Indianapolis Journal, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 April 1895 — Page 2
THE INDIANAPOLIS JOURNAL, THURSDAY, APRIL 4, 1895.
municipal officers passed off vry (u.'f Uy by the election of trie entire 'Democratic and Populist, ticket haacled bv A..C licl--land, Democrat, for Mayor. Tho City Council will be Democratic. MlSSOtRrs DISGRACE.
Coventor Stone Call Attention to the llolilness of I-olb jlntn. JEFFERSON CITY, Mo.. April . 3,-Gov-" ernor Stone to-day" cent a call for a special SeSfllOn of th State T AO-lain 1i ire in mMf on April 23 for the following purposes: First To enact such legislation as may .le necessary and expedient to properly define the relations between the different classes of employes of railroad corporations of this State and also the proper relations between all such employes and railroad corporations employing them and , to define and fix, the legal liabilities between the different employes themselve?, and also between uch employes and said railroad corporations for injuries done or received by cneisvch employe as the result of the culpable negligence of another such employe while engaged In the service of such corporations. . . Second To provide such legislative enactments as may be necessary and expedient to prevent the maintenance of an organized lobby at the capital of the State, either to obstruct or promote anv legislative or executive act; also' to regulate the manner of presenting any question affecting legislation by persons Interested therein before the General Assembly or any committee thereof. - Third To er.act such " laws- as raiv le necessary and expedient to prevent fraud . against the elective franchise and to secure honest elections in all cities having 300.000 inhabitants. Fourth To consldtr any other subject that may be submitted by special message during said extra session. Fifth To make an appropriation for the exsnses of this extra session of -the General Assembly In his call the Governor says: "For a number of years the State has been disgraced by an organized and salaried lobbv. maintained by special interests at the capital during the sessions of the General As- . sembly for the purpose of influencing legislative action. Encouraged by a seeming lack of sentiment at their presence, and emooiaenea . Dy repeated successes, these lobbyists have from year to year . increased in numbers, influence and audacitv. until they have become an almost dominating jorce in legislation, so connaent have they Krown tn their strength and so potent m .Influence that they now ply their vocation - almost without disguise in defiance of public authority and in inter contempt of public opinion. It has come to pass that al most every important measure or legislation must undergo the scrutiny of the lobby bel'ore its fate can be determined. What it approves is not without hope, tout what it condemns is lost. "Perhaps the most ! conspicuous lllustration of this disgraceful domination Is to be ; found in the treatment accorded the socaneu feucw-servants bill. I do not now tfl1w.llH the mprlta 'the monaure- I icfo. only to the means adopted to suppress and . defeat it. A number of Senators and Representatives, as well as many good citizens, who have felt appalled at the overshadowing influence and humiliated at the triumph of the lobby, have pressed upon me the importance of reconvening the General Assembly to the end that the issue may be . fairly presented and an open test made as , to whether a just legislative measure cf this eharactercan be enacted into a law in f plte of , the contaminating influence of those who openly boast their ability to direct the current of legislation. These are sti-ong worefs, I know, and I write them with the greatest regret, but It Is clear to me that time for mild protest is past. We are confronted by the question whether the people or the lobby shall rule In Missouri. The public safety and the honor of the State are at stake. Kvery Senator, member, pnblic official and citizen familiar - with the "truth knows that these words are justified by the situation at Jefferson City.". ; The Governor , then mentions the necessity, of passing new laws, governing elections. On this' subject he says: "Generally, throughout this State. I am confident elections are characterized , by the highest integrity, but unfortunately this is not true In all large cities.? It is known that srross r frauds have- been; committed in St. Ixmis and Kansas City. The inducement and opportunity for eorrunt practices in large, populous municipalities are great and experlence proves that dishonest men of all parties have not been slow to debauch the eleitive franchtse. Not a few consummate and dastardly ' outrages have been perpetrated. Candor will compel a general admission that the dissrrace of election frauds is fairlv divided between the adherents of the different political organizations. ' The truth of this statement is mode evident r.v the fact that both Republicans and Democrats, o-alled. hv been recently 1 Indicted In St. Louis and Kansas Citv for t tl(ri Uh In atirH fro ti1l Vl hton 'audi frauds are ot -only r.osble but are ctuaUv and boldH, committed, it is evident that the nublie. safev Imneratlveiv .. .. . i .ill reoulres sucn rnanrei m.in"-iiw m not only terminn'- existing aKiw Mt prevent their repetition In the future." Tn the 1Innd of the A'. P. A. T.TNCOL.N. Neb.. April 3. The bill which will place the Omaha fire and police, departments in the hands of the 'A; P. A. passed the Legislature to-day over the Governor's veto. The measure provides that the Governor, Attorney-general and Commissioner of Public Lands and Buildings shall, appoint the persons who rchall constitute the Omaha fire and rolice commission, two of whom may be of the same r rt ft ir Tli. IttArn.v.ironaral a nrt Ortmmtfisionra of Public Lands and Buildings are A. P. A. F.verv business man of prominence of Omaha protested against the measure, since It cuts the Mavor of the city off from all participation in the control of city affairs. The police commission at present is a nonpartisan body. ' Police Hill Endangered. ALBANY, N. Y., April 3. The serious illness of Senator Robertson, which will necessitate his absence from the capital for the next ten days, , will delay the passage of the New York city police bills, unless . some of the Democratic members can be persuaded to vote- for the measures. Two of the Republican Senators have announced their opposition to the b'lls and the attitude' of a third Is In doubt. , . THE FLOUR OUTPUT. " Marked Falling: Off tn Grinding Dor- , log the Pniit Week. . ' MINNEAPOLIS, Minni. April 3. The Northwestern Miller says: Minneapolis mills ground 146,910 barrels of flour, against 164,010 the week before. " It. Is likely to be somewhat larger this week. The water Is better, but not enough to drive all the mills and this restricts operations. The river is uncommonly low and the absence of rain makes a full power unpromising. There is a shade of Improvement in. flour, mainly that, more patent can be sold for export. On a basis of about 20 cents per eighty pounds, c, 1., f., London, considerable patent has been worked. A limited quantity of clears has also been sold at 15s to 134 3d. About all are sold ahead on clears, as far as they care to be, and pretty firm . as to prices. Domestic trade still comes in 'small lots from a wide ; area. Sales for last week approximated 150,000 barrels. Prices are not materially changed. Mill feed that can be ernt out at once ts In vrv active demand at full prices. Export shipments. 38.IWO barrels, against 38,500 the wel before. 54,580 In 1894, and 36,015 in 1893. Superlor-Duluth mills made 34.535 barrels, compared with 39,380 the week before. Output promises to be lighter this week. Liberal sales of both patents and clears were made last week for lake shipment at satisfactory prices. The demand for clears abroad is good and the mills sold as far ahead on this grade as practicable at -figures 5 to 10 cents advance. Large -amounts of patent also worked domestic and foreign, but though In better demand, is yet considerable of a drug. .Most of the sales have been for lake shipment. Exports nothing, compared with 2.671 barrels the week before. St, Louis mills turned out 68,900 barrels, against 73.8)0 the preceding week. Flour going on the market at present Is mainly for the South. From the East t.iere is little Inquiry and sales are small. Foreign buyers are not near high enough to permit business..'. t : - -. ..-- Milwaukee ; output 37.020 barrels, . against 40,330 the 'previous week. The" greater part of the domestic sales last week were . of clears, and the foreigners are anxious for straight patent, but at very low prices.; Trade is a little more dull with .North Dakota mills,: with conditions in wheat causing buyers to hold back orders. Correspondence from the vaey of the Ohio shows that perhaps 10 per cent, of the oil wheat remains in farmers" hands. In the foreign markets the tendency was quiet and rather weak, but no decline was recorded. An unnatisfactory flour market prevailed at New York, a moderate local business comprising most of the trade.. Little or no effect was produced at Philadelphia by the advance in wheat. Slxirt llflwrrii f.10,HM and HMMM. - NEW YORK. April 3.-T. W. T. Nolan, confidential bookkeeper of the Park-avenue Hotel, is short In his accounts and has been missing since Saturday last. So far a can be learned ,ae shortage is estimated at between $:j),ew and $6000.
