent with the fundamental principles of justice that existed in China and America and everywhere where Cod reigned. The other reason was the provision for the arrest of Chinamen not provided with certificates. lie sympathized with the gentlemen from the i'aciiie coast and would do anything to help them except what he believed to be essentially wrong and unjust.
The vote rt-us then taken and the conference report was agreed to—yeas. il: nays, 15.
Druth of William llemlersun. IXIIANAI'OLIS, Ind., May I.—William Henderson died suddenly at his ljonie of heart disease. He recently became known by reason of his charges of corruption against the Mexican governnient with relation to the chihn of Gen. Horman Stnrpi for $.'100,000 for supplies furnished the Mexican government. He was a wellknown lawyer lind insurance man. very wealthy, and was once the law partner of the late Vice President Hendricks, tlen. Sturm now bus a suit for $100,0011 damages pending against Henderson.
National league games on Tuesday resulted as follows: At Chicago—llos ton. i) Cliieugo, 0. At Pittsburgh (two games)—Pittsburgh, -I: Brooklyn, Brooklyn. S Pittsburgh, 0. .At Louisville—Louisville. 4: Baltimore, 0-.
Illinois-Indiana league: At lOvansilie- Juliet, It!: livansville, '2. At Tcrre Haute—Terre Haute, 2 Uoek IslandMoline, 0.
Victim of the Philadelphia Fire. Piili.ADKI.i'iliA, May 4. Everett M. Holmes, aged 24 years, of Camden, one if the victims of the Central theater fire, died Tuesday at the Pennsylvania hospital. The death of Holmes briugs the number of lives lost by the jonllagration up to eight. ilarou l'uva ltcturuliiK.
I'OSIF. May 4.—Baron l-'ava, the Italian minister to the United .Slates, has started on his way to Washington. He will be a passenger on the steamer Noruiumiia, which leaves Southampton on May 7.
Th© Illinois River and Tributaries Out of Their Banks.
CllKAT DA MACK AIM ITS TORSI'.
Itiiill Inr the
I'i*d|c»tioti
of l\»wtw
.Ire ('riiiiihiliiK Ills* I u-t in l»an}*EI'. 4)1 IICH ,IL 11:1 ME PROPERTY ?Mvept
A
way.
.Mi:v.\r: *tv KI.OOJIS.
MAHSKM.LKS, 111.. May 4. Kmni appearance* :i miracle only ran sav«»
1
Marseilles from threatened inundation. The almost, unceasing rainsU-i tn.it have rnired up and down the Illinois Fox and Kankakee valleys MIICC Sunday ni^ht have precipitated upo.i this largo area Ihousamls upon thousands of tons of water in excess of any heretofore encountered Hood, The rivers have been rapidly rising since Monday and the Illinois from far above Marseilles t.o the navigable waters below La Salle is nearly a mile wide and dee]) enough in the channel to Hoat the largest lake vessels. The waters liave already risen some Js feet above l»»w water mark, und in this city the situa titm Is desperate.
The Levee .May I'.iTiih.
A Long levee on the north side of the river and also al)ovc the dam has for \ears kept back the waters ol the spring Hoods. Tuesday the new llti.xl gates of the water power system went out, and water began tlowin^ over the levee. Nearly .Mn men, employed iu tin* factories"'' below, which would receive the heaviest part of the OIMI were the levee to break were put to work' oil the embankment with shovels and teams and succeeded iti lighting lm«-u the waters by driving piles-and phicin 'I feet of earth upon the top. Though the men are still at work the waters are slowly gaining upon them and are already creeping over the eastern end of the levee, which may Iwvak at any ni »menl. Snould the levee break some liftv families, who liave already moved to the high land*, beyond the canal, would be ivudeivd destitute, and all the district belweee the canal and ».he river would be buried under lf» feet if water.
-'i:
What II Wonhl Memi.
