Greenfield Evening Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 5 March 1896 — Page 4

WILD SCENES IN ITAU

Excitement Intense Over the War in Africa.

THE CABINET HAS RESIGNED,

¥he OoTernment Condemned For tlie Sl»nght«r of the Italian Troops in AfTin Popular Demonstrations of the

Hart Violent Character at a Number of Different Places. BOMB, March 5.—Further details have •been received concerning the defeat? of She Italians at the battle of Adowa and (hoy tend to confirm the most alarming reports circulated, although the exact number of men killed is not yet announced. General Baratieri's force conoisted of 16 battalions of white troops {Italians), six battalions of native troops and 12 batteries of artillery.

Since the defeat, no news has been received from General Dabormida's brigade, which was composed of seven white battalions and four batteries of srtiliery. Genen Js Albertone and AriamwiHi and their brigades are also misslag «nit it is believed that they have been annihilated.

It is almost impossible to describe the of excitement in Rome and no gach scenes have been witnessed since occupation of this city by the Italfan troops.

The whole population seems to be in ghe streets ana the entire police force, as mil as all the troops of the garrison, £n» on duty.

The whole country appears to be as excited as the inhabitants of the capital, and it is reported that rioting occurred dnring the day in several cities. The press censor, however, is holding back all dispatches liable to increase the state of alarm prevailing, and some time must elapse before the real truth is known.

The war office is besieged by crowds of people un»l is now surrounded by teroons.

Til) offices and residences of all the •ministers are guarded and the guards at the palace have been doubled.

In the nu-iu thoroughfares shouting crowds jist'. i.ik-'lo every now and then, calling for un1 tiownta.il of the ministry, only to be dispersed by the police. Ku•nierous arrises iiave been made and the police esCiHTi'ig the prisoners to the different depots have been in several •cases roughly handled by tiie mobs.

Late last night there was a serious eoniiict be,.ween the police and a mob which seemed i-ent on making a demonstration before the palace. Tlie national bag was carried draped with •crepe and there were cries of '-Down •with the ministers," "Down with Crispi," ''Death to Baratieri."

The newspapers report that at the cabinet m#acmg held yesterday afternoon the ministry resolved that they wouid resign rather than face the crisis. (Premier Crxspi, it is further reported, ^subsequent to the cabinet meeting, informed King Humbert of the decision arrived at.

Further details are being received of -jiolent scenes enacted at different points all over i.taiy, which the government -."has sought in vain to prevent the publication Oi:'. 'i he most serious of these occurred at Milan, where 30,000 persons look part in fene disorders, amounting 1to a popular uprising. The poiice of that city nail Uu'ir hands lull to bring •fche crowds uiuier control and were forced to charge, through the streets with fixed bayonets before they succeed•ed iu uis^ersiiig the mob. No statejjxient is made of the amount bf harm done to the inhabitants by this rough wsage, but. ib is known iii.it a large number oi persons were injured more or less seriously. The public gatherings -were auur-' t-sed by orators wiio inaue violent speeches against the constitution and against the ministerial policy in Abyssinia, and who were greeted

Twith wild acclamations. At Pavia tiie population turned out «ii masse to protest against the dispatch tof further troops to Africa. Some of Sins reinforcements designed for the reSieff of the Italian army in Abyssinia •were to depart from that city yesterday. JBnfc they were taken possession of bodfly bj the rioters, in whose ranks were included many women and children. The soldiers were forced out of the cars which they had taken their places [preparatory to departure, and the mob ifcea tore up the rails along the track, nod made the soldiers promise not to leave the town.

In Some there was less violence, but tribe public indignation was almost ftqtt&lly high. The students of the city 3ed. the demonstrations, which were dierected against the cabinet. Papers contarninc pictures of Signor Crispi were Twraed iu the pnblic streets with every accompaniment of contumely and wrath napcessed against the premier. Crowds 3«zaded the streets everywhere shouting ~*3)ovra with the government!" "Down nrmh the murderers J" The police and TOHrfctraers were finally obliged to take a ttamd, as the volume of public wrath mia fast assuming dangerous proportion* and the paraders were at last disjp&cssed.

