Indianapolis Journal, Indianapolis, Marion County, 22 May 1895 — Page 2
THE INDIANAPOLIS JOURNAL, WEDNESDAY, MAY 22 1895. ' t .
Incluied." This ex-cfncer believes the Blueflelds fcrt. which Is nearly two hundred feet above the sea, to be almost as impregnable as Gibraltar. The Chllr-llolivla Treaty Confirmed. BUENOS AYHES. May n. The treaty of feace and friendship conclude! between Chile and Hollvli, by which Chile cedes to Bolivia a small strip of territory and a port on the I'acinc. midway between Iquinue anl I'lsaua. has b-en confirmed. The documents In the ca?e have been signed. Chile la return received commercial aivantages and Bolivia ty.KS becomes once more a country having an oulet for her commerce from the Interior .o the Pacific?. ELKS 3IAY LIVE IX PEACE.
Steps Tnken Thnt May Ilenalt In Bringing the Fuctlon Together. BUFFALO. May 21. The peace convention of the Klks ended with to-day's session, and, after an excursion to Niagara Fall3 to-morrow, the delegates will leave Buffalo. The expectation that the two warring factions would be 'brought together by the conference has only in a measure been fulfilled as j-et, and time onlv will show whether the action taken to-day will end In one grand organization or not. The result of the peace conference has been to strengthen the Jamestown faction and correspondingly weaken the other, as nearly all the Atlantic City lodges represented in the conference have joined hands with the Jamestown faction. With this as a nucleus the larger body hopes gradually to gather In a majority of the opposing lodges. The number of the Atlantic City lodges which were welded with, the Jamestown lodges is reckoned at about thirty. The Joining of forces was accomplished and ratified by the manner of election of orticers. The Jamestown Grand IJge elected officers, whose names were submitted by the peace conference. These officers were then officially and formally indorsed by the conference. All this was not, however, accomplished Without opposition. Chairman Jewell offered as a minority report that the conference recommend the subordinate lodges to acknowledge the authority of the Grand Lodge fwhich met at Atlantic City in June, 1801. This provoked the warmest speech of the conference from Jerome B. Fisher, of Jamestown. Mr. Fisher charged Edwin B. Jlay, leader of the Atlantic City faction, with bad faith In not being present at the conference. "But despite his attempts." continued Mr. Fisher, "the conference will not (be a failure, for it represents the virtue, the brains, te manhood and the spirit of the Benevolent Protective Order of Klks of the United States." Mr. Fisher then spoke of the corruption in the Eastern lodges, the ones who were holding aloof from the peace conference. Ho said that these lodges had failed, as yet, to see the handwriting on the wall, which plainly showed that the future of the order was to bo in the South and West. Mr. Jewell's minority report was finally defeated, only four voting in favor of It. The conference then adjourned and the Orand JjO&ge met to elect officers. Following' was the result of the election of officers: Grand exalted ruler, lion. Meade D. Detweller, Harrisburg, I'a.; treasurer, Kdward S. Orris. Meadvllle, Pa.; secretary. Clate A. Smith, Youngstown, O.; esteemed leading' knight, J. A. McHenry. Cumberland, Md.; esteemed loyal knight. Hunter A. Craycroft, Dallas, Tex.; esteemed lecturing knight. John A. Ellinger, "Washington. I. C: titan, Charles M. liedell, Syracuse; esquire, II. F. Butt, Jr., Portsmouth. Va.: inner guard, George P. Cronk. Omaha, Neb.; chaplain. Simon Quinlan, Chicago; trustees George V. Parker, St. Louis; James W. Newman, Portsmouth, O. : John J. lims-h. Lanslnj?. Mich. It was decided to hold the next convention in Itochester, from July 13 to 13, 18. PIRATICAL SEALER CAPTURED. .The Ilritlah, Schooner Shelhy Seized by the nevenne Cotter CoriTln. SEATTLE, Wash., May 21. Tho steamer Tcpeka, Just arrived from. Sitka, brings news that the revenue cutter Corwin seized the British sealing schooner Shelby for violating the sealing laws, and brought her ( Into Sitka. She was turned over to the British cruiser Pheasant, who pent her to Victoria, This Is the first seizure this season. Grand Rapids Factory Cloned. GRAND RAPIDS. Mich.. May 21. The Michigan Trust Company, as trustee for the bondholders of the Wlddicomb Mantel Compaay. took possession of the plant and all property belonging to the mantel company to-night and the factory will be closed until some arrangements can bo made to better secure the bondholders. About ZA men will be thrown out of employment. The mantel company issued the bonds, amounting to SlOO.iOO, in 1SD3. to be paid in Installments. HO.ouo per year. The first installment was paid, but the second has been passed and the interest Is defaulted. The mantel company is capitalized at JIOO.O) and has assets estimated at $1 75.000 to 200,00i). Flo.iti.ij; debts, about $42,000. It Is not in f ny way conhected with the Widdicomb Furniture Company. The mtr.tel company formerly made wood mantels and ornaments, but for the past year has been making" bedroom firniture. Its Indebtedness has been steadily increasing and the bondholders finally esked the trustees to take charse of th business. A Discreditable Crimude. TOLEDO. O.. May 21. A crusade against houses of disrepute that is peculiar In many respects has begun in this city. It is not prompted by love for law and order, ; but Is purely for personal gain. What Is known as the Winn law provides that a fine of &0 can be assessed in a civil action for the selling of liquor In sporting houses, and it makes the owners of the property liable with the persons who run the place. Several lawyers of this city have taken up a number of these cases and already a dozen of them have been filed In Common Pleas Court. As half of the Judgment goes to the persons bringing In the action, it Is profitable business and is proving more effective than a police crusade.' Suits aggregating $10,000 were filed to-day. Thinks She I Heir to JfillS.OOO.OOO. KINGSTON. X. Y., May 21. Mrs. Sarah Stephan. an aged widow oi this city, has reason to believe she has become the rightful heir to a fortune which is estimated at $28,000,000. For the last eight years she has kept a small candy shop on Broadway here. Michael Haver, her brother, who recently died in England, left this vast estate. Years ago the Havre family lived in New "York. At the age of sixteen Michael ran away from home and from then until the time of his death, a few months since, he had not been heard from. It seems he went to Australia and made his fortune in gold mining and his sister lately heard of his death- lie was never married and Mrs. Stephan is the only near relation living. Order of HeptaMoplm. NEW HAVEN', May 21. The Supreme Conclave Improved Order of Ileptasophs held its most important session this afternoon. All the reports of the supreme officers were read and many recommendations received. The report of Supreme Arch F. L. Brown, of Scranton. Pa., states that the membership has Increased from 215 conclaves and members at the previous session, to 203 conclaves, with a membership of 20.317 at present. The organization has paid out 3500,000 in benefits In the list two years. Secretary Edwin Fareckson. of Baltimore, reports that assessment levied aggregate $rC7.506.97, and there is a balance in the benefit fund of j35.S06.97. No G. A. It. rosin Mill Participate. GRIIKX BAY. Wis.. May 21.