Daily Wabash Express, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 11 June 1889 — Page 2
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Publication Office 16 south Fifth stiwt, Priming
HonseBanare.
[Intend Scoood-dass Itntlw it the Postoflloe.
of Terre Haute, IndL]
SUBSCRIPTION OF THE EXPRESS. ..." TLKXL—POSTAGE PREPAID. Daettu Edition. Monday Omitted, vauyoo One Year W»
'8
TO CITY 8CB8CKIBKB8.
Dally,
delivered. Monday Inducted
ate per
Dally) delivered. Monday excepted. ...16c pet week. THE WEEKLY EXPBESS. One copy, one year, In advance One coDlf si* months, In advance
Postage prepaid In all cases when sent by mall. Telephone Number, Editorial Room*, 72.
The Express does not undertake to return rejected manuscript. No communication will be published unless the full name and place of residence of the writer is furniabed, not necessarily for publication, but aa a guarantee of good faith.
THJC EXPEESS take* great pleasure in remarking that Indianapolis did nobly in its response to the call for relief for the Pennsylvania suffereaa.
It was to have been expected, hut hardly from the Chicago Herald. We are now informed that the Cronin mur der conspiracy is owing to the protective tariff.
No one is heedless to the cries of distress in the coal mining regions, but we do insist that this effort to make politi cal capital out of the condition of the coal business is not altogether foreign to the spirit that actuates any ghoul. The coal mining industry has received decided set-back in the use of natural gas and oil as fuel. The report of the chief of division of mining industry for the United States shows that the amount of coal displaced by natural gas in the United States in 1888 was 14,163,830 tons, valued at 822,662,128. Of this amount 12,543,830 tons were displaced in Pennsylvania, 750,000 tons in Ohio and 660,000 tons in Indiana.
•M
It is estimated that from three to eight million dollars life insurance is involved in the Johnstown flood. It would seem that the companies interested and proper representatives of the relief movements should get together and agree upon some general plan for equitably settling these mnfin which otherwise will be relegated to the courts. No doubt the insurance companies would now be willing to agree to a very liberal plan of settlement, whereaB in a few months they would be less influenced by sentiment and more by dividend considerations.
THE CRONIN CASE.
The Cronin inquest so far develops one fact apparent above all others: the quarrels and desperation of the leaders of so cietiesand factions. There can be no possible excuse for these conspiracies to murder, for that is what they result in, in this country. The societiesnaa^ fie murder of Jr. "Cronin.
The sympathy of the American people, and the Irish-American people, if a line is to be drawn between them, is clearly with the cause of suffering Ireland, but it no more extends to those who deal in murder and assassination than it
doeB
to ghouls who are robbing
the dead and helpless at Johnstown.
The Johnstown disaster's death list may not be so long as was feared, yet there is no doubt that it iB in the thousands. The calamity cannot be measured, alone, by the number of the dead. The entailed fatality, through disease and physical injury will add to the death list and distress of the fatal event. The property loss is one of magnitude, such as oannot be comprehended. In it is included the small home of the poor man whose loss is to him faf more than that of the corporations to them and tbe appeal for charity should be extended to bis relief as well to the relief of the physical suffering of the hungry and homeless. The people of the whole country can apply to these people the principle that General Harrison enunciated in his speech in favor of the dependent pension bill, that the people of this oountry were unmindful of personal dereliction and carelessness if the injured and distressed had oauBe to appeal to the charity of the whole people.
C. O. D.
•A Great Artist, v...- »,.r
P. ttreen—Have you seen Smear's new portrait of Dollle Footllte? ivory Black-No is it natural?
P. (Jreen -I should say it was natural. Every dude that sees his tie.
The I'nknuwable.
Teacher—Tommy, what Is an unknown quantity? Tommy—All the bananners I ktn eat at oncet. A June Idyl.
The boy who's tilled thinner works With apples green and warty, Now straightens out by starts and Jerks,
Then doubles up like forty.
Remarkable Natural PhenomenonMinnie—I want to tell you—Charley popped last I night
Mamle—I heard brother Tom say this morning I that Charley was busted.
EXCHANGE ICH08S.