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Manj arrests were made during

*hed»y. There v.-ere many demonstrations at other lxjiiit against sending more Italians into Africa. Protests similar in Jdud to that at Pavia against further operations in Africa were made at l)orao, Cremona, Palermo, Ledi, Forli, JAwzu, Aici .ina, Purina, Verona and daiieo. it is stated that the resignation of the .ministry v.i'i be formally announced to parliifc'iienfc. Alter tins has been done, too tin Jionsos v.-ill adjonrn and await the 'decision of 1 "ing Humbert upon what action he v/::i take. The king has infcormudSig

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Crispi that he must have

sitae to«onsi er whether he will accept 3he resiginm.. us of the ministers, and

confuiTOi: "/itli the presidents of the iwmate and the chamber of deputies Ti5?on the «nl»j*t. i-'he g) .'Vi.ment is being urged by kx»e of most prominent men in the c-uuntry to give to tlie press all the news in its possession, as it is still believed Jtfoat the wear has not been told and jtfiat the war office is in possession of facta still more startling than those "which have already leaked out. One jgnuaor has it that the entire Italian 0»j was practically wiped out and

Sfaut only a battalion or so succeeded in attaching Asmera. At the war office, Junvever. it was stated that this is an rai»ggenition. iflfi trnth of the matter neems to be Jlkat the m, ... ,,ers are anxiously await­

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ing the report of General fealdissera and that, in the meanwhile, they are suppressing the facts which readied them previous to his arrival at Massawah. This, at any rate, is the most charitable construction to place upon the apparently cruel silence of the government. But the excitement will not diminish to any appreciable extent until an official statement has set at rest the alarming rumors in circulation, or definitely established the real fapts in the case.

It is said the government was aware on Tuesday of the full extent of the defeat inflicted upon the Italians, but it was judged to be dangerous to allow the startling information to reach the public suddenly, and so, first the report of the defeat was permitted to leak out then the war officials allowed it to be "rumored" that 500 men had been killed after this came the report "that 3,000 soldiers had fallen," and now it is "admitted" that 5,000 Italian troops were slain, in addition to severe loss among the native troops serving under the flag of Italy.

To those having relatives serving with the Italian army in Africa the failure of the war office to issue an official report is little less than torture. But no amount of pressure seems strong enough to obtain the anxiously awaited news from the minister of war.

An important meeting, at which the Marquis Di Budini presided, took place here. All the opposition deputies who could attend were present, and while it was decided to support all the measures necessary to sustain the honor of Italy, it is understood that the government will be subject to the most fierce attacks and that its colonial policy will come in for the strongest condemnation. GENERAL BARATIERI'S COWARDICE.

He Quitted the Battlefield While the Troops Were Still Fighting. LONDON, March 5.—A Rome dispatch to The Daily News says: "General Baratieri's own report shows that he quitted the battlefield while the troops were still fighting and without knowing the fate of the column under Generals Dabormida and Arimondi. He will be tried for abandoning his post, the penalty of which is degradation and death."

The Chronicle's Rome dispatch says: "Qaeen Victoria and Emperor William have telegraphed their sympathy to King Humbert with the expression of the hope that the army of Italy may ultimately be victorious."

FIRE AT JOHNSTOWN.

Three ISusiness Blocks Destroyed anil a Number of i'inns Uurucd Our.. JOHNSTOWN, Pa., March 5.—At 9:30 yesterday evening fire broke out in the basement of the Nathan Miller block, in the most central part of the town. The grocery store of Nathan Miller, where the lire started, was entirely destroyed, entailing a loss of $5,000.

The Democrat office, on the second floor of the building, was next destroyed, together with all the fine new machinery and equipment of that firm. Their loss is placed at $30,000. Nothing whatever was saved, even the employes, who were preparing the morning edition, fleeing for their lives. The H. Al. Benshoff book bint e.-y on the second floor was also ctrujietely destroyed, with a loss of $6,uu0. Oil the third floor was' the Neum.ui League club rooms, one of the finest iu the ciiy, and ail their furniture and paraphernalia, which is estimated at §1,000, is lost.

The Hannan block was the next to go. The hardware store of .Jo.m Hannan on the 'first floor was entirely destroyed. His loss is placed at $2,000. The JHJ. L. 6c H. T. Upuegrave millinery establishment, also in the Hannan building, was destroyed, with a loss of $2,0u0.

Tiie Wolf block, which adjoined tlie Hannan Block, took fire from the burning biulding and soon was a total loss, in this block, which was also valued at §75,000, were a number of lawyers' offices, ail of whom had very line libraries, and which were totally destroyed. The lawyers are: City Solicitor F. J. O'Connor, Oliver E. McNeelis, O'Counor & Greswald and County Surveyor E. G. Fetterinan.