-Oommander-In-chief I-awler. of the O. A. R.. said tonight: "I can safely say that there will be no Grand Army posts at the Abdication of the Confederate monument In Chicago Memorial day. I have not cared to rush into such matters, but I am on the Hide cf the Grand Army on this question. and. although, there is no objection cn my "part to the ex-Confederate soldiers erecting such a monument. I can tell you now thai no G. A. R. posts will participate in the dedication ceremonies." Mm. Snrlnjrer Wanted. CIIICACJO. May SI. A capias was issued this afternoon for Mrs. Warren Springer, the wife of a Chicago millionaire. Several months aso Mrs. Springer was indicted for an alleged attempt to bribe a Juror in a J property condemnation suit in which her lu-shand v,a Interested. When the caw was called for trial to-day the defendant was not in court. The caphs was issued and a bond of $T.K sltrne l by her husband was declared forfeited. It Is said Mrs. Springer bi visiting friends somewhere in Ohio. Price iif Spirit Advanced. PEORIA. 111.. May 21. The Distilling and Cattlo Feeling Company advanced the price of spirits to-day 1 tent to 1.2'Vi per gallon. The independent Atlas distillery Is selling at 11. 2T.. Henry Kanne. president of the independent Hanover distillery, denies there la a conference of Inirepcndcnts at New York, except it b between J. l. Grecnhut and Samuel Woolner. 9outh fnrllnn ejsroei Ilejniee. CHARLESTON. S. C. May 21.-The negroes of Charleston hell a thanksjt'vlng service to-nicht on account of Judge iiotra decision declaring the registration law unconstitutional. A series of resolutions was adopted In which their gratitude was expressed. It was agreed to contribute funds to further eccuro their Jus; rights C3 citizens. fc, ...
50,000 DAMAGE SUIT
W. II. DURHAM, OF CnAWI'ORDSVILLE, SIED I1Y HIS SOX-IX-LAW. Clns War nt OePantr That Continued All Mght and Resulted In Several .Serious Injuries. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. CRAWFORD.SVII.LE, Ind.. May 21. J. C. Wampler ha3 begun suit for SSO.OW damages against W. II. Durham and wife and their Fon. George G. Durham. Wampler eloped with Miss Lillie Durham, daughter of W. H. Durham, and it is alleged that the defeniant alienate! the affections of Mrs. Wampler from her husband, so that she left him and returned home. It Is also charged that Mrs. Wampler died from morphine, self-administered, and that, although the defendants were warned they neglected ta keep proper watch over Mrs. Wampler. She took the poison and died. Mr. Durham, at cne time, was the most wealthy man in the county, but he has been a heavy loser In the Muncie hail works. CLASS WAIl AT Ml PAl V. t'pper mid Lower Clansmen. Fight Over the College Girls. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. GREEN'CASTLE, Ind., May Zl.-Green-castle was kept awake most of last night by the greatest display of class spirit ever shown by DePauw students. The trouble grew out of the giving of a party by the sophomores to the seniors, an unusual occurrence in college affairs, as that privilege is generally accorded the juniors. The Juniors and freshmen took a novel method to obtain revenge. They quietly set out and engaged the company of all the senior and sophomore girls in college for the evening. This was . not made known to the senior and sophomores until late yesterday, and then war was declared. The Juniors and freshmen were not Invited to the "soph." reception party, hut they claimed they could take the girls to the doors and return for them when the affair was over. The seniors and sophomores could not enjoy the party and stand the guylnj? they would necessarily have to undergo at the hands of the girls, who had entered heartily Into the scheme. They resol ved on revenge, and after supper set out to either capture their rivals or disfigure them so they would not be presentable in the presence of the fair ones. The fight began on Seminary street and extended all over the town. A police call and fire alarm was turned In, and the fire depeartment made a run to the scene of action. One young man was tied with a rope and placed in a public hall, safely guarded for an hour. Another had his hair clipped to the scalp, and another received a big gash in his head from a club. One senior tired shots from a revolver near a door, frightening the other fellows into permitting him to enter. The rivalry was kept up until a late hour, and the honors were about evenly divided. The classes of '&6 and 9S claim they carried out their scheme, anl not only took the pirls to the party. but escorted most of them home. There were about three hundred students engaged in the scrimmage, and the class spirit today ran very high at chapel exercises. The result, as morning found it. was a fractured skull on the shoulders of M. James S?prankle, of Muncie: severe Internal Injuries for Mr. J. S. Gavin, of Greensburg, several broken arms, black eyes and cut faces. HULL. HAS Till; IIEST OV IT. Thus Far In the Church Debate Rev. Treat Hua Not Done Well. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. MUNCIE, Ind., May 21. The attendance at the Hull-Treat debate to-night was an increase, and the easy and convincing manner of the spiritualists was a surprise ,to the church people. Hull answered the preacher's questions and offered any amount of Scripture to prove spiritism. Treat seemed badly rattled, and devoted much more time to abusing the society of spiritists than he used in making the clear points his friends desired. Tonight he branded the spiritists as "idiots," compared them with the heathens of Africa, saying they are of one breeding, and what the foreign missionaries are seeking to rescue. Even members of the church to-night said their cause thus far in the debate is badly handled. Jleginnir.fr with to-morrow right Treat has the affirmative, but it is feared that he has taken on himself more than he can do justice to. Hull intimated that Sanford University was a spiritual gift, and Treat attacked hint fiercely in his denial. This point will come up again in Hull's reply. CASEY AMI I1ALP.YMPLE. Winners in the Cadet Examinations nt Anderson. , Special to the Indianapolis Journal. ANDERSON, May 21. Hon. Charles L. Henry announced the result of the examinations for appointment of cadets to Annapoll3 and West Point, today. Mr. Patrick J. Casey, an Irish boy of twenty years, stood highes't in the list for the military appointment. Leroy T. Hillman, of Indianapolis, v.-as second: John Jacob Ellis, of Anderson, third, and Edmund G. Denton, of lngalls fourth. For appointment to Annapolis, Virgil Dalrymple lanked first, Walter E. Miller second. lauls G. Mayer third, all from Indianapolis. Mr. Casey is twenty years old, a graduate cf the Anderson High School and has taueht in the country schools of this county. His father Is a flagman on the Big Four. Young Casey Is a Democrat, but will be recommended by Congressman Henry. 3IasonIe Temple Cornerstone. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. ANDERSON, Ind., May 21. At 5 o'clock this afternoon the Masonic fraternity of this city laid the cornerstone of their new temple with the ceremonies that are observed on such occasions. James M. Thompson, deputy grand master, otilciated. John P. Names, one of the oldest members of the fraternity In Anderson, made the copper box which was fitted into the cavity of the stone and which contained copies of the local papers, together with other matter relating to the history of the lodge. The structure will be three stories high and to cost about $30,000. For the Fatherland. Special to the Indianapoll3 Journal. HUNTINGDURG. Ind., May 21.