Crawfordsville Review, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 25 March 1893 — Page 7

WERE BURNED ALi\

TWENTY-ONE PEOPLE PERI IN A MADRiU FIR~.

The KIrc Ilri'iilt1* l»nl IVIiU"

In si Vu

ll1"

Oil Aivnk«'ni"B Mulcc Their UHrnpi.

Aro

MAPiiin, Mil fell 20. -Ai 3 oVlor.K yesterday morning fibroke, out. in

fastry-cook's

Ihem

shop in St,. Seb ..sl!:i.- A

toy of spirits exploded :ind id Utr fir© to tlio udj«-i liiiiy house.-, wi '.'.W' densely tenanted. All tuts o.- upanls wore sleeping' and the Ihitni'* wen iirumnl them b.'t'ore they could warned. Two uiniilies on the t"j' floor of a four-sfce-ry house were MiiV'o cated in their buds. Fifteen pursou:.

nmped from their windows. Ten of wnre killed and throo received mortal injuries. Twenty oiKi persons

are

known to have, p^rishe l, and .several others, whose .at.e is inikno.vn. are bidicsved to have been burned or crushed in the ruins.

UlOTiatS ItlilvAK INTO CIMUtCH.

Many 1'ornons Spvcrciy Injured XMii'.c HoRistliift I'uriH ,"*?(»1». VAV.IS, March 2(1.—.Socialists at Ron baix yesterday stormed a hall in which Catholics were holding' a private

firot.ec.tion

meet­

ing. When trie rioters ha 1 broken the doors several ('atliolies tried to bar their progress into the meeting'. The rioters threw them down and foreed their way to the platform where the priests had raised an altar and plaeed a cnvilix. Thev spat or. the crucifix. broke it into fragments 3!2(1 tossed t'no pieccs into the or.^ ration. The priests, hoping to alley Mie xcitonitMi'., befjan to intone antheins. Their cisltuness only aj,r:-r'

avated

drove

tlvj

mob. The priests were altaeked. knoeked down, "ivn'ieii tl,e doors, and thrown into the street, while some of the rioters

out the JMOTI.women

and children of the congregation, others smashed the furniture in the hall. Many women and several men were severely injured by

IUMIILT

knocked

flown and trampled while the rioiors were ejecting' them. The

police

.ii.l

not arrive in sullieicnt. force to e. nt iv.l the mob until aft'i" the hall had been emptied of the. Catholics and all tl:. furniture bad been destroyed.

VrotcslantR in No Danger.' LONUOX. March 20.-—-John Dillon. "Nationalist M. P. for East Mayo, in speakinp to a Olasg-ow audience said that if in the trouble with I'l.ster it came to lining'ditches, the. home rule Irishmen could hold their own with anybody. He scouted the idea of the

fies

persecution of Protestants by Cathoin Ireland. Nevertheless, he said, the Irish were willing to submit to the humiliation of bavins- clauses for the

of Protestants in .Ireland

userted in the hoint' rule bill.

Koya,lt}* in it Tniin Wreck. LIRKON, March '20.—-Kim* "avlos, Queen Marie. AmaTie and all the members of the Cabinet went on a special train to Csildas da Kaina to open a hospital. The train ran olT the track at Campolide and all the passengers were thrown from their seats. A-side from the fripht caused by the shock, however, nobody suffered by the aceident. Affce.r two hours' waiting 'the royal party proceeded on another train to Caldas da Raina.

Ijerd Salisbury Seriously III.

LONDON,

March :!).—

I,or:

Salisbury

°a confined to his bed and hat- been forbidden by his physician to attend to any business whatever, lie has sent a dispatch to Belfast sayinp that ho hopes to be able to address the meeting of Unioniste:there on April 4.

MURDERED BY AN OL'O MAN.

A Michigan Farmer Killed He Wonll Not 'Gftt Up on 'Time. CABS CITY, Mich., March 20.—.lamer. Sheridan, a weil-to-do former living two miles from Cass City, wtsr, instantly killed -by Carl -Stevens, (i!) years old. Sheridan and .lames Davit-, a farmer boy, went to the Stevens house last night at 10 o'clock and resEwined all night. Davis sleeping on the couch

downstairs, while Sheridan occupied a bed upstairs in a room adjoining that

His dog was tak-?n to track him, and the indications are that he has changed ibis course and is headed for Canada. The cnt ire country is aroused and many men are on his track. Mrs. Stevens claims shr was in sac adjoining room when the shoot ing took place. She is in the custody of tho •officers.

