Indianapolis Journal, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 October 1894 — Page 2
THE IKDJANAIOLIS .HRdiKAL, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1891.
1
uzrstltion following the death of Nicholas 1 that no other Nicholas would be enthroned survive. Fears of a renewal of, the condition of affairs under the first Nlcholas Is deeply rooted. The feeling prevailing amonsr the lower classes proves that they do not regard the Czarewltch as heir by the jcrace of God. Moreover, their views on autocracy have greatly changed." Two FnrIIan Humor. PARIS, Oct. 21. A dispatch received here from Livadia by a government official says that the death of the Czar Is expected in a. few hours. There is growing anxiety In French government circles. The St. Petersburg correspondent of the CauJois telegraphs mat he has the authority of a member of the Czar's suite for Mating that the reported shrinking of the sufferer's kidneys Is not o serious as reported, and that his Majesty's pnysicians have every reason to hope for a iermanent Improvement of the patient's condition.
TIIK CZAUISWITCII. Report that He Will Soon Cio to Mt. I'eterwbarc The SneceHsloii. st. pBTKitsucna. Oct. 2L it is reported that the Czarewltch, will shortly leave Llvadla for St. Petersburg and that fce will not await the death of the Czar, his father. Humor has It that the comlnj? of the Czarewith to this city Is In order to be at the capital when the Czar passes way. ? An Imperial decree was published to-day declaring Grand Duke Michael, the third eon of the Czar, the heir to the throne la succesion to his brother. Grand Duke Nicholas, the Czarewltch. and present heir apparent. The Grand Duke George, the seconl son. has renounce! his rights of accession. In view of the fact that his condition Is considered hopeless. The Imperial yachts Polestar and Tzarvena, which had been ordered returned to Cronstadt. rece.ved fresh orders' to-day to proceed to Piraeus, the port of . Athens. This new3 is varmly diseased here this evening and 'the orders l.ssUea ' are supposed to be due to the fict that the Czar's physicians still have the Intention to remove T.isn to Corfu If It Is possible to do so. although, according to the bulletins from Uvadia, the weakness of the patient Is increasing and his removal is generally regarded as out of the question. IX A FIX WCIAL FIX." Italy Sorely In etl of Statesmen Who C'na Kronomlie. ROME, Oct. 21. As the date for the opening of the Chamber of Deputies approaches It becomes very evident that the situation of the Ministry Is one of extreme difficulty. The financial problem is stilt unsolved and the deficit 13 calculated at CO.000.000 lire. In semi-official circles it i asserted that the government will propose to meet this deficit with 20.WO.000 of resh economies and with ffim Hre of additional taxes, but as the army will not be touched the" only hope of effecting serious and durable economies Is a "scheme for administrative organic reform. Most of the public departments are much overmanned, and there ha been in consequence a loud choni3 of discontent at the civil service. The postponed use of the official ax, however, haa calll forth many threats of political revenge, and the Ministry is keenly alive to the difficulty consenting it In the pa.h of reform. The Ministers say that In rder to make the rehef co the budget quickly appreciable It is necessary to sacrlllce some interests, and they will have to do this In spite of the threats of revenge. That jortion of the press whlcn Is friendly to -J'remier Crispi insists that nothing but a "omprehensive scheme of decentralization '"Will save the financial .situation. On the other hand, the newspapers which are opposed to the Premier hail the difficulties Which he Is encountering- as an undoubted ign of the early fall of the Ministry, and a consequent blow to the Premier, If not his complete political extinction and entire loss cf pre.:!ge. KSQllMAVX STARVED. Jvldence of Cu onl 1ml lam in the Dfo late Far Xorth. DUNDEE. Oct. 2t.-VhalIng vessels belonging t the Dundee fleet which have returned here, bring a gruesom story from the far north. At the beginning of August the whalers Aurora, Dalaena and Estpul-' inaux were In lrince Regent's inlet, between latitude 72 and 71 north, searching for white whales. They steamed Into Elvln bay, and a party from the Ualaena landed and proceeded In' shore. They had not jrone far when they came upon a number of corpses, the remains of Esquimaux, who 3iad evidently died of starvation. The evidence pointed to its having been a case of survival of the fittest. The bodies had pxobablp laid where they were found 'for a number of months, but the remains were well preserved.' Some cf the- bodies bore no trace of the tale told by the the otners. On the othr hand clean-picked human bones and partially devoured bodies revealed a story of cannibalism. One corpse had been beheaded and the head was found thirty yards away from the trunk at a place where some one had evidently made ti meal upon the flesh and brain. It Is supposed that the party, while traveling, found their progress checked by the sudden tsettinff In of winter. What tevr provisions they had were soon exhausted and then starvation stared them in, the face. One by one they succumbed to the pangs of hunger, and Anally the stronger. In a futile attempt to a their own lives were driven to eat the others. The spot where the remains were found Is Inconceivably desolate, ami Is entirely destitute of game or wild ar.imal.- of any kind. Tne crew of the lialaena brought a number of relics of their horrible find. 'Conference of Cntholie Frlutei." ROMK, Oct. 24. The conference to arrange, if possible, a reunion between the liastern and "Western churchest a movement that had Its initiative In the Pope, was opened to-day, his Holiness presiding. Among the high church dignitaries present were, Cardinal Rampolla. Pontifical Secretaiy of State; Cardinal Iedochowsky, Prefect of the Congregation of the Propaganda lide; Cardinal Lar.genleux. Archbishop of Jtelms, France; Cardinal Vlncenzo vanuutelll. Cardinal Ga'.lmberti, the two Catholic patriarchs of Syria, and a delegate representing the Maronite .patriarchs. The Pope addressed the prelates on the return of the ili3tern churches Into Catholic - unity, and invited Cardinal Iangenleux tnJ the patriarchs to give a statement of their views. The conference will be resumed In a few days. Cable INotes. Johann Strauss, the composer, is suffering with a cold contracted during his recent Jubilee fetes. He is seriously 111. , A Madrid dispatch says: The finance committee of CorU-s has decided to establish a goM i tandard of currency for Porto Itlco. The Mexican dollar will hereafter le used only as a basis of weight for the value of silver. The Marchioness of Queensberry has obtained a decree nullifying her marriage to the Marquis. The case was heard in camera and It was only on Friday last that the announcement was made that the ifarchiones had lodged a petition for the nullification of her marriage. Chttnnrer Dejievr'a 'Klrst Speech. mVIXGTON. N. Y., Oct. 2L Chauncey M. Depew opened his stumping campaiga this evening at a meeting under the auspices of tne Irvlngton Republican Club. Mr. Depew sild that he was for good government every time and to obtain this the I eople would have to turn the Democrats out. Mr. Depew reviewed the even Is of last year and said the last election gave film great pleasure when he found McKane and Miynard and the policies they represented w?t away. One tnlnr: showed widen way the wind was blowing. The Republicans were fighting for nominations and the Democrats . were running away. Hill trlM to run away and down in New York the running away amounted to a stampede. Tlie financial depression of the last year was the worst the country had e?n since 11 and no one could tell what might happen If the country had to undergo a few more years of a Democratic President, Democratic House ami Democratic Senate. Mmnllnox nt 1Vnh!ncton. WASHINGTON. Oct. Zi. Some alarm is tiding Kit here by the presence or smallpox, which developed here a few days ago 'and now seems to be spreading. So f ir there have ln1 twn d:ths Four rw5"s ae at the penthouse and there are two wuspiciou cais. in latest vicum or me contagion Is Judge K. Marion Kucker. of Fouth Carolina, an Assistant Attorneyticneral for the Infrior Department, who appears to have a well-developed case. He was removed to the pesthoust-. The Judge lived In a boarding houe where thirty person resided. An Investigation shows th.it Jutlge Itucker became affected with the runtaKlon at his olliee, where Mr. Coster, father of an Infant that died with the disease. Is employed in a clerical capacity. For Hronchlal. Asthmatic and pulmonary Complaints. "Hrown's Hronchial Troches" l.ave remarkable curative wUrtU:. b'old 6ly la boxes.
