Indianapolis Journal, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 July 1883 — Page 5

FOREIGN NOTES AND NEWS A Protest Agaiust the Landing of Rags at Liverpool. Th© Death-List Increasing—Cetewayo, His Wives and Many Chiefs Killed by Lisurgouts— General News. THE CHOLEKA. The Liverpool Town Council Protest Against Landing Hag Cargoes. Liverpool, July 26.—The town council having called the attention oC the privy council to the danger to public health arising from the large cargoes of rags received from Egypt, the privy council sent a reply in which they declined to interfere in the matter. The particular cargo cited town council’s communication as a rargo of Egyptian rags was not intended to be landed at Liverpool, but conveyed to New York or Boston. The town council to-day decided to apply for power to deal with rag cargoes. The Death List. London, July 26. —Deaths from cholera yesterday: At Damietta 50, Tan tali 28, Nehalla 25, Chobar 6. Samanoud 7, Mehallet 56. Zifteh 21, Mansourah 12. Ghizeh 55, Menzaleh 3; Alexandria 2; Cairo, 422. Two Cases in England. London. July 26.—A case of sickness, suspected to be the cholera, has been discovered in the London docks, and another one in Wales. Proper precautions have been taken in connection with each case. Forty members of the army hospital corps have beenjjrdered to Egypt. Several Deaths at Rostov. Berlin, July 26.—A special dispatch to the Independence Beige says cholera is reported at Rostov and several deaths have occurred. Neglect of Sanitary Precautions Alexandria Correspondence (July 5) of London Times. Lest I should seem to make against the government the serious charge of uegligence of sanitary precautions, unsupported by evidence, I will relate a few facts. Travelers some weeks ago reported that the stench of Damietta was observable ten milea away. The English residents at Mansourah months ago stated that the passage of dead animals down the river, five or six. at a time, was evident to both eyes and nose. For months back the newspapers have drawn attention to the presence of carcasses in the water. To keep lip the supply of water in the Alexandria canal, the government, with a view to save the expense of pumping extra water from the river, closed the locks of the irrigating canals for five days of the week, thus ruining the crops and compelling the natives to drink stagnant water, but enabling some of the officials to earn backsheesh for illicit supplies of water. The drainage of Alexandria is notoriously defective, owing to the fact of the low level of the central square not allowing a sufficient flow to the sea. The European roads committee offered six months ago, at their own expense, to raise the square and reform the entire system of drainage. The government never vouchsafed a reply. So much for the past. Nw t as to the effects of the present spasmodic energy exhibited by the government. A native doctor repeats that three days ago dead animals were floating down the Nile in large numbers through Damietta, exhaling horrible odors. Until a few days ago Damietta was without doctors, medicines or disinfectants. Prior to putting a cordon round Damietta—the utility of which measure is at any time questionable—ten thousand people, attending the fair, were allowed to disperse throughout the interior. The cordon itself could be evaded by backsheesh. The well-known physician," Dr. Mackie, applied through the consulate to the principal medical officer for information of the simplest description, and received a reply that the officer had no information. Monce Bey, who had been instructed to prevent people landing from Damietta along eighty miles of coast, suggested the guarding of the Damietta bar—which is a few yards wdde—in order to prevent any exit from the town; but the demand was refused. Carts may now be seen going through Alexandria, carrying away garbage by order of the sanitary authorities, but they are surrounded by no guards, and the natives follow them, abstracting and eating their contents. The inhabitants of the supposed infected quarter are removed into quarantine by carriages whicli next day ply for hire. I have surely given enough facts to establish the charge of negligence against the government. The position of the inhabitantsof Damietta deserves consideration. Thirty thousand souls are there locked up, with but the possibility of escape, and they are dying by hundreds, with only some half-dozen inexperienced native doctors at hand. The whole population are employed in saving themselves, without apparently a thought of this unhappy town. England should insist upon an efficient supply of doctors and medicines being sent. The inhabitants should be removed and camped out in the desert and kept within a strict cordon until the town has been purified, if necessary, by burning the infected houses. CETEWAYO’S DEATH. All His Wives and Many Chiefs Share His Fate -Sketch of His Career. London, July 26.