Anothei Strike o* the III i^onr. SPIUNGFIEI.D, 111., March 20.—All Tin ion switchmen on thu Big Four have been called out at this point. They struck some weeks ago, but a partial settlement was reached, under which a few men went to work. The men claim the road failed to follow •out the agreement, hence the strike "They say they will .call out all the switchmen on the Big Four system.

Fattorlaptl. Klour Oltjr llurncti. Sioux CiW, Iowa, March 20.—The plant of the Peck Manufactoring Company at Leeds, a suburb of Sioux City, four miles distant, wae totally destroyed by fire. The plaxit consisted of four large buildings, in which wind-mills, scrapers and well-augers were made. The loss is 800,000: insurance $38,000. distributed among seventeen companies. The fire j.s believed to have been incendiary.

D«ath of a Wealthy J.utiiUernunn. SAGINAW, Mich., March 20.—George F. Cross of this city, one of Michigan's most prominent lumber opera torn, died in New York yesterday, aged (17. His ^Derations have commanded miftdont 6t 6apital. He was rery wealthy

Two ImckM of Snow in lowit BOONK, Iowa, March 20.—A mow•term visited thin region lar.t uight Mid the ground it now ooverad with two inches of now.

\'V ivi r.uc.

A in

fu

of 111 of l-.li i|^' Hltf. Will. Ill tin* vi 'lit only

in

IN

in Article

_v

!i:i( cn made up 'U will animals, is mi V. II Wiillenbar

C-I -.it .»!

U-nb.ir keeps his

II I'llSl

in

l-x-iied up

ami takes it exhibit it to

ill of K: as'Mii.i

lo

pari I i.l ir Iriends. Tne ni was ma le in Mns. ow, and it took

OIK

.-nan two years to put the

pieces together. Kinisued, the rug nas the appearance ot a ri -h mosaic, the deep yellow of the tiger woven into the coa 1 bla-k -of th" South Sea seal in diamond-shaped blocks. The center is made up of three rings of a diameter of twenty inches, the patclilik diamond pieces radiating1 from a circular tuft of monkey skin and bordered "uy a rim jf otter. The ground work of the entire piece is in monkey skin.

Outside the larg(* center pieces are two rows of circles. The outside contains fourteen circles six inches in diameter, made of mink, Angora and 0tk"\ The inner rows contain sixteen circies of Russian sable and monkey skiD At. either end and on the sides is a six-inch selvage of Russian silver fox hide, and twenty silver-gray fcx tails adorn the ends. In the make-up pieces of the furs from the Russian sable, Persian iamb, Angora goat, China goat, mink, otter, South Sea seals, monkey, Thibet lamb, muskrat, iveasel, leopard and the Russian sil-ver-gray fox are used.

THE DOOM OF GLACIERS. Tliuy Como to an lfutl by Moving I-'uster Than They Flow.

Git tiers plunge into the sea in many cold countries and perish by drowning, their dismembered remains floating away as bergs. Hut their end is dissolution where the average mean tem-perat-"',2 .-ises considerably above the free/.i tig point. At some certain level Ihey meet faster than they can flow, and so terminate.

The level, indeed, is a fluctuating one. Icelandic glaciers, according to M. Forel, have undergone during tlio present century five alternate periods of diminution and growth.

Without one additional degree of cold it is conceivable that a persistently augmented deposit of snow upon the Genstenhorner and the Schneestock, although otherwise scarcely perceptible, might enable the Rhone glaeicr to overwhelm the Brieg.

But this would be an exceedingly small step toward the restoration of a former state of things, when an ice stream close upon 250 miles in length, I /arting from the same source, crossed the frozen or non-existent lake of

Geneva, tnd debouched by Culoz upon Lyons. Without severe cold as well as heavy precipitation ice could not possibly have gained such an ascendancy. And this was no loical phenomenon it was simultaneously prevalent over widely separated tracts of the earth's surface.

SAVED HIS FINE.

fitory of a Smith Who Was Both Quickwitted and Lucky. Judge Smith, now a resident of Phoenix, Ariz., was once a prosecuting lawyer in the little town of Quitman, Miss. On one occasion he was defending a case before Judge Buck Hancock. During the trial Judge Smith had occasion to frequently go out of the court room. Judge Smith finally got tired of the delay in the case caused by Smith's absence, and reprimanded him. Finally Smith came into the room with his hat on. The judge

MW his opportunity and called out: "Mr. Smith, I fine you 850

au,^

of Stevens and his wife. .called Judge Smith to the beach. After Judge Hancock had left tli& room the acting justice turned to the

"At. 6 o'clock yesterday niorniufj Stevens came down-stairs a.nu Atndled a fire, at-the same time making dire threats against the life of Sheridan if lie did *»ot come down. Presently he went iip-stairs .hnd tln'ee -ehots wer£ fired,, the last killing Sheridan instantly. Stevens then took his repeating rifle and started down the road toward Sagiu.nv.

