Crawfordsville Daily Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 20 March 1893 — Page 1
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126 West Main Street.
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Mr.'_Kline can always bo found and will be glau tn see all who have errors of vision at the Old Reliable Jewelry Store of
Mat Kline, opposite Court ouse.MainS
IT. IMI. O. A. BarberShop! Weather Report.
-itulu uud warmer.-
BATHS. Tub and Shower, hot and Cold.
MCCALIP & ARMSTRONG
Kresli GoodSy
Cranberries, celery, New Figs,
Fresh cooking and Eating Apples,
Dates, Raisins. Prunes, Apricots,
East Main Street.
Everything will be sold at 30 per cent- of original cost. SIGN OF THE RED FLAG. Chicago Clothing and Hat Store.
FUNNY, ISN'T IT! How things spread? Heres a man writes us from Lincoln, Neb., and another from Santa Rosa, CaL, each wanting 'o sell THE rjEX_.A3SrXD CIGAR
Such is fame. We are waiting now to hear from Li!:onkalani or some other "feller" in the Sand
Crawfordsvrile Transfer Line,
WASJKUP & McU AKIIAND, Proprietors
Passengers and Baggage transferred to hotels, depots or
any part of the city,
OMNIBUSES, CABS AND HACKS.
Leave orders at the stabies on Market street, Telephone No. 4V
"Sr?^77?™rProfessor~of Mo'clTcino at University College, London,
Author of the Standard Handbook of Therapeutics,'
VAN
"From tlio careful analyses of ai«l ^!HMS lam soUsUoa mat
is ill no way injurious to health., am! jlint
$
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5
Nectarines.
CASH FRY, the Grocer.
Bankrupt Sale of Clothing.
Formerly owned by Jas. S.Molony,will commence on Saturday, March 18. at
i3SES
HOUTE^I CI COCOA
&!&i£mcnk fuSm Trade'rivals OM.orapouticsare qul.o misleadin^ aiy"{V LOUXFS'
COCO
"HE THAT WORKS EASILY, WORKS: SUCCESSFULLY." CLEAN HOUSE WITH
SAPOLIO
Advertisers,
JCS^You can't reach the readers of
LlVi''L-'ri'AT'nuotlilkinsln
A
THUS, RIFOR'NA^IT
.~m-m..
THE JOURNAL by advertising
in any other paper.
Ponder this Fact.
rrpcllcd, and the very
1
VOL. VII—NO. 155. CRAWFORDSVILLE,INDIANA, MONDAY MARCH 20. 1893.
BOSTON'S BIG LOSS.
The Famous Tremout Temple Is Destroyed by Firo.
A TOTAL LOSS OF ABOUT $500,000.
Tli© Parker Ifonse Damaged, the Guests Meing Driven Out— Several Church
Societies l.one Heavily—Ills. tory of the Structure.
nrcnrfcF.i) TO muss.
BOSTON, March 30. —Smoldering ruins mark the site of the historic Trcmont temple, and one wall stands as a memento to Ttoston** narrow escape from a coniingration that at one time bade fair to bo more serious than any iu the history of the city. Coupled with this was a close call for over 1,000 sleecping guests of the Parker house adjacent The property loss will reach 8500,000, only one-third insurance being carried.
Itoarlng Furnucr.
It, was 7:10 o'clock when the fire was discoverer] in the temple auditorium, breaking up through from the boiler room, and before the department arrived, a matter of less than four minutes, the entire interior was a roaring1 furnace. Never did a fire jrain such headway. The alarm was given from box 729, the private box of the Parker house.
Three alarms were sonndod in quick succession, but when the firemen arrived the entire upper part of the building was in flames and the Parker house on the north and W. S. Duller & Go 's bijr dry-goods establishment on the south side were in imminent, danger. It looked as though nothing could prevent the spread of the fire in both directions, and a greater danger was threatened in the rear, where ten acres are covered with ramshackle structures, tinder boxes, with the exception of Clark's trivern and the St. Nicholas and the Park hotel, ail filled with guests.
Fighting tlie Flume*.
Five streams from stnmlpipes from the Parker house, and engines poured water into the building, and after two hours the firemen had conquered and the flames were kept wilhin the walls of the temple, though some damage was done to the adjacent buildings. Twenty lines of hose were carried through tho hotel, and the flames successfully fought from getting a foothold in that direction, while a water tower deluged the building on the front and forty streams were poured on from the Butler block. The temple was five stories in height, but the vast auditorium gavo the flames plenty of fuel and draft. It was impossible to fight the firo from the front or rear to any advantage, owing to the wires in Trcmont street and the narrowness of Chapman place, the lane in the rear. By 10 o'clock the fire was practically subdued, and all that remained was a front wall of granite, which is badly cracked.