The Americus club rooms occupied the third floor, and they had one of the finest clubs in the city, their loss on furniture alone being estimated at $1,500. Lawyer William Williams was also on this floor, and his loss is total. Mr. E. M. Mahlans occupied the first floor with a grocery, and he succeeded in saving part of his stock, and his loss is placed at $2,000.

The fire then spread to Morris Wolf's residence on Lincoln street, where considerable damage was done. It was only by the most presistent efforts of the firemen, several of whom were injured, that the whole square, which represents the principal business portion of the city, was saved.

Will Get Greater Wages.

ST. Loins. March 5.—Local journeyman stonemasons and stonemasons' laborers, some 500 strong, made a demand on the bosses yesterday for an increase in wages. The stonemasons want an increase from 40 and 45 cents to 50 cents an hour the laborers from 30 to 32 1-2 cents an hour. A committee was appointed to ask the stonemasons to give the bosses until May 1 to decide. Nearly all of the bosses say they will give the increase on that day. No action has been taken yet in regard to the laborers.

Bradley Indorsed For President. FRANKFORT, Ky., March 5.—The Republican state central committee yesterday afternoon, after a spirited contest between Lexington, Louisville and Frankfort, settled on Lexington as the place of holding the next state convention and fixed April 15 as the date. Resolutions were passed indorsing Bradley for president.

Proposed Peace Monument. WASHINGTON, March 5.—Representative McMahon of Pennsylvania has introduced a bill appropriating $75,000 to procure a site and erect a peace monument at Appomattox, Ya. The site selected shall be where Generals Grant and Lee met and agreed upon terms of capitulation.

Germany Claims Unfair Treatment.1 BERLIN, March 5.—During the course of a debate on the sugar bill in the reichstag jsterday Herr Staudy urged a direct tax on sugar and energetic action against the United States, which, he claimed, did not give fair treatment to German sugar.

CHEAP, TELEPHONES.

No High Prices Paid by the People of Shelbyville.

TWO COMPANIES OPERATING.

The Conntry People Have Taken Up the Matter and the Entire South Side of the County Is Connected With Telephones.

Looking For a Dead Man's Money. Other Indiana State News. SHELBYVIIXE, Ind., March 5.—While some towns in the state, with greater pretensions than this, have been successfully baffled by the telephone companies in the matter of cheap rates, this place is in the complete and full enjoyment of the cheapest telephone tolls of any town of its size in the country.

Some months ago a mutual company was organized by the people for the purpose of constructing a telephone plant, and all of the stock was quickly taken. All kinds of hindrances were placed in the way of the new enterprise, but nothing daunted, the projectors pushed the scheme along, and when the matter reached the city council, the company had no trouble in securing a 50-year franchise. Previous to this, the rates of the Bell Telephone company were $3 per month, paid in advance, for the use of an instrument.

Soon as the Mutual company commenced to get their plant in working order, the Bell people at once cut their rates down to $1 per month. The home company did the same thing, and the price has remained at that point, with no prospect of either company making concessions. The result is that both, exchanges have increased their business to a wonderful extent, the new company having about 225 instruments in use and the old company about 125. Previous to the time the fight was inaugurated, there were only about 70 teleephones in the town, all told.

In addition to the cheap rates in the city, the country people have taken the matter up, and the entire sojith side of the county is now connected with telephones. A company, consisting of three men, was organized they purchased instruments. went into their own woods and cut poles, purchased wire at wholesale, and by doing their own constructing put up one of the cheapest telephone systems in tlie country. Tney now have a line that connects this place 'vith Wilson postoliice, Bynum, Cave Mills, Norristown and Geneva.

At these points other connections are made that reach Flat Rock, Lewis Creek, St. John's Switch, St. Louis Crossing, Hope and Columbus and several way stations. Lines are now being consti ucted from Flat Rock to Edinburg and from Norris town to St. Paul. When these lines are up and in working order, every town and postoffice in the south part of the county will be connected by telephone, and by the means of a switch board all these places can talk to this city.

There is talk of a number of people organizing a company for the purpose of extending these lines on the north part of the county, and if this is done, the county will have the most complete system of telephones in the country.-

A FARMER'S PECULIARITIES.

An lSffnrt to Discover the Money Left by Dr. Taylor. TERRE HAUTE, Ind., March 5.—Dr. James L. Taylor of this city lias brought suit against the seven other heirs of his father's estate, demanding an investigation and settlement. Tlie senior' Taylor, who died in 1891, was one of Sullivan county's wealthiest farmers and money lenders. He was popularly supposed to be worth from $75,000 to $100,000.