—Additional advices from Durban, relative to the death of King Cetewayo at the hands of insurgents, state that all his wives and many of his chiefs were also killed, Cetewayo was the son of Panda and nephew of Chaka, the Zulu Napoleon, who, on the death, in 1812, of Uzenzangacona, ousted his half-brother, Uzingujana, from the throne, and, with the assistance of some men of the Umtetwa, among whom he had been brought up, set about reorganizing the Zulu nation. At Panda’s death Cetewayo was formally crowned by Mr.—now Sir Tbeophiius—Shepstone, in the presence of some 10,000 warriors. In October, 1876, when the English governor of Natal sent Cetewayo a remonstrance against the execution of his subjects who refused to obey the marriage laws, the Zulu monarch returned a haughty reply. “Why,” he said, “does the governor of Natal speak to me about my laws? Do 1 go to Natal and dictate to him about his?” The refusal to permit him to go through the ceremony of “washing his spears”—the first act of a Zulu king on coming to the throne, and a very natural one for a military potentate desirous of keeping the people around in due terror—tended to increase his 111-feeling toward England, and finally he was bullied into the war in which his power was broken and his throne lost. The story of the war in which the Prince Imperial perished does not need to be told over again in these columns. In August, 1879, Cetewayo was a fugitive in the wilds with a handful of faithful followers, hotly pursued by bodies of English and colonial cavalry under Lord

Gifford and Major Marter. He was captured and taken to Cape Town, with two of his twenty-three wives, two of his concubines, his daughter, and four male followers, apartments for their detention being fitted up in one of the bastions of the Castle barracks. When he was driven through the city, followed by a large crowd, he asked the interpreter why the people were cheering, and when told it was for him, he said they cheer because “the lion is caught.” He was delighted to see some of the crowd kissing mother earth in their excitement to see him. “Served them right!” he said. He was quite interested in seeing the trains run by the station, and shouted and laughed at them. The sight of so many soldiers impressed him, and he remarked with some bitterness: “O, I was only born yesterday. lam a mere baby. I never should have fought against such good men as the English, who intended to take away my country and govern it so much better than I could. They shot us to make us Christians. I ask pardon for shooting back at them.” In this prison the ex-King remained nearly two years, during which neriod, by the way, he dictated the history of his people to Captain Poole, the officer in charge of him. Early in 1881 he was removed to the farm of Mr. J. S. Lister, near Ronderbosch, not far from the city. He was next taken to England, and then “reinstated” on his throne. Cetewayo has a son and he ; r, a bright boy of fifteen, who may prove a source of danger to the English. A FRENCH POLITICAL SCANDAL. Sensation In Paris, Caused by Charges of Legislative Bribery. Cable Special. The Republique Radicale has startled all Paris this evening by the publication of a long and circumstantial account of the systematic bribery which it declares has been supporting the scheme to induce the government to buy out railroads not already under government control. The Republique asserts that many members of the Chamber of Deputies were under regular salaries to advocate the scheme, and that nearly all these had a large bonus in prospect if their efforts were successful. It even gives some names and indicates many others. The case made out by the paper is one of the completest cases of political scandal on a large scale ever made out, and involves so many favorite names that the Chamber will undoubtedly be compelled to order an investigation or a prosecution of the paper. Theßonapartists point to the scandal us a necessary example of what they call “the inevitable corruption and disgrace which attend all republican governments which, like the United States of America, permit men reared among thieves to secure places of power.” GENERAL FOREIGN NEWS. Inadequate Medical Management of Atlantic Steamships. London, July 26.—A deputation of the British Medical Association and several members of Parliament called to-day upon President Chamberlain, of the Board of Trade, and asked him to appoint a committee upon the inadequate medical and sanitary management of the Atlantic steamers. They comment strongly upon the want of proper precautions upon emigrant vessels, from which an annual sacrifice of life resulted. They suggested that ship owners be compelled to increase the pay of ship surgeons, and that the American government be requested to contribute a small sum toward the expenses of vaccination of passengers on hoard vessels. Mr. Chamberlain replied that he intended to introduce in Parliament in 1884 a bill dealing with the subjects mentioned and amending the shipping act. Affairs in Madagascar. London, July 26.