Soma of the Loior».
Tremout temple was of stone and brick and had a frontage of 74 feet on Treraont street, running back 150 feel toward Chapman place. Tt was owned by the Union Baptist Temple society and portions of it were leased. It cost S37S.000. The insurance was $95,000 on building. $9,000 on the great organ and 88.000 on the fixtures. The society's loss will be about 8300,000, including 820,000 value of tho Gilbert collection of rare music and paintings.
The damage to the Parker house, J. Reed Whipple, proprietor, will reach •15,000, mostly a water loss to carpets and decorations, fully covered by insurance.
William S. Butler & Co.'s loss will be heavy and it is impossible more than merely to approximate it at $50,000. The firm employs 300 clerks and carried a heavy stock, which is badly damaged by smoke and water.
The Watchman, the Independent, Women's League, Loyal Women of American Liberty, Woman's Voice. American Baptist Missionary union, the Kingdom, the Woman's Baptist Foreign Missionary society, the American Baptist Home Missionary society, the Baptist State Mission all had offices in the temple and lose their books and furnishings.
John Frederhen & Co., opticians Mrs. M. A. MacDonuld, glov6s Sumner, pharmacy Sam A. Beckard, gentlemen's furnishings, and Otto Lubin, trusses, suffer loss by smoke and water. The heaviest loss among these tenants of the Burnham building (a wing of the Parker house) ana the front of the Temple building was sustained by Mrs. MacDonuld, who carried a $30,000 stock of gloves.
Patrick Dunn, driver for tho district chief, had his right leg broken by a wall falling, and Andrew McLane, of Ladder No. 3, was seriously injured by being struck by a falling ax.
There was excellent judgmcntshown by the help of the hotel in allaying a panic, and in recognition of their work pronrietor Whipple gave $1,000 to be divided between his cooks, bell boys and porters, and H,000 to be divided between the firemen and policemen.
The fire is supposed to have originated from overheated steam pipes or from an electric wire in the organ loft.
Public services were conducted in the temple and the Maionaon or lower hall every Sabbath, and both halls were rented for lecture and dramatic uses. Many big political conventions and rallies have been held in the great hall. The temple will be rebuilt
Insurance Miiii Lose Heavily. The loss to insurance companies will be about S240,000. The lines are well distributed, and no one company will sustain a greater loss than §10,000. All the firms in the vicinity who suffer losses by smoke aud water are well covered by insurance indeed the only real losers by the fire are the Trcmont tetuple people, whose official title is the Union Temple Baptist church. The amount of insurance on the temple was but 65 per cent, of the assessed valuation. The organ, which cost $18,000, was insured for but $9,000, while the four small organs, the pianos,
THE DAILY JOURNAL.
the Gilbert library, a rare and valuable collection of music, and the paintings of former pastors and others, amounting in all to almost $10,000. were uninsured. The loss to the temple owners, over and above all insurance, will not be less than $70,000. Dr. Lubin, of the pharmacy, places his loss by water at $5,000, covered by insurance. Tho occupants of the first floor of Tremont temple lose heavily, but the insurance will cover iu each caso.
Rev. Dr. George C. Lorimer, formerly of the Immanuel Baptist church, Chicago, is the pastor of tins great congregation which*once more has been made homeless by fire.
The (turned ISuildlnff.
[Tremont temple, which vaa originally a theater, has bnen ono of tho ost conspicuous public buildings of Boston in the current generation. .Since 18f3 it has been celebrated all over the country as the largest Baptist church in New Knglund, if not in America, and the headquarters of thai denomination. The purpose of taking it for religious uses was stated in the original appeal for purchaso tnonoy to found a free church in Boston, whore "all person*, whether rich or poor, without distinction of color or condition, might worship." The night of March 81, 1832, the temple was burned, and John Hull, a cilizcn, was killed and George Estos, a ilreman of engine No. 7, Charlestown, had his back broken and died shortly afterward. Tho loss way H78,3(*j insurance, M5.244 A new building on tho old site was completed, however, in December. 1853, ut a cost of ?120,« 000. August 14, 18T9, the building was destroyed again by fire but was promptly rebuilt and reopened October 17, IBsO, at a cost of more than 1230,000. The auditorium was one of the largest in the country, being 1'22 r«et in length, feet in width and 66 feet in height The seating capacity was equal loan audience of 2,000 people. Beneath this great hall was the Meionaon, with a seating capacity of 1,000.]