M'NELLIE A FIGHTER
THE 3IIMSTER DRIUS PA.MACJE SUIT AGAIXST CHI RCH MEMBERS. enatlon In Christian Society Circle nt SpottibnrK Ranawar Conpie Looked lp t Elkhart. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. JEFFERSONVILLE, Ind.. April 3. The filing of a damage suit at Scottsburg, by the Rev. J. N. McNellie, against several of the leaders of the Christian Church at that place, has caused a sensation, as the affair has In connection with it several incidents" which savor greatly of white-capism. Rev. McNellie alleges that the defendants entered an order on the records", of the church . which prohibits him from further preaching in the church, and that the order is a fictitious one, having never been passed by the church board. The-defendants declare the suit an outrage, but others do not view it In that light. The opposition to Rev. McNellie has resorted to White Cap methods. The following letter has been sent to him: . , ;"We don't want to cause you any trouble, nor do we want you to cause us any more. We have fixed it so you can't preach in the church anywhere. We sent another letter to you before but you didn't pay any attention to it. lou had better do this, or we will do you as we said. So look out. : "COMMITTEE OF SIX." t?J1? ftter contains an admission that w hite Cap methods were used before in the i m v." , " ",uu-" ii-utTs. ine suit 1 will be heard Saturday. The affair has eaused ereat excitement Qr.i divided on the subject, some favoring the minister, others the defendants. As Rev. McNellie is an evangelist the threat to preyenrhis preaching in any other church of the denomination is regarded as being serious as the nature of tne steps necessarv to be taken to attain such an end would be the filing and sustaining of very serious charges. ;, , niYAWAV "WIFE i ARRESTED. Ilnllet Found In the- Charred Rudy of the Murdered Husband. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. uL.K.tiART, Ind., April 3. Edward Mosher and Mrs. William H. Kehries. who have been accused of the murdpr of the an's husband last Sunday nightv returned; m-ie mis morning and were at once arrested and placed in jail. They claim that after being driven tO Jones's rrnsolnir RnnJ day night, after bearing the pistol shot. mey tooK a train and went to Detroit. Mich., without knowinc- of KphH.'s Heats Lr011 lne wornan says she became1 c. , . w""ng io see r.er cntidren, came back here, bringing Mosher with her. On Iiear.ng of her husband's death she appeared to be greatly affected, w'eeping bitterly. She says her husband undertook to shoot her Sunday evening because sne had begun divorce- proceedings and that it was to save her own and Mosher's life that they started fo." Canada, This aftetnocn Coroner Kreider, who was unable yesterdiy to find a bullet wound on the dead man, together with a number of physicians, thcroughly dissected the body am found a bullet wound belcw the right niptl and the ball itself in his hip. Mos-her, Mrs.; Kehries and Gilberc Borne, the latter th man who drove them to the station, are in Jail. STRIKERS HIOTIXG. Xnmbrr of Men AVho Aent Back to Work Beaten l' at M uncle. ? Special to the Indianapolis. Journal. MUNCIE, Ind., April 3. Monday a dozen men employed In the nut arid bolt works of the Indiana Iron Company, struck for higher wages after the company refused to recognize their request. tThe strike 'was very peculiar inasmuch as they were engaged by the bolt makers as assistants. They demanded that the bolt makers be paid more wages so they cculd get a raise. Yesterday some of the men returned to work and this greatly enraged the others. They assembled at a saloon near the works yesterday afternoon and decided to ' la for th? men who had returned and assault them last evening as they left the worka. As a result a general fight was soon on and clubs, stones, knives and fists were used with little regard for the dangerous reults. After fighting for a half hour the twenty or more participants became exhaust3d with blood flowing in the street Foreman Charles W. Parker, of the bolt works, was beaten Into insensibility, but is to-day out cf danger. Others attacked and seriously Injured were John Sailors, Edward Foulke and Charles Smith. Those, of the attacking party who were badly dwne up were Fritz Kidisch, Peter Mulveyhlll. Dan Ryan. Thomas Mulveyhill and Tom Nolan. The nut works carre to Muncie from Toledo and nearly all the men Come from there with it. To-day Vice President G. O. Cromwell, of the Iron ompany, pi ef erred charges against the in stigators or the not. mis morning, ms rowdies were in waiting for the men ana started more trouble, but the police son squelched the trouble. , , FAITH CURB UlS MAD. Christian Scientist Relied on Prayer and "Wife nnd Son Die. Associated Press Dispatch,' MARION. Ind., April 3. The twp-year-old son of Elwood F. HollowelP died this morning. The father is a Christian scientist and relied on silent prayer to effect a 'cure. A year ago Mrs. Hollowell died, the husband refusing to call a physician. The neighbors in South Marlon are very indignant and called at the office of Prosecuting Attorney Cline to see if some action could not be taken against Hollowell on the ground of neglecting his child. A POIXT FOR FOILKE. Jnd&e Baker Thrown Out One Case ' Afrainnt the Vlncennes Banker. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. EVA.: LE. Ind., April 3. The case against II. A. Foulke, banker of Vincennes, is still on trial in the United States Court, but will no doubt be concluded to-morrow. This afternoon, after a number of witnesses had been examined in the hearing of the charge for making false entries in his report of the condition of the bank, Jifdge Baker deemed the testimony Insufficient to convict and he Instructed the jury to bring a verdict in favor of the defendant, which was done. The charge of perjury against the defendant was then given a hearing, which trial lasted until the close of couit and will be resumed to-morrow morning. Juriffen for the 'Interstate Contest. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. RICHMOND, Ind.. April 3. One h-undred copies of Miss Nellie Woods's oration, on which : she recently won the State oratorical contest for Earlham College, at Indianapolis, were to-day sent to Minneapolis, Minn., to the secretary of the Interstate Oratorical Association. It was. nccssiiry to print that many copies In order to fur nish them to the colleges interested and to the judges on thought and composition. Famous judges have been chosen for the contest this year. On thought and composition they are Henry Wattert-on. editor of the Louisvill Courier-Journal; Rev. Gunsaulus, of Chicago, and Senator Wolcott, of Denver. On delivery they are Governor McKlnley, Congressman Bryan, of Lincoln. Neb., ana. lion. J. J. mgaiis, or Atchison, Kan. Hfv. AVi S. lllrcn' Will Probated. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. KOKOMO, Ind.. April 3. The will of the late Presiding. Elder W. S. Birch was probated to-day, disposing of an estate of $40,000. To the widow Is left the Kokomo residence and a farm of one hundred acres during her lifetime, after Which the property goes to the proposed American University at Washington. D. C. This will amount to fciO.OOO. The remainder of the estate goes to his children Mrs. Kev. ,. H. Daniel, Mrs. I. R. Hltt and Edwin A. Birch. A portion of the property was given the children some time prior to the death of Dr. Birch. Richmond to Have n. Music Festival. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. RICHMOND, Ind., April 3. The greatest musical event that Richmond has ever had will occur here next month, the dates being the 27th, 28th and 23th. Professor Albert II, . Morehead, who some years ago , conducted a musical festival at Grand Rapids, Mich., has charge, and anion er other noted soloists has secured the following: Mrs. Genevra Johnston Bishop, prima donna.
of Chicago; Miss Minnie Blenner. of Erie, Pa., another soprano; Mr. Charles Stevens, of Detroit, Mich., tenor; Mr. L..-P. Eddy, of Grand Rapids, Mich., the leading .basso of that city. - FouKht with Razor and Chair. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. JUDSON, Ind , April 3. Saturday night, about 9 o'clock, William Armstrong, aged fifty-two, at -Judson, and James Baldwin, age twenty-two, fsught over th? settlement of un account involving a 25-cent difference.
Baldwin attacked the old man and Arm strong drew a razor and Baldwin struck him with a chair, and was cut with the razor from the top of the head to his chin. Baldwin is lying at home in a dangerous Condition. Armstroi g's left arm was broken in the fight. He is under 1200 bond and Is to be tried Monday. Southern Indiana Teachers. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. COLUMBUS. Ind., April 3. On adcount of the Southern Indiana Teachers' Association meeting at North Vernon, April 4 and 5, the thirty teachers in this city and ten In Columbia township closed their schools here to-day and on invitation of the Madison teachers left for that .city to-night in a body. Thev will be entertained at the Madison Hotel to-night, and at 5 a. m. tomorrow will be driven to Hanover College, returning to North Vernon to-morrow, where they will attend the institute for two days. -. . Earlham Biblical School. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. RICHMOND, Ind., April 3. Since Dr. Dougan Clark was forced to resign his position as head of the biblical department at Earlham College on account of his submission to. baptism, there has been no biblical department. The trustees have just made public their action providing for the reestablishment of the department next year, and it will be placed in charge of Mr. Elbert 'Russell,.a graduate of the institution in 1894. . A Counterfeiter lit Jail. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. DANVILLE, Ind., April 3. A. L. Carpenter was arrested her to-day for counterfelting silver 'dollars, halves and quarters. Sheriff W. C. Thompson made thearrest Lead, tin foil and plaster of Paris was found at his residence. His three daughters who are confined in the calaboose for disreputable conduct, gave the officers the pointer. They also charge their father with grave misconduct toward themselves. Much of the Wheat Killed. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. LAPORTE, Ind.., April 3. Farmers in thi county say a large part of the wheat is killed here. The cold weather and the absence of snow from many of the fields resulted in weakening the roots and the dry weather and high winds of March completed the work so the entire tops , and roots of the wheat are dead. It is now thought that much " of the wheat will be plowed up and put In spring crops. Suicide of an Old Soldier. Special to -the Indianapolis Journal. GOb'HEN, Ind.. April 3. Sylvester Heaton, an old soldier, of Bristol, appeared at Hotel Hascall, in this city, at 2 o'clock 4hls morning, asked for a room and immediately retired. He - stopped up the cracks in the door and windows with his bed covers, turned on the gas and was found dead this afternoon. The cause of the suicide is not known. He was a bachelor, aged fifty-four. . John Wolf Roughly Handled. Special to thi? Indianapolis Journal. WABASH, Ind., April 3. John Wolf, of Logansport, came to this city yesterday afternoon, and last night, while under the influence of liquor, wandered Into the woods north of the city, where he was set on by tramps,-feafully beaten and left for dead.. The footpads took $15 In money from him. Wolf was found unconscious early this morning, and this afternoon was sent to Logansport. Xew Iv. of P. Lodge nt Colfax. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. FRANKFORT, Ind., April 3. Shield Lodge, Knights of Pythias, of this city, instituted a lodge at Cojfax to-night. The Colfax lodge startswith a charter mem-i bership of thirty-five. Thorntown; Craw-1 rordsville, Dayton, Lafayette and other lodges were represented, and the people of Colfax were very hospitable in the entertaining of the visitors. Waiting Fourteen Yearn for David. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. KOKOMO, Ind., April 3. David L. Duke, of the Insurance firm of Duke Brothers & Co., of this city, is sued for $10,CCO damages for breach of ' marriage contract by Miss Belle Prime, who claims they have been engaged fourteen years, and that the defendant refuses to marry her. Defendant is a brother of George W. Duke, of the State Auditor's office. Dr. C. I. Gully Indicted. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. SHELBURN, Ind., April 3. Dr. C. D. Gully, of Sullivan, a practicing physician under the new Cascade School, which has been operating in the western portion of the . county, was indicted by the recent? grand jury fcr prac.cing medicine without a license. Gully was arrested and put under bond. He is also using the arrest as an advertising scheme. More Land for Reform School. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. PLAINFIELD. Ind., April 3. The board of control of the Reform School has closed a deal with E. C. Crawford, of this place, for 195 acres of ground, also with a Mr. Thomas for a small tract, paying therefor the sum of $9,603, the amount appropriated by the last Legislature. This purchase makes the State farm consist of 415 acres. Chewed 1 1 ly Hi Horae. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. VALPARAISO, Ind., Aprll 3. While William Davis, a farmer, was hitching up his horse this afternoon the animal became mad arid, attacked Davis, catching him , by the handv pulling off his thumb and three fingers and tearing out the tendons of the forearm. The arm will have to be amputated at the elbow. Indiana Man A Us $100,000 Dnmaeven. CLEVELAND. O.. April 3. The case of Charles Hawthorne, of Indiana, against the Baltimore & Ohio road, for $100,000 for the loss of both legs and an arm is on hearing before Judge Ricks in the United States Court. Thi3 is the heaviest damage case for injuries ' ever started in this district. Miner Gets a $,MM Verdict. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. BRAZIL, Ind April 3. The damage suit of John Edmunson against the Diamond Block Coal Company, for $10,000 for Injuries sustained while at work in the comp;mv's mine, was decided to-day In the Superior Court. The plaintiff was given $2,000. FreiKht Wreck on the P.. 1). fc E. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. EVANSVILLE, Ind., April 3. A freight train on the Peoria, Decatur. & Evansville road was wrecked a few miles out of this city this afternoon. The track was badly torn up, but no one was seriously injured. gAornml Opens with 2,;1. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. VALPARAISO, Ind.. April 3. The eiahtvsixth term of the Northern Indiana Normal Sphnnl nnenerl ti.rtav u.itKi Vt tendance in the history of the school. The iuiai tjuuiiineni was ,aoo. Smallpox, at Evansville. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. EVANSVILLE, Ind., April 3.-Evansville has quarantined against Shawneetown. 111.. and Other nelhhorinp- tnuna 'VvL-n at, im posed cases of smallpox developed here tbIndiana Deaths. LOGANSPORT, 7nd.. April 3. Abraham Hiidebrand died yesterday on his farm in Jefferson township, aged eighty-three. He semeu in tass county in 1S0. and with his wife, who survives, spent sixty of the sixtythree years of their married life on the farm where he died. They had six children, twenty-six grandchiluren. forty great-grandchildren and three great-great-grandchildren. WABASH. Ind.. Anril 3. Mrs. Marsraret Hutchens, one of the old residents of this county, died this morning, suddenly, at her home in Waltz township, of old age and ailments aggravated by an attack of the grip. She was eiehty-five years old, and nau uvea since 18.0 in Wabash co.inty. JEFFERSONVILLE. Ind.. ADril 3. Wil liam Johnson, aged ninety-four, died thia morning. He was born in Maryland, but
has lived In this county almost his entire life. Eight children survive. , , ' 4' Indiana !Vote. Robert Burr-is on trial at Rockport for murder in the first degree for killing Capt. Williamson, an Air-llne engineer, in this city, Oct. 10. - Professor Adolph Gerton, instructor in French and German at Earlham College, has a letter that is a relic of the Elbe disaster. He received It a short time ago. long overdue. . - Prof F. J. Lahr, formerly of the Shelbyville schools, has been elected principal of the Third ward school at ICokomo, taking the pk'ce of Prof. J. Cv Leach, who resigned to accept the appointment of Statv Natural Gas Ir spector, " Dr. G. Wt H- Kemper, commander of Wimams Post, No. 78, G. A- R., yesterday received $M.W and a letter from Washington saying it was his final pay for army service rendered during the war. The check was a great, surprise as he did not know that Uncle Sam was indebted to Mm for his army work. C A ESAR WAS JEALOUS
NEGRO CHARGED WITH A BRCTAL MURDER AT NEW YORSv. Mystery of the Corpse Found Last Sunday Prohahly Solved Superintendent Byrne' Story. . NEW YORK, April 3. The mutilated corpse found Sunday morning in the area way at ! Sixth avenue and Waverly place has been positively identified as the remains of Mary Martin, who lived with a West Indian negro known as William Caesar. The 'latter was arrested. Thomas Martin, the husband of the murdered woman, left her two years agol i; ' i Superintendent Byrnes told at police headquarters to-night the story of the circumstances which led up to the murder and of the work attending the- arrest of the sup- , posed murderer, the negro William Caeser. In some respects the story of the crime i3 one of the most remarkable that has ever been told in this city and the account of the transfer of the corpse ln its rude- bundle from Caesar's house on West Twentyseventh street, by means of a Sixth-avenue surface car in the early part of the evening to Waverly place, where it was found, seems hardly possible. The first piece of definite information gathered by the detectives was unearthed at 2 o'clock on Tuesday afternoon - when they found a woman ,who positively identified the dead woman as Mary Martin, the mistress of William Caesar, who had lived with .lim since last August in two rooms on Twentyseventn street. Caesar, Ihe woman's protector, they discovered, was a porter in the store of Youmans, the hatter, under the Hoffman House. Inquiry as to the mode of domestic life pursued by Caesar and his reputed wife, revealed the fact that there, -were frequent quarrels between ! the two, caused, by the man's Jealousy. It was ascertained that on 'Friday night the couple had a violent quarrel and that the woman threw a glass at the man. hitting him on the head. He then threw her down on the floor, after having grasped her by the throat with both hands, there lying on the I'cor. it is said, - he - held her throat tn such a irrasn-that he thought he had killed her. But when he released his hold he discovered that she was still breathing. Then, according to the police, he secured "he piece of cheese clotli which was found tied around her neck on Sunday morning. This it is alleged, he put around her throat and twisted it. and then tied it into, a double knot and strangled her. He slept as soundly, it is'said, as if -the corpse of the woman was not almost 'within his very sight. The next morning he went to work as usual. At noon he went back to the house, unlocked the door to see if the body had been disturbed, and then returned to his WOT''' i - tr.,-- . -. On " Saturday evening, according to the storv of the police,, Caesar went back to his home and prepared to dispose of the body. He borrowed a. butcher's cleaver. He then proceeded to cut up the body. He first attempted to cut the legs off -at the h'ps, but failed tn-that, and then cut them off just above the knees. Having proceeded so far. he took-a piece of the carpet on the floor and an-old rug which was in the S-45 so the superintendent said, ho picked up the bundle and took it in his arms from the hou3e, which is not far from Seventh avenue, where he boarded a S.xth-a venue horse car bound down town and stood on the front platform. When the car stopped at Waverly place Caesar got off and walked over to the west side of the street In front of the building of the New ork Bank-note Company. He leaned against the rail in front of the , building to rest and put the bundle on top of the railing. The bundle- fell over the railing upon the ground on the other side. 