MENACING THE JAPS
Till: TOc;ilAKH CAI SINfi SERIOIS TIlOtlILK I.V cgiika. Htm f Foreigner In Clilnn In Peril Mall Advlcen Regarding the ProRreM of Uie Orlentnl War. CHEMUI.PO, Corea, Oct. 24. The pacification of the country, is seriously Impeded by the Tonghaks. who. although unarmed, are a standing men:ioe to Japanese Interests on account of the spreading of their propaganda of mistrust of the Japanese. The latter are scattering silver about the coun try with the object of purchasing the favor of the people, and It Is stated that lw0 yer have ben distributed about Seoul alone. The Japanese hospital arrangements are very defective, and a number of d-ad horses and cattle are "found along the roads between Seoul and Ping Yang. On the battle field of Ping Yang are many dead Chinese, 1 partially burled, and the stench from lieir bodies Is terrible. It is now reported that the Chinese infantry cut through the Japan ese at Ping Yang, but it is said that the Chinese cavalry . was easily destroyed, as the horses stuck In the mud and their rid ers were shot before they could extricate their mounts. Many Japanese are suffering from dysentery, and numbers of them have been brought to Chemulpo', "where they were landed at nl?ht. An additional force of Japanese and Coreansvleft Seoul on Oct. 1"., going southward In order to quell the. disturbances raised by the Tonghaks. . War prices prevail here and the cost of everything has been considerably Increased. ADVICES I1Y STI3AMKH. I'omI tlnn of Fore! jrnerw In China Crit ical LI llnnir ChnnK'a Decline. VICTORIA. B. C.; Oct. 24. The steam ship Kmpress of Japan has brought Or iental advices to Oct. 12, as follows: The position of foreigners In the Interior of China, and especially at the north, Is re garded as extremely critical. Even resi dents of Shanghai feel it necessary to re mind' commanders of European fleets of dangers that will threaten them In case the government suffers further reverses, and the few aliens who remain in Peking have more ferlous cause for apprehension. The authority of L.I Hung Chang, which would ordinarily be exercised in behalf of strangers. Is now so weakened that his promises of protection can no longer be trusted. No Immediate movement from the capital could be safely attempted, as the roads are thronged with disorderly bodies of troops and peasants, famished and desperate. The presence of marines to guard legations and restraining the lawlessness of mobs, which seem , waiting only for a pretext to rise upon Europeans and Americans, Is Impera tively demanded. The call of Prince Kung to power as president of the Tsung 14 Yamen is Interpreted as another sign of L4 Hung Chang's decline.' This half-forgotten statesman, now over seventy years of age, controlled the diplomacy of the Empire some thirty years ago, until he was set aside by one of the palace conspiracies, ' which in' those days frequently threw the government Into confusion. His appoint ment was quickly followed by the nomina tion of General Sung to the chief command of the southern armies. This is understood to hi equivalent to a definite denial to La's petition to be Intrusted with the direct management of the military and naval forces. . . The statement previously published that the Chinese fleet purposely carried no boats Is corroborated. "The crews of all the ves sels lost off Yalu. river perished with scarce ly an exception. ' Tne number of drowned is roughly estimated at nearly TOO. Every deck officer engaxed was Injured. On the ?.hips which returned to Port Arthur, about 1W were killed and 250 wounded. An extraordinary imperial edict has been Issued cainng for a true report of the battle of Phyong Yang. The, Chinese Emperor announces that the defeat was owing to dissensions among the defenders and rivalry of generals in charge of the several brigades, and states that the guilty parties will be severely v punished. One of the latest Imperial decrees announced that the sovereign has consented to the Empress dowager's request to omit or postpone the celebration of that lady's sixtieth birthday, and devote the 'Immense sums of money collected for the ceremonies to the prosecution of. the war. Reports ot mutinies among Chinese troops In Manchuria gather strength and are causing great agitation In Feking and Tien Tsln. The advance guard of the Japanese army Is now close upon the Yalu river and the main body is within 'a few days march of the frontier, itoldlers from General Yamaata's army relate the discovery of additional booty along the' line of march. -Several more abandoned Krupp gun have been picked up all In good and serviceable condition, and each new town that Is seized Is found to contain large stores of ammunition and food. It Is expected the Chinese will make a stand at Kew Leen, some thirty miles beyond Wi Ju. on the road to Moukden. Japanese newspapers are now required to exercise great discretion In the publication of Corean intelligence from which It is inferred that the government anticipates events of Importance In the peninsula or In Manchuria. All Japan Is In a fever of excitement awaiting news from General Oyama's expedition, which Is supposed to be directed toward some point on the Chinese coast within the gulf of Pel-Chl-LI. Reports of landings at Port Arthur, Wel-Hal-Wei and other localities are already circulating In Japanese 'newspapers. From the beginning the Japanese authorities have been determined to allow no inaccurate records of actual events to go forth. Admiral Ito's official report of the battle near Tai Kosan harbor has been published. It Is extremely exuberant in tone and is filled with eulogies of the spirit and fortitude displayed by officers and men. The government has given to Japanese newspaper correspondents permission to Join tne flagship in Corean waters. If the same privilege be extended to foreign correspondents It will be Kreatly to public advantage. In conserrence of the persistent rumors in open rorts that Japan contemplates a fore'gn loan the corresDondert of thp As.?ocIaed Press is authorized to state that no such measure has been considered and the government is confident thit Its domestic resources will be sufficient for all Its needs. When the baggage of General Tso was examined after his death at Phyong Yang It was found to contain several deta'.led and minute plans of the foi t'ficatlnns at Wei-Hat-Wel, together with other documents of strategic importance. Prince Wei Ihu, second son of te King of Corea. has been appointed embassador from that country to Japan. A proclamation his been issued warning Rritlsh trooos against ar"t'.i? any engirements that may be offered. The Merchants' Steam Navigation Comrany cont'nues. the transfer of Its ships Trorn Chinese to German control. I,oncN f the Chinese. VANCOUVER. P. C.. Oct. 2!.