The breaking of the levee may mean the sHeeeping away of nearly every manufacturing institution in tin
4
city,
including the Illinois Valley paper mill, the largest'in the world the Marseille? Manufacturing Company's works, the John F. lark mills, the Unwell Houring mills and many new* industries ir which millions are invested. lH|'tll»e t.lH'MlltTC.
Kesides the damage done here, mile* upon miles of valuable crops put in up.m the Illinois bottoms fo: 'JU mile, on cither side of Ottawa are undet water, involving a lo.-s of .^rio.'.nn t, farmers. The Kickapoo and oth»*: bmtge* have gone out and Allen i'nrk Ottawa and all of the lower, islands are Hooded.
Town* Submerged.
1!IIAI-I VII.I.K.
IU.. May
-I
—Tin* rain
has been falling in torrents every hoiu since Sunday evening, one thunderstorm following another. The rtei courses arc all full, and the tlood has spread over the larger portion of the town. Tuesday morning the entire north end of the village was one lake, full of lloatin,\: culverts .-itsi siflewnll»s, which were being used by the inhabitants in many eases to get from thrir houses to drv grounds. The miners did not go into the shafts owing the great amount of surface water which covered the liiine. The report* from Cardner, liraidwood and Coal City are all to the effect that the towns artfull of water, afut iu many cases the llood has entered lite dwelling houses.
Sivreps All lleforu It,
Mop.ins. Ill,, May 4.— Buildings, farms and factories along the Illinois river bailies have been abandoned. The river has been rapidHy rising and has now reached a height that it has but once Irefore attained. Driftwood, fences, farming utensils and debris of all Ifinils are rushing out with the tloATl. Thousands of acres of farming lands are swept lxirc of all impi-ovemcuts. Houses along the river banks arc Hooded und their oo.iyimjiits are moving out. The river has iyc|mnded toastrenjp as bj-oud as the Mississippi, and It is already l'.i feet above lpw watermark. The floods from the I)csplaiues and Kankakee rivers are helping swell the Hood.
A C'lomtlnirMt.
LINCOI.N, 111
May
-I. ,\Inu'ay
even
ing a cloud burst in the nort.hw-cst. part of this county near Iim^on. Prairie creek swept away 200 feet of track of the Peoria, Decatur ICvansville. railway und a bridge, compelling- the company to tr.-flisfer mail, passengers and express. The water rose so high that Andrew 'lei.sM ami family barely escaped with their lives. The fields arc eas of water, and. farmers being a fortnight behind in their work, the prospects for half a corn crop in this county arc poor. !roivue! In
II L-'loodiMl
Creek. ..
Joi.lK'r, HI.. May 4.—Archie Kobson, aged Mt years, was drowned near Wilmington Tuosdliy morning. He, with his son and daugliter. attempted to cross Forked creek in a baggy, when the vehicle was upset by the llood und the father drowned. The eljildren managed to save themselves. Mr. Robson was a mei'iber of the stone contracting firm of liobson A Haley.
Ill lllillUIIH.
COMIIKN,
Ind., May .4.—The rising
waters resulting from the late rninsarc doing incalculable damage. The Klkhart river is higher than it has been since 1851. The electric light and gas plants are both under water and many families along the bottoms were compelled to move out at midnight. The lower floors of all the factoriesand mills uhuigthe hydraulic arc submerged, and a large force of men lius been at work on the (ioshen dam. The Goshen and Michigau branch of the Lake Shore, railroad is washed out east oi the city und trains cannot (,'et iu.
WORSE Tim JACK.
Tho Whitochnpol Fioncl OuUlouo in Chicago.
HORRIBLE BL'TCHEllY OF A WOMAN.
Ilridijet Wulsli Murdered by Her Nephew —Fiendish Mutilation of Her ItomitltH- ller slayer Caught and CnnteriMen.