Baltimore American: High license lg strons be-1 cause It is sensible, effective because It Is praeUcal. and permanent because it Is feasible, it regulates an evil that no law has so far prohlb-1
Nothing else could do so much Clan-na-Gael of the suspicion ol
complicity in the Cronin murder as the public and auUioritatlve assurance that it has no secrets which may not be revealed at the demand
ot
the
representatives of public Justice. .Thc BaUwsd Review predicts that steel rails will be as cheap as $35 this Any one who made such a prediction a few rears WJouW been regarded as Insane. But the tariff has eneoureged home manufacturers to such an extent that they are able to sell at prices no object to This Is oneor the«SS
0
mlueed
An interacting investigation upon the •bora subject has recently bean under the aaepiew of the imivsraity of Dorpat, Russia, wys the Boston Medical Journal. Some five hundred circulars wera sent out with a seriw of quite definite questions, which wera answered with equal detail by 151 students, 113 other males, 142 females. The results for the two sexes wera so different that they demand nptfttioiif while the isudents formed a homogeneous claes, intonating as a The first problem that ww iropoeed waa the .relation between the requency and the vividness of yeams. It appears that per cent of thoee who aream every night dream vividly, 60.5 per cent, of those who dream freonly 2G.8 per oent of those seldom, showing that the vividness of dreams increases very rapicily with their frequency. Next, how la the intensity of sleep related to the frequency of dreams? Of the students who *68 per oent. have a hght ly28per cent, have a deep sleep) of those dreaming frequently, 40 •r cent of thoae dreaming seldom, per cent. Similar i»re»ntagwfcw the other males are 68.8,42.1 and 39.3, and for women 72.46 and 50 per oent.
We conclude, then, that frequent dreams area concomitant of light sleep, though the relation is far from universal. As regards sex, women have 73 per oent. of their number dreaming nightly or frequently, while students have only 50 per cent., and other males 48 per cent. Again, 63 per cent, of the women slsep lightly, and only 42 per cent, of students, and 44 per cent, of other males. We conclude, then, that women have a very much lighter sleep than men, and that their dreams are proportionately more frequent.
Another conclusion, the evidenoe ol which is too detailed at present, is that as we grow older our dreams become less frequent, but our sleep becomes lighter, age affecting the intensity of sleep mora than the frequency of dreams.
The author regards the students as in the'period of maximum dreaming (20 to 24 years of age). The deep sleep of childhood (hostile to frequenoy of dreams) is then least counterbalanced by the lessening of dreams due to age. The vividness of dreams shows a similar relation to age and sex the women dream most vividly the students, being younger than the other men, have more vivid dreams. The power of remembering dreams is also dependent upon vividness and frequency of dreaming it is aocordingly greatest in women, BUS in students than more mature men. The liveliness of the emotional nature, prominent feature of women and youth! Beems thus to be marked out as the causative agent in the production of dreams. The duration of Bleep should naturally be related to the habit of dreaming, but in the men no such rela tion can be discovered. In women, however, it appears that those who dream frequently sleep nearly an hour longer than thoee who seldom dream. This difference is regarded as due to the fact that men are more under duty to break short their sleep and thus violate the statistics. This is corroborated by the frequenoy with "which the men who dream frequently declare themselves tired in the morning, indicating inoom plete slsep.
The need of sleep is greater women than men the duration of sleep being longer and the percentage of tired morning and evening and of not tired being 3 to 2 and 2 to 3 respectively, as compared to the men. Students sleep lorn er and Img
ibiii j.i.2 Uiuutes for the women, each case, however," it takes longer for those who are frequent dreamers and light sleepers to fall asleep than persons of opposite characteristics. Eighty per cent, of students sleep uninterruptedly through the night 70 per cent, of other men, and only 43 per cent, of women. Light sleep and frequent dreams increase the interuptednesa of sleep. The power of falling asleep at will is possessed by few. It is greater in youth than in age. Twenty-Sight per cent, of men, 19 per cent, of students, and 20 per cent, of women, sleep in the afternoon, indicating a making up of insufficient sleep on the part of the m^n.
The effect of dream habits upon mental work is also evident. Those who
dream seldom, or sleep dwply, are better disposed for work in the forenoon than light sleepers or frequent dreamers. The forenoon seems in general to be the preferred time of work. The statistics regarding nervousness confirm the accepted fact that this is greater among students than other men at large. It is, too, a concomitant of light sleep and frequent dreams. As to temperament, the phlegmatic people are quite constantly deep sleepers and infrequent dreamers. Finally, a contrast between teachers and professors of the same average age shows the effect of the occupation. The teacher, with his daily toil, hw a lighter Bleep and more frequent dreams, while the professor, leading a comparatively congenial and worrilesB life, is a deeper sleeper and a leas frequent dreamer than the teacher.
THE MILITIA
A Call by the Adjutant General )For a Meeting of Officers Here.
The following order to the First regiment of the Indiana legion was iwued: EXBCCTIVB DEPARTMENT,
ADJUTANT GENERAL'S OFEICE,f INDIANAPOLIS,
June 7, 1889.