-The steamship Empress of Japan brings the following advices from the Orient: 'The Chinese loss In the battle of Yakushan was seven hundred killed and 252 wounded. Two different accounts are ' published In Yokohama papers with reference to the Chinese troops having erected six fSrts on the southern bank of the river and fourteen on the northern. They have about eighty guns In position and the fsree assembled to dispute the passage of the Japanese army Into Manchuria is about 70,0(0. All the troops that escaped from Ping Yang are on the northern bank. Other reports say that the Chine5e forces only number 9.000 on the northern and a "similar number on the r-outhtrn, and that but eight forts are built so far, bat that on the app?arance of the Japanese troops they hastily started strenRthening their position, evidently intending to act strictly cn the defensive. The Nlv Pon rubliches an account of an encounter between the Maya Kou and four Chinese ships In the Yellow sea, where the Maya Kou was reconnolterlng. A fierce fitht ensued; In which the Maya Kou sank one of her opponents nnd then escaped In a more or less injured condition. As the Maya Kou I a gunboat of but 613 tous tne cnKement Is regarded as a rrvth. Tnouqh the Chinese at Ping Yang were Imperfectly supplied with ammunition, they had plenty of money. The aj;sreate cmount of hull. on falling nto the hands of the Japanese is estimated at 1,..4J yen. Navigation In the hbtonsha channel Is new very dangerous, six hundred subtnailne minis having tnren laid. A r-e Jui.k struck a torpedo recently, and Loth It and
a fishing boat were blown up and the crews destroyed. A Chinese gunboat was also destroyed In the same manner. Hospital arrangements at Hiroshima are very extensive and complete, and the wounded Chinese prisoners nre treated with the same care as Japanese, so much t-o that many Chinese patients show reluctance to leave the hospital, and manifest very little patriotic feeling, their chief concern being their arrears of pay. A Seoul correFpondent states that a plot in which partisans of the Tai Ixn Kun were Implicated has been discovered. The conspirators intended to raise to the throne Li Yo Phu, grandson of the Tai Loon Kun. and drive out of Corea the pro-Japanese statesmen. The plot also Included an attack on the Jaianese residents of Seoul. Fierce persecutions have broken out In the two southern provinces of Corea against the native Christians. This is headed by the Tonghaks. the allies of the -Chines in Corea. Already a large number of native converts have been murdered and many robbed and beaten. Pere Jozeau, a French missionary, was captured by General Yeh while on the way to Seoul. He and an attendant were Interrogated and beaten by soldiers in the presence of General Yeh. They were afterwards seized by six soldiers and hoisted oIT the ground by their ears. While in this position Jozeau was stabbed with a bayonet In his side by one of the soldiers. The prisoners were then trown on their faces and their heads literally hacked off. General Yeh and staff complacently regard?d the whole transaction and then went away without a word, leaving the two headless bodies on the bank of the river. So great is the terror .caused by the Tonghaks that It was two days before the native Christians ventured to bury the bodies. A I1ISGISTKD GERMAN.
3InJor llloliter Experience with the Chinese Army. VICTORIA. B. C. Oct. 21. Among the passengers on the Empress of Japan was Major Itlchter, late of the Chinese army, who threw up the post of inspector-general at Tien-Tsln In disgust. He was formerly in the German army and was commissioned by Li liung Chang a couple of years ago to Inspsct all troops, regular and militia, and suggest reforms ami Improvements. He entered heartily into the work but soon found it impossible to reform them. He found corruption and fraud rampant, even his reports to LI Hung Chang being garbled and cut before reaching him. The war with Japan was never expected, and when It came China's troops were in a Ftate of demoralization, . poorly armed, poorly drilled and generally disorganized. Large sums of money had been expended to Increase the effectiveness of the army, but it found Its way Into the pockets of avaricious officials. After leaving Calna Richter spent a short time in Japan, and had a long conference with high .T.mane? officials at Hiroshima. When taxed with having given away valuable Information Richter laughed at the Idea, for he said he could gain more ir formation from, than he could give, to the Japanese. The Japanese had been preparing for war for several years. They had a complete survey of every port, the result of a large amount of open and secret work by spies. Major Richter said that they had excellent information as to the defenses of Tien-Tsln. TO JAPAN'S ADVANTAGE. DiplomntoN Think the Mlkmlo Would Gnln by IVnee Ktln"tlon. WASHINGTON. Oct 24. The peace negotiations between China and Japan are likely to take an unexpected turn, according to diplomates here who are informed on the progress of affairs. The critical illness of the Czar has, for the time being, diverted Russia from the attention she was going J.0 give to the Eastern war, and has made it improbable that the Czar should take the Initiative toward bringing the contestants together. The intervention of England or France has been viewed with distrust, owing to the territorial interests those countries have In Asia. Under these circumstances diplomatic officials here say that Germany will undoubtedly take the Initiative In any peace settlement. Whether such steps have already been taken Is not known here, but the officials best acquainted with the facts sav there is little doubt of the part many of them will take, and the Intimation Is made that the negotiations will not be deferred. The same authorities say that when the peace proposition is submitted Japan would be the more ready of the two belligerent powers to accept it, notwithstanding the reports that China was the more anxious for peace. The explanation given for this is that any peace settlement at the present time would be to the marked advantage of Japan, owing to her recent victories, and .to a corresponding disadvantage to China. The Japanese have everything to gain by a settlement on the .basis of the war up to date, tvhile the Chinese have everything to gain by waiting until they can offset their losses. The" present basis of settlement, as outlined by a member of the diplomatic corps, would be the acknowledgment by China of Corea's Independence and the payment to Japan of an Indemnity covering the expenses of the war. This basis, it is said, Japan would speedily accept, as it would permit her to retire from the conflict with added prestige as a military power and with a large cash indemnity in her coffers. China, on the contrary, is not expected to yield to such an arrangement, humiliating to her pride and expensive to her purse. So that, should foreign Intervention under Germany's guidance force the settlement. It Is believed that China will be the power reluctant to accept peace on the terms prescribed. FOUND UNDER A LOG ALL THE VIRGINIA TRAIN nOIHlERS 1IOOTV RECOVERED. I'Inee Where the Exre Poach Wn Hidden Pointed Out hy Senreey Only Two Hnnriltm Concerned. NEW YORK, Oct. 21. President L. C. Weir, of the Adams Express Company, was seen to-day In his office and questioned regarding the recovery of the express pouch near Calverton, Va., yesterday. President Weir said: "We have not opened the bag as yet, and, of course, I do not know what it contains. But