—A dispatch from Tamatave, dated the 13th inst, says a state of siege is strictly maintained. Four French men-of-war are in the harbor, and other French war ships are en route to Tamatave from Reunion. The British warships Dragon and Dryad have sailed for Tamatave, and the American man-of-war Enterprise has gone to Zanzibar. Six English missionaries and their families are detained in the interior and unable to reach Tamatave. Discussion of the Suez Canal Motion. London, July 26.—The House of Commons will, on Monday, discuss Sir Stafford Northcote’s motion for an address to the Queen praying that she will decline to recognize in any negotiation relative to the Suez canal any claim of the company to such a monopoly as would exclude other undertakings designed for opening water ways between the Mediterranean and Red seas. A Government Chief Proclaimed. Guayaquil, July 26.—8 y spontaneous action the people to-day proclaimed Pedro Carbo chief of the government of Guayaquil, with full independent powers. The three governments will jointly convoke a national convention. An Improbable Story. Berlin, July 26. —It is stated that Professor Zeuplitz killed himself because he had drawn the death lot in a so-called American duel. Illness of the Pope. Rome, July 26.—The Pope is indisposed. Cable Notes. General William Fenwick Williams, an English soldier, is death Bismarck still looks ill, and bears traces of his recent attack of jaundice. Intelligence has reached Rome, from Berlin, that Bismarck will continue to negotiate with the Vatican for a settlement of the differences between it and Prussia. Information has been received at the Vatican from New York that the Catholic clergy in the United States will follow the instructions of the Pope in regard to Parnell and his followers. At a meeting at Dublin, of the Irish National League, Mr. Harrington announced that with a view of electing a Council as soon as possible, meetings for the formation of branches and to otherwise advance its interests, will be held ail over the country. Enforcing the Sunday Law. St. Louis, July 26.—Chief of Police Campbell issued orders to patrolmen to report to their respective captains all violations of the Sunday law, beginning on next Sunday. These refer not alone to saloons, but to all violations as defined by the State statutes. It is now generally believed that the saloonkeepers will resist the law. Home Sewing-Machine Factory Burned. Bridgeport, Conn., July 26.—The extensive works of the Home Sewing-machine Company were nearly destroyed by fire. The buildings destroyed occupy three sides of a square, ami we;** of brick, four stories high. The company employs about 400 hands, and was turning out about 110 machines per day. Big Fire at Pascoag, R. I. Providence, July 26.—At 11:30 a large fire was reported at Pascoag, and assistance asked. The Fire broke out in a building owned by Howard, and spread to a dwelling owned by Pendergast. Both were destroyed, and the fire is spreading. This is in a district 1 beyond reach of the force-pumps of the mills.

the INDIANAPOLIS JOURNAL, FRIDAY, JULY 27, ISS3.

STATE NEWS AND GOSSIP. The Recent Meeting at Island Park the Most Successful Ever Held. Evansville Metropolitan Police on Duty—An Illinois Woman Shoots Herself in a Jealous Fit—Notes. INDIANA. Close of the Meeting; at Island Park—Letter from Dr. Vincent. 6pecial to the Indianapolis JonvnaL Island Park, July 26. —The Island Park Assembly for 1883 has just closed, and it is the verdict of all that attended that this has been the most successful session ever held in the West. The members of the C. L. S. C. cattered throughout the State have a strong hold upon the assembly as was shown on many occasions. Wednesday was C. L. S. C. day and every part of the programme was a happy encomium on the Chautauqua circles of the tri-States, Ohio, Indiana and Michigan. and each of these States was strongly represented. The graduating exercises of the class of ’B3 were brief, but impressive. Dr. J. H. Vincent, the founder of the 0. L. S. C. and its general superintendent, who was to have been present, sent a letter to be read the class, and which contains advice and suggestions that will be of benefit to the circles of the State and is given in full: Dear Fellow-students: It is a source of great regret to lue that I am not permitted to he present with you on the occasion of your commencement service. The new assembly at Mount Eagle, Tenn., presented an earnest appeal, to which 1 reluctantly yielded in the mterestof the “C. L. 9. C.,” and the work which is possible to •it in the sunny South. I greet you to-day as fellow-studeuts in a great school. Its hulls are vast as the mountains and the heavens. Its text-books are the land, the sea, the heavens, the soul of mau, ana the word of the living God, from whom heaven and earth and soul have their being. Our curriculum is endless