.v .oo uutuidi. x,vcrr Uth, at 9 a. m.. In the armon of
It Instlnctlvelrcommences to adjust I {e0OT?fOTfn«SSlo^!rtl,WI,t
rrinn"nlond
S
RSPKCIAL ORDER HO. 66.1
The Held and staff and company officers of t.hn Flwt raglment Infantry, Indiana lesion.are hereto ordered to assemble at Terre Haute, Indiana, on
Infw,tr'' In,Ua«
•.: I JCommanmn* oftloers ot companies will brins copies olmustw rolls anS
u,TOloe of 811
Property In their
"Officer reimbursed for the actual rallWld to them, on the basis of the shortjSnsSs. aUowed $1.60 each for ex-
By order of the governor. N. B. BDOKLE. Adjutant General of Indiana.'
Colonel W. D. Ewing,'of Evansville, is I
•i? vi ,e
re«iment-
The meeting I
mobivaiI
^^nflss have received their by-lawa from the state department, where they were approved, and the last formal act of the company's organization hw been performed*
NEW YOSK, June ia—TheJMb««&A| Baltimore special wys: "Thehighliosaas movement her# is making ptograifc PHft prominent oitiwne comprise a mauatt formulate a plan of organization, that the legislative distriotethroogh the state can be nanrassed to learn the sentiment of the people in the matter. Tbttt ia no doubt about the feeling in Baltimore, regardless of politico. In population of nwriy Ave hundred thoownn then are now 4JOOO saloons, two-thirds of the number being low gragi which get the beat part of the inga ot the large colored portion of the population. It is rumored that tbe ,tic ring which has controlled the legislature, wliile not openly antagonizing the bill, will smother it in committee or in some manner prevent its becoming a law. The men, however, who are at the head of the lioense movement will endeavor to have mSn nominated from their districts that will favor the bilL The oommitteeon organization will fovor the creation of aooort or commission to which every applicant for a license muat send hianame and the namee ot hia backers. These names and the propoeed location of the saloon will then be published so that the public can wisely direct the oourt in granting or refusing the lioense.
Cardinal Gibbons, Bishop Parat, of the Protestant Bpisoopal diooeee of Maryland, the judges of the courts, and many other prominent people in religious and business circles, have indorsed the movement. It has been suggested by one member of the oommittoe that the license be fixed at $1,000. The state temperance association haa passed a^ resolution, which, after declaring that high lioense is powerless as a remedy for tto liquor evil, approves, aside from the license featurea, the efforts to restrict the liquor traffic contemplated in the new movement. This is a departure from their hitherto bitter opposition to license in any form. William Daniel, who was on the pwj identiu Prohibition ticket with St. John, has cauwd a stir in temperance cirolee by discovering ah old Maryland law which embodies the prohibitory featurea of the Brooks'law in Pennsylvania. It is still on the statute books and provides that a judge shall not issue a license to any man who has been prosecuted by a grand jury. "Enforce this law," says Mr. Daniel, "and we can close up every low groggery in the city."
The high lioense movement IB taking hold in the counties as well as. the cities. The farmers of Garrison, Forest Grange, Baltimore county, have passed a resolution favoring the passage of a suitable high lioense law, in order that the county may derive a revenue from the tax for the sale of liquors sufficient to
Eouse
ay the increased cost of court, alms and jail, caused by its unrestricted use.
CHIEF AKTHUB DENIES.
He
Saya He Did Not Talk Adversely to it Reported.
BOSTON,Strikes10.—The
Thomas Sullivan went to work in the yards Monday morning. Milo Everett, who ww slightly injured in the yards a few days ago, returned to' work ywterday.
George Robinson returned to work in the machine shop ywterday after a weeks sickness.
T- A. Lawes, division master mechanio of the Bee line, stopped off in the city a few hours Sunday.
The work of removing the general offioeeof the Wabash road from Chicago to St. Louis hw already begun. It is stated that the change leavw some eighty clerks out of work.
The Hon. Anson Wolcott, of Woloott, hw brought suit against the Panhandle company for $30,000, for the alleged fail ure of the company to furnish can foi the shipment of his farm products.
The working hours of the employw of the Panhandle^ shops at Logansport were reduced from nine to eight Monday morning. There is considerable objection from the men to the new order.
Through paaasge on the E. A I. is impossible owing to the fall' of the bridge at &el river, but one train ww sent far as Saline City yesterday. Work on the bridge cannot commence until after the water falls, whioh will not be for several days yet. ,P~ W. Cox, the florist from Crswfordsvilie engaged in beautifying the parka of the Vandafia, Saturday
shipped 800 ohoice plants to Green castle
0Bed
at
meeting will be extended into I Crawfordsville Journal: D. W CJX ia 5rwt1th# abeence somewhat noted a pnetfod ioiw h^t LieutenantTricheI the tables w«re turned on himnioely Itl, °ompanv. Adju-1 Saturday. Ben MoKeen and John •Si ^,®u°Ue and some of I Brothers, of the Vandalia, were in
.^f^tal officers arrived in this debkandSaturdi I for oarin whi lhe rifles have
UTICA,
June local Brother
hood of Locomotive Engineers to-day held a big secret meeting in this city, at whioh delegatea were present from all New England pointa well as from New I York and New Jersey. Chief Arthur] I who was there, was aBked if the report was true, telegraphed from Chicago, to the effect that at a recent Becret meet-
s_
lUf
Ohinann lui InliT "I
slu-
ing in ChiOHfrn ^i snmnthinff on the general subject of atrikse which, had been misconstrued by his enemies and so published all over the oountry. The subject of grievances also came up for discussion to-day, speeches being made against doing over-time work, a mattAr which just how promises to make trouble on all the New England roads and may develop into an extensive strike, affecting every road between Canada, Boston and New York.
