Indianapolis Journal, Indianapolis, Marion County, 9 September 1895 — Page 2

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THE INDIANAPOLIS JOURNAL, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 9, 1895.

namented with designs representing: saints and emblems of the church. The alter Is tiifrty-three feet high and beautifully carved. There are also two lJe altars, one irrncnir.Tl with a fisrure representing the Virgin Mary and the other with that of the Savior. In the gallery at the rear Is the great pipe organ. Fafher Schmidt Is the pastor. A chime of bells has been ordered for the tower. The first mass conducted by a Catholic priest In M uncle was by Father MaJoney, of Indianapolis. In 1S5-1. At that tlme;Muncle bad only two famil.es of Catholics. They were the families of Patrick Tuhey. whose on Is now postmaster here, and Nicholas Eiler. The construction of the hrst churcn, . -which Is now being replaced, was begun In 1S03. Father li More. and Father .McMahon superintended the work. Previous to that -time Fathers Clarke. Fitzmorrts. Shel'.amaker. liuck. Vanderpool an-1 Doyle officiated here previous to the erection of the church. Fathers Cowley and Marshal came hr after the- church was erected, and In Father William (leorge Schmidt was sent here. When he took charge of the church .there were less than one hundred families In the city. Now the church membership is over five hundred families. Father W. G. Schmidt, the present pastor. Is forty-three years old and a native of Germany. His father Immigrated to this rountrv in 17. locating at Mineral Point, W is. Father Schmidt ws educated for the priesthood at Fond du Ic. Wis.. In Calvary College, -and in St. Mary's Seminary. Cincinnati. After being