-The organization of the German empire was celebrated to-day at the park near Jasper, the capital of Dubois county, by the Germans under the auspices of the Union Band. Hon. J. G. Shanklln. editor of the Evansvllle Courier, and C G. It. Mountoux. delivered addresses in German, and Senator Mike Sweeney, of Jasper, addressed the people in English. Excursion trains were run and a crowd of about three thousand strangers was In the town. Two .'asper bands, assisted by the Tell City and Cnrjsney bands, furnished music. r Young Wolf Charged with Arson. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. MOKUlSTOVN Ind., May 21.-Arthur Wolf, a son of J. G. Wolf, a prominent business man of Carthage, but formerly of Morristown, has been arrested and charged with arson. Saloon keepor McCarthy brings the charge. J. G. Wolf, the father, has been engaged for some time as a leader in a crusade againtt the liquor business in Carthage. McCarthy's saloon was burned and he assaulted and shot Wolf. McCarthy was arrested for the shooting and now charges Wolf's son with having a hand in burning the saloon. Judgment AKitln-t Wntternnn. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. WINGATE. Ind.. May 21. The case of R. X. Cording and others on behalf of Starlight I)ige, K. of P., against the Hon. Henry Watterson fcr failing to fill an engagement at this pUcc. Feb. 4. was trird at Attica to-diy before Mayor Will Reei. at which plaee Mr. Watterson's box receipts were garnished March 1". U resulted in a Juigment against! Mr. Watterson and the Southern Lyceum Rurcau for tl'X). Mashed I'nder it Flat Cur. Special to the Indltnapolis Journal. FRANKFORT. Ind.. May 21. Thorn s Trow ley, an employe of the Clover Leaf slops, mot with a fatal accident here this morning. He was at work at a jiSi rcw ra!ing a fiat car when the 40 row sJinped and let the c.tr fill u;vn him. breaking hi; back and frightfully bruUin.-; him. He Is still a!:ve but his chances for rerovery are slim. Trowlcy's home is in St. Louis. Crniy llusbaud Chewed 1 1 Ills Wife. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. EL.WOOD, Ind.. May 21. This evening Charles Demecse, a plate glass worker, sud
denly became Insane, attacked his wife and would have killed her had not he been bound hand and foot. He Injured her seriously and bit a great piece of flesh out of her arm. He has been weak minded for several years and recently has been out of work. This is supposed to have aggravated his mental trouble and caused his mind to give away entirely. There is no room for him In the asylum as it Is already overcrowded. Hon. S. II. Xlcholson nt Anderson. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. ANDERSON. Ind.. May 21. Rev. S. E. Nicholson, author of the now celebrated temperance bill, was In Anderson last night and spoke to nearly one thousand people, v.ho thronged the Christian Church to hear the expounder of the Good Citizens League movement discuss the new law. Charles E. Haynes, one of the leading business men of the city, presided. A local league was formed at the conclusion of the speech. The Intention of the association is to secure a better enforcement of liquor and Sunday laws. ill House Ilurned Four Time. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. MUNCIE, Ind., May 21. For the fourth conservative time within the past six months the farm residence of Grant Hancock, north of Muncie, was burned by incendiaries last night. Mr. Hancock resides in Muncie, but has hired two men to watch the building with shotguns each night since the work of rebuilding began. At 2 o'clock this morning they got cold and went to bed. In a short time the house was ablaze. Hancock is a carpenter contractor and has had the building erected for his aged parents. To Have a Paved Street. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. FRANKFORT, Ind., May 21. The Frankfort City Council opened the bids for the first mile of brick street pavement to-day. There were eighteen bids submitted and the prices are the lowest ever received by a city for like improvement. The two lowest bids were as follows: Capitol Paving Company, Indianapolis, for Veedersburg block, 4.72 per lineal foot, and M. I. Roulden, Tipton, Clinton brick, $4.53. As the Council prefers block the Capital Paving Company will probably be awarded the -contract. Two llulletn in the Xeitro. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. KNIGHTSTOWN, Ind., May 21. A fight, almost resulting in murder, took place at IJarnes's sawmill, this city, to-day. Swinton Nurce, colored, and Jacob Maddox, employes at the mill, had a fight, in which Maddox was badly beaten up. He left the mill and returned In a short time with a revolver. He fired four times at Nurce, two shots taking effect. Maddox then run to the woods and escajcd, while the wounded man was placed under a doctor's care. He may die. Vu Ipu ralso Commencement. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. VALPARAISO, Ind., May 21. The twenty-fifth annual commencement exercises of the Valparaiso High School were held tonight in Memorial Hall. The address 'was delivered by Dr. G. ,S. Burroughs, president of Wabash College. The graduates were Grace Ixuderbeck, Rebecca Schnewind. Jennie K. Moffit. Elizabeth Finney. Estella Louis, Ina Howman, Mabelle Sturgeon, Emma Wilson. Violet McGee. Lester Spooner and Fred Fitzwilliams. A Snlelde's Funeral. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. ANDERSON, Ind., May 21.-The funeral of Frederick M. Irwin, of Columbus, O., who killed himself here Saturday, took place last night and the remains were interred in the Anderson cemetery. His mother, sister and brother, of Cok-mbus, reached the city at noon. A note was found to-day in a book at the Big Four Hotel, where the dead man stopped, which further revealed his identity. His relatives returned homo to-day. Indiana Deaths. MARTINSVILLE, Ind., My 21.-J. A. Isom died at the home of D. C. Tucker this morning, aged sixty-eight, after several weeks' illness of stomach trouble. Ho was a cooper by trade and a native of Jefferson county, Kentucky. He leaves a wife and two daughters in Ohio and a son in Oregon. VALPARAISO, Ind., May 21. Mrs. Cythvia Jstoddard. wife of Sheriff Heber Stoddard, died last night, the result of a surgical operation. She was forty-six years old. TELEGRAPHIC BREVITIES. The physicians attending Charles Armour, of Chicago, who is ill at the Windsor Hotel in New York, are hopeful of the patient's recovery. Two sections of an Erie freight train, which had broken in two. came together near Ashland, O., yesterday, causing a-bal wreck. S. Decker, a brakeman, was killed. Rev. E. W. Mcintosh delivered lectures at Akron, Ind., Saturday and Monday nights, his topic being "Southern Prisons During the Rebellion." On Sunday he delivered a sermon In the M. E. Church at Akron. At Columbus, O., yesterday, Judge Pugh, in the Common Pleas Court, held the Ohio Winn law constitutional. Its penalty Is a tine of JSTiO for the sat; of each intoxicating drink sold In a house of 111 repute. Owners of buildings so occupied are liable. Mrs. Frank Leslie has repudiated an alleged interview in which she is reported as being about to leave for Europe to visit Lady Wilde, to condole her In her family troubles. Mrs. Leslie says she severed her connections with the Wilde family more than two years ago. At a meeting of the executive committee of the Cotton States and International Exposition at Atlanta yesterday, a resolution was unanimously adopted, inviting Henry Watterson to visit Atlanta on Nov. 16, Kentucky day at the exposition, and make the address of the occasion. PLENTY OF PEACHES PROMISED.