aa eternity. In such associations we may well rejoice. I greet with especial pleasure the graduates of 1883. This is your “commencement day,” and to-day you do commence as full members of the “society of the hall in the grove” to prosecute courses of reading and study, reaching the outlying regions, a glimpse of which your four years course has given you. The diploma which you receive holds upon it not only a testimony lo the work you have wrought during the four years, but you will find there blank spaces for thirty-one seals yet to be won us you shall add knowledge to knowledge. While you get knowledge remember that grace is better than knowledge. It is worth more to you for this life and the life to coine to he thau to kuow. Knowledge is light; grace is heat. What were the sun to the earth if only its light rays touched field and mountain! What is culture without character! “He that knoweth to do good and doetli it not, to him it is sin.” “The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom." For revereuce and conscientiousness are the true foundations of a worthy and enduring culture. “Knowledge passt-th away,” but love—the love that comes from the heart of God to the heart of man—is as enduring as God himself. What is the knowledge of human history and physical science to the soul that stands among the realities of the realm invisible! If the acquisition of them has developed will-forco aud fostered and given birth to gratitude, then indeed will t hey prove of worth in the world to come. But without love they are barren and useless as sansknt alphabets to starving, freezing pilgrims urnoug arctic snows. I congratulate you upon the zeal and faithfulness of your leader, the “Messenger of the C. L. 8. C.” I congratulate you upon the success which the Assembly at Island Park hus already secured, and I sincerely trust that the C. L. 8. C. of the future on your beautiful Island may prove a source of help to thousands who are in need of courses of study prescribed by our organization. May our Heavenly Father dwell in your midst, and while you study His word aud works, may you never be discouraged, but persevere to the end. Fraternally yours, J. H. Vincent, Superintendent;. Institution C. L. 8. C. There was nothing occurred to mar the pleasure of anyone, and at the close the “good bys” were said reluctantly, as associations were so pleasant that friends regretted to part. After the last exercise was over the vast audience, feeling that there were more to follow, remained seated, and Mr. Z. A. Coleman, first basso, and Miss Anna H. Jones, alto, of the Wiiberforce Concert Company, stepped to the front of the platform and were united in marriage by Rev. A. H. Gillet, amid the most enthusiastic applause. The contracting parties bore their parts with much grace and were honored by the C. L. S. C. salute, three waves of the handkerchief by every member of the circle. Dr. j. H. Bayless, of Cincinnati, well known throughout Indiana, was in attendance the last days of the Assembly, and delivered several fine lectures on “The Relation of tiie Church to Working Temperance Organizations,” “The Eternity of Truth,” “The Mission of the Church to the Present Age.” The election of officers for the ensuing year resulted as follows: President, J. H. Rerick. Lagrange: vice-president, Robert Larkins, Chicago; F. W. Keil, Fort Wayne, and Geo. M. Buck, Kalamazoo; secretary, P. N. Stroup, Lagrange; treasurer, John Mitchell, Kendailville. The Metropolitans in Charge. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. Evansville, July 26.—The Metropolitan police force formally entered up their duties to-day, and everything is working smoothly'. Punishment of a Wife-Beater. New Albany Ledger, 25tli. There lives at Seymour a shoemaker named Ernst Peters. He is in the habit of going on sprees, and when drunk is very abusive to his family, often having beaten his wife in a most cruel manner. About two years ago he was taken from his house at night by a crowd of men, tied to a shade tree and switched at a lively rate, for beating his wife. This kept him pretty docile for a time. But last Saturday night Peters went home drunk and gave his poor wife a most savage beating, averring he would kill her. The persecuted wife’s screams for help brought to the house several men, who compelled the brutal husband to desist front his inhuman conduct. An hour or two later a crowd of fifteen or twenty men went to the residence of Peters, and, seizing him, took him to the woods in the edge of the town and tied him to a tree. Then, w.th great deliberateness, they went to work upon him with switches, literally Haying his hide from shoulders to heels. The flogging was a terrible one, and Peters fainted under it several times. At nearly every lick given the brute the handler of the switch would quietly ejaculate: “You whip your wife, do you?” Every one of the party took a turn at him, and he begged most piteously for mercy. When he was finally released lie was warned that the next time he whipped his wife lie would be takeu out and hanged. To the Students of the Indiana University. Bloomington, July 25.—The opening of the University for the coming year will not be hindered nor delayed by the recent disastrous fire. Work will begin in all departments and in all classes on Thursday morning, Sept. 6. The old building is uninjured, i and arrangements will he made whereby reci- | ration rooms will be provided for all the : classes, and all the professors will be in their • places. We confidently expect that you will