PRICE OF A MAN'S VOTE.
Latest Quotations from KwriHRs Place the Mcrure at 810,000. TOPKKA, Kan., March 20. The bribery investigation now in progress here before a committee of the state senate, intended originally to cover charges of corruption made by the Capital in connection with gamblers, developed a huge sensation Saturday morning, and no one can now say where it will end. The testimony had 110 connection with the original charges, but was incidentally brought out. Representative AlcEleny (pop.), of Kansas City, Kan., swore that he and Mr. Burgard (pop.), representative from the same city, were both subject to corrupt offers made by Cyrus Leland, the noted Kansas republican, if they would vote as he suggested. He testified that Leland offered him 5 5,000 to vote for W. H. Rossington (dem.) for United States senator, and thai Burgard told him that Leland had offered liira S10.000 to vote for the republican candidate for state, printer, and that Iturgard had also told him about a proposition made to hiin (Burgard) by Leland to vote for state printer. The accused men emphatically deny the charge.
A FATAL BLAZE.
A Woman Servant Tries to Suve Her Manny and Loses Ilnr Lift. PHILADELPHIA, March 31. The house of .lames W. Wood, at 4200 Walnut street, was partially destroyed by fire Sunday morning, and Rose Gallagher, a servant, was burned to death. The adjoining property of Miss Elizabeth W. Morris, at No. 4201 Walnut street, was badly damaged. The loss by tho lire is about £20,000. ltose Gallagher and another servant had escaped, but the former, remembering that she had all her savings in her bureau drawer, reentered the house to secure her money. She never returned, and when the fire was extinguished the firemen found the charred body of the girl lying on the floor before the open drawer of the bureau.
AN EX-SENATOR GONE.
Death Ht St. Louis of Hon. David II. Armstroug. ST. LOUTS, March 20.-Ex-United States Senator Armstrong died here Saturday morning. [David Hartley Armstrong was born in Nova Scotia, October 21. 1S12. He received an academic education in the Maine Wesleyan university, and removed to St. Louis in 1837, where lie opened and taught the flrst public school in the state. He was comptroller in St. Louis from 1847 to J8M and member of the board of police commissioners from 1S73 to 1875 and again in 1S77. He was rhosRn United States .senator as a democrat in October. 1577. to fill tho vacancy caused by the death of Lewis V. Bogv and served until IS79.
Kobhed HI* Kmployers.
DENVER, Col., March 20.—J. E. B. Alordaunt, wanted in Chicago by Smith & Webster, a plumbing supply house, was on a telegram from the Chicago police locked up in this city Saturday night. Mordaunt was confidential bookkeeper for the plumbing firm and is charged by his employers with having taken $25,000.
Hull* a Million In Ardies.
AIII.WAUKEE, March 20.—Fire started in the second floor of the Straw-Ells-worth Manufacturing company building on Broadway, just south of Michigan street, on Saturday. In threequarters of an hour it was under control, but in that time a loss of SoOO.OOO was entailed.
A SuceeHrtfiil Cant.
CHICAGO, March 20.—Sixteen hundred pounds of sterling silver were melted in a crucible at Grand Crossing Saturday. At noon the molten mass Wits poured into a huge mold and Montana's silver statue of Justice, a reproduction of Ada Rehan's ample proportions, was an accomplished fact.
Killed Their ISrother-ln-Laiv. JACKSON-, Miss., March 20.—T. F. Decell, in an effort to sec his wife, who had left him because of bad treatment to live with her brothers near here, was shot and killed Friday by James and Robert Rutherford, who say he endeavored to force his way into their sister's presence with a revolver.
l'rnlrle Ires Sweeping Oklahoma. GUTHKIE, 0. T., Mareli 20.—Prairie fires have been raging extensively in different parts of the territory during the last two days. In Cloveland county several horses and a number of barns, besides many tons of hay, were destroyed and a little girl so badly burned that she will die of her injuries.
LYNCHERS AT WORK.
They Wreck Their Vengoanoe on a Tennessee Desperado.
IESSE JONES IS HANGED BY A
HP Wa. One of a Mob Who Attacked a bhvrllT and III* ru.se on ti Train, Killing: the Officer and Wouud-
Inj* Other, of 111. Tarty..