Delaware Likely to Yield Much 3Iore Fruit than Last Year. Philadelphia Record. While it is customary much earlier in the season than the middle of May to kill off the Delaware peach crop at least once or twice, and while there have been cold rains if not killing frosts in the little Diamond State this season, the lovers of the luscious free and clingstone fruit are liable to a very agreeable disappointment. Threefourths of the crop was, it U true, scheduled to be destroyed by a fungus growth which developed after the recent protracted cold rains, but even this sign of ruin went awry. Compared wdth last season'. yield; this season's peach crop will be a large one, though it i true that many of the tree3 are In bad condition. Indeed, there are Indications that Kent county will yield the largest crop In Its history, and this rrospect can hardly be materially cnanged, since the peach seldom suffers serious injury from climatic changes later than May 10. The fruit now appears to be very vigorous, and the custcmary fall of unripened peaches in June will probably not be large. The number of peach growers in Delaware Is constantly diminishing. Many of the fruit farms which formerly yielded from eighty to one hundred acres of peach trees now have but twenty to thirty acres of orchards. The number of trees in Kent and Sussex counties has been diminished to reduce the ravages of the yellows. Many of th? best informed peach growers in the State are of the opinion that a "half crop will be better than a full crop," for the reason that a glutted market and low prices are almost certain to follow overproduction, while with a fair crop prices are reasonably sure to be satisfactory to the producers. While there is no doubt that the peach crop ha3 been damaged to some extent, and while it is possible that in sorre districts the loss of the crop will be almcst complete, there are still plenty of peaches in Delaware, and thi: rummer's prices are likely to be fairly moderate, unless late frosts and storms should further injure the fruit. One of the largest pear orchards In the State is on the farm of James T. Shallcrcss, near MacdonouKh. and thl fruit, like the peach, appears to be but little Injured. t'nnhler Koettlnj; oes to Prison. MILWAFKKE. Wis.. Mav il.-Joha R. Kooning, cashier of the defunct South-silo Savings Hank, whose cae has been before the courts for nearly two years, during which time the prisoner has remained In jail, to-day pleaded guilty to the charge of receiving money after he know the bank was insolvent, and was sentenced to Waupim prison for tivc years. This is the sentence Imposed by Judge ("lmentson about a year ao. Koetting thi appealed his case, and it has dragged In court ever since. inNtirtince Company in Trouble. NEW YOKE. May 11. Judge McAdim. In t'.:e Superior Court, special term, granted an order to-day for th? appointment of a temporary receiver for the New York Fire Insurance Company and a temporary Injunction restraining the directors from further interfering with the management of the company. The petition for dissolution Is filed by a majority of the directors. It sets forth that the stock effects and other property are not cuKlcleat to pay all Its demands, , . ......
GEN. COGSWELL DEAD
WELL K.OW.V- AS A SOLDIER AXD 3IEMUEII OF CO.XGRESS. One of the Most Popular Men In the House Death of Yon Sunne, the 31 us leal Composer. WASHINGTON. May '.-Representative ullliam Cogswell, of Massachusetts, died at 1:35 a. m., at his apartments lei this city. YVlth him when the end came were Mrs. Cogswell, his wife; Dr. Cogswell, his son, and Miss Cogswell, his daughter. General Cogswell had been falling rapidly during the day and as night came on it was apparent to his family that he had but a short time to live. Much of the time his breath came only in gasps, though the end was calm-and peaceful. General Cogswell has been Incapacitated for congressional work for about six months, and was not seen in his seat during the last session of the FiPy-thlrd Congress. Arrangements for the funeral have not yet been completed. William Cogswell was born in Eradford. Mass., Aug. 23, 1SCS. He was graduated from the Dane law school of Harvard in 1S60. He entered the federal army in April, 1861, and served throughout the war. He was breveted brigadier general in 1861. After the war closed he resumed the practice of law at Salem, Mass., and was for five years Mayor of that city. He served five terms in the Massachusetts House of Representatives and one term In tho State Senate. In 1SS6 he was chosen to represent the Essex (Mass.) district in the popular branch of Congress and has served there continuously since, having been re-elected to the Fifty-fourth Congress. He nas served with distinction on the rivers and harbors and appropriation committees. He was one of the most popular members cf the House. In personal appearance he somewhat resembled President Cleveland, for whom he was often mistaken. His hale, sturdy, frankness and Integrity commended themselves to the House when he spoke and gave his utterances much weight. He was broad-minded and was particularly careful to avoid partisan debates touching the war. Mrs. Enmm Llpplnentt. QUINCY. 111., May 21. Mrs. Emma Lipplncott, matron of the Illinois Soldiers' Home, died to-day. She was the widow of Gen. Charles E. Lippincott, for eight years Auditor of State and first superintendent of tho Soldiers Home. General Lippincott was killed In a runaway accident five months after his incumbency, and his widow has conducted the hospital' at the home ever since and was love! by every soidier. She was a former society leader at Springfield, but gave herself up entirely to the good wotk at the home and was called "comrade" by all the veterans. A body guard of twenty soldiers will escort the remains to Springfield for burial. Yon Suppr, the Composer. VIENNA, May 21.-Franz von Suppe, the musical composer, is dead. Other Deaths. WASHINGTON. May 21. Saul S. Henkle. a prominent member of the Washington bar, dropped dead at his residence here to-dav. Heart disease was the cause. Mr. Henkle was a native of Ohio and was a delegate from that State to several Republican conventions. He was Adjutantgeneral of the State at tho beginning of the late war, and was active in the work cf mustering and organizing tho Buckeye State troops. CHICAGO, May 21 Dr. Mary Harris Thompson, widely known to the medical fraternity as tho founder of the Chicago Hospital for Women and Children, died suddenly to-day of cerebral hemorrhage. She was sixty-six years old. HE CAME FROM INDIANA. S. S. McCInre, of the Literary Syndleate. In a Hustler from the Yest. New York Commercial Advertiser. One of the most successful New Y'ork publishers is S. S. McClure, whose hame 1 familiar wherever dally newspapers are read, for he stands at the head of the literary "syndicate" business. He has within the past ten years made the acquaintance of more authors of standing in .iffcrent countries than any other man knows, or ever knew. Whether or not he invented the scheme, it was he who elaborated Into