'To attempt to put it together -again the negro saw was useless, so he 'decided to let it remain there, and he walked quickly away. There it lay unt"l 6 o'clock on Sunday morning, when young Phillips found it as he was on his way to early mass. ' Sunday evening, the superintendent says, Caesar went to his rooms and burned up the effects of the woman. When the rooms were examined to-Gay, after the prisoner's arrest, a piece of a handle of an umbrella, a number of hairpins and other belongings of the dead woman were found in the ashes. The walls were spattered with blood. No attempt had been made by the murderer to eradicate those telltale marks. Caesar Is twenty-eight years old. and was born In the West Indies. He is a little above medium height and is very blackskinned. He has been in this city since 1890. ' '' 1 '' "' WORSE THAN DICKENS'S FAT BOY. Deputy Marshal Taylor Slept, Despite s it Loud . Explosion. Deputy- United States Marshal Taylor was detailed on duty that required him to be up all night, and yesterday came Into the office and went to sleep in a chair. The attaches of , this office are a rollicking set of fellows, and a practical joke Is one of their daily divertisements. They set fire to a fire-cracker -si a inches long and an inch in diameter and exploded it under his chair. It did not phase the peacefulness of his slumbers, such was his weariness.The report w as terrific and its muffled cnnn eastierl (Via street tielOW. which WAR ,full of people leaving a matinee. It began ' . . V-.. .... IT 1 ,1 1 1 fc to loott as ir tne ponce wouiu ue tdi-u, uut the sound could not be located. Marshal Hawkins is working Deputy Taylor too hard. " Smallpox at Kansas. , KANSAS CITY. Mo;, April 3. A smallpox epidemic is imminent in this city, and city physician Crow has advised all people who are not vaccinated to attend to the precaution at once. Two cases of smallpox have been discovered in the city during the last few days,- and both parties afflicted had been in crowded quarters where many people were exposed to the plague. v ATCHISON, Kan., April 3.-Fifty Atchison men who went to Chamois. Mo., to work on the river for the government returned to-day, smallpox, having broken out among the government forces at that place. Men from all over the country were exposed, and it is feared that the disease .will be widely distributed. Carl Browne Charged with Libel. MA5SILLON, O.. April 3. A warrant was issued to-day for Carl Browne, marshal of the Coxey commonweal. lor criminal libel. Policeman Henry S. Seaman is the complainant. A week ago Browno was making a speech and somebody threw eggs at him. In his paper, the People's Party Campaign Cactus, he charged that officer Seaman was responsible for the outrage. "Fugitives" Arrested. DENVER, Col.. April 3. Larry King. C. I. Edwards and Billy Connors are under arrest in thus city booked as "fugitives." King jumped $5,000 bail at Provo, V. T., where, it is alleged, he swindled a wealthy man out of $5,000 by the gold-brick trick. Connors is a well-known Chicago burglar, confidence man and pickpocket, and has served three terms in Joliet prison. Judgment Against the Iven Estate. NEW YORK, April 3. Russell Sage got a judgment by default for $34,3Cf "9 against the executors of the estate or Henry S. Ives in the Supreme Court, before Justice Patterson and a jury, to-day. The action arose out of transactions in stocks and dealings in securities in Wall street. No one appeared for the estate of Ives. '1. S. Mall" on Boston Street Car. BOSTON, April 3. An arrangement was niade this noon by Second Assistant Postmaster-general Neilson with President Little, of the Weat-end Street-railroad Company, by which, on and after May L the United States mail will be carried from the central station to the substations In Boston cn electric cars.
CIVIL-SERVICE RULES
THEIR EXTENSION STRONGLY ADVOCATED BY MR. ROOSEVELT. Vifforoni Argument Against the Spoils SyMtrm Plea for Taking: Postoffices Out of Politics. WASHINGTON, April 3.-r-Civll-service Commissioner Roosevelt Is thoroughly committed to the doctrine of including many more offices under the civil-service rules. Speaking on this subject he said: "A house divided against itself has got to fall, and in the end this government, so far as the nonpolltical offices are concerned, must be administered on both, and I am perfectly certain that the merit basis is the one on which it ultimately will be administered. We have got to have civilservice reform not only in the Nation, but in the State and the municipality, and we have got to apply it not only to those offices to which it now applies in the Na-S tion, but to very many other offices that are not properly political in character. Our f people have for seventy years, been- edu-J cated to regard the spoils system as part of the natural order oi things, so that they' are wholly incapable of understand as yet that a postmaster, for instance, has nothing whatever to do with politics if he attends to his duty, and that there is no more need of filling the fourth-class postoffices with people who sympathize with the views of the administration , for the time being on questions of tariff and currency than there would be sense in having the express and telegraph business of the country administered by men who are protectionists or free-traders, according as one party or the other triumphs at the election. - , "Everv civilized countrv in Europe re fuses to treat postoffices as political spoil,. ana it may be of interest to those rooiish members of our own body politic who rail against the reform because in England there is also --civil-service reform to know that in England the reform only came in with the growth of the democratic spirit, and that the reform has reached its most perfect manifestation in the federal republic of Switzerland. The latter country is genuinely governed by the people for the people, and no public servant whose duties are nonpolitlcal- is ever appointed or turned out for political reasons. In England postmasters are appointed - by promotion from within the ranks, except in the lowest grade,, where they are appointed directly from the outside. They are never removed for political reasons. In our country it would perhaps be difficult to allow of a system of transfer from office- to office throughout the Nation at large, but such transfer could be certainly made with in the borders of a State, and the postmas-, ters in tne Dig cities at tne .largest orates should be appointed, whenever a; vacancy occurs, from within the ranksrof the postal service of that State. .