TRAGEDY DOWN SOUTH.
KNOXVILI.E, Tenn., March 20.—A terrible tragedy occurred on the Knoxville & Ohio passengor train Saturday morning before daylight at Hells Point, a peculiarly signficaut name, VA miles east from Newcomb, in which Sheriff John Burnett, of Campbell county, was killud, Deputy Sheriff John Dalo probably fatally shot, Crusoe Smith mortally wounded and Jesse Jones sustained several serious injuries. The tragedy occurred while Sheriff Burnett was attempting to execute the law and aid the conductor in protecting tho passengers from a gang of desperadoes.
Jones was captured and placed in jail at Jacksboro. The others, including Crusoe Smith, escaped. Jones was a leader in the mining troubles last spring, and was a refugee from Scott county.
Lynched.
A dispatch from Jellico says that adgc Lynch held a meeting Saturday night at midnight at Jacksboro, aud at daylight the form of Jesse Jones was found hanging to an old-fasliioued gate-beam a quarter of a mile east of the town limits. At midnight Jailer Irwin was called to the door of his residence. lie looked out upon a courtyard full of determined people and the 1« iders at once covercd him with rifles and demanded that he unfasten the doors and lead tliem to JcSse Jones' cell. The jailer obeyed tho orders and soon Jones was brought forth.
A march was taken up until tho barnyard of Rev. J. S. Lindsay was reached. Before an old-timo beam gate the mob halted and one of their number mounted the gallows and placed the rope over the top beam. Jones throughout was remarkably collected. Asked if he had anything to say, he denied having any connection with the affair. He was then drawn up and the rope made fast, when tho mob quickly dispersed.
PERISHED IN THE FLAMES.
A Score or More*ot Persons llurticd Alive In Madrid. MADRID, March 20.—At 8 o'clock Sunday morning fire broke out in a pastry cook's shop in St. Sebastian. A keg of spirits exploded and spread the Ore to the adjoining houses, which were densely tenanted. All the occupants were sleeping and the flames were around them before they could be warned. Two families on the top tloor of a four-story house wcro suffocated in their beds. Ten of them were killed and three received mortal injuries. Twenty-one persons are known to have perished, and several others, whose fate is unknown, are believed to have been burned or crushed in the ruins.
Dynamite Kills Two Men.
WHITE PLAINS, N. Y., March 20.— Residents of Scarsdale were severely shaken up Saturday by an explosion in which two Italians, John Nicholas and Joseph Bartilono, were killed. The accident happened a mile east of Scarsdale depot, on the Harlem railroad, where a new park is being luid out. The bodies of the men were hurled 200 feet distant and the shop blown into splinters. The mangled body of Nicholas was picked up clothesless and that of Bartilono without shoes and stockings. His wateh was found 800 feet away without crystal or chain, but going.
Forty Year* for a Murderer. BLOOMINGTON, 111., March 20.—George Price, on trial for the murder of John Hay, was found guilty, the jury sentencing him to the penitentiary for forty years. Both Price and Hay were farmer neighbors in this county. Sunday, August 21 last, both became intoxicated and got into a quarrel, which resulted in the stabbing and killing of Hay after he had twice been knocked down with an alcohol bottle.
Killed wllh a Hammer.
BAKEII CITY, Ore., March 20.—Mrs. Shaw, the widow of Alfred II. Shaw, of Canyon City, who was arrested with one Gallin, the hired man of the Shaw house, on suspicion of having caused Shaw's death, has made a confession. She declares that Gallin, with whom she had been intimate, killed her husband with a hammer and then carried the lifeless body to a barn in which was stabled a stallion.
A Factory Destroyed.
Sioux CITY, la., March So. Tho plant of the Peck Manufacturing company at Leeds, a suburb of this city, was totally destroyed by fire Sunday morning. The plant consisted of four large buildings, in which windmills, scrapers and well augers were made. The loss is 800,000 insurance, £38,000.
llohheti a Oucwt'ii Koom.
CHICAGO, March 20.—Frame Conley, a bell boy at the Hotel Aletropole, Twenty-third street and Alichigan avenue, is under arrest for stealing S500 worth of diamands from the room of Adolpli Aschoff. Air. Aschoff is the secretary of the Brazilian commission to the world's fair.
Klaxe in a DULIMery.
CINCINNATI, Alarcli 20.—Walsh's distillery in Covington, Ky., was damaged by fire Saturday night. The loss is estimated at 8100,000, partly covered by insurance. The origin of the blaze is a mystery.