a great, systematized bureau the plan of buying an author's short story, novel, essay or popular descriptive article, and then selling It for simultaneous publication to leading newspapers all over the land. The idea ha3 an easy, fascinating look. Its practical outworking is extremely difficult, as many Imitators have found to their sorrow. Mr. MeC'lure's energy and ardor triumphed over difficulties, and he built up his business without the aid of capital, and with a very scant stock of previous experience. Out in Chicago they would call McClure a hustler, but here in New York he is regarded merely as an enterprising business man. He brought his inherited vim and Ingenuity with him from the north of Ireland, where he was born some thirty-six or thirty-seven years ago, and whence his family migrated to the United States when he was nine j'ear3 old. The McClures soon found an abiding place In Indiana, and Samuel, after a busy boyhood of hard work In numerous kinds of labor, entered Knox College, at Galesburg, 111., where he made his way by doing odd Jobs In term time, finding steaay employment In vacations, and staying out occasionally to teach district school. He left with his sheepskin in 1832, but he went back to Galesburg the next year to marry a professor's daughter. Meanwhile he had gone to Boston and found a position as editor of The Wheelman, an illustrated monthly periodical for bicyclers, and it was good experience. After a year or more hv"1 came to New Y'ork, where he was at first employed by Mr. De Vinne In the great printing shop that manufactures the Century Magazine, though uftir a few months he found himself an assistant in the Century's advertising department. It was about this time In the career of McClure that his imaginations seized upon the notion of syndicate publishing, and with the audacity of youth and inexperience ho left his position to try the thing. If he had been vls3r and more elaborately versed in the ways of authors, and publishers, and newspaper editors, he would, of course, never have tried it. He ought to have failed, but somehow he succeeded. It was a time when the circumstances of newrpaper publishing were making for enlarged Sunday editions, and McClure became the great purveyor to the Sunday literary supplement. He secured the best writers in the world. He had the discernment In some cases and the good luck in others to establish connections with rising authors at the happy moment when they were about to step across the threshold of fame. He helped them and they helped him. It would be easy to make a long tale of the remarkable manner In which, by a natural process of evolution, this Intimate connection with authors and editors and the reading public has led up to the establishment of McClure's Magazine. AO COMMOX PLACE El'LOGV. A AY He's Tribute to Her Dead Haslinnd Over His Cirnve. New York Sun. The following unusual, not to say remarkable, funeral oration was recently pronounced by Mrs. Turner, over the body of her husband, the Hon. Isaac M. Turner, of Grand Rapids, Mich., who died of consumption, after a lingering illness. There were no other funeral exercises: "I feel that I must say a word here above the b'.er of my dead hero, for all that Is best in life I owe to him. While living lie was for all; but, being dead, he is mine alone. Then 1 would speak, for many of you here were friends cf his, and, through him only, friends of mine. "You wdio knew him in his professional or public life, knew hini to love and esteem I know from your presence here; but I think that it must have been that he was at his best in lite private life. In his home, with his friends, in bis library, was certainly where he found life's fullest meaning and highest enjoyment. And if m public life he ever found it necessary to be stern or appear harsh, yet it wa3 his nature to be kind and gentle; for he was ever a lover of little children, a lover and protec:or of all domestic pets, a lover of flowers and forests, and of that gentle mystic mood of nature of which Ids favorite poets sang so cloqently. Perhaps he did not possess the technicalities of exact scholarship, yet be was a profound s:udent in many depaitments of research; he was familiar with the wide sweep and tendencies of history, as well as with It? more particular phases, lie was a lover of the literature cf all ages and nations. It was a maxim v. ith him that in a knowledge of universal literature was to be found the widest culture. "His Anglo-Saxon blood made him a fearless lover of the truth and a fearless advo-, rate of the rights of the inlivliual. With him the human soul in in full Integrity should acknowledge no authority, either to church or State, except, indeed, in so far as had been mutually agreed upon for the good of all. Yet. claiming this pre-eminent position for himself, you would not find a man more modest and more considerate for others. "His life was cast upon a generous mould, his love and sympathy were as wide as humanity, his interest as wide as nature. Tho less fortunate in life found in him a
true friend and helper and he was the peer of many upon their own more limited platform. "Ha was made of the stuff from which heroes are made. It was ever his lot to struggle, it was his to endure, and It was his to attain. To struggle, to endure, to attain; that makes the cycle of human life, and his was not Incomplete though his forty-three years seemed all too short. "During the fifteen years of our wedded life there has never been a winter nor a summer gone by, but at the turning of the seasons 1 have heard the rustling of the robes of the angel of death. The shadow of her wing has been over us at all times. There has never been a fond ambition for this world's fair projects but has been gently shrouded on her breast. My sorrow Is great, but It Is without bitterness, except In so far as contrition and Yemorse will come with the recollection that I might have been more tender and loving to one whose life was so unequally matched with fate. "I cannot stand here above the wreck of so much promise and say that I believe that It Is the will of Providence, for I do not. God does not will sucn heartbreaking things. I can take no comfort In the platitude that the mysteries of Providence are past human understanding. Humanity its?lf has been intrusted with the high problem of working out its own salvation, and it is humanity's part to see that such Inconsolable things do not happen. Humanity, by investigation, research, and effort must fulfil the destinv stamped upon Its brow. To base my faith upon the postulate that somewhere at some time In the universe this must be compensated is an unsubstantial position, for there is no compensation. There can be none, except in so far as human effort can prevent the happening of such untimely occurrences. "But weep not for him, for all has ended in peace; weep for me and for mine, if you will, but weep not for him. for his life went out upon triumphant lines. No imperial guard ever died at his post of duty more noblv than did our hero, and I pray that his life mav still be a hope and Inspiration to me. and not a mere memory however sweet and sacred that will always be. Weep not for him. Chant no funeral dirge. Let no minor strains of woe accompany the. flight of his spirit. We will not Fav dust to dust and ashes to phes. but life to life nd spirit to spirit. Weep not for him, for I say his life has gone out upon triumphant lines, and let dominant triumphant chords weave the harmony that would echo the flight of his soul." KICKAPOO "SOOXERS." They Have Already Taken Possession of the Reservation. OKLAHOMA' CITY', O. T.. May 21.-The