I can tell you now what it should contain. The eontents include fcome bills of lading for cotton and several thousand dollars' worth of railroad receivers certificates. Of course the loss on this would be very small, but would cause consiierable trouble to oar customers and ourselves in replacing them. We have now recovered everything." The di?patch from Calverton, Va.. rays that the pouch containing the money stolen from the express car at Aquia. creek was found under a log. It is stated that part of the funds recovered were In government bonds and negotiable paper. The searching party reached Calverton about I o'clock In the afternoon, and after a brief stop pushed on to Catletts, at which place Searcey said he could point out where th? booty was secreted. About two mil outside of Catlett Searcey looked about for a dry creek, near, the bank of which was a decayed log. After a short search the log was found and Searcey cried cur: "Here we are. Pull out tnat underbrush and you'll find it." After, removing the refuse the party was rewarded by finding the- pouch. Searcey said: "My pal and I hoped to do great things with all that boodle when we reached here after rurning and walking thirty miles from Aquia creek the night of the hold-up. We agreed to take enough to see us tnrough for a year and then come back for the balance. We therefore abstracted 12,500 and divided it equally." In spakins about the robbery Searcey said he and Morganfleld were the only ones who were in it. He (Searcey) hold up the engineer while Morganfleld did t'ae work in the express car. They hid afterwards in a dense copse called Crow's Ne3t. The 3cheme of the robbery was hatched in Washington. Moi-KniineM Doesn't Know Searcey. CINCINNATI. O., Oct. 24. Charles Augustus Murganlield, the broken-lessed suspected Aquia creek robber, has been plied all day with every device of detective Ingenuity to elicit a confession. He Is Incommunlcably mute. "Who the is this crazy fool SearceyT he exclaimed, w'hen told of Searcey's confession and of the recovery of the stolen money." Sheriff Kennedy, of Virginia, and Captain HinJe. the Pin!;erton man, supported by the Cincinnati detective for.e, could get nothing more out of him. He positively denies that he Is the missing gamoler, Jim Morgan. (ioml Record. Philadelphia. North-American. Talking to forty thousand people In four hours Is u pretty good record. Mr. Harrison's record, however has always been pretty good.
NATURAL-GAS WRECK
PHOTOGRAPHER'S GALLERV RLOWN LP AMI THREE IN J t" RED. Mlw Spenkir.au, of New CuMIe, Hurled lit the Ruiun New C'nrEnle Hn a $1.,MN lilfizc State News. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. MARION, Ind., Oct, 21. A mysterious explosion occurred herp about 6 o'clock thl evening by which the Larrimer photograph gallery was wrecked and three persons seriously injured. Ilenjamin Iarrlmer, one of the proprietors, escaped with severe burns about the face and hands. He was able to extricate himself unassisted. 4. Miss (Jrace Speakman, who was employed as a retoucher, was found unconscious. She has injuries . about the head, her breast is crushed and the chances are against her recovery. She was soon found and removed. Her home Is in New Castle. A'Ifred Greenman was In the middle room and was buried In the wreck. He is Injured about the head, breast and spine, but will recover. He was reached after half an hour's digging. He was conscious when discovered, and for some time directed the efforts of the workers. There were three rooms in the place, the building Inclosing the front and middle rooms which completely collapsed. There are various theories as to the cause of the explosion, but It was doubtless due to escaping gas, the odor of which had previously been noticed. The gas had collected under the lloor, beneath which there was no ventilation. The building was of brick, no cwo of which were left together. Windows were broken a square away and ail the adjacent bul'.d!ns:s were badly shaken. The floor was lifted from the joists and torn to splinters. The loss will be about $in,000 FIKB AT XfciW CARLISLE. Number of RIoekn In Heart of the Town Ilarned. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. SOUTH BEND. Ind., Oct. 24.-Early this morning a half block of buildings in the heart of the town of New Carlisle was reduced to ashes. The loss will reach $15,(hk. The fire started about 5 o'clock In an old frame building on the south side of Main street. The supply of water was short and the buildings were soon in ruins. The following were destroyed: The Hughes Building, occupied by Abel Rodgers's saloon; the Tarnell double building, occupied by C. Tyler's jewelry store, the Postal Telegraph Company and Phillips's millinery; tne two-story furniture building of S. VL. Argabrite and his residence on Main and Filbert streets; the G. H. Service, S. C. Lancaster and Trowbridge buildings and J. Martin's jewelry store. Most of the contents of the buddings were removed. Losses and insurance are divided as follows: S. L. Argabrite, loss Jl..vx, Insured in Manchester Company of England for $l,2ui: H. H. Wetherel, loss $.), Insured for $-lu0; S. C. Lancaster, loss fully covered by insurance in the Phenix of Brooklyn; James S. Parnell. loss $1,200. Insured in the Springfield Company of Massachusetts for KV); meat market owned by i.Mr. Warnbaugh, of Rolling Prairie, no insurance. CHOKED Iim TO DEATH. A Montpeller TourIi Norr In Jail on n Charge of Murder. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. HARTFORD CITY, Ind Oct. 24.-Rossf Shields, a Montpeller horse dealer. Is here in jail charged with murder. Early this morning he assaulted James Young, a bartender at Montpeller, and choked him to death. Young was a small man and weak from sickness. Shields's home is at Union City. After the inquest Young's bddy was sent to Pittsburg. About 1 o'clock. this morning oung went Into the Crescent' restaurant at 'Montpeller for a lunch. :;.IIecisked the price of a bunch of bananas, and a tough by the name of Erastus Shields told him they were worth $1 Young said he was not talking to him (Shields), whereupon the latter threw his arm around Young's neck, and with his other hand caught him by the throat and choked him to death. Threats were made to lynch Shields, but the ofllcers hurried him to the county Jail. Shelby Sunday-School Convention. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. SHEUJYVILLE, Ind., Oct. 24. - The Shelby County Sunday-school Association met in the First M. E. Church last Tuesday evening. The large ho-ue was packed full and many persons were unable to gain admission. Mayor Enos, an earnest Sundayschool worker, delivered an address of welcome, responded to by C. L. Weaver, of Indianapolis, State secretary and treasurer. The principal address of the evening was delivered by C. D. Meigs, State Sundayschool superintendent. At the close of the session the Young People's societies of the city gave a reception to the delegates. The work of the convention opened Wednesday morning at C:15 o'clock with a "sunrise' prayer meeting, attended by forty-three. The convention lasted all day and was the most enthusiastic and prolltable convention ever held by the association. Arrangements are being made for a systematic house-to-house canvass of the city, and It is expected that many of the towns and townships will 'also be canvassed in the Interest of Sunday schools. A complete list of o.Hcers was elected as follows: president, Joseph Chez; vice president, C. S. Johnson; secretary'. Laura Garrison; treasurer. J. S. Showers: superintendent home clasa department, Charles W. Culbertson. Roth Attempted Suicide. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. SALEM, Ind., Oct. 21. -James Stucker, the man who turned a car loose at Hitchcock's Station a year or two ago, allowing it to run down the main track to a point near Salem, was convicted, Monday, In the court here of train-wrecking and sentenced to two years in the State Prison South. Last nisht his wife was with him In JMl and they each agreed to commit suicide. Sfie took the fatal dose, but he only feigned. They were discovered and physicians called and a'though he gave symptoms of having carried out his pirt of the agreement it was soon discovered that Stucker had weakened or deceived hi? wife. Physicians have been laboring with her since, but say she will probably die. Stucker may have to answer the more serious charge of murder. She is still in an unconscious condition. Mnnele Illntrlet MlnlMterm. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. . MUNCIE. Ind., Oct. 24. The Muncle district ministerial meeting of the Methodist Protestant Church closed its semi-annual convention to-night with a sermon by Rev. S. S. Stanton, the sixteen-year-old boy preacher, of Falrmount. The morning session was opened to-day with devotional services led by Rev. IlilT. The discussions were as follows: "My -Method of Conducting Revival Meetings." by Rev. D. V. Evlans; discussion led by Rev. G. W. Boxell. "Doe3 Reseneration Entirely Destroy Sin." bv Rev. E. C. Hughes; discussion led by Rev. Stanton. "Our Financial System," by Rev. Stackhouse. D. D.; discussion led by Itev. S. J. Jones. The meetings has been well attended -and highly beneliclal. Tomorrow will be Christian Endeavor day. W. P. 31. S. Kleet Ofllcern. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. SOUTH BEND. Ind., Oct. 24 The annual meeting here of the South Bend District Woman's Foreign Missionary Society closed to-night. The following officers were elected for the ensuing year: President. Mrs. Julia Clearwaters, New Carlisle; first vice president. Mrs. Julia Ogden. South Bend; second vice president, Mrs. Ella Smith, Plymouth; third vice president, Mrs. John Martin. La Porte; rerording secretary. Mrs. YVllbert Ward, South - Pend; .corresponding secretary, Mrs. S. A. Gould, Argos; treasurer. Miss Flora Gantz, Lucerne; superintendent mite box. Mrs. Laura S. Dale. Montlcello; secretary bureau of exchange, (Mrs. M. R. Watson. Argos; photograph committee, Mrs. E.Trna Lavengood, i?outh Bend. Peenllnr Glnss-Work Accident. Special to the Indianipolis Journal. GAS CITY. Ind.. Oct. 21. A costly mishap has occurred at Thompson's green glass bottle works here. The molten glass In the tank was allowed to get too hot and began leaking through the bottom of the tank into the air tutineL The alarm was given end efforts were made to chill the hot glass v. lth cold waUr. Pcfore it could be checked
however, about forty tons of glass had run out. filling and ruining the tunnel under the tank and badly damaging the tank itself. The loss will aggrt-gate more thn SI) and it will require the closing of th? factory for two weeks while repairs, are being made. A Snloon Keeper w Lengue. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. BRAZIL, Ind.. ' Oct. 24. To-day several hundred saloon-keepers In this county met in secret session In this city for the purposa of banding together and preventing the passage of the proposed bill to be Intro-, duced at the next session of the Legislature llmitinir the number of s.iloons to
one to each thousand Inhabitants. This j would reduce tne tnirty-one saloons nere to eight. It is claimed thai, steps of this kind are being taken by liquor dealers throughout the State. The car.diiates for the Legislature will be called on and their opinion on the subject solicited. Jlin "Wnltm Dlen ot IIIm Wound. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. CAMBRIDGE CITY. Ind., Oct. 24. John Waltz, who shot himself and child Tuesday morning, died yesterday evening after undergoing an operation. The operation disclosed the fact that the ball entered the abdominal cavity, punctured one of the intestines and severed a large blood vessel, fni.i which he bled to death. He will be burled Thursday afternoon at 2 o'clock. The j child s injuries are such that hope lor recovery Is entertained. District W. It. C. Meeting. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. HAMMOND, Ind., Oct. 24. ihe Woman's Relief Corps of the First district held their fourth annual meeting in this city to-day. The district comprises eight counties and delegates were present from every county. The meeting was presided over by Dr. Mary Jackson, of this city, who also delivered the address of welcome, which was responded to by Mrs. J. V. Elam, of Valparaiso. A campflre was held in the Mac cabees liall to-night. Illn Enr Torn Off. Special to the Indianapolis Journal." SHELBYVILLE. Ind., Oct 24.-Frank Layman met with a peculiar accident this afternoon. He and another workman were engaged In driving a well in the east part of this city and were using a bar and chain, twisting the pipe. In some way the chain slipped and struck him on the left side of the head, tearing his ear entirely off and rendering him unconscious for hours. Riff Four Agent SumlbuKgeU. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. BRAZIL, Ind., Oct. 24. R. P. Jackson, agent for the Big Four at Carbon, was sandbagged and robbed near his home last night. He was attacked on a dark street by two highwaymen and knocked senseless. His pocketbook containing $12 was secured, but several hundred dollars of the company's money, which was concealed in the pocket of his shirt, was overlooked by the robbers. -, Snloon nt Roby' Horned. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. HAMMOND, Ind., Oct. 24. Fire of an unknown origin destroyed the Brennan saloon and building owned by the Keeley Brewing Company, opposite the gate of the race track at Roby to-day, entailing a loss of about $2,50O fully covered by insurance. Indiana Noted. E. E. Taylor, of Elwood, formerly of Chicago, made an assignment yesterday morning, his liabilities being $7(0, with assets up in the thousands. Samuel Dowe, aged seventy-three, died Tuesday night at the home of his daughter. Mrs. Mary Fletchr.r, in Muncie. He was an old soldier and a member of Williams Post, No. 78. G. A. R., of Muncie. Herbert Adams, of Elwood, and John Mirror, of the American tin-plate works, have purchased the plant of the Greentown Gem and will publish a Republican weekly. Both are new in newspaper work. Prof. George F. Bass, of Indianapolis, delivered his popular lecture on "Gumption" at Worthlngton Tuesday evening. The proceeds of the lecture will be devoted to purchasing new books for the High School library. UNKNOWN SHIP SUNK. Hun Down by the SteaniNhtn Pari All Ilnutlw Lnsit. SOUTHAMPTON, Oct 24.