It was never collected.

for con­

tempt of court" "Very well, your honor," was th» reply, "I'll pay it to-morrow."

The case went on. The next day Judge Hancock wa® in abetter humor.

^sh-Hig to go out for a moment,

•clerk and said: "The fine against Mr. Smith yesterday for contempt of court is remitted." and so it was.

A Military Canine.

San Francisco possesses a dog that does regular military guard duty. He is a Newfoundland and the pride of Battery K, Fifth artillery. This dog In a marvel in its way. Every night at dusk, as soon as the sentries are about to patrol the premises around the official quarters and the barracks of the enlisted men, Ned, as the dog is called, after wagging his tail to the officer in charge of the patrol, starts on the grand rounds. If there happens to be any drunken men lying around or suspicious characters lurking about, Ned soon spots them, and although the dog will not bite, yet he will hold on to his captives until relieved by the appearance of a sentry.

Gilt Letters on JBookt*

Gilt letters on bindings are impressed by a hot tool or stamp. The tool bearing the letters should be first arranged in order on a rack before a clear fire, so as to be well«heated without becoming red hot. The leather to be stamped is first dusted over with very finely powdered rosin or gum mastic, over which lay a leaf of gold. The well-heated stamp is now pressed down on the gold leaf, which will, of course, be indented and show the figure or letter impressed upon it.

How to Care for Trousers, The best way is not to hang them up. Fold tbein flat and lay them down. If there iB no place to do this, hang them on two naila. Button the waUtrband and put the front part of the band on one nail and the middle of the back on another at the same height, so that the garment will bang W

A FAMOUS PHRASE.

Where I.loooln Got His Kxpreaslon of t. Government of the People. Identical thoughts and identical forms may be original in many minds, asserts Cliarles Dudley Warner in Harper's Magazine. The oration of our day whie.h has taken its place among the few classics of eloquenco is Lincoln's short speech at Gettysburg. Tlia phrase most often quoted fi'om it is: "That government for the people, of the people and by the people shall not perish from the earth." Porter's Rhetorical Reader was published ill 18:11 in is:i( it was in its fifty-second edition. From this edition I quote the following sentence for an "exercise," entitled "New Social Order in America." and credited to one Douglas: "The Kimo ean emigrant might believe himself one transported to a new wori.f-/ governed by new laws anv finds himself once raised in tiiscale of being—the pauper is raa'(,:. tained by his own labor, the hired !A borer works on his own account, a:. the tenant is changed into a proprk *.oy. while the depressed vassal of the old continent becomes co-legislator and cornier in a government where all powc is from the people and In the people and for the people." The idea is not new. though this premature Douglas may have been the first to put it intc this form. When Porter published these selections of prose and poetry,

Lincoln was 22 years of age, and beginning to read law. It is possible that he may have read this very piece in a school book which was widely cir culated, and that this phrase ma3' have «tuck in his memory. It does not mat ter. The phrase ia his mouth is aa jure as a gold co'ln just dropped from the mint it was his genius that set it in an immortal oration:

ONE OR THE

OTHER.

Kngllsh

English 'Boys and tho Great 1'ulillc Schools. In England, while a boy is still in the unreasoning age of childhood, good-natured people will ask him playfully what he is going to be. At a little later stage the inquiry takes aur&fther and more serious form—"What school are you going to?" There is no playfulness in the question now. Heroby hangs a whole social history. Ia one family the tradition is for Eton, is I another for llugby and to these traI ditions father and son are, as a rule. absolutely loyal, except under especiii emergencies of typhoid or scarlet fever.

The true Englishman of the upper class is not more certainly born. 'either a little Liberal.