Klckapoo country, which will be opened to wddte settlement Thursday noon, is full of "sooners," and more are going in every day. These men are very bold In their declarations, and there can be no doubt that the most shameless acts of "soonerism" will be practiced on all sides. The news of the President's proclamation has not penetrated much beyond the towns lining the railroads. In the inland towns and on farms are many people who have been waiting for years for the opening of the Klckapoo lands, and these will hardly receive the news in time to get ready and get to "the country by Thursday. The people of Chandler and Tecumseh, who several times during the last two months were fooled by couriers riding into the town with the announcement that the Klckapoo country was open to settlement, and who rushed pelt-mell into the reservation and staked off claims, have discovered that under a strict construction cf the "sooner" act of 18&9 every man who went on these false alarm runs is a "sooner" and barred from taking land. They have found that the old Kickapoo boomers, who have been camped on the line for years, have all of their names, the date of the runs and the location of the claim each one staked to be used In proving them "sooners," and the false alarms were a little scheme of the old timers to shut oft much! competition in the real opening. There is much bad feeling over the matter, anl there may be trouble between the two factions on Thursday. As yet, however, nothing real has happened to mar the universal feeling of happiness that prevails along the border lines of the new Eldorado, and great expectations are harbored by many of the eld timers, who know the lay of the land perfectly, and each of whom has long ago picked out some particularly fine claim that he hopes to secure. I The Yankton Reservation. MITCHELL, S. D., May 21. The Land Office at this point commenced to receive filings for land on the Yankton reservation at noon to-day. The first application was that of a young lady. Up to 4 o'clock about one hundred soldiers' declaratory statements had been filed. The rush here will commence to-morrow or next day, when the homestead applications will come In. At 7 o'clock this morning a line was formed in front of the Land Office, but everything was quiet and orderly. JIST AN EYERY-DAY CAT. Icodemus," I'rir.e Winner nt the Recent Show, a Ringer.' New Y'ork World. Bryan G. Hughes, who entered the "brindled Dublin torn cat Nicodemus" in the cat show, with a big pedigree attached to him, showing that he was descended from a cat the mummy of which was found in an Egyptian tomb, and putting the price of Jl.O.'X) on him, confessed to a World reporter yesterday that the cat for which he has had offers of $2,000 Is a fraud. The confession of . Mr. Hughes, who makes paper boxes In a wholesale manner at No. 242 Center street, and resides at No. 49 East One Hundred and Twenty-sixth street, shows first that he Is an honest man and secondly that New Y'ork Is full of gullible people. Mr. Hughes doesn't know any more about cats than he does about who dug the canals on Mars. He beiieve3 that cats catch mice and sing after sunset, and there you have the extent of his knowledge about them. A few days before the cat show Mr. Hughes was sitting. In a bootblack's chair on the Bowery, when a colored boy sauntered up and said: "Say, boss, do you wart to buy a cat?" "How much?" inquired the paperbox maker, who is always ready to make a trade. "Ycu can have him for a drink," said the boy. " "Where did ycu get him?" "An old woman down in Hester street gave me a nickel to take him to the dock and drop him into the drink. He made too much noise nishts." Mr. Hughes remembered that mice had been eating up his paper boxes, and he gave the boy 10 cents to take the cat down to hi3 factory and show the animal where the mice could be found. Eut the cat va3 too silly to be of any use a3 a mouscr. "I guess he must be an ornamental C3t," said Mr. Hughes to s brother. "At any rate, he Isn't useful. Perhaps he's meant to be looked at. Let's enter him at the cat show." And so they paid the $1 entrance fee and made up a long pedigree for him. put some flowers on the cage and tagged him as for sale at $l.O0O. "The names in the pedigree sounded fine," sail Mr. Hughes. "We made It up as we went along. All the experts crowded round the cage-an i admired him. They put their heads on one side and said, knowingly: "Yet, I see his grand lam was Coleslaw, out of Cabbage, and you can't beat that blood, my boy. Of course Coleslaw and Cabbage were names we Invented. Then they came around and wanted to buy the cat. and he was awarded a third prize. "Since the show closed I have been bothered to death with offers for him. I have had checks for 51,000 and $l,f00 thrust in my face. I have refused them all. because I am not in the bunco business, and don't purpose to cheat any one. At the same time I was a little modest about confessing that l had fooled everyone, for I don't want to oe made unnecessarily unpopular. "But two ladies drove up to my house on Friday in a fine coach and offered me $2.0 for the cat. That morning I had received three letters and a telegram making other offer, none of them unier $1,0. and there was a crowd of cat fanciers down in my office trying to bribe their way into my brother s private room in order to tilk cat to him. I couldn't stanl it any longer. I toli the ladies that Nicodemus was a 10cent cat from Hester street. They laughed, refused to believe me and raised their offer "All I want is permission to live a quiet life in my own simple way. I want the cat experts, the cat mongers and the cat fanciecs to leave me Hlooe. I'm an honest man, An J they can't have my lU-cent cat for j2,(kNl. That is final. If any more people come around bothering me with their old i money I shall not be responsible for the i confluences. I , "This Is a full and complete 'own-up jjnd it Is final. I wan: It to be believed. 'Any one who questions my veracity must taice the consequences. "It seems to me. tniugri, from th? offers I've had, that there must be a cat famine In New York, and a chance for some cne to go into the cat business." l't-Seeretnry Washington Letter in MeCnllnch. Philadelphia Tclegraph. Ex-Secretary Hugh MeCulloch, who Is now supposed to -be fatally il was regarded us one of the mort conservative and wisest financiers the country has ever seen, and the onlv man who, was ever twice called to be Secretary of the Treasury. Yet in his book, "Fifty Years of Men anl Measures." the ex-Secretary relates how he came on to Washington from Kort Wayne, Ind.,- during President Lincoln's first term, to oppose a bill then pending in