Kerr Moxt Kxpelled.
NEW YORK, Alarch 20.—The Alorning Advertiser says that Herr Most, the chief of anarchists, has been expelled from all anarchistic circles. He is accused of betraying secrets to the police.
LOOKS LIKE MURDER
Mystery Surrounding the Death of a Freeport (111.) Couple.
THEIR HOP BURNED TO THE GROUND
The Charred Remain* of Mr. and Mrs. ISoedeeker Found In the Htiiim Omlor ircumNtmice* Wlilth Lead to the
KJellef That They Were urderod.
FOUL PLAY srsi'Knrnn.
FKEEI'ORT, IU.. March 20.—The residence of Henry Hoedolcer, a wellknown citizen of Freeport, burned to the ground at 2 a. m. Saturday and the charred bodies of Air. anil Airs. Boedokcr were found in the ruins. The origin of the fire is a mystery. Air. Boedeker was one of our leading coal merchants and has been doing a good deal of collecting of late. It is believed that burglars eutered the housq in the night and that they were surprised at their work by Air. Boedeker, who gave them battle. The supposition is that the burglars killed both Air. and Airs. Boedeker and then set lire to the house to cover up their crime, diaries Trunek, a neighbor, was the first to discover the faro and he found the front doors af the house wide open and not a sound could be heard from within. For this reason it is believed that the couple met with foul play. The borly of Air. Boedeker was found downstairs ani his wife's body was found upstairs. Both were burned beyond recognition. The coroner is now investi gati the double murder.
Suspicion* Circumstance*.
It is claimed that both Boedeeker and his wife were too careful to have left any door open, and that this must have been the work of some burglars. The door which opened from the downstairs room usually occupied as a bedroom by the Boedeekers was lying flat on the floor and on it were the marks of blood and some human hair. Airs. Boedocker's clothes were found in the bedroom downstn.ii but no trace of Bodecker's could be found. It is known that he bad in his possession a large silver watch and chain, but no trace of this has been discovered. although several metal articles have been found. His bookkeeper also states that he took from the oflicc when he went home nineteen silver dollars, and not a vestige of these had been found.
ARTHUR MUST ANSWER.
The U.rlted Stales Court Take* Important Action in the Ann Arbor Strike Mat ter.
TOLEDO, O., Afareh 20.—Tho United States court appears to hold the trump cards in the little game of boycott against the Ann Arbor railroad. If there be auy immediate adjustment of the trouble it will probably be due to the action that the federal court proposes to take. Late Saturday afternoon, on the request of the complainant, Circuit Judge Taft issued a supplementary order to his mandate of Friday. In this the court takes by far the most important procedure of any yet made. Chief Arthur is commanded "in the manner customary and usual, according to tho practice of the Hrotlierhood of Locomotive Engineers, of giving information to its members, to cause to be known and published that the law, by-law, rule or regulation of the said brotherhood requiring its members to refuse to handle the cars of the Toledo, Ann Arbor & North Aliclilgan railroad is not in forcc or effect against the said railroad."
Jasper W. Watson, chairman of the Lake Shore engineers' grievance committee, is named as joint defendant, and the two are to appear for hearing on Alonday, Alareh 27. District Judge Ricks held a special session of tho federal court here Saturday afternoon at which he heard the complaint of the Lake Shore &, Alichigan Southern rail way, that several of its employes lind refused to handle freight from the Ann Arbor. Summonses were subsequently issued for the arrest of tivo engineers and three firemen. Three of the engineers were taken into custody. Summonses were issued also to all the engineers of the Wheeling & Lake Erie, warning them against participating in any discrimination. Aleanwhile the boycott is temporarily raised, orders to that effect having been received from Chief Arthur.
James Walsh Company Assigns. ST. .JOSEPH, AIo., Alarch 20.—'The James Walsh Alercantile company, the largest wholesale liquor house In this city, has executed a deed of trust in favor of J. Frank Smith for 8140,000 and suspended business. This company's heaviest creditors are Louisville and Cincinnati firms. It is believed all claims will be paid in full.
lrire Wipes Out a Hotel.
Cmi'i'Mc CjtEEK, Col., March 20.—The Clarendon hotel was completely destroyed by fire early Sunday morning*. The flames spread so rapidly that the guests had to flee for their lives and many of them lost the greater portion of their personal effects-. The loss is over $.30,000 no insurance.
•fuMlJce Lamar Eulogized.