A WOMAN SI.ArOHTKUKO.
f'mcwrio. May 4. -Mrs. Itridget Walsh, wife of Michael Walsh, a teamster in Uie employ of J. V. Farwell A Co.. was butchered iu a most cruel and horrible manner at her home Tuesday afternoon. The crime is the most atrocious in the criminal history ol Chicago. The methods of the murderer were those of ".lack the Kipper." ami were more licndish in detail than those employed by tin? Whitechapel butcher.
A lliiMhandV Awful Discovery. When Walsh came home to supper at o'clock Tuesday evening he found the body of his wife on the Hour destitute of clothing, excepting a pair of shoes. pair of scissors was sticking up to the hilt through her right breast, and by actual count then* were sixtv live jugged stabs iu her body. One great, gash across the abdomen allowed the intestines to protrude.
I*iendlnli .Mutilation,
A brootu that had been carried from the kitchen into the bedroom had been broken and the handle was thrust through the entire length of the woman's trunk from the abdomen to the throat. 1'ieces of vital organs had been torn off and carried along by the blunt end of the wood and the mouth was tilled with a mass of blood and ilesh. The broom handle had been thrust with terrible force, for the woman's body was fearfully torn and portions of it were left on the lioor.
A Terrible sirujfjfte.
The room gave evidence of a terrible struggle. The walls to a height of 0 feet wen* spattered with blood and in several places the hand of the murdered was outlined against ttic whitewashed walls with the same crimson thud. On the iloor at the feet ol the dead woman lay the beefsteak which she was about to put in the frying pan when her nephew made his brutal assault,. 'rile rieml Captured.
The police were at once notiiied and soon made the discovery that Thomas Walsh, nephew of tbe dead woman, had been at the house nearly all the afternoon. Walsh was promptly arrested, and when confronted with the evidence of his guilt confessed the crime, giving complete details of the horrible deed.
ItU CnnlV'H«li)ii.
lie had made insulting proposals to his aunt, been repulsed, attempted an assault and seizing a pair of scissors with which the unfortunate woman had attempted to protect herself lie stabbed her until she lost consciousness. After completing his hideous work he left the house «juietly and attended to some business without displaying the least agitation, and was returning to his home when arrested.
IN THE HOUSE.
I lie IMptomatie and Consular Appropriation Hill Amended and Pa^-ed.
W ASHINGTON,
Curried by KrpuItlirans,
ST. I'ATT.,
Minn., May
4.—The
PRICE 2 CENTS
Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U. S. Gov't Report.
Powder
ABSOUUTEUr PURE
Spain proposes to try ovnannt^r--itln.ul a jury. Hveining. the convicted murderer, is rit iug h's antohiograph\\ Precautions against anarchists on--tinne to be taken in Kurope.
Methodists, in |undreuni'il conference Jit hnaha. liave perfected their arrangetncnts for work.
Coijuettc. orrigan's entry, broke the •2-year-old record on the Lexington track Tuesday, going 4^ furlong- in a"."i seconds. hristian Nelson, of Pciimark, la., became anger- at his w^ie on some slight- pretense and almost beat her to dealh with a club.
President Cable, of the lioek Maud'.'.' railroad, is to resign his ojliee. and Hi be succeeded by Prcsi-or-nt Trucsdale, of the Minneapolis it St. Paul.
Menrv M. Waterman. Milton, Wis., secured judgment, for £•:.*•.oon Tuesdnv against, the Chicago Ar. Alton radwav tor injuries received in a wiv.-u'. (ten. (leorgc F. I hit avdgi. general-' manager ot tin* Plnrnix i"'»rc Insurance'-'-* Company of Hartford, committed sui cide Tuesday at Wilmington. I'el.
I hiring a performance at Jacobs' Third Avenue theater. New York, a man in the front row of tin' gallery lost his balance and fell into t.iic «.rche.str.*i. lie was fatally hurt. .-
In the third race on the St. Louis track "I uesday the favorite. Mike Wat-... SOJU fell and broke his back', his jockey. \. Ilritton. receiving such a shaking uphe will be unable to ride tor sonic tiiive.