- ! ! . "If you wish an illustration of the fact that the service rendered by a postmaster has Nothing to do with his politics let me refer you to Postmaster Zumstein, of Cincinnati, : who has just been supplanted by Postmaster Brown, and who himself four years ago supplanted Postmaster Riley.' Air. ztrm stein was a Republican. For over two years he has served under the Democratic Postmaster-general, Mr. Bissell. All through Mr. Bissell's term of office Mr. Zumsteln has , been postmaster at Cincinnati. Nobody wo'uld know from any result visioie in tne operation or the postal service that Postmaster Zumstein was of one politics or another. He has given during this time precisely as good service as Postmaster Sullivan, of Brooklyn, or Postmaster Heslng, at Chicago, both of them Democrats. The letters have been distributed just as well In Cincinnati under the . Republican postmaster as in Brooklyn or in Chicago under, the Democratic postmaster. Four years ago the letters were distributed just as well under the Democratic postmaster at Cincinnati, Mr. Riley, caring - the Republican administration of the government as they were by the Republican postmasters of Chicago or Boston. The people have been as well satisfied by one administration of the office as by the other. As a matter of fact, ninety-nine out of every 100 of them have not known and have not cared a raD what the views of the. oostmaster were as to the annexation of Hawaii f or the Nlcaraguan canal so long as " their i letters were delivered speedily and i without , blunder. In Charleston, S. C' 'the Democratic postmaster was continued all through Mr. Harrison'3 term of service, just as in New York, vvliere the Republican postmas-. ter was continued during Mr. Cleveland's -first term, and in neither case did a single; individual outside of the class of professional politicians who wanted a job for their henchmen complain... "We have the same Interest as private: citizens in the delivery of a letter that we have in the delivery of a telegram or package of goods. We want It to go as quickly and as surely as possible, and It Is not Anymore the concern of the public what the postmaster thinks about the tariff than It is what the manager of the express company or the superintendent of tho telegraph station thinks. It is just as absurd to turn out a letter carrier because he voted the wrong ticket as it would be to refuse goods delivered by an expressman who is out of sympathy with the dominant party on some question or to refuse to give your message to a telegraph clerk who did not think just as you did on the tariff. "The present railway mall service Is administered precisely as it was three years ago. Democrats and Republicans go into the service alike, and as a matter of fact are now pretty evenly represented In It. A curious result of the present system is that the nominal head of an office is of no consequence whatever in the administration of the office. In a great many postoffices throughout the country all the work is done by the assistant postmaster.who is permanently retained. He could do his work quite as well as if there were no postmaster. . "The decent people of this country are greatly interested in political questions, and they are also greatly interested in such nonpolltical questions as honesty and efficiency of their public servants; but they are not interested in seeing a lot of small politicians get office. The question of the tariff. th( question of the currency, the question or our foreign relations these are all of immense concern to all Americans who have the welfare of America at heart. But these questions are fixed by the actions of the people's representatives in Congress, in the presidency, in the Cabinet. There will be no need of changing more than a hundred officials in the Treasury Department to make complete and radical reversal in the tariff or financial policy of the government. Almost all government employes perform duties merely ministerial in character. The enormous majority of the people do not have to deal with political questions at all. They have to do merely with the work that Is done by the average employe of a byslness firm or corporation, and the concern of the public in their work is limited to seeing that work done faithfully and intelligently. "I want to see the civil-service system become universal,, in the first place, because the offices ought-to be out of politics, and the service would be Improved if they were, but In the second place, and chiefly, because I wish to take out of public life the utterly demoralizing and degrading- influence of the spoils system. It has been on the whole the most fruitful of the causes which tended to degradation of American politics, and in no way can we so strengthen the forces which tend to the elevation of our political life as to utterly destroy the Epoils system." . OBITUARY, Mr. 1'nrati Stevens, a. . Well-Ivnown Nw. York Society Woman. NEW YORK. April 3.-Mrs. Pa'ran Stevens, who, with the late Ward McAllister, was, for many years, a society leader of New York, died of pneumonia, at her home Nq. I p:ast Fifty-seventh street, at 3:15 o'clock this afternoon. Mr?. Stevens was one of the large family of Judge Reed, a prominent jurist of Massachusetts, and was born in Lowell, a little more than sixty-one years ago. While she was only a g'rl she met Paran Stevens, owner of tho Tremont Hotel, of this city, to whom she was married a year later. Mr. Stevens died twenty years ago, leaving an estate valued at almost a million dollars. Two children were born to the couple. They were Henry Stevens, who died twelve years ago, and Mary Flsk Stevens, who is the wife of Sir Arthur Henry Paget, of London. The Pagets have three children, who will be the direct heirs of Mr?. Stevens. It was stated at her home, to-night, that a cablegram had been sent to Lady Paget on Tuesday, bidding her come to this country immediately, and it is thought that she sailed yesterday and may not know of her mother's death till she arrives in this city. Henry- Hammond. DANIELSONVILLE. Conn., April 3.-Hen-ry Hammond, the Abolitionist, died here this morning. Deceased was born in Pomfret. Conn., in 1814. He was instrumental in forming . the first anti-slavery society in the State, and in 1847 was associated with Hon. Salmon P. Smith, of New York, and others, in forming the memorable , Buffalo platform.
Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest J7. S. Gov't Report
His residence In 'Pomfret formed a link in the "underground railway." Other Death. TOLEDO, O.. April 3. Joseph Bender, formerly proprietor of tne 'iu.uuu German Express and Toledo Commercial, died at his home in this city to-day of pneumonias in his sixty-ninth year. Mr. Bender was the associate on the New York Staats Zeltung of the late Anton C. Hesing. of Chicago, who died on Sunday last. He also held a position on the Illinois Staats Zeltung and on the "Louisville and Milwaukee German papers. BOSTON. April 3. Samuel Atherton, fifty-nine years a director of the New Ensfland National Bank, of this city, died suddenly to-day at his home, in Dorchester, of heart disease. He was eighty years old, and, as senior member of the firm of Atherton. Stetson & Co.. was a prominent figure In the shoe and leather trade. CHARLESTON, S. C. April 3. Gen. Samuel J., Lee, tho colored brigadier general of the National Guard, : was burled here to-day, with military honors. The funeral was the largest seen here in many years. It is estimated that ten thousand people were in attendance. DUBUQUE, la.. April 3.-George L. Torbert, president of the Iowa Trust and Savings Bank, died here to-day, aged sixtyfour. He had been forty years a resident of Dubuque, was once postmaster and had been identified with many public . enterprises and charities. COLUMBIA, S. C, April ' 3. John H. Houston died suddenly In Greenville, S. C, to-day. He was one of the defenders- of Fort Sumter and won promotion in the Confederate arsrty by his gallantry there. PARIS, April 3. The widow of Alexander Dumas died to-day.. FOSTOFFICE KOBBED. flO.OOO Worth, of Stamps nod Sliver--ware Stolen at Spring-Held, 111. SPRINGFIELD, 111., April 3. Tae postoffice, here was robbed of about slO.OOO worth of stamps and silverware to-day. The robbery was committed about noon, while Postmaster Ridgley was at ; dinner. The robbery was not diseoverey until 5 o'clock, and those implicated have so far covered up their tracks. Access " gained to the vault by the use of du "s .keys. The vault Is located in the po. iter's private office, and the combination . never turned1 except at night. I. order to secure entrance to the vault two keys had . to be used, one to open Jhe spring lock on the door of the office and the other to the inner door of the vault. Both of these doors were locked when Mr. Ridgley returned to the office after lunch. Besides the stamps Mr. Ridgley had stored in the vault his daughter's wedding presents, valued at $1,000. The stamps and silverware would make an enormous package, ami it in hard to oonpplve of'a. method to take them from the building in broad daylight without observation. it was s o ctocK when Assistant Postmaster Murphy had occasion to go to the vault for stamps. He found the interior of the vault in wild disorder and everything of value removed. This was the first Intimation that the place had been looted. Mr. Ridgley until a few days ago had about $30,000 in cash in the vault, and the theory is advanced that the thieves had some intimation of this, and that they were after it. The work is no doubt that of experts, and they were compelled to work for fully a week In order to secure their keys, as the only -opportunity they could avail themselves of was at noon when the postmaster and most of the clerks are away. POLITICS IN A CHURCH. President Cleveland's Brother Requested to Renlg-n HI Pastorate. ' WATERTOWN, N. Y April 3. By a vote of 28 to 1, during an exciting session, the congregation of the Presbyterian Church at Chaumont, this county, last evening decided to ask Rev. William Cleveland, brother of President Cleveland, to tender his resignation of the pastorate. It is reported that politics has been a disturbing element, although Mr. Cleveland took no part in politics. Mr. Cleveland will appeal to the presbytery. , THE Gl'LF STREAM. How Its Course Could Be Diverted to the Pacific Ocean. Scientific American. . The course of the Gulf stream could be changed by cutting across the Isthmus of Panama a channel of sufficient size to admit the .passage of the water forming it. The stream would then flow into the Pacific ocean and no longer cross the Atlantic to warm the shores of Europe, as it now does. The Gulf stream Is an, equalizer of water as well as heat. If the water remained equally distributed there would be no ocean currents. The land, with Its varied formation, together with wind and tide, the great forces which move or displace the water of the sea, is continually causing inequalities of water. The moon and sun, by their attraction, draw the water from the poles to the center directly under the moon at the tropics, and it is brought by the tide waves from the east to the west shore, where it is held by the moon, sun and trade winds and forced along the shores north and south. . The islands forming the Caribbean sea act on the principle of a breakwater or dam. They hold the water that has been forced into the Caribbean sea by the tides and trade winds, which causes the water to be higher in that sea and turn it into the Gulf of Mexico, which becomes the . reservoir or fountain head, and whence the Gulf stream flows like a river from a lake. It is the equalizer of water as well as heat, and makes its way In the direction of the greatest deficiency of that element. The warmth of the stream is accounted for by the fact that Its waters are supfilied from the tropics, the tide waves actng on the principle of an eddy, so it has counter currents also. This theory rests upon the assumption that the water Is higher on the east than on the west side of the Isthmus of Panama. The continent of America is the great dam In the ocean that forms the Gulf stream. Place the continent of. America so it will lie east and west, there would be no Gulf stream. If there were no other land on the globe than America there would be no oceanic currents except those connected! with America, but such is not the case. . Africa has her nose In the way, Australia and New Zealand intervene, and Asia is there to stop tides and make ocean current in the Pacific ocean. So when we find large bodies of land directly in the path of the tides we find ocean currents also. All large oceans have their counter currents or eddies. The water that has been carried west by the tides has to return as currents to supply the deficiency, thus imparting the eduy motion. The tides and the winds, with the land and its formations, will produce every circumstance connected with the ocean currents. The peculiar formation of the land has a good deal to do about getting up the Gulf stream. - "-- f THE BICYCLE CRAZE. Marked Falling Off in the lie of Horses and Buggies. New York Sun, So wldeppread has the blcycllne craze be come that the livery stable keepers are beginning to feel the effects of it sorely. it is tne sunaay traae, tne Dest-paying trade in the livery business, that has fallen off chiefly, the reason being that the young men who used to taKe their gtrl rrienris driving every pleasant Sunday afternoon now taKe tnem bicycling instead at a much smaller expense. A horse and buggy casts about $5 for a Sunday afternoon, while a pair of bicycles can be rented all day f jr $2 apiece, or a tandem for about $1. The natural result Is that every Jack who has a bicycle Is teaching his Jill to ride, or if Jill is the cyclist she is insisting that Jack shall purchase or lyre a wheel, so that he can accompany her on her Sunday afternoon spins, and the academies where riling Is taught are full of bruised but persevering learners in the art or wneenng. Walk along any of the boulevards of this city or Brooklyn some tine Sunday afternoon and you can see the result of this. There will be two bicycle out for every horse and buggy, and a good proportion of the bicycling, you will ft ad. is dne in pair. which rnpans much loss of custom' to the stables. A man up town who Is wise In the matter of horres said, recently, in, dl.c'isslng the matter: "One outside the livery ' business can hardly believe what a falling off ia trade there has been aince bicycling been me so popular. As lonjf as it was confined , to