-Fetween 1:30 f and 2 o'clock yesterday morning the American line steamer Paris, which arrived here to-night from New York, ran down and probably sank an unknown ship. The weather was very thick at the time, a heavy rain falling. As soon as the collision occurred the Paris was put about and a search made for the ship. After a time the vessel or a capsized wreck was reported off the starboard, but sight of it was lost before a lifeboat could be lowered. Nothing further was seen, though the Paris lay off searching until daylight. The steamer sustained no damage beyond having a portion of her rail bent and two wire stays broken. Sailors on the Paris say that the sailing vessel s'aowed signals of distress after the collision, and that screams were heard aboard of her. It Is stated that a white light was seen on board the ship three minutes before the collision, but that no red or green light was visible until after the steamer had struck her. Captain Watklns declines to make any statement regarding the accident, except to the company ohiclals. Passengers of tne Paris criticise the delay of the steamer In lowering a boat and getting the searchlight working. o Word from the l-'nleon. ST. JOHNS, N. F.. Oct. 24. Nothing has been heard of the sealing steamer Falcon, the vessel that conveyed the Peary expedition to Greenland, and which sailed from Philadelphia Oct. 3 for this port with a. cargo of anthracite coal. All hope of her safety has been practically abandoned, but her owners and those having friends or relatives aboard are awaiting the arrival of the steamer Portia, due here to-morrow night, before finally abandoning all hope. Schooner Ilfown I' p. ABERDEEN. Scotland, Oct. 24. A dispatch received here from Peterhead, a seapcrt about twenty-five miles from here, announces that the Swedish schooner Alene, loaded with gunpowder, which was at anchor near Peterhead, has. been blown up. It Is added that within two minutes after the explosion nothing was to be seen on the surface of the water but splinters from the schooner. All her crew perished. Movement of Steamer. NEW YORK, Oct. 24. Arrived: Majestic, from Liverpool; Buffalo, from Hull. GIBRALTAR, Oct. 24. Arrived: Augusta Victoria, from New York. ROTTERDAM. Oct. 21. Arrived: Veendam, from New York. SOUTHAMPTON. Oct. 21. Arrived: ParIs, from New York. ANTWERP. Oct. 2L Arrived: Lepanto, from New York. GLASGOW. Oct. 21. Arrived: Peruvian, from New York. TELEGRAPHIC BREVITIES. At Smithville, Tex., yesterday, Frank Scott, a negro, killed Ed Turner, a white brakman, and Charles Chappell, a colored gambler W. W. & R. W. Rozman. of Cincinnati, manufacturers and wholesale and retail cigar dealers, have been held in &.C00 to answer to the charge of refilling cigar boxes to escape the revenue tax. . Robert Eower Is under arrest at New York charged with the embezzlement of J8.200 from the India Wharf Brewing Company, for which concern he had been bookkeeper and cashier. The money. It is alleged, was lost in speculation. The difficulties of the Pullman Co-operative Company, of Hiawatha, Kan., have been adjusted and a' charter has been applied for. The new works will not now manufacture cars, but will make furniture and coffins, and anything there Is a demand for." The Central Hotel, a frame structure, one of the landmarks of Raton. N. M., was destroyed by tire early yesterday morning. James Iapoint, James McCool and A. I. Kennedy, railroad men, who boarded at the hotel, perished In the flames. The flie was caused by the explosion of a lamp. The weavers In the worsted cloth mill of Ross. Miller & Co.. at Manayunk, Pa., have struck for an Increase of 15 per cent. In their wages, ihe employes say ihat they have been subject to a reduction equal to 50 per cent, since last spring, and that $S.50 per week Is all they can earn on a thlrteenhour turn. Effeet of the Income Tax Lnn. NEW HAVEN. Conn.. Oct. 24. Many cf the Connecticut savings l,uhk3have given notice to depositors hayfrfg more than J10,uw) to draw down theii deposits so hs to relieve the bank,". tiom the optratfcr.i of the Income tax lay
Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U.S. Gov't Report
MA1LVEL0US. IF TitUE JOHN S. JOHXSOX REPORTED TO HAVE "WHEELED A MILE I.V lt:;5d-.. Pnrt o:f the DUtnnee, However, Wnw Down II 1 11 American Century Record Broken by A. G. llnrdtnu:. BUFFALO, N. Y., Oct. 21 If Tom Eck and a select party of bicyclists who were out on the Tonawanda road to-day are to be believed, John S. Johnson, the racing roan, went a mile straightaway, paced by a quadruplet. In the nvirvelous time of 1:25 4-3. Eck has been here for several days with the Stearns team. He brought Johnson here to try for the mile straightaway over this pavement, which Is as smooth as a parlor floor. The course is straight and has been carefullj' measured, but there is a steep fall for an eighth of a mile at the finish. The timers were T. J. Sayles, of Buffalo, and Frank Mayo, of the Stearns team, at the start; T. W. Eck at the first quarter; A. D. Kennedy and P. Sheehan, of Buffalo, at the half; C. M. Murphy, the racer, and H. 11. Stevenson, at the three-quarters, and W. Stark. W. O. Lutz and B. Van Velsor, all of Buffalo, at the finish. The quadruplet was ridden by C. H. Ca'dahan, H. H. S.?avy, Patrick O'Connor and V. A. Rhodes. The time by quarters was: First quarter, :212-5: second, :25 2-5; third, :25, and fourth, :23. Electric timers were used, and It Is claimed that there can be no mistake, and that Johnson actually went the fastest mile ever ridden by a human being. He will go out and try for another record tomorrow. Xew Aterlenn Century Record. ST. LOUIS, Oct. 24. Albert G. Harding, a Class A rider, belonging to the St. Louis Cycling Club, is the holder of the American century record, which, owing to his marvelous efforts to-day, now stands at 4:37:56 3-3. or 23 minutes better than the best previous record, held by Frank Radway, of London, Ont. Harding's victory is decisive and triumphant. No time was he in trouble. His dogged perseverance was rewarded with the success it so well deserved. Undeterred by the fiasco of last Saturday, when he was stopped by rain at the fortieth mile, he went the record to-day with renewed determination. After fifty miles had been covered it was evident that tho American record would go, and the excitement was Intense among the large number of bicycle enthusiasts gathered at the fair grounds track. Many of his friend3 Insisted upon hl3 going for the world's record of 4:19:00, held ny the Englishman. Michael, but his handlers refused to allow it, claiming that he had a sure thing on the American record and that It would be unwise to drive him too hard. Still very many competent Judges gave it as their opinion thtt Harding wou;d have had but little trouble In doing better than 4:ll?:00. The last m51e was wheeled In 2:M 3-5, anl in 4:37:56 4-5 Harding shot across the line victor in a contest with old Father Time and holder of the bicycle record for one hundred miles. His fastest mile was the nineteenth, which was run In 2:30 2-5, and his Klowest the