be with us, and that no one who was prepared to come will be dissuaded from his purpose. Lemuel Moss, President. Minor Notes. A colored camp meeting will be held near Princeton, August 9, to coutiuue ten days. Rachael Cowan, colored, reputed to bo 110 years old, died on Tuesday night at Gibsonvllle. A number of farmers about Windfall have been swindeld by a seller of territorial rights for a patent wire fence. The Bluffr on Banner ban been sold to three citizens of that town. E. Y. Sturgis, Dr. A. G. Gorrell aud Josepn Gorrell, for $6,500. Six Lafayette residences were entered by burglars on Wednesday morning, but they got barely enough from the lot to pay for a square meal. George Right, of Sullivan, was struck in the forehead by a pitchfork while descending from a hay stack on Wtduesday. He will probably die. Frank LiteniDg, who fell on a picket of the Court-square fence, on Tuesday, lingered in great agouy until Wednesday morning, when he died. C. 8. Ball, of Terre Haute, charges Matthew Lytle with committing rape nearly three years ago o. the former's step-daughter, Rosa Williams, now about eleven years old. Thomas Cole fell out of a cherry tree, at Plymouth, on Tuesday, and broke bis breast bone. He will have to lie In one position at least’two weeks, It is said, to restore the fracture. Full arrangements have been made for an old-fashioned Methodist camp-meeting, to open on September 6, in Blue's grove, at Montezuma. Able preachers are promised to conduct the meetings. Professor R. 8. Groves, late the superintendent of the public schools in Aurora, has received calls lo become the pastor of two Christian churHies—one at Fort Wayne and the other at Chattanooga, Tenn. Parke county comes to the front with a t went.v-eight-acre field of wheat averaging twenty-four bushels to the acre, machine measure. It was raised by ThomasCaUssey, and sold for ninety cents per bushel to Davis, Akins & Cos., of Moutezuma. B. F. Boltz, county auditor of Randolph county, aud George S. Diggs, merchant, of Winchester, engaged in a shooting scrape the other evening, growing out of an alleged intimacy between Diggs ami u widowed sister or the former. Several shots were exchanged, but fortunately without effect. Last Sunday, as a train was leaving the depot at Shelbyville, somebody threw a large stone through a car window, striking an old lady by the name of Smith, who lived at Sumuan, twenty miles east of Greeusburg, on the temple. Information now ooiues that she is dead from the effects of the blow. At, Hazleton, on Tuesday, Peter LeFare was running a belt on a pulley, using a stick for the purpose. Tlie stick became fastened in the wheel and after one revolution it was thrown with terrible force, striking LeFare m the bowels and penetrating deep into his body. It is reported that the young man died the same night. The fluprems Court having decided adversely to Joseph Stour, now under sentence of death at Rockville for killing Dunbar, in Montgomery county, the gallows lias been prepared for the execution on August 8. Stout still oontindes indifferent, declines to see a minister, and appears far less concerned than those who guard him. At the opening or the rebellion the citizens of Perrysville made a public presentation of a fine sword to Captain J. M. Sinks, now of Indianapolis, then of the Seventy-first Indiana volunteers. It whs captured by an officer of John Morgan’s command, who is now a resident of Georgiu, aud offers to return the sword lu good condition to Mr. Sinks. ILLINOIS. A Desperate Struggle Between Two Convicts in a Prison Cell. Joliet, July 26. —Yesterday morning about 4 o’clock the night guard in the west wing at the prison heard loud yelling, which proceeded from one of the cells on the fifth or top gallery. The j ells were accompanied by a noise, indicating a violent struggle. Securing the keys the guard ran up to the place from whence the disturbance came as quickly as possible, where he discovered that Win. Lowe, a one-year larceny man from Chicago, and his cell-mate were engaged in a terrific encounter. Lowe was underneath and his cell-mate on top of him vainly trying to get a knife away from him, with which he seemed desperately resolved to take his own life. His ceii-mate made almost superhuman efforts to prevent it, fearing that he would be accused of murdering him. Lowe bad already made one gash upon his throat, but