Upon his death but $5,000 personal property and $7,000 real estate couid be discovered. One thousand six hundred dollars was found in the bottom of an old trunk, and it is claimed that many thousands were either hidden away by him or given to some one in trust. He had a horror of banks, and is known to have slept with as much as $10,000 under his pillow.

Will Case Compromised.

GREENSBURG, Ind., March 5.—The celebrated Cooper will case, brought to this county on a change of venue and tried, with the result that the jury disagreed, has been compromised, the widow getting 115 acres in land and $1,500 in cash, besides considerable bank stock, given her before he died. It was an attempt on the part of the Cooper heirs to break the will of the late James Cooper, who left a great amount of wealth, the most of it going to his second wife, by whom he had no children, and who was the domestic during the lifetime of Cooper's first wife. The case took up two weeks of the court, and was hotly contested.

Retract* His Confession.

CRAWFORDSVILLE, Ind., March 5.— Phillip Hauk, whom the grand jury of Fulton county failed to indict as an accessory to the murder of Grace McLamrock, and who is now awaiting grand jury action in this county, has repttdiated his former confession, in which he alleged that he accompanied his victim to Covington, where a criminal operation was performed by Dr. Cox, and he now claims that the purported confession was extorted from him while he was under a great strain. He now says that Dr. Cox simply informed him what the trouble was, and that neither he nor Cox contributed in any manlier to the girl's death.

A Slander Suit Compromised.

I WABASH, Ind., March 5.—The slander suit for $10,000 damages against Sylvester Clarke, brought in the Kosicusko circuit court by Mrs. Alice Fawley, was I compromised yesterday, Mr. Clarke agreeing to pay all costs. The action was based upon language used by Mr.

Clarke to the effect that Mrs. Fawley was not a fit person to be retained as a member of church, and that she ought to be expelled.

Damages l'or False Arrest.

TERRE HAUTE, Ind., March 5.— Claude Ewing, a young man employed by Frank Rigney of Honey Creek township, was arrested on the streets of Terre Haute one day last week, charged with stealing his employer's watch and revolver. He established his innocence at his preliminary hearing, and has emI p?oyed attorneys to institute suit for |5,000 damages for false arrest.

W'%

TOITGUESOF8ILYER.

SPEECHES IN CONGRESS FOR WHICH THE PUBLIC IS HUNGRY.

Remarkable and Eloquent Array of Facta and Figures of Congressman Towne of Minnesota—Yonng Orators Who Charm the Veterans—Circulation of Speeches^

[Special Correspondence.]

WASHINGTON, Feb. 24.—The Fiftyfourth congress certainly has not astonished or delighted the country with any oomprohensive measure, but it has produced at least ten great speeches, for which the reading public appears phenomenally hungry. Now, the philosophy underlying the popular demand for printed speeches, and especially the remarkable variations therein, is something on which old members are never agreed, and those whose speeches are not called for are apt to be sarcastic, but this demand is well worth studying, and just now the facts are very curious.

Senator Tillman on finance and senatorial dignity, Senator Wolcott on our British relations, Senator Warren on live stock and the variation of prices thereof due to politics, and Senator Sherman and various representatives on silver are in de-

CONGRESSMAN CIIAIU.ES A. TOWNE. marnl for reasons which any one can see, but why should the calls for Judge Terry's short essay on silver be many times more numerous than those of any other representative?., The member for the Littlo Rock district is one of those sarcastically quiot men like "Brown of Calaveras," and, like him, lio occasionally "cleans out the crowd" very unexpectedly. In a rather close acquaintance of two years I have never known him to laugh, and very rarely to smile, and his speech has not in it a grain of humor or a single sentence of what may be called popular claptrap. Yet 70,000 copics of it havo already gone out, and the demand continues. Georgia alone ordored 40,000, but when the Atlanta Constitution published it in full some of them were recalled. Georgia and Alabama have together taken over 50,000, and it is believed that Arkansas and Texas will equal it. It is probably the best condensed speech in the silver series, and therefore convenient for a textbook.

A Silver Tongued Orator.

Of all the silver speeches, however, that of Hon. Charles A. Towne of Duluth was by far the most catching. It would bo rash to pronounce it the best over delivered here in favor of silver, for one's prepossessions may mislead him, but all the silverites so consider it, jmd it is the safest of prophocies that its circulation will run far into the hundreds of thousands. In fact, tlie demand was great within a few hours after it wa- delivered that Mr. Towne decided to revise it very thoroughly and contract for printing it by tlie bale. It will be a textbook next fall in every district where the silver issue is up. To heighten the interest the best reply to it was made by another Minnesota man, Hon. James Thompson McCleary of Mankato, who used the same charts to prove the exact opposite of Mr. Towne's contention—a delightful illustration of the sad truth that "figures will lie." I hardly dare say that these two speeches rank with that historic contention of Lincoln and Douglas, but I do believe they will occupy a similar place so long as the silver question is prominent.