eighty-fourth, which took 3:15 to accomplish. G. A. Mjxwell, who. started In the first race of tie day, a three-mile open. Class A.4 broke the competition record for that distance. He made the three miles in 7:05 3-5, taking nearly, ten seconds on Johnson's time. ENGLISH ANARCHISTS. Metlioiln of Club Having: llendiunr tern In the IlrltUh Capital. The London spectator. The club and rallying place of the HussoJewish Anarchists in East Ixmdon was until lately In Berners street. Recent occurrences, however, rendered this an undesirable locality; It was too well looked afrtr by the authorities. So It was transferred to a quieter and more obscure corner, where it was hss likely to attract the notice of outsiders: and it Is now by no means easy to find. Near the top of the New road, which opens Into Commercial road, there is a turning known as Charlotte street, at one corner of which is an oil monger's and at the other a tobacconist's. Three doors or so from the former is a narrow archway, bricked over. The roadway beneath is roughly paved, and the curb is generally the seat of some half dozen unkempt an t disheveled gossips attended by twice as many barefooted children. Passing under the arch, one emerges upon a lane or alley not more than nine or ten feet wide. Tnere is a row of small tenement houses on one side, a d.rty brick wall ,and some stables on the other. A few costers' barrows arcbacked up against the wail, and the uneven roadway and gutter are invariably sloppy and sloshy, owing to the grooming of horses always going on, and tne practice the residents have adopted of emptying their was:e water from the upper windows. At the bottom of this thoroughfare, and on the left hand side of it, is a s.r.a 11 building, half workshop, half warehouse, witn a steep sloping roof, the gable end facing the roaa. inn lower part is entirely boarded up and tightly nailed to. There is a large double door on the iirst floor and the entire width of the building, and only tne upper part of this is glazed, so that it is Impossible to look in from without. Nor can the ellflce be seen from the streets at the end of the lane in which it stands. There are two small doors, but 'rlthout either bell or knocker, handle or hitch to them. A couple of posters are stuck on the doors, one in Hebrew characters, reading Arbeiter-freund. the other in English, "Workers' Friend." thus announcing this to be the official headquarters of the East End Anarchist propaganda. Knock, kick, or batter at the side entry any afternoon or evening, and the big door on the upper floor will be cautiously opened, and you will hear a hoarse khtotam? ("Who is there?") If you are unknown to the speaker, you. will be told that no business Is done there. If the questioner above recognize you, or you come with a friend, a string arrangement will open the side door on the left, and by means of a wooden staircase yon can mount to the upper floor. Go up any afternoon or evening? and you will hear the sound, not of political argument or socialist debate, but of cardboard falling upan wood and suppressed talk and laughter. The who'e of the uinr part forms a large oblong room, half office, half sitting roam, with a bench or two. upon which a score of young men and .Women are generally to be found seated, smoking and chattering away, while others are at a small table playing at cards. As you enter ycu may catch one watching the game cill out In unctuous Yiddish. "Das kortl begrubt ech" (that card will bury you), and the card apparently does settle the i.a --. for he t'irows It down with an oath and a muttered, "Shw.Tts mazel" (Bad luck) and tosse$ a couple of sixpences over to his companions. The young men usually present are well fed and dressed, belonging apparently to a comfortably off class, and the younir worr.sn are altogether comely specimens of "fair Israel" in East lyondo.i. But the visitors here are only new adherent?, young converts. They are the I He drones of the Anarchist hive. The club n but a rallying place for such followers ant a blind for the outs!de public. For the workers we must look else where. And these will be found in the smaller circles or branches which meet on Sundays In their own appointed places. One such branch, comprising a section of the women's organization, has Its meeting place In the very heart of the Anarchist nuarter in the Commercial road. Two or three doors from Morgan street is a riv row parage by the side of the large 11c' house in thesop?n thoroughfare. Tnls is London Terrace, and lends to one of the darkest and most forbidding of the alleys that abound In the vicinity. There are ho'jses on or.e side onl: on the other a wail, which effectually nrevents any glimmer of sunllTht from reaching the tenements. So bi'd is the reputation of the terrace that none but residents would wlllIr.riy go through it after dusk, and even thes-? take cre to ke?i their lower window shutters close barred and their doors locked as soon as twilight sets In. At the further end the wayfarer down there Is as far from help and hearing if attacked or molested as though he were a hundred m!les Instead of a hundred pices away from one of the busiest thoroughfares in Iondon. Half way along the passage we ente p.n open doorway and are ushered flown a short flight of stairs by an associate, to whom we have letters of Introduction, then across a yard communicating, seemingly, with the block of houses facing
Umberstone street, only to find ourselves in -an ordinary-? lzed room filled by two and twenty persons seated like thos-e attenlmg a spiritual seance, men and women ranged alternately round the wall. They are all Jewi and Jewesses, but markedly different from the ordinary stock types encountered in the ea.t end of Ixndon. None of the men Is over forty, and orly two of them wear beards the rest mustaches and side whiskerj. They aro neatly and Quietly dressed. and. wt-re it not tor their Jewish features, wouiJ piss unnoticed in any ordinary assembly of Englishmen. The women are. all of them, taller than the average, strongly built and plain looking, with the heavy features of Russian Jewesses. They wear their own hair which East-end Jewesses generally cover with a sheltel or wl? and none of them has a wedding ring. Their expression of face is not prepossessing, for the eyebrows are unusually bushy and there ls an ominous "v" fold In the depression alove the nose of several of them. Their peculiar utterance of certain consonants marks them out as Courlinderlnnen. natives of Courland. The Ktiiaer'ft 9onsr. There's noucht too great for me to touch. Too small for me to tackle) Or b It little, be it much. On all things I can cackie. By. right divine I cialm as mine The privilege to blunder. And shout aloud my last design. In tones as loud as thunder. "Whatever oft-tried statesmen say, I coolly scout and flout them. Age and experience whit are they? I've always done without them! " For I'm the glorified capital L Infallible and emphatktil; Ready myself to deify With a confidence dogmatical. Eager, elate. To put things straight. With my preternatural "flyness." A toasting, boasting, round-th--world posting. Imperial-erial "P'-ness! London Truth.