The question hw not yet assumed a threatening aspect, but the temper of the men is in favor of making a bold stand against the railroad companies.
BAUBOAD NBW3 NOTffi.
General and Personal Mention «f General and Local Interest.
Erneet Bishop visited Vermillion friends Sunday. Engine No. 185 hw baen sent to the shops for a few repairs.
ornamenting the groundal
'I1® station there, and also took afull
Pleasant quarters in the home 1loa® of flowers to Maxinkuckee for 11U0 warrantQ proceedings againat ProThe
to*«»PWP«e.
th. h. i— I plants to Qreencastle, they
IndiotS^^ iaatetosats. were lost On the arrival of the car Indictments have been returned I »nd its oontents at Iferre Haute all the «gunst Oliver Jones and Frank MoCoy, I ra«road men in the viainity were naiw| the former for petitlaroeny and the lat-1
tfi*Taph#d
r»«eht'
when his oar came, one would auppoae intended for the transportation of a asotion of Forepaugh^i ciroua. Twelveamall boxw were pat in it and Cox aavs thev
iL
G" denied
I having any interest in the oar, or knowl-
*A atom of
^rais and hail, th is I in thi(Mfl4aon. BeaHdo«ar Oa
Mj lMMt and fnM waa-'' sailing
drowned. Ibe
yacht berk Secret wae ssbore. and nothing cwi be learned at hie party of five young men. ttsw YORK, Jane lOr-Thn Time* Rochester (N. T.) special asps About fawrtfeok ysstords5'tfte«oon a sever, atom struck this city. haiktonee tbe aizs.of watoutejWl in large quantities. Nurssriss, market garden and florists' setaWiah»ente_WMe damaged to the extent of thoaeanda of dollars. Seven g«i«hooaaa wan newly destroyed. One nursery firm wtlmatee ita lbaa at not law than eight thousand dollars.
N. June la-TSiecyotene
ww caused bf atorme ooming nosa two directions and uniting north ot this city. Prom the point ot uniting the direcUon was northewterly. The rapocte that oome every hour bring new or grawar dwtruction to property in I*wto ^oun^r and in the eouthern part of Jefferson county. In Fort Leyden the buildings and uieda of the iron works ware totally demoliahed.
A special to the Obeerver. from Cam den, says that Mrs. Spain, who residedm the town of Pteranoe, waskilledby her houw falling upon her. This is the only fatal oaw yet heard of.
WELCOMED HOXB.
The Friends of Louis Stela, of the Sixth Ward, Oo to Meet Him.
Mr. Louis Stewf ex-oounoilman, turned home last evening on the 8:151. & St.
L. train, after an extended viait with friends and relativw in Germany, He ww met at the depot by a party of about one hundred of hia friends, accompanied by the colored band from the southeastern part of the city. He a hearty and unique raoeption After the many hearty congratulations upon hia sate return he ww conducted to the vehiole that had been built especially tor the occaaion in whioh he waa taken home. The vehicle consisted of a onehorse wagon, on the gearing of which had been placed aboard extending from the front to the rear, and supporting a large dry-gooda box. Mr. Stem waa assisted into the box, and, headed by the band and followed by the other vehicles and footmen, driven south on Sixth stnet Main, ewt to Ninth, and thenoe to his residence on eut College sfcteeU Several of the mora enthusiastic admirers of Mr. Stein kept up a continuous shout, if the oocaaion were a campaign rally. The procession ww a surprise to all except those who participated in it, and many wondering apeototore asked whether an election bet was being paid. At Mr. Stein's home a genend reception to his friends ww given, and all made merry and the guests were treated to the many good things that mftUft life endurable and happy.
TKBBE HAUTE WINS AGAINV ——r— Zi1"
An
Exciting flame at Danville,
Total
IU.,
Tee-
terdajr—Gamee Klsewhere. .,
Special lo the Express. DANVILLE, IU., June 10.—Terre
the umpire, nine players and 'the'crowX^ Nelson's hit in the eleventh inning won the game, bringing in Schneider from thirds The attendance was large and there ww great excitement
K. 2
TKBRK HADTK.
ia 1 0 1 0 1 2 0 0 0 ~6
Doner,Cf Bannln.c. Lotz, lb'. O'Brien, ss Schneider, rf 2 Nelson, 2t..._... 0 HlU.Sb.. Fonythe, Iteljorg, p.