n
1
men it didn't make much difference, but as soon as the girls began to take it up our profits went flying. Whv. even a early in the season as this you can see the machines spinning every decent roadway hereabouts, but you see mighty few rigs with 'cm. If it's that bad now what will it be when the dry F-aon comes and the roads are all easy for the wheels? "Why, a fellow whose girl rides a bicycle, and there's an awful lot of 'era that do. can just take her spinning down to Coney island, or off In the Jersey roads, or Jip tho Hudson river, or down on Staten island for a good long rldo and get back before dark, and we livery men can sit In our stables and twirl our fingers and, wonder how we're gorng to make business pay with no trade to speak of Sunday, when business ought to be liveliest and prices . biggest. .Why, 111 bet that rxi per cent, or more of the Rlrls that used to make the Sunday livtry trade profitable have learned how to ride wheels. P tell you for a fact I know three livery men in this cit all : of 'em -prosperous and all of. 'em ola hands in the business, and they're going. to give it up this, summer. I met one of them the other day and asked him how things were goin and he told me he was going to quit. "'What's "to pay? I said, 'Made your pller - " 'No, said he. 'but I don't want to lose what I've got. There's nothing in horses. I'm going into a better line, where there's money. " 'What's that?' I asked. " 'Bicycles,' said he. 'Don't have to groom 'em, don't have to feed 'em and they don't get sick and cost you "vet" bills, besides that you can get prices for 'em where your hourses won't be hired out enough to get exercise. There's no more money in keeping horses until they make a law declaring bicycling a. criminal offense, for everybody Is stuck on the wheels, and if somethingdon't happen you won't see .any horses in this city a few' years from now except on drays and. street cars. No more horse for me. Pm going to get in out of the rain. said he, and i guess he was pretty near right. "I know It to be a fact that probably the biggest bicycle company in tho country is now making arrangements for the manufacture on a big scalw of light wagons and carriages, made on the bicycle style of steel wheels and rubber tires. They claim that these equipages will cost less than a horse and carriage and be only half as expensive to maintain, and that in five years they will have completely dono away with the us of horses. Ifm waltimr myself, and as soon as I see one of those things fun I'm going to get out and get into something else besides the livery business." ERRORS ABOUT KYOLL'TIOX. People Erroneously Think We Are Deseended from Men with Tails. Westminster Review. ' . ?. The popular belief concerning evolution, is that a person named Darwin wrot a took with tne object of proving that men were the descendants ot rhonKeys. Mr. John B. Martin, of Martin's Bank, London, relates an anecdote concerning a customer of the bank who insisted upon removlns his account because he had observed that nno nf tho nnrtners in thf bank had at tended Darwin's funeral. Most assuredly this person must have supposed that Darwin had injured the human race by the shocking discovery that men and monkeys were such neat relatives. .To-day everybody talks about evolution as it it were something which had been suddenly and recently discovered. Like electricity, the bacilli of consumption and typhoid fever, woman's rights, or the tariff question, It appears to have attracted the attention of the whole world, from Mr. Glad-, atone to "Prof." Garner, the latter gentleman having, according to a newspaper re-porti-kindly condescended to explain that he did not agree with Darwin tnat manjs predecessors were monkeys. Everybody believes that he knows all about evolution, and many people oiscui-a it In mnph tho name wav as thtv do thn merits of books which they have not read. or the fighting capacity of Corbett and Jackson. Everybody is aware, 'in a sort of unconscious way, that the whole theory was invented by the late Mr. Darwin and systematized by Mr. Spencer, the prevalent Irnpression being that we aro all descended from men with tails, who were the final offspring a sort of edition de luxe of the gorilla or the chimpanzee. Practically every part of this programme is a delusion. Mr. Darwin no more invented evolution than Mr. Edison Invented electricity. We are no more descended front men with tails than we are descended from th Manx cat, which has no tail, and our relationship to the gorilla (s not nearer than a fiftieth cousinship and is far more remote than that existing between the cat and tho tiger. Scientists are not making daily effort to discover the "missing link," because Buch links as the missing are not of paramount Importance. Facts. About Silver. 1 " Louisville Courier-Journal. (,; The facts about the silver question -a pretty well known. There Is ri need to conceal them under a Jugglery of- worlls unless there Is an Intent to deceive. The coinage of the standard silver dollar waa stopped in 1873 and Its unlimited legal-tendir quality taken away in 1874. Both were restored In 1878.- Since 1878 we have coined fifty-three times as many silver dollars as were coined from the foundation of tho government up to 1873. . Though Prince Bismarck Is enjoying good health, as a matter of precauvion, he will not bold any receptions this wrek. , . Its This Way. We repair your watch and keep It In good order for one year for $2. J. C. SirE, lSVi North Meridian street. Dr. Price's Cream Baking Powder World's Fair Hiehest Award. National Mi Mi nmmm pipe foe Gag, Sieamand Wate r. Boiler Tubes, Cut nd MUeble Ires Fittinira ' fe (black ti1 (alTiitiriti. V. V Ives. Stop tveki. Eoglna r""Trmnjinn. , 8ta Gaugo. J P1 Tonga. Plpo tntlwi, S Via. Screw Piatt nl Diea. , Wrcnehes, Steam - Tra pa, Pumva. Kltcheu Hinka. Hoee, Belting. Babntt MeUl. Hoi. ler. woilt and Colored Wip. in? Waate, anrl all other Sap. . pliea hm1 in conaef t.on with Mas, Steam and Water. Vw ural Oaa ttnpphes a ajwela'ty. Htm-tiattiift Apparat'ia tor fuduc Bounsnira.btore-room. Mill. Slitfpe, Fuctnri.i, Lann driea.-- Lumber Drr-hunaea, etc Cn anit Thread Ut enter any aize Wiourht iron Pipn, from 4 Inch to '1 -J iuciiea diameter. ? . Knight & Jillson, 75 and 77 ; - 8. PENNSYLVANIA ST. WAXTlEp. At Brills's Dye House. Lace curtains cleaned from the loom. Equal to new. Th low price of 60 cents per pair and up. 8 Massachusetts ave. and 95 North Illinois at. DEXTIHTS. . 1 DENTIST. E. E. REESE Eaat Ohio at., bet. Meridian and PenaajlTaaia, Animal Extracts THE Prepared according Jo the formula of DR. WM. A. HAMMOND. In bit laboratory at Washington, D. C The most wonderful therapeutic discovery since the days ot Jcnncr. . CEREBRINE. - - From the Brain. For Diseakf of the Brain and Nervous System. nEDLLLINE, - - From the Spina t Cord. For Epilepsy, Locomotor Ataxia, etc. CARDINE, - - From the Heart. For Diseases o( the Heart. TESTINE. . : . prom the Testes. For tte Tcsies. OVAR1NE. ... From the Ovaries. For Diseases of Worn vn. Dose. 5 Drops. Price, Two Drachm , $i. no. rot EAI.K IV AU till'CClSIt. THE COLUMBIA CUE JUCJlIi CO. WASHINGTON, 0. C. cad for Book. ; . ir?