I have never witnessed just such a scene in the house as that when Mr. Towne was speaking. His time was twice extended by unanimous consent and finally made unlimited, and when it was questioned if this could be done under the rules a member on the gold side offered to surrender all his time to the speaker. It was amusing to watch such old goldites as Dlngley, Cannon, Grosvenor, Boutelle and Walker, who never took eyes off the speaker or interrupted, but sat like enraptured amateurs listening to a great singer, and when a new member insisted on asking a question there was a general growl of displeasure, and if I am not greatly mistaken a New York member shouted in a stage whisper, "Keepstill, you dHoosier!" When Mr. Towne olosed, business was impossible for several minutes. In vain did Chairman Sereno Payne handle the gavel. Men of all faiths crowded to shake hands and congratulate, and the next speaker, Hon. U. S. Hall of Missouri, whose remarks were expected to bo of intense interest, as ho was to announce his own conversion to gold, talked five minutes before we could hear a word in the galleries. Mr. Towne is 137 years old and never ran for office till 1:04, but Minnesota men tell us that he was eloquent debater in college at 16, a popular speaker in campaigns at 18, ran for congress on a silver platform in a gold district and received nearly 10,000 majority.

What Congressman Bailey Proved. Another speech for which the demand is great aud the circulation is expected to run well toward 50,000 is that of Hon. Joseph W. Bailey of the Fifth Texas, the boy of the house when ho entered it, in the Fifty-second congress. The silver orators had generally made tho almost fatal concession that wages had risen despite the great decline in commodities, accepting the conclusion of the Aldrich report, but Judge Bailey flatly contradicted that and brought figiiros from the agricultural regions proving to tho satisfaction of his side of tho houso that wages have really declined at least 25 per cent. And right here comes in the most singular feature of this inquiry. The outgo of silver speeches is at least 10 times as great as that of gold, and I think it will bo 20 times as great by the close of the session. As might be expected, the reasons given vary greatly. Mr. Dingley says that in his section people no more think of debating this issue than the law of gravitation or the Copernican •ystein of astronomy. Their mindn aro at ease thereon, and they caro nothing about

the literature of the snbjeoft. I eoold bat smile when I saw in The Record that less than 5,000 of Mr. Dlngley's speeches had so far been called for.

The other fellows say that the party that Is fighting up hill always has to oiroulate more literature, and one member asserts that in the year 1856 tho Republicans in Illinois circulated 20 times as many papers and documents as did the Domocrats. Furthermore, says Mr. Kem of Nebraska, people in the states from which the silver members come are all investigating the subject, while in the gold states "they affect to treat it with a silent contempt—the arrogant contempt which comes of ignorance." The circulation of speeches made by tho Populist members, however, is not much of an indication, for the committees often shove them by tho tens of thousands. Senator Tillman, who is now counted here as a Populist, started by ordering 30,000 copies of his speech printed, and they went off as fast as his clerks oould mail them. The circulation will at least double that, and probably reaoh 100,000. He has received nearly 8,000 letters, of which not quite 100 condemn his speech, while many praise it in such extravagant terms as to create suspicion of delirium. The worst joke in the business was played on Populist Kem. By mistake in the printing office his name was put over a perfectly rantankerous goldbug speech by Hon. Winflold S. Kerr of Ohio.

Decline In Values.

Senator Warren has also furnished a textbook for his party, his speech on the decline in values of live stock being as ingenious a compilation of figures as I ever saw. If the reader will only concede that concomitant proves causation, as the professors say, then the senator has proved that live stock appreciated just as Republican prospects roso, and vice versa, and that the election of Cleveland cost the owners $600,000,000 at a single sweep. Senator Woloott is not in so popular a current. His speech is widely read, and there are many words of praise, but the trouble is that the approval comes mostly from the east and northeast. If Wall street and Yale college and the Pennsylvania Quakers could voto in Colorado, it would be more to the purpose. It is said that the senator does not like to talk about it, but I fancy he is on that as on most other topics, for when I have tried to interview him ho always fell to talking about the wonderful groatuess aud destiny of Colorado, setting forth how the plains we once pronounced worthless are wonderfully fertile, how the mineral wealth is 50 times as great as the Pike's Peakers of 1859 ever imagined, how it is tho Switzerland of America and likewise the France, tho Italy and tho Greece, and finally—and this is something you always hear in Colorado—how it was settled by the most intelligent set of people of any new commonwealth in history, scholars who went there for their health, and that this will give tho state a superiority for ages to come. I hope so, but just the samo it appears that many of these scholars don't like his praise of Great Britain.