Didn't I.ISie tlic 'lea hn.
Pim. iu rent A, Mav I ivo hundreti school children connected witb-the Vaughn grammar school iu Kensington went on a strike Monday morning because a new principal has been placed in charge of the school. They jo,-iced the gates of the school by wrapping, heavy wire about the iron po«,t, and itwas found necessary to eall hiiheaid of eight policemen, who finally drovethe recalcitrant hoys away and opened
Joi,n:i. 111.. May Patrick «'Sul!ivan,
heaviest
May 4. -Tlit- house
took up the diplomatic and consular appropriation bill. The consideration of the consular portiyi of the bill having been completed without any material change having been ma le the committee reverted to Cue amendment offered a few days agn bv Mr." Chapman (Mich.) and temporarily passed over providing that no part of the emergency fund shall be paid to any foreign government in settlement of any claim agulust the L'uited States. The amendmcut was adopted. Mr. i.lount C»a.) in charge of the bill, moved to strike out the appropriation of £tsr,000 to continue tlw preliminary survey for an intercontinental railway. After some debate the motion wus agreed to —Mil to 71—Mr. Hlountthtift triumphing over the otherwi&o united vote of his committee. The committee rose and reported the bill as ameuded to the house. Mr. Hooker (Miss.) demanded a separate vote on the amendment striking out the $0.*i,000k appropriation for tho international railway commission. It-was agreed to—yeas, 145 aays, S4. The bill was then paused. On motion of Mr. Outhwnite (O.) the senate amendments to the army appropriation bill were non-concurred in and ft tooferenoe ordered.
city
elections took place Tuesday. The indications at this hour are thuttho whole republican ticket is elected. Mr. Smith confessed himself beaten by Col. Wright, the republican and citizens' candidate. The republicans have probably eight of the nine assemblymen, and certainly five and probably seven of the eleven alderuysn. The majority for Wright (rep.) for mayor, is estimated at 1,500. Mayor Smith Idem.) was elected two years ago by 1.10(1 plurality. ('IOHIM! the Fuetory.
Nl-:\v YOKK, May 4. Baroness Blanc has obtained a judgment for ?mi,000 against the I.itofuge Manufacturing Company, which produces a compound for the preservation of boilers. Baron Blanc is president of the company and the matlcr grows out of the ((uurrel between husband und wife. The sheriff has seized the manufactory and closed it Up.
-j
1
tin* school. V:. I ell al Ii«-t* leel a I nipos i.AN!').-. 111., May I.- l!ei :-n I.ula Paddocks, daughter of Henry Paddoe'.rs. a prominent fainter, iciuse lo. marry Theodore linker, son of Wii! .am
I!. Paker. of Willow ililL he en*
1
his/
throaWwilh a razor. .nUn-ting five hor-. rible gasiics. He rushed to her room' and fell at her feet a corpse.. She. is. prostrated with grief. f'Sitlll Ii
Al aiidnjirhtrcv.Mu.in, was nd tulit V-luidv he. can mav" railv as
1
-:e
alive lejt breat hllig ing for life. Attendants sea reel stirvive but he
he ha* done scvcral tunes sn»«:e Suhflay., lie has made no confession. An oi.icra^ tion was pei formed on Jiim Tuesday,-" since which he has been unconscious.x.
Hotel and station Hioned. i:w. Tenn.. May I. -Tiw hotel, de*: )Vit. bniiding. freight hoase. roundhouse, and water, tank i»f the Lou.'sville &'• Nashville railroad at this place were destroyed by lire Mo:nlaV. i'he i«»sc. "will amount lo m:»itv thou^.tiuis i»f tloh lars. A burned.
deal ot f.
I I.
MI
ept-
Cot.tJV.
*vn
'.in:. Mich., rain lai liat
this vieiilily was..cxjuVrii
•I. The UTC'J it'
1
need ~M ni!a\..
night. The Itraneh river uiiil -l. :ii -.v-.e. 4-arried out an,I t'.v-i bridges I auay: also one bi iHge ViriCii-i eiby 1 and l.'itillev. 'I lie It::.^ i:. Iv.Nul'. [teiwiii'il Ji hnsL »*. \V
MI!- N.