Or else a little Conservative

than he is an embryo Harrow boy or Winchester "man."' In after-life he meets with the question, "What school were you at?" And here again he is apt to feel at a disadvantage if he cannot fasten upon one of the important public schools the credit or blame of his early training. It matters nothing that he was only there for half a year, that he never rose above the lowest form, that he was flogged half a dozen times in as many weeks, that he was promptly expelled for outrageous insubordination —he was at a public school, he has the cachet of an English £'ent.lipman. To have been at the university is as nothing compared with this,declares a writer in Harper's Magazine. Many a man is compelled by army examinations or by business op portunities to forego the pleasures of the alma mater. With the public school it is otherwise to this they must all oome,

WORDS LIGHTLY

SPOKEN.

"I only got a nominal fee in this •case," said Brief. "So the plaintiff said. He said your charges were phepomenai." "It it dreadful, Maria, that you always will have the last word." "Please, ma'am, how am I to know that you have nothing more to say?" iDWatts—I don't like this reincarnation idea a bit. Potts—No? Watts —No. Just fancy yourself occupying the body of a mule and hauling stones for your own monument

Harry, who had some money given him to spend at the fair—Papa, things were so cheap at the fair that thirty cents of my money was wasted. Papa—Wasted? Harry—Yes I didn't spend it. "Your wife doesn't keep you long," taid Hicks as Digby returned to finish his smoke. "No," replied Digby ruefully turning his trousers pockets inside out, "but she manages to keep tne confoundedly short."

Business jNtan—You remember that 'ad' I had in your paper and took out two months ago? Well, I want to have it put back again. Editor—Why, I thought you said no one noticed it while it was in. Business Man., humbly—They didn't seem to until took it out. "Nothing can make a woman so superlatively happy as to have a babj of her own to kiss," exclaimed Mra McBride rapturously, as she fondled her first-born. "My dear," replied her husband pityingly, "you can never know the unutterable joy of being •Next* in a crowded barber shop on Saturday night."

ANIMATE NATURE.

Electrical science is now after the caterpillar. Alternate wires of sine and copper half an inch apart, attached to a battery, encircle a tree and soon becomes a martyr.

A shark, lately washed ashore at Midian, B. C., had "two distinct tails, three perfect eyes and what appeared to be the rudiment of a fin or flipper hanging to the under jaw."

In Alachua and other counties in Florida, a short time ago, there waa a shower of fine spider webs, which covered the ground for miles. Enough fell, it said, to start a cotton fao tor jr.

CLAIMS THE STRIKE IS OVER.

Manager Ashley of tho Toledo Road Says They Have Plenty of Engineer*. NEW Y(. .K, March 20.—Mr. J. M. .'Asiuey, Jr., vice-president of the Toledo, Ann Arbor &. North Michigan Uaiiroad, received last night the following dispatch from Toledo, Ohio, signed bv It. W. Ashley, general manager of the Toledo road: "We have a full quota of freight trains on tho road. Judge Ricks is coming hereby special train to enforce the orders of the court, if necessary. We do not want any more engineers."

To a reportor Vice-President Ashley said that the strike 011 the Toledo, Ann Arbor & North Michigan Railroad was ended. "Furthermore,"' said Mr. Ashley, "all our old employes who remained faithful to 11s will be protected, in spite of the demands of the discontented men that they be removed. Our road at present is blocked with freight. We expect, however, to have the entire line clear inside of twenty-four hours. Just now the company's lake steamers Ann Arbor No. 1 and Ann Arbor No. 2 arc giving us more tratlic than we can handle."

ARRIVAL OF THE SARNIA.

The Ovordut* Mull Steamer

KCUCIICR

Hall-

fax—Delayed by a Uroken f»huft. IIAI.IFAX, N.S., March 20.—The overdue mail steamer Sarnia was reported off this harbor coming slowly under her own steam. She is accompanied by another steamer, supposed to be the government steamer New field.

TheFurness line steamer Madura, thirteen days from London, arrived here. She reported that on Thursday evening, March Hi, in latitude 45.30 north, longitude r0.32 west she sighted a steamer on the Starboard bow showing signals of distress. Mhe ran within hailing distance and found it was the Dominion line steuaier Sarnia, now nine days overdue at this port. The captain said his after crank shaft was broken and asked the captain of the Madura to stand by till daylight. The Madura remained till morning, when the Hnrnia signaled that she expected to effect repairs by -t p. m. on the same day. The captain of the Madura then asked if the steamer Wanted to bo. towed, but got no reply, and the Madura proceeded 011 her voy-

ALLKGXD EMBEZZLER GAUOHT.

,J. il, Morrtuunt. of C'hlcagn Under Arrchl lit Denver. y:i-.NVKU. I'olo.. .March :.'0.—'. E. B. Mordaunt was arrested 011 a telegram from Inspector Ross of Chicago. Mordaunt is under iudictinent for embezzlement. The arrest is a most important one. as the sum named is 82:5,000.