not deep enougli to be fatal. The guard, assisted by the captain of the night-watch, separated them and took Lowe from the cell. He still held the knife in a vice-like grasp, so that his fingers had to be almost broken before he would relax his hold. When they had succeeded in getting the knife away from him he attempted to throw himself from the gallery to the stone floor below, and, being a powerful man, almost succeeded. Shot Herself in a Fit of Jealousy. Special to the Indianapolis JouruaL Urbaka, July 26. —Mrs. A. Lewis, of this city, wife of an itinerant jeweler, a Jew, was shot in her house last night at 9 o'clock, during a family quarrel. She is alive, but will die. The ball entered the breast bone and went downward, and cannot be found. She said her husband shot her, and Sheriff Ware arrested him, but a policeman and some of the neighbors say that he was not near her, but was out of doors at the time calling for help to keep his wife from killing herself. The sheriff therefore released him. This morning the woman confessed that she shot herself. She appears to have been in a frenzied rage caused by jealousy, having heard that her husband had been out rowing in a boat on Crystal lake with some other woman. Her husband says she is subject to fits of hysteria, One Hundred Persona Poisoned by Ice-Cream. Joliet, 111., July 26.—One hundred persons in attendance at a lawn party here last evening were made seriously ill by eating ice-cream, the flavoring of which is believed to have been poisonous. None of the victims have died, though several are in a critical condition. Brief Mention. Alexander Sspp. n well-to-do farmer living about five* miles southeast of Danville, hung himself with a halter-strap, iu his barn, on Tuesday. The Attorney-general of Illinois gives the opinion that George Torrance can be chief wetghniaster of Chicago while holding a State senutorship. William Dowdall, editor of the Peoria National Democrat, had an altercation with Edward Mulee, pound in as ter, and beat him terribly over the head with a club. Miss Caroline Clement, a young ami interesting lady of Biooiniugtou, has commenced suit for $20,000 against Mr. Timothy Benjamin for breach of promise. Dr. Lighthall, the Indian medicine man. and bis gang, were run out of Decatur on Wednesday, another warrant having been sworn out for the arrest of the Doctor, Mr. Curtis, of Rockford, who has been a Master Mason for sixty-one years, was presented by the order with an India ink portrait of himself on his ninety-first birthday. At Bird’s Point, on Tuesday night, a man attacked YardiiiHster Dwyer while he was asleep in bed. and tried to kill him with a large pitcher. Falling in this he drew a dirk-kmfc, but before he could use it the noise brought assistance, and the ussasslii tied, but was arrested ou Wednesday. In the lecture-room of the Methodist Church at Mount Vernon, on Wednesday night, it lighted chandelier, containing six large lumps tilled with kerosene, fell to the floor with a crash, him! the burning oil set. fire to the chairs and other furniture. The flumes, fortunately, were put out iu a few' minutes, and before much damage was done. Horsford’s Acid Phosphate A8 A REFRIGERANT DRINK IN FEVERS. Dr. C. H. 8. Davis, Meriden, Conn., says: “I have used it. as a pleasant and cooling rinuk in fevers, aud have bcou very much pleased with |t."

DALLY WEATHER BULLETIN. Indications. War Department, ) Office of the Chief Signal officer, > Washington, July 27, l a. u. ) For Tennessee and the Ohio Valley—Fair weather, followed by partly cloudy weuther and local rains, variable winds, rising followed by falling barometer, stationary temperature. For the Lower Lake Region—Fair weather, followed by partly cloudy weather aud local rains, southeasterly winds, falling, followed by rising barometer, stationary or rlsiug temperature. For the Upper Lake Region—Partly cloudy weather and local rains, stationary or rising barometer, lower temperature, variable winds. Local 00r ration*. Indianapolis, July 26. Time. Bar. J Th. j Hum Wind WeatheriK’fT 6:24 a. m. 30.06)69 I 76 Calm Clear, j 10:24 a. M. 30.05 79.3 54 W Fair. 2:24 P. M. 30.04 84 3 46 NW Fair. 6:24 P. M. 30.01 84.5 50 W Clear. 10:24 P. M. 30 06178 2| 64 Calm Clear. | Maximum temperature, 85.5; minimum temperature, 66. Geueral Observations. War Department, l Washington. July 26, 10:25 p. ro. S Observations taken at tue same moment of time at all stations. g fTT =T s sag? 3 Z t Z —* *©• * £ ® station. j z : ; r p -s 5 : : = i j®i i © • ; 7 s * ® • ! •’ ! ! x • Bismarck, Dak • • Cairo 30.11 78 8 Clear. Chicago 30.01 77 W Fair. Cincinnati 30.10 78 N Clear. Davenport, la 29.98 78 ,8W Foggy Dead wood 30.05 55 NW Cloudy. Denver 29.93 64 8E .07 Clear. Res Moines 29 99 73 N Cloudy. Dodge City 29.90 70 8 .06 Lt. rain. Ft. Assiuniboioe Fort Butord Fort Concho Fart Elliott Fort Sill Galveston 30.04 83 NW Cloudy, Indianapolis 30.0? 