P.O.
0 8
A. 0 1 0 6 0 4 1 1
16
0 1 il 3 2 1
11 24
5
DANVILLK. R.
Schultz, If
IB.
Corydon, lb Tully, Boat, 3b Fogarty, 2o Ford, ss Lambereon, cf Hodge, rf Hall,
0 0 0 0
P.O.
0
A. 0 0 3 2 3 7 1 0
14 9 3 2 2
0 1 0 1 1
Totals
By Innings— Terre Haute 0 0 Danville 0
1 0 0
14
31 30
1 0 1 2 0 0 0 1-5
40000000 ft. 0-4
Two base hits, aone three base hits, none horns runs, none passed balls, Tuley three wild pitches, none. Umpire, Flaherty.
Qamw elsewhere: Athletics 8, Kansas City 3 St. Xjouis 9, Baltimore 1: Brooklyn 7, Louisville 5^ Philadelphia, k'
1! C'®ve,"Pd
5: Philadelphia 3, Wwhington 1: New1 York 5, Boston 1 Chicago 4, Indianapolis 3 second game: Chicago 3, Indianapolis 2. J-
HE 18 IN TALL CLOVER.
but.
A Polish Priest Is Exeommnaleated is Enjoying Life. CHICAGO, June 10.—A dispstoh from
Dstroit wys: Yesterday Priest Kolssinki's Church ww dedicated. It ww an unuaual dedication, for Kolaainki hw been exoommunicated for diaobedienoe, and there ww no biahop preeent. He consecrated the church himself, and will henoeforth be hia own biahop. There ww a terrific jam among the Polw who constituted his congregation.
The church is not quite finiah^, it will hoid 8,000 and there are fully that
ot
s°,u
Pfofeesor
dainty sorrels.
A handsome brick stable is now being built near the church for Kolasinki's horsss.
in»titntod by state omeers.
John Collett hw instituted
lfe3sorS.aIL.h.
CVix'a
feasor S. S. Oorby in the Dearborn circuit court. The latter muat ana war and art forth why he oontinuw to 1QM the office of state geologist whUa the former wan la it on the 20th inst.
The quo warranto suit of John Wor-
IwU Wm. A. Peellein themtwt
^transport aome over ths offiae of state atatistician, ww I
n« the I argued in the circuit oourt to-dav. The consequence ww that John I* Griffiths, tapraSSrS •e it I P«ter, thia morning Petitioned
oourtL.
morning petitioned Jodga
wland for a writ of mandate to oom-1 ml Secretary of State Griffin to raosiva 520oopwaof Indiana repovta and iasoa tothapetittonara warrant for the aamab I Aigumsnt ia baiiut heard on tha petition thia aftwnoon.—{Indianapolis Nswa,-
Isi P»sH.
New YOBK, Jane IA—The -rfiip Ayleeia, whioh lsft Port^a-Frinoa on 16th, arrived this womb* J. Main •m
ol Port an-Priaw The wm bsooght by the Aylssia keyse the oatcoaeaC the Hsytkn troabtw etill donbt.
TOIClOTLAHDlBAeKDr.
ttM AwMWw.
CuniLun), June 10l—For over a th Cleveland hw baaaixdted over illwppwranns nf littVs girl nanv Maggie Thompaon. Wealthy people who lived in the neighborhood made up a reward for her reoovery. As telegraphed lwt night, the mutilated maina wera found under the houw of Henry Lauth, a German cabinjA maker on Merchant avenue. Leuth livw lsw than 200 bat from the Thompaon :Ha and hia wife and son wera under arrwt at 3 o'clook thia morning. Hanaasad and owtuaad by the aharp^ queatioaa ot the officer* who slowly but surely wera entangling him in a net ot hia own contradictions, young Otto Leuth, the aon, finally broke down and oonfawtrt that he had mmmitted tbe horrible crime. Heaudtbat on the day of the murder Maggie Thompson naaaad bis houw at about noon on nar way from school, and ntW him toe a button to put on a "button string." He entioed the little girl into the houw and up stairs, then placed her on abed and killed her with a hammer or hatchet.
He left the body on the bed until the following Wedneeday. when he carried it to the cellar where it ww found. When asked what motive he had for the murder, he aaid that he had had a oouple ot drinka of liquor and must have been cnusy. In answer to questions he finally admitted that he had attempted to outrage the girl, but ww unsuccessful. Otto Lueth, the wlt-oon-fSased murdenr ot Maggie Thompson wys that he ia 16 yean of age, but he looka older.