Another curious fact, but easily accounted for, is that the demand for speeches bears no sort of relation to tho prominence of the speaker. The able and thoroughly studied addresses of Hon. Nelson Dingley are read by but few, and so far as can be determined by the points to which they are shipped tlie speeches of Senator Sherman are read by a select few in each district, probably by tho intelligent few who want to study the subject from original figures. The circulation of the speeches of Senators Lodge, Morgan and Chandler on foreign affairs appears to be chiefly local, and generally it may be said that the speeches of eastern men and thoso from large cities do not go out in anything liko the proportion of those of country members. The explanation is simple. In the east and iu the cities the subjects aro exhaustibly discussed in tho great papers. Tho silver speech of Senator Jones of Arkansas started with a comparatively light demand, only 10,000 copies being printed on the first order, but tho increase has been stead}* and tolerably rapid, aud tho employees think it will rank high in tho matter of circulation. r-

Great Spcechcs In Former Times. There is no record to show how the great speeches of former times circulated, but old employees are confident there has for many years been nothing to approach tho demand for Tliad Stevens' great speech on reconstruction or for those of Shellaharger of Ohio ttnd Henry J. Raymond, and, as

mm

CONGRESSMAN JAMES T. M'CLEART. to Sumner's speech on "The Crime Against Kansas," some of the old fellows are positive that over 1,000,000 were printed. In addition 4o this, I distinctly remember that the main part of it was printed in the Republican papers of the central west. As to'the speech of Senator Jones of Novada on silvor, why that is, of course, the great thesaurus into which were condensed all preceding arguments on that side, and from which, as from an original reservoir, all subsequent debaters start. So its circulation is claimed to be Hearing 500.000. It is a little unfortuuate that Populists and silver men are not given to keeping exact records, for there is no way of proving how many copies of tho Jones speech havo been circulated in tho book form in which it now goes out, and when one asks at silver headquarters he is answered in vague terms of millions, and one enthusiast tells mo that the circulation "has exceeded that of 'Uncle Tom's Cabin' or Henry George's 'Progress and Povorty,' which aro said to have run almost evenly and far outgone any other books except the Bible and Webster's elementary readers.

Of course every member sends to his own district a few of his own speeches or of those whose sentiments ho adopts, and of late years tho trick has becfline very con:mnn of saying a few words and then nsk'ng leave''to print and incorporating in Tin -ui'od speed) elaborate arguments w:vo i.-ivir uttered in the House.

E. MAGK,

,, TEACHES OF

fiolin, Piano, Cornet, Mandolin.

Kesldence, North Street, next to New Christian hurch. d&wanj

DR. J. M. LOCHHEAD, (iiMI'AiMC PHYSICIAN and SIMEON.

Office and residence 42 N Penn. street, e«r side, and 2nd door north of Walnut rrpet.

Prompt attention to calls in city or wuntry. Special attention to ChildrenB.'Womens' tad Chronic Diseases. Late resident nystcian St. Louis Childrens Hospital. •i"»lv

)R. C. A. BAKNES,

Physician and Surgeon.

Does a general practice. Office ani ^•idence, 83 West Main Street. wld If phone 75

Indianapolis Division.

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"••'lr? 00 i- Kn-:!iv i!e, !oy vi!!. •iilii'is and mtennfd ate sta: .HIS. AIT'HO cnbridgo City i2 30 aurl +0 05 p. in. .X-jiiPII WOOD, 1. V. FORD,

General Manager, (Jerjral Passenger Agoat

PITTSBURGH:, PEN:: A.

For time cards, rates of fare, tbronerh tickot.i, -aiigage checks and further information re--nrding the runninsr of trains apply to auy Agent of the Pennsylvania Lines.

1896 MARCH. 1896

Su. Mo. Tu. We. |Th. Fr. Sa.

2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31

This Is the Heroine

Of Will Lisenbee's powerfnJ story entitled

Casinca

S§ IM

Which we are about to pub* lish, with appropriate illustrations.

CflsincA-

Is a tale of mystery that wW

Ml' puzzle and astonish vbu.

."•i.iX

t-J