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Congress creating a national banking system. He soon became convinced, however, that the proposed new system would be a 'success, and a year later was Invited by Secretary Chase to accept the controllership of the Currency and perfect the organization of the national banking svstem. The circumstances surrounding this appointment as Controller, as related by Mr. MeCulloch, are Interesting. He had r-assed througn Washington, accompanied by his wife. or. his way to Maine to visit his old home. Mr. M'cCulloch called at tho Treasurj- Department to see Secretary Chase, but the latter's messenger stated that the Secretary was busily engaged, and Mr. MeCulloch left his card and passed on his journey. hen he reached Maine ho was surprise! to find a telegram from Secretary Chase urging him to return and accept the position of Controller. He became the first Controller of the Currency, and afterwards Secretary and was called a second time to the Secretary's office by President Arthur, when tiresham. who succeeded Folger, deceased, resigned to go upon the federal bench at Chicago. A3 a Secretary he had some homely and useful rules, which his successors in office have, for some reason, found It Impracticable to follow. One of these was to make a personal tour of the various divisions in the treasury once in two weeks and acquaint himself with all the details of the othce, A Personal Statement. Wow! Meow! I am the Office Cat. Will you get on to that? And I don't go To any cat show In Madison Square Or anywhere. That's me. See . It takes all my time To chew up rhyme And other things ' That the poet sings; And to masticate What comes too late To publlcate; " And to make me a nest Of the amateur's best; And to chuck away What writers write who've nothing to say; And a lot more like that. Which an Office Cat, Who knews where he's at. Has got down pat. Hut If I wasn't busy well. Nobody can tell What a three-ring show I'd be, if I'd go Up there To Madison Square, With an essay under my diaphragm. And a poem from the pen Of a poet out in Y'uba Dam, Inside my abdomen. That's what; And there's not A cat Like that Anywhere Near Madison Square Ladies and gents. In the cat show tents, I'm no film flam: That Is the kind of a cat I am! iFelis Solaris, in New Y'ork Sun. Whisky Trust Reorganization. CHICAGO. May 21. The reorganization committee of the Whisky Trust met at the Great Northern Hotel to-day and took action which will probably end the receiverShip of the concern within a fhort time. Resolutions were adopted providing for a sale of the trust's propery. the sale to be either by the courts or by the board of directors. The reorganization committee held 348,040 of the total 350,000 shares of stock at to-day's meeting. Ex-President Grcenhut being represented by 1,119 shares. Time to Kick. Thiladelphia Record. , Tho high literary and dramatic aesthetidsm to which the reading of "Trilby" has brought a wretched Republic finds its climax In the threatened suit for darraxes which is to be brought against MaJiaer Palmer by Miss Estelle Clayton, who claims to have a United States copyright upon 'bare feet. It Is time for the great American people to kick against all this consummate nonsense with something more substantial than a Trilby foot. Menn Suggestion. Philadelphia Press. A man named Herron, who died in Indianapolis, seems to have been a queer bird. He never visited an art exhibition, and yet left $225,000 to the Art Society of the city. Perhaps ho was afraid of being disillusionized if he attended the exhibitions, and so kept to his ideals. llncket Shop Fails. KANSAS CITY. Mo.. May 21. The Sehroeder CommIs?lon Company, carrying on p. bucket shop (business in the Exchange Building, failed, this evening, with liabilities placed at id23,000. There are no visible assets. The firm was on the wrong side of the wheat market and was caught short. AVhnt They Want to Know. Philadelphia Record. The statement that ex-President Harrison is In New York to have his portrait painted ouKht to settle the matter, but it doesn't. What the politicians of his party are anxious to know Is whether he is still posing for a living picture. So It Will. Kansas City Journal. Chairman Tagpart thinks the Inditni Democracy has trouble enough already without splitting on the silver question. And so it has. Hut it will split, all the same. She Sixty Do It Yet. Chicago Post. Woman must have h?r own separate Bible, according: to Elizabeth Cady Stanton. As yet, however, -iie has made no demand for a separate world. CITY NEWS ITEMS. The police yesterday found a young girl named Schnable In a questionable house. Her mother was here searching for her and returned with her to Madison. The State Sunday-school convention will be held in this city at' the Tabernacle Church, June 11', 13 and 14. Miss Mabel Hall, who makes a specialty of primary work, will com from Chicago to addreta the meeting. Michael O'Reilly, an- a&ed inmate of the Home of the Ocod Shepherd, died suddenly last evening at the Institution while sitting in the smoklns: room. Coroner Castor was called and decided death was probably due to heart failure. Friends will see to the burial. AVanted to Shoot Ills Sister-in-Lavr. Edward Tidle, an employe of the streetcar company, was arrested last evening by patrolman Raftery on a charge of drawing: deadly weapons. It is alleged that he drew a revolver and threatened to shoot his sister-in-law at his home. No. 245 Coburn street. Tidie had been drinking, and he gives as a cause that his wife does not love him. She called to ee him. but he refused to talk to her. She said she was net guilty as charged by ;iirn. and that all the trouble was iue to the talk of the neighbors. Raftery was attracted to the house by the screams of the women, and he had a run of two squares before catching the rriijoner. Historical Society vr Hook. Publication No. 2 cf the Indiana Historical Society Is Just out from the house of BowenMerrill. It Is a handsomely bound quarto edition of pases, Indexed. The book contains monologues on "The Ltwa and Courts of the Northwest," by Daniel Walte Howe; "The IJf and Services of John R. Diilon," by General John I'otiurn and Horace p. Riddle; "The Acquisition of Louisiana," by Judge Thomas M. Cooiey; "Lougbei ty'.s DcdYat and 1'lceon Roo.t Massacre." by Charles Mirtindalc, and other pnpers bv George W. Julian. John Citrk Ridpath. Oscar J. Craig. C. P. Ftrguson. Samuel Morrison. Robert I. Duncan and Jaccb P. Dunn. Whedon Itelleved of III Trnln. Conductor W'.'.li F.Whedorw of th? J., M. & I. read, who was indicted by the county crand jury upon information furnished by P.. C. C. fc St. L. rallwav spotters, furrendered his train at Madison last night, by order of th company, to conductor William Lewis, of Columbus. Dr. Price's Cream Raking Powder World's Fair richest Medal and Dlplosa.
Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report
n o IPwd(f? AMUSEMENTS. r.rnnd-The Ironmaster. The Kendals last night presented "The Ironmaster" under difficulties. They rlayed against a counter attraction at the Grand, and one that furnished no little entertainment to the audience. Prior to the rising of the curtain Mrs. May Wright Sewall. at the head of a column of society buds, just ready to blossom into beautiful womanhood, ma.rhed Into tho theater. There was about forty of them, and they occupied nearly all the boxes, from tho proscenium back, on the right. The cirls. with their
uuiij, unsni eyes ana neat -r evening gowns, created a veritable sensation. Such a happy, chattering party of young people has not been seen at the theater ill aces. ThfV hvnnntlT.1 nn.il.
encc and divided the attention with th Kendals throughout the evening. To make the situation more interesting on the opposite side of the theater there appeared & box party of youths, all armed with glasses, who had net been invited to Join Mrs. Sewall's coteries, it was oasv to conceive the young gallants had prospective sweetncans among tne bewail party, and this conviction was heightened bv the flutter which their seemingly not unwelcome presence created among the girls. Mrs. Sewall's face was a decided study at thin coup of the youngsters, but that good lady refused to let the fact mar her enjoyment. Wise woman that she is. she accepted the inevitable, and to all appearances no harm was done. Everybody seemed to enjoy th situation, even to the members of the company. The performance of "The Ironmaster" was substantially the same as that which the Kendals have been glvlu? throughout the country, and was falrlv satisfactory. The more one sees of Mrs. Kendal's acting the more one Is Inclined to believe that she Is wise in her conclusion to retire from tho stage. Tli Queen's Shllllnj?. , To-night closes the engagement of tha Kendals in this city as well as the theatrical season at tho .Grand. The play selected for their farewell performance will be G. W. Godfrey's comedy drama. 'The Queen's Shilling." The hero is a gentleman's son, who has enlisted as a private in the Lancers, and seeks to find la a new, rough life, forgetfulness of the troubles that drove him from home. Under tKV assumed name of Esmonde, young Frank Mai'tlanl gets on very comfortably until one tine day. At the Chequer' Inn, near the Lancers' post, he falls in with a very pretty young: lady. who. like himself, engages in masquerading. He likes this young cousin of the hostess of the Inn. at she declares herself to be, and she hcreelf is Rrratelul to him for rescuing her from the" too pronounced attentions or his comrades. Kate dfyd.ires that, at tho .loir nf tho inn young Maltland is confronted with an old friend. Jack Gambler urges him to appear again, for once, nt least, as a gentleman. He Is going to Dingley Grange, and will present him. in citizen's attire, as his friend. Maltland consents and runs away !rtm the Euard house, where he had been confined for some slight infraction of the discipline. Jack had his uirprls when he found that tho hostess, Kate Grcville, was the supposed waiting maid who had 'chaffed" him so cleverly at the inn. Hut even a greater surprise falls to the fortune of Maltland. Introduced as Mr. Vane, he finds himself confronted by the young girl. For a moment he is dumfounued. Later he is convinced that the maid of the inn and the mistress of the grange arc In truth, on and the same. His own colonel Is there as the suitor for Kate's hand. Indignant at the presumption of the old martinet (who does not in the least suspect his Identity) Maltland holds him up to ridicule. A stormy scene follows. Both men cross swords. The Colonel's wrist is scratched. Maltland'a arm pierced. Hut all ends well at last. Mrs. ratter Stabs Kyrle Belle w. NEW YORK. May 2L In tho bath scene In Vharlotto Corday," in which Kyrle Bel. lew and Cora tlrquhart Potter opened their week's season at the 'American Theater, Mrs. Potter's too vigorous portrayal of th title role came near resulting seriously for MaratMr. Eellew. In this
ncene Charlotte stabs Marat, and Mrs. V Potter entered so faithfully Into the spirit of her part that she accidentally Inflicted a wound on Mr. Belle w. Her alarm S was visible at the eight of the stain of J blood on Marat's fleshings, .but the act was J fini?hed. When the curtain fell Mr. Bellew ( went to his dressing room, where a doctor J stopped the flow of blood. The wound is not
at all serious. Illnshnw Murder Investigation. IL C. Webster, of this city, has been summoned to appear before the Hendricks county grand Jury. The latter Is Investigating the killing of Mrs. William Hlnshaw, wife of the Methodist minister at Belleville, and Webster obtained some Information ln the case. It has always been said that Mrs. Hinshaw was shot by burglars. ' Dandy old sprinkler, isn't it." Repair your hose in a sensible and easy way with ! HUDSON'S HOSE MEUDEfl One minute of time, one twist of the wrist, and the leak or break is mended. Ak your ?fr tor tbt of TIrr'S rUt MriMlta. eiitirc of tub. 2 brc, tud I ptir p'ipm, or foti1 J.V. Ltr punt ol4 Mm4r. Oiv Inside diameter of hose. ; I51GHT & JILIS05, iE&JSKpoiis, Seilir j Apsis. ; NATIONAL Tube Works WroagM-Iroi Pipe far Gas, Steam aod Water. Holler Tubes cant and Malleat!e Iron MUlntnUbia aad Calvnlzl). Valrea, Hff oritn. Knclae Trimmtiif, 8femni (iiujrt. ripe Tcnf, I'll ittrri. TIm. Screw Mates and l)l. VYrrn L Mani TrarM. I'll id w. Kttbm Mtiks. lio. rtrlimjT. liab. Mt Metal NoUr. White aai 0lorl Wiplnjf Wart, ar.4 all otbr up.llMi utiA t ronuev-ttcn with liu. Mram anl Waif-r. Natarai liu Supplif a tp?rtalty. MamtijUiiiK Apparatus for J'utli ltuiMUtft, Mrc-rotr. , Mill, ?hops,i"artorlfn, Iail dritft. Lumber Iry-lfoue, t CutaiKl Ttiremtl to or rtr any rue WrouKbt-tron I'll, from H inch to 12 tnrtive diametrr. KNIGHT & JILLSOK, "Sand 11 S. I KNNiVIVAMA ST. The di5criminaftn,up to harmony of htr charmicwtuny with tpar of the jmmctncaL Mid enduring v asm tShovnfr .1
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