Why Fronde Made Enenile. New York Commercial Advertiser. For a man of mild and romantic character the late James Anthony Froude manase! to make a wholly unnatural number of enemies. IPs convictions carried him into collisions which his kindly niture and good manners led him to shun. The explanation seems to lie in his almost abnormal lack of humor. The savins grace of ris.bllity was denied him. For want of it his earnestness was almost traclc. Even a small percentage of the averane amount of appreciation of fun to be found In the dullest of American scholars would have made hlm genial in his literary art. where bis Inexactness of statement made him occasionally Irritating, though always IntereMing. One touch, a mere gleam of Holmes, would have made Froude great. The Allotted Time for tir. Pall Mall Gazette. The Czar has reigned for nearly fourteen years. This has been, it is worth noting, the average length ol a Russian reign since the beginning of th seventeenth century. Since about the S4.rao date tae average length ot a Spani re. go har oeen twenty-one years, of an Auj;ri2b ;e.gn twentysix years, of a Pruksixa Uwrtr years, and cf a British reign thirty or thirty-live years, according us George is Included or excluded. Royal mortality in Russia is higher, too. than in France, wnere the last fix sovereigns reigned, on an average, twenty-six ytars each, although one of them was guillotined, one transported to St. Helena, one depesed and one forced to abdicate. ' Why They Uu It. Wa ' fto'n Post. T is a curious belief among some of xdored people of this city, Marylai A Virginia. It Is no uncommon si, .o see them with a little knot of kl , hair rlat on top of the head, tied up tightly with a bit of strln-r or rlbbn. Jf . you ask any of these old uncles or aunties the meaning of the strange hair dressing they will say, "Why, hunnv. I deep dat to keep my pallet from falling down my throat and chokln me." Ilede'n Independence. New York Evening jun. Jadam Rede, of the birch bark breeches and the incisive wit. has resigned his pot of United States marshal for Minnesota. His reasons are that he cjnnot refrain from active political work, which Is barred by Instructions from the White House. The Hon. Jadam Is a man of genius, a thoroughgoing partisan, whose silence 13 not to be purctasd by a few thousands a ycr pall out cf the treasury. Cotton IMcklriK Miirhlne Ten led. MEMPHIS, Tcnn., Oct. 24. The cottonpicking machine recently Invented by Bloom Bros., of Texa. was given a highly satisfactory test to-day on a plantation near Jackson, Miss. It gathers tu per cent, of the open cotton In a somewhattrashy condition. The picking, with four n.en and four mules, was done at t'ae rate of ten or twelve bales per t'.ay. It i thought the machine will revolutionize cotton farming. Andrew Cnrnejtle Convince Vi!e. SOUTHAMPTON, Oct. 24. The American line steamship Paris, which, sails from here on Saturday next for New York, will take among her passengers Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Carnegie, .Mrs. J. u. Cameron, Mr. A. J. Hrexel. Mr. and Mr3 C. F. Havemyer. Gen. J. W. Kearney and Mrs. Kearney, Mrs. Langtry, Miss Le P.retor, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. S:nger and the Rev. T. Dewitt Talmage. Mile Hun In lt3Sr.-1. CHICAGO, Oct. 24. Glen Brown's colt Libertine, by Leonatus-Fallze, to-day established a new world's circular track record for a mile. He carried V) pounds and covered the distance in lVi. or one quarter of a second better than ftie record held Jointly by Arab and Ducat.' A Hackneyed Topic. Chicago Tribune. By this time, without doubt. It has occiifred to the esteemei Ohio contemporaries that the subject of Southern lynchings is a hackneyed one anyhow. Dr. Price's Cream Baking Powder World' Fair Highest Medal and Diploma. EGZEHfls From early chlMhood ntll I n crown mr famtlr epent a lortnn trrlnx tour moot tills 'dleae. 1 Tin tea Hot bi-rlugn. and treated br iu tettnedlcsl men. tot wm net I benefited. WLen all tLlng Lad failed I determined to mm m m m try t. . nrd infournsonihi ir fCfJll anntlrelr 'cared. Tho mmmmb tTrlbleKrirmt was gone, nut atyri of It left; tnr u nerul bealta built up. and 1 Lave uever bad an? return or ui i imrm ph-rt-cora mended S. to a m berof friends tin aie, tjaiLt.giiLB , and k&Yt ierr Tt kn.nii,iiiHto fiR!. Uto. w.ihwi., Irwin. Ta. Nr fails to etirf.eren after all on Mood and fckiu Luaa mailed tie tu ii miJrni. bWllT snxinc CO , ItluU, c. n Triors t TubeJVorks. WROUGHT-IRON PIPE Gas, Steam ami Water Holler Tiil f.'ant anl MaiU-aMa Iron lltrin? V black a ud tralvanizA 1 1. 'alTra. Mi.j t'uit, hn.i-j nmmtuic. t a-u (i.iu t. Viim a. srrt w l'iau-a an! I ., Wreurlifta. st.ajii l'r:tia. Pump. Hl: hen Mnka. lirttuic. Ha -i.it j;t.l. der. White at.d 'olied WipltC Wa.tr. and all tl.r jk Vlir uti tu ion rction t a . Stt-atn mid Water. NU oral i .a stiMl:e a jvi.i!f r. Hlc.uu le. tin Apj jr.tit fur litUhe thiii'i.oc. NioiariMiuia. Mill, oho; -a. i actorlix Utuu. dnea LumtM-r Pry iiMi. dj aiza r'i!u imn i fruza Hi inch to I'.' inches c: lata er. Knight & Jillson
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