THE WABASH FLOOD.
fhe River BepnFaUlas Iast Night—The Railroad Interruption.
The river ww on a stand ywterday, and ww thought to be falling slowly last night. The broad valley ww covered with water, and many boats could be awn in the neighboring fields. The waters extended to the eastern border of West Terre Haute, and the boats frequented that neighborhood. Large drifta oould be awn in almost ev ery corner ot the field, whioh the growing crops are hidden
bar
the flood. Swift currente ran in Mi directions through the tillable lands, threatening destructive waahoute cropa soon the waters begin to recede within the banks. Many spectators visited the oourt houw tower to sw the wide expanse of* waters from that point, while othen contented themselves a view from the river bank.
The E. & I. trains ran far Sriine City where passage ww obstructed the watonot Eel river. Itia hopet rather than supposed, that passengers can be transferred at Saline City to-day. The other roada were able to make better time, becauw the smaller streams
market here yesterday. Farmers could do. nothing on the farma, and did the next bwt thing by driving cattla to mar—ii
J-r ---1' ""t-
The Freshet In Parke County. Special to the Express. ROCKVILLE, June 10.—The freshet in
the Wabwh and Raccoon' valleys hw destroyed most of the corn. In the neighborhood of Rosedale the Big Raccoon ia filled up from bluff to bluff, and the farmers will have to replant their corn,'! while at Rowville many housw have been inundated. At the river ywterday the water lacked about tEree inchw of overflowing the levee. The farmers worked manfully hauling dirt to repair weak places and stop, if powible,the break of the levee. Many people from Rockville went to Montezuma to see the river.
Cattle Drowned In Clay County. Special to the Express. BRAZIL, lad., June 10.—The flood of
lwt Friday night and Saturday proved more dwtructive to stock on Birch creek than any previoua one. Already thirty or forty head are reported drowned betwwn this place and Saline City.
Several iron bridgw Just erected, or yet in procew of construction on Birch creek and Jordan, are reported swept
7, Pittaburg from their moorings.
Sixteen Badly IiUnrad.
WILKKSBARRE,
Pa., June 10.—The I ~"wu
railroad, due here at 9 o'clock thia morn' ing, met with a wriousaocidentthis side of Sugar Notch. The disabled oar ppea upon the track, and the several coaches following crashed against it, all being precipitated down an embankment. The cars were badly wracked, and aixteen passengers were wriously injured, though none fatally. The occupants of the coaohw were principally reeldents of the email towns below the city.
The Why ot It.
A prohibitionist friend writee us, aaking why it is, that if prohibition' doean't prohibit, the liquor men raiw
I
adheranta fairly poured in hia lap. A y*ek ago the pariah, whioh seems to fairly idolize Kolaainki, prawnted him a fine coach and a apan
'A
it is that the
liquor men don't like to do a contraband buainew or surrender the traffic to the druggists.—[Mansfield Newa.
nte Milwaukee Ohlnamra. MILWAUKEE, Jane 10.—Sam Yip Jah, the Chinaman convicted of luring little gi^a into his laundry for immoral parpoew, ww sentenced to the state prison at Waupon for fifteen yaara. Hah Ding'a I Ohio, notioed a peculiar flavor in hfa oaw ww oontmued unUl the July term. I tea, and Mia Trepcler on lifting the faet-
•hat Way.
"Your daughter ia a born mnaician, Mr. Quimby." "Yes I asad to think that twenty
I walked the floor with
her. —[Linooin JoarnaL
writing
man, with voles abasst on-
tbee,' 'Babr Bell.
thsalt eea. sie *Hns welLn oaUwpraudtMtnleU.
ShetwolMitaoen"OrtaiOfather,! eomrat-" "Wtal. utl" tbe good man eMed, ttfUiiclila hat-'OiniUather'-Mer 1 Want thought of that." —[Hsrpcfs Week]}.
Paola, KaaM hw rented ita city park to a carpet renovator. "The piano taught moderate" ia a sign on a houw in London.
A Nevada man hw a strawberry patch whioh yielda 1,000 boxw a day. The deoeaw in the public debt during Ifay ia aatimated at ISflOOfiOQ.
Than ia a man in Hart county, Georgia, who spella hia entire name with two letten, Bob Bobo. .Two hundred and seventy-five ladies are olergymen in the United States and occupy pulpits auoh.
A littlegirl inOrvingaville, Ky., choked to death Ktor awallowing a grain of corn, which lodged in her throat.
The almoat incredible atatement is made by a south Florida man that it has rained more or lew in the-vicinity of his home on the 20th ot May for the past nineteen yean.
Some ingenioua arithmetician has calculated that the 30,000,000 atampa iwued by the English postoffloe from 1840 to 1884, if plaosd end to end, would reach to the moon and back.