Mordaunt is years old. with a boyish face. In Chicago lie was employed as confidential bookkeeper by Smith & Webster, a big plumbing ply house. He stood high in the estimation of his employers, and great was their surprise when he failed t6 appear at his accustomed desk on the morning of Feb. 24

An examination of his books revealed a shortage of nearly §25,000, and small amounts received by Mordaunt during the last year were unaccounted for. Mordaunt says that he is Innocent of the charge against him. lie will be taken to Chicago. No money was found on him

STKIKERS S£"NITENCED.

Homestead Trials End La Heavy Pnn[isliment for Four Participants. PiTTSnuito, March 0.—Robert J. Be&tty, Hugh F. Dempsey, District Master Workman of the Knights of Labor, Gallagher, and Davidson, the Homestead poisoners, were taken into court this morning for sentence.

Beatty -and Dempsey get seven years each in the penitentiary Gallagher five years, and Davidson three.

Oberly'a Name Mentioned. WASHINGTON, March 6.—Iti is understood George L. Rives of New York is likely to be First Assistant Secretary of State C. S. Hamlin of Massachusetts one of the Assistant Secretaries of the Treasury Robert A. Maxwell, one of the assistants to the PostmasterGeneral ex-Congressman McAdoo, Assistant Secretary of the Navy. Frederick Condert. of New York is mentioned as prospective Minister to France, Bayard as Minister to England, and "Bishop" John Oberly of Illinois as Indian Commissioner

In Paint

the best is the cheapest. Strictly Pure

White Lead is best properly applied it will not scale, chip, chalk, or rub off it firmly adheres to the wood and forms a permanent base for repainting. Paints which pee! or scale have to be removed bj scraping or burning before satisfactory repainting can be done When buying it is important to obtain

Strictly Pure White Lead

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What is

Castoria is Dr. Samuel Pitcher's prescription for Infants and Children. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. It is a harmless substitute for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups, and Castor Oil.

It is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty years' use by Millions of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms and allays feverishness. Castoria prevents vomiting Sour Curd, cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. Castoria relieves teething troubles, cures constipation and flatulency. Castoria assimilates the food, regulates the rtomaeh and bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Castoria is the Children's Panacea—tho Mother's Friend.

Castoria.

MOteto*ia

la an excellent medicine for chU-

draa. Mothors have repeatedly told mo of Its good effect upou their children." Pa.

Q. 0. OSGOOD,

Lowell, Has*.

oaatorla is the best remedy for ehlldrea of vhlch I «.m acquainted. I hope the day is not far distant when mothers will consider the real faiterest of their children, and use Castoria instead of the various quack nostrums which are destroying their loved ones, by forcing opium, morphine, soothing syrup and other hurtful agents down their throats, thereby sending them to premature graves."

Da. J. P. KINCHMXJE, Conway, Ark.

Castoria.

Castoria Is so well adapted to ohildrea tkaft I recommend it as superior to any prescription known to me."

HEADQUARTERS

For fino Goods, large assortments and low prices. Also repairing of lino end complicated Watch and Clock Repairing. Gold and pold filled watches, diamonds both loose and mounted, gold headed cams and cmbrellas. Silver plated knives, forks ane spoons

Fine art pottery, piano and banquet lamps, and articles too numerous to mention.

Call and see us, we tvill be glad to show you through,

C. L. ROST,

Jeweler, 207 castMain Street.

SEE THE JBIG LINE OF-

Blankets and Robes

AT

ST--- *Sr-

Mammoth! No Equal!

Clover, Timothy, Bine Grass, Orchard Grass, Seed Oats Our stock of field ^eeds can not be equaled in the state. We will be pleased to have you inspect our seeds beforr buying. Prices lower than the lowest.

Orabb cfcReynolds.

Wholesalers and Retailers. Market Street

H. A. Ahctbk, M. B.,

Ill So. Oxford St., Brooklyn, V. Y. Our physician 0 the children's department have Bpoto? Mkchly of their experience in their outsMfe practice with Castoria, and although we only have aroeng oar medical supplies what is known as regular products, yet we are free to confess that the merits of Castoria has won us to look with favor upon it."

UKITEB HOSPITAL ASD DISPKN8ABT,

ALLEN

Boston, Mess.

C. Surra, Pres.,

The Centaur Company, VI Murray Street, Noxr York City.