78 Calm Clear. Keokuk 30.02 78 SE Clear. La Crosse 29 92 75 8 .49 Cloudy. Leavenworth 29.98 73 8 .14 Lr. rain. Little Rock. Ark.. 30.03; 82 8E Clear. Louisville 30.06 77 NE Clear. Memphis 30.05 78 NE Clear. Moorhead 30.02 62 W Clear. Nashville 30.07 741 N Clear. North Platte 30 08 57 N Clear. Omaha.. 30 01 71 Calm .14 Lt. rain. Pittsburg 30.09 68 Calm Clear. San Autonio BhrevePort 30.00 83 8E Clear. Springfield. 11l 30.06) 74 8 (.dear. Bt. Louis 30.07 76 8 Clear. Stockton Bt. Paul 29.99 66 N Cloudy. Vicksburg 30.05 79 SE Clear. Yankton. D. T 30.13 56 N .13 Clear. Fort Smith., 30.04 80 SW .49 Cloudy. Las Animas 29.90 69 NE Cloudy. New Orleans 29.98 82 8E Fair. Salt Lake City 29.79 75 N Clear. Fort Billings I TELEGRAPHIC BREVITIES. By will of Henry L. Kendall the Providence publio library gets $475,000. It is expected that 1,500 survivors of the battle of Wilson’s Creek will attend the reunion, which begins August 8. Rev. James Kilbouru, who for many years lias been engaged in missionary work iu Racine, fell dead from heart disease. Miss Walker and eight other young ladies of Huntsville, Ala., challenged a male nine to u game of base ball and beat them by 20 to 11. The men employed in the yard gang at New Castle, Del., who have been receiving $7 a week, struck tor SB, and refused a compromise of *7.50. At Boston, yesterday, Daniel B. Phillips, a well-known evangelist, who has been troubled for some time with his head from sunstroke, hauged himself. John H. Pettinglll, a substantial business man of Lewiston, Me., went to a circus with hisgraudson and suffered huuself to be defrauded out of SI,OOO by moute men. James Rand was at work in a field near Rich Hill, Mo , with three horses, wheu a stroke of lightning killed mau aud animals, the lutter being horribly lacerated. The Bank of L^adville, at Leedville, Col., E. L. Campbell, president, assigned yesterday morning. Other Colorado banks are thought not to be seriously affected. Collector Gould, and other stalwart Republicans of Buffalo, are negotiating for a penny evening paper, to acquire a press franchise and start a morning political journal. At Harrisburg, Pa., yesterday, W. H. Muenlch, aged eighteen, in attempting to go between n saw and hot-bed in the rail mill, was caught by a rail and pierced by the hot metal. He died a few hours after. A decree annulling the marriage of Marianna Conway and Jules Levy, the coruetist, was entered in the Supreme Court ot New York yesterday. The application was made by Mrs. Levy on the ground that Levy is the husband of auotner woman. In a collision some years ago between the Pennsylvania Railroad Company’s ferry-boat and the New York Transportation Company's steamer. John H. Martiu received injuries causing insanity. He obtained a verdlot against both companies for $20,000. A Good Place to Begin. Peoria fill.) Transcript. * If strikes are to be prohibited by law it will be best to begin with the strikes of capital in making corners in the necessaries of life, and after this is attended to it will be time enough to consider the strikes of labor. Who Carried Indiana in 1880? Steuben County Journal. Leading Republicans in Indiana know that the State was carried in 1880 not by Dorsey and his companions, but by the able management of tiie central committee and our own earnest workers throughout the State. Cheap Rates THE CHICAGO, ST. LOUIS <fc PITTSBURG RAILROAD, PANHANDLE ROUTE, will sell excursion tickets to Columbus, O , and return to those wishing lo attend the Reunion of ex-Soldiers and Sailors of the United States. Ou July 24 aud 25 tickets will be sold at half faro; July 26 and 27 at $3.60 for round trip, tickets good to return up to and including July 28, 1883. For information and tickets please apply at Union Depot and at City Ticket Office. No. 16 North Meridian street, Sentinel Building. Cheap Rate to Louisville, Ky., aud ReturnOPENING OF THE GREAT SOUTHERN EXPOSITION. On Aug. 1. the C, 1., St. L. <fc C. railway (Kankakee line) will Hell tickets from Imliauapohs, Shelbyville, Rushviiie and Greeusburg at one fare for the round-trip, good returning on Aug. 2. Tickets on sale at Union Depot and city office, Indianapolis, aud at stations above mentioned. J. H. Martin, General Agent K. <fc L Line. Nothing is more harassing than boils or ulcers. Fortunately they oau be quickly healed by the use of Glenn's Sulphur Soap, which purges the sore of its poisonous virus or proud flesh, and thus removes the ouiy obstacle to its Healing. Grow young in ten minutes with Hill’s Instantaneous Hair Dye. Stinging irritation, inflammation, ail kidney and urinary complaints, cured by “BuchuPaiba.” sl. Ladies ask for Corticelli sewing silk. i>n COOK— Passed to spirit life, Mrs. Agnes Cook. Funeral services at home of I). C. Gill, 242 College avenue, to-day, at 4 o’clock p. m. C. K. KREGELO, CHAS. TEST WFIiTSEIT. 183 N. Tenn. St. 336 N. Alabama St. C. E. KREGELO & WHITSETT. FUNERAL DIRECTORS AND EMBALMKRS, No. 77 North Delaware Street. Talcphuue connection at office aud residence.