Judge Wray, ot Walton Springs, Greene' county, Georgia, keeps a horse saddled and bridled to anawer the calls ot couples bent on matrimony. There is an epidemic of marriages in that county now,
Theodore Urban, an antiquarian and student ot Columbia, Pa., aays he has evidence that this continent ww settled about air hundred and fifty years after the deluge that the inhabitants were highly civilized and used tools of metal
A carriagemaker of Armstrong county, Pennsylvania, hw just shippsd to Persia a sarriage packed in boxes, to facilitate transportation aorow the desert on cam els'backs. The total freight bill ww about one hundred dollars.
A Cairo colored man narrowly oaped being bitten by a rattlwnake. He fired hia gun at tbe reptile, and it )Hnlf«ri him into the Ochlocknee river. He oould not awim, but ww pulled out by a pasaing teamster. The snake escaped death.
A Minneeota man who appears in the public streeta drunk will for the first offense be fined from ten to forty dollars second offense, from twenty to fifty dollars thira offense, imprisonment from sixty to ninety daya. For the first two offenaw imprisonment may be substi tuted for fine..
The German painters who sent piottuna and the aculpton who sent stat uary to the Paria exhibition have already been boyootted at home. Their excuw, that they thought it only right to try at an international competition for recom-
newspaper as an "impudent and egotistical aawrtion of the love of gain." An JBngliah clergyman, it is said, who i-«ant}v tolling the story ot^tbeGxxl Bible mixed, with a decidedly ludicrSus rwult. After reciting the Good Samaritan's promise to the landlord of tbe inn: "And when I oome again I will repay thee," he added, "This he wid, knowing that he ahould aw his face no more."
One of ths ewiwt ways to reduce weight is to wear a short flannel sweater, andride a brisk trot. If the hone trots roughly, and the rider bounoes up and down in the saddle, so much the better.
,n
w-^bou.d «, vi^ xr-'ft: *b2.k £'s gs
A prominent citizen of Parsons. Ksn., determined to sup with a party of friends againat the will or hia wife. He ww resolved that he would, and ahe that he ahould not go. His friends missed him, and just for fun envadsd his residence, where they found him and his wife sitting in their chairs fast wleep. He hsd given her an opiate that he might slip away, and ahe had given bim one that he might not.
The American pickpockets who visit the Paris exposition are having a hard time. Mr. Byrnea, of New York, wnt photographs of nearly five hundred thievee, pickpockets and burglars to the chief of police of Paris, and now aoon wan Amerioan rascal atepe into the exposition be is hailed by name and notified to keep his handa in hia own pockete end out of the pockets of other people. If he takm his-hande out ot his pockets he is looked up.
Peter Trexler, of Catawisra valley,
I tie lid found within a beautiful trout WWtotaUi. Mr. Trexler had kept
CHICAGO, Jane 10.—The Johnstown I it for years in the spring to purify the. fond ww increased to 990,587 this morn-1 Usually hia wife got water from ing. Thereis now no doubt bat that it I SJnSS1?. but being hurwill go over $100,000 the gw oompan-1 iaa, the street oar nd ths I '"•PP^ the hd on without looking into Mamanyjn the ststarAU LOSSMS are
board of education have to report *et 12* boiling mernlv» the wood I 50*1 or »mt PAYS fwas I nre, and tbe trout ww in the pot. Soma idw may be formed of thevastf uantity of water discharged ty South! wk lake into the Cbnemaugh vaUey" when oomparad to the flow over Niagara I falla. BstimatingtheNisgarasupmyal ^SfiOOflWtam of thirty-aix cuuofwtI
I
tdPn«thf
I the lake to hava bean thiaa and
—11/mn^OOO/JOO
yard wid»—(UnoolnjvmuTraqunTt^^^bmn isT •x..oMT ITiatnntslls.
a
IS desired and admired by all.
The British matron hw at lwt succumbed to the attractions of her own music halls. Thorn most agreeable places of entertainment, where the singing of old ballads and new fanciw is BO delightfully done, have always been regarded highly improper, with sufficient reason, perhaps. But now women rriTTt M"l~i have begun to go in the boxes only. But I TIME ADLEI-T-IT-S-TA they are still, there, wives, daughters
Among
frinp which may best be done to. ,. enhance personal beauty is the daily -J use of Ayer's Hair
Vigor. No matter what the color ol the hair, this preparation gives it a lustre and pliancy that adds greatly to ita cliarm. Should the -. hair be thin, harsh, dry, or turning gray, Ayer's Hair Vigor will restore the color, bring out a new growth, and.
render the old soft and shiny. For keeping the scalp clean, cool, and healthy, there is no better preparation in the market.