WASHINGTON, Alareh 20.—The bar of the United States supreme court assembled Saturday, and, after speeches by Senators Vilas, George, Walthall and Alitchell, Representative Catchings and others, adopted resolutions eulogistic of the late Justice Lamar.
PRICE2 CENTS
Highest of all in Leavening Power.—Latest U.<p></p>B&King
ABSOLUTELY PURE
S. Gov't Report
Powder
SHORT Nl'KCiAI.S.
A mysterious underground river has been discovered near Augusta, III. Spring seeding is in progress oil the line of the Illinois Central west of Fort Dodge, la.
The government expenditures up to date this month are S22, L.'5L,UOO, exceeding the receipts by (403,000.
Fifty feet of the De.s Moines (la.) duin was carried away by the ice Saturday, causing a loss of S50.00U.
Robert Springer, born a slave in Newcastle, Del., in 1774, and consequently Mil years old, died near Alorgantown, Pu. ilatt Kelly, the well-known politician, who wns shot, two weeks ago in St. Louis by Airs. Alary Frush, alias Alollie Ward, is dead.
Judge Stephenson, at Xoblesville, I ml., has refused a new trial for the AIcDonald will case, and the matter will be appealed to the supreme court.
Suit has been entered at Pittsburgh, Pa., to recover from the lYnnsylvania company properly in that city valued at SI,000.000 alleged to belong to a family named Barbui.
George Iloch, a grain dealer and coinmission merchant of Scales Mound, 111., killed himself by blowing out his brains with a revolver. Financial difficulties are supposed to bo the cause.
New York and Urooklyn Chinamen are reported to have raised W0,000 to test the constitutionality of the Geary registration law. Celestials in San Francisco and the west are said to liavo raised SCO,000 for the same purpose.
HIS POLICY DEFINED.
I'reHldent. Cleveland on Ilia One-Term Itnle—Hope lor Old olllciiil. Keii|jpoint mom to Former f'tnees Alone llarred.
WASHINGTON, Alarch 20. In an interview with President Cleveland on Saturday Congressman Springer, of Illinois, was given to understand that in the cases of appointees under Air. Cleveland's former administration, who were not allowed by the succeeding administration to serve their full term exception might be made to the rule now in force prohibiting former employes from appointment again.
In answer to the question whether the president's rule, as to the one-term appointments would prevent former incumbents of olliees from having applications considered for offices which thev have not held before, and whether or not he intended that they should bo wholly debarred from public service, the president said that he had no such intention, and that former oliiccholders might apply for new ulliees.
As interpreted the president desires,, it to be understood that, old office-'" holders are simpiy to be barred from reappointment to the places which they held before, but there may be exceptions even as to that rule. They., can, however, apply for different positions. -c.
To ICecovor 9000,000.
PHILADELPHIA, Alareh 20. —Ex-Sen-ator Joseph M. Gazzam is alleged to bo responsible for the loss of SOOO.OOO ill the handling of his late father-in-law's estate. Lawyer Richard C. Dale, as counsel for the Fidelity Insurance & Safe Deposit company, tiled in the prothonoUiry's oflice a bill in equity against Gazzam, in which tho latter is charged with reckless and improper management of funds while acting ns the fiduciary agent of his father-in-law, the late John G. Reading.
I'aliKitrtes Destroyed hy Dynamite. NEW YOKK, Alarch 20.--0ne of the biggests blasts of dynamite that has ever taken place in a quarry, if not the bigges't, occurred at the I'alisn.de quarries. about 2 miles from Fort Lee. The palisades at this point, which is jnst opposite Fort Washington, were shorn of about 1,000 feet of surface and the displacement extended about. !)00 feet on an average into the rock. Washington's head was destroyed.
Mors Gold from Chicago.
WASHINGTON, Alareh 20.—The treasury department has received from one of tho Chicago national banks a telegraphic offer of 51,000,000 in gold in exchange for small notes. The name of the bank cannot at present bn learned. The offer will doubtless be accepted. This million, in addition to other small offers, raises the amountof free gold on hand to about SC.000,000.
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Palatable as Milk"
This is ti fact with rejr.-jrcl to Scott's Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil. The difference between the oil, in its.plain state, is very apparent. Ia
Scott's Elision
you detect no fish-oil taste. As it is a help to digestion there is r.o after cjfci except good effcct. Keep in mind that Scott's Emulsion is the best promoter of flesh and strength known to strength science.
Prepared by Scott Bowni-. N. V. All ilv