Pa.. Ma
SII:I
ay hi ht
at in ti*chick John .McNeill a a: e-!.'d for cruelly beating a no!e. W hse ««n the way to the lockup .MeNeiM.-:'b'r»dfe.-. awa from the oilier and phnigcdrHti.tK. the Atlegheny river ami was drowned •. bod has not vet been "eeovcrcU.
a* .\in.:i,
DAI.l.AS.
'lex.. May 4. ,L H.
who died in M. Louis, is said tohaie nunle a confession that he ami a nci/ru set lire to the wholesale whisi^v store burned on Commerce street iki* c:M' last fall and which cttrricd an insiiiance of nearly S100.0U0.
Nogro ICxndiiH lrun Ark'inHM^. GunnoN, Ark.. Mav l.--Fver smcc the burning of the negro «v at 'I cxarkana, the ne^rot'S have been leaving the state and the planters are beginning to fear that the exodus will leave them without hands to ou]tivatc tlic llcJda.
HUMPHREYS'
DK. Hi-uniHKYH'sriicincd nroBclrmin. rnri«fully prepuml preMrrliM-i'iiiff used for ni:ec. vfam in private timet ire withHUcettftH.Atid Tci! o\ thirty yeiirn used by tliy |H'opl«. fcvery tiin^le .S|h» chic 1M ii euro for tho dlPCASo IUIIIUMI.
TIhuo
speotHcs ci:ro wltuout drugKlUK- pur»r«
ltifC 'Jf mincing the syntcm, aiul arc iu fm*t jtml (licit tho sovereign leiiiedieMOl lie World.
ij.sTorritiycn'ALNOH. ovum. rith h. revei'M, coiiK«*tl'n, IntlaiiiinatJon .^."i W oriiiH. nnn hover. Worm oltr sjib 'J CryhiK Colh^or'leethhJKerIr.fiintrt 4 l)larrln»u, of thltdien or AiJiilt^.... 5 llyNeiitery« Griping, lllHous Cullc.. 0 (-uoloru orbutt* VondUiig ii.5 7 Couiflip, Cold, UronehUlA 'ZTi
SllrndacljeHtTtxdliaeiie.Faccm'tic
Neuralfrlu, ... .'2" .SiokHciidacho, VerttKo 10 IfyftpepNln, ttlliou* Stomneli 11 Su^p^ireHHra nr S*n Infill i'erlodM 1*2 WufttM, too Profuse Ivriodn 1*1 C'rouu* Coti^'h, Dittleult l-'realliliiK It Hall Itliiiim» Krysl|K»lax, Krniif 15 ItliouuiniiHin, KheumutK*r»dn
-ii
.'t.l Si*
ntldliB. Jlli*....
Ill Fever'and Ague,
CIIIIIH,MuUiria....
17 1*1 leu, Hllnd c»r Iilccdlnv
.^.1 .r,u .tu ..J
IleMf lillnd or Uicwdlnff I Catarrh, Influenza, Cold tn the Hem! Wtioottlnfr rninrh. Violent Courts
Whooplnir Couirti* Violent Couchh. .'•() *24 (J«*n*rnl llehllhy.riiysicalWeukiic^ .At) Kidney DUcrtHe 39 ^noiisllcbllitr JO itrlnary \Vcnkne#«, Wettlntr ..ill
WliienHenof tbelleiirt,rull'ltati«ii 1.00 Sold by DruggistH, or ««mt ixwtimld on rewlpt or urico.
DK.
iluuraneYH'
MAKUAI., M4I PIWL
rJculy lKund In cloth and gold, mailed free. HUMPHHEYS' MEDICINE CO., Cor. ftTiliiam and John Streets, New York.
S E IF I S