I free to confess that a trial of, Ayer's Hair Vigor has convinced me that it is a genuine article. Its use has not only caused the hair of my wuo anu daughter to be
Abundant and Glossy,
but it ha9 given my rather stunted mustache a respectable length and appearance."— R. Britton, Oakland, Ohio. "lily hair was coming out (without any assistance from my wife, either). I tried Ayer's Hair Vigor, using only one bottle, and I now have as line a head of hair as any one could wish lor. —R. X. Schmittou, Dickson, Tenn.
I have used Ayer's Hair Vigor in my family for a number ot years, aud regard it as the best hair preparation I know of. It keeps the scalp clean, the hair soft and lively, and preserves the original color. Mjt wife lias used it for a long time with most satisfactory results.—Benjamin M. Johnson, M. D., Thomas Hill, Mo.
My hair was becoming harsh and dry,' but after using half a bottle of Ayer's Hair Vigor it grew black and glossy. 1 cannot express the joy and gratitude I feel."—Mabel C. Hardy, Delavan,Ill.^gs
Ayer's Hair Vigor,
I PREPARED BY Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mat* Bold by Druggists and^erfumers.
sin
BUCK
Standard Henriettas, Bordered Henriettas, Striped Henriettas, Camel Hair Alye, Mourning Cloth, Camel Hair Twills, Waterproof Serge, Maria Theresa, Railway Cords, Alpaca Brilliantine, Mohair Brilliantine,
owns
Some Are Here
Given:
Melrose? Drap d' Alma, Crepe Cloth, Alys, Venetian, Armure, -M Habit Cloth, Mohair, Tamiae, Batiste, Nun's Veiling, 1
Mohair Sicilian Brilliantine.
1
and sisters of respectability unquestionable. When Lard Dudley and other noble I lords were arrested in the raid on the
Field gambling club, the char^T ^ainsi I ttr1*
them ww dismissed by Justice Hannay on the ground that "it would be absurd to fine gentlemen of wealth and distinction auoh a sum six shillings and eight penoe." The eame week two small boys were convicted at Croyden of tbe crime of pitch and tow, and they were each fined wven shillings and six pence, and wven days'hard labor.
Juat a partial list of the popular light weight eummer fabrics.
GOHS III) SU ALL OITHM.
I I S- s*
INDIANAPOLIS, IND.
N. B.—We are the exclusive selling I agents for thoee very tine plain black and figured Drees Satines. We guarantee that neither sun, water, perspiration nor acids will change tbe color.
Trains marked thus (P) denote Parlor Car attached. Trains marked thus (S) denote Sleeping Trains marked thus (B) demarked thus
Care attached dally. note Buffet Cars attached. Trains
AU0"Mt
da»y Sund-ys
VANDALIA LINE.
T. H. I. DIVISION. LEAVE FOB THE WEST.
Mo. 9 Western Express (SftV) No. 6 Mall Train*. No. SMall Train No. 1 Fast Une (P4V) No. 7 Fast Mall*.. L.
aaaaie, so mucn me better. I ARRIVE FBOM TBE EAST.
9 o'clock this morn-1 mad« bv taklnv I "ns (p*Y)^V|No. 7 Fast ^all
made by taking four, six or eight thicknsssw of flsnnel and wrapping them around the loina and the lower part of the chest.
1.42 a.m. 10.18 a.m. 2.16 p. m. 9.04 p. m.
UUVE von TBE EAST.
No. 12 Cincinnati Express (S) No. 6 New York Express (SAV) No. 4 Mall and Accommodation No. 20 Atlanuc Express (P&V) No. 8Fast Line*.. .-.....
1.90 a. m. 1.51 a. m. 7.16 a. m. 12.42 p.m. 2.00 p.
(S1T)
..... 1.30 a.m. ... 10.12 a.m. «r. 3.00 p. m. 6.46 p.m.' ... 9.00p.m.
on—*'
ABBIVC FROM TBE WEST.
No. 12 ClndnnaU Express (8) 1.20 a. m. No. 6 New York Express (84V) 1.42 a. m. "S i"SnT,^.xprew* 12-37 p. m. No: 8 Fast Line 1.40 p.m.
T. H. ft L. DIVISION.
IJUVEIOB THS HOBTH.
No. G2 South Bend Mall No. South Bend Express
S°- S J8"? Hadte Express..
6.00 a. 100 p. I
ARK IT* FBOM TBE XORTB
1X00
No. 68 South Bend Mall. 7,80p.
FIRE! FIRE! FIRE! FIRE!
INSURANCE.
You can get fire Instiranee or uiy'otber Mwrf of Insurance or
Allen Kelley Sj, Co.,
««5 Wsbask Avmw, Tsrrs Ktulsjiid I No. 24K. Thiss«eney companies now
LIVE STOCK INSURANCE
Vwrfoaest nsaoau,
oMeaurementof
Pwhiflh
Aonmrma
A8SHS, St 33^00^00.00.
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