Every Corset is warranted satisfactorjr to its wearer in every way, or tlio money will be refunded by the person from whom it was bought Th nly Corset pronounced by onr leading Pbyrielane not Injurious to the w earer, the ‘‘most comfortable and perfect fitting Corset ever made ' PRICES, by Mull, Postage Paid* Health Prr.ervlng, sl-60. Belf-AdJuH*, $1.50 Abdominal (extra heavy) $2.00. Nursing, *1 50 Uaalth Preserving (line cowttl) $8 00. Paragon 81tirt-Sup porting. $1.50. For sale by lending Retail Dealers everywhere. CHICAGO CORSET CO., Chicago, HI. Agent for the above Corset. PHILADELPHIA STORE. D. J. SULLIVAN, DEALER IN DRY GOODS AND NOTIONS. No. 50 North Illinois Street, corner Market. S?' LU ILL' ■ ... ■-- ‘ ■ l AMUSEMENTS. ZOO THEATER AND DOOBLE ELEVATED GARDEN. C. T. GILMORE Manager. Monday, July 23, 1883, With usual Matinees Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday. ANOTHER DOUBLE HEADER. To commence with the ever popular drama, RIP VAN WINKLE. Owing to the extreme length of tills great bill, we will commence 15 minutes earlier. Second week of the popular comedian, ED OHRISSIEand the talented character artiste, LILLIAN A. PEASE. First, appearance of the great aud only ZANFRKTTA Pantomime Troupe. Mr. curb. Banks. Blossom and Vernon Hattie Wescott and May Ciark. Lester aud Walker. No change in prices. Note them. Night, 150, 25c, 35c. Matinee, 10c, 15c, 250. ■ 1 ■ BCX.XTETTS MARK. MONARCH SHIRTS SOLD BY LEADING DEALERS HOTELS AND SUMMER R ESOR JT3. HOTEL COLUMBIA, OCEAN BEACH, N. J. Opens June 20. Desirably located within fifty feet of surf. Facilities for boating, fishing, bathing, etc. Music throughout the aeftSQU, For illustrated circular, terms, etc., address FRED. E. FOSTER. Manager. MACKINAC ISLAND. The Michigan Central Railroad Company has Issued a beautifully Illustrated guide book to this wave-washed tourists’ paradise of the unsalted seas. Write at ouce to O. W. RUGGLES, General Passenger Agent, Chicago, 111, aud got a copy before the edition is exhausted. FOfIEST HALL, DIAMOND LAKE, MICH. This beautiful resort is now open for the reception of guests. Ills especially recommended to those seeking a change of climate, on aooount of the wonderful salubrity of the atmosphere. It is one of the most charming spots in Michigan. A superb sheet of water affords endless amusement for sailing and fishing parties. Every luxury to be found unsurpassed at any fashionable resort. Special rates to families. Most accessible to railroads from all quarters, Address E. J. fc A. 8. MAY, Cassopolis, Mich. OUNTAIV HOUSE, T RES SON SPRINGS, Cambria county. Pa. Opens June, 23, closet October 1. 1883. Reduced rates. Unsurpassed accommodations. On main line of Pennsylvania Railroad, 2,200 feet above sea level, situated iu a park of one hundred acres, amid the matchless scenery of the Alleghenies, its accessibility, pure air, and freedom from malaria, files ami mosquitoes render it the most desirable resort in the. State. Special rate round trip tickets on sale at all principal points. During 1881 anew hotel was erected—firstclass in all its appointments, and capable (wuu cottages) of accommodating nearly I,oooguests. Cottage residences may be rented by thpse desiring the quiet and seclusion of home. For descriptive circular, diagram and terras, address W. D. TYLER, Superintendent. The celebrated Logan House, Altoona, Pa., is also under Mr. Tyler’s management. Send for circulars. The elegant passenger steamers of the L. M, and L. S. Trans. Cos. will leave Chicago for Duluth and intermediate ports of LAKE SUPERIOR each Tuesday and Friday evenings, at 8 o’clock. Cool atmosphere. Unsurpassed ell* mate. Magnificent scenery. Send for Tourists’Guide,'giving full inform* tlou. L. M. and L. S. T. CO., No. 74 Market St., Chicago. Summer Toys, Traveling Accessories, Celluloid Collars and Cutis, Fans and Satchels, Fishing Tackle and Games. CHARLES MAYER & CO. Nos. 29 and 31 W. Washington Street. eg -■■■■■■ "■ 1 " - - ss BRUSH ELECTRIC LIGHTS Are last taking tiie place of ail others in faa toriea, Foundries, Machine Shops and Mills. Parties having their own power can procure an Electric Generator and obtain much more light at much less cost than by any other mode. Tho incandescent ami storage system ha* been perfected. making small lights for houses and stores hung wherever needed, and lighted at will, day or night. Parties desiring Generators or to form companies for lighting cities aud towns, can send to the Brusii Electric Cos , Cleveland, 0., or to the undersigned at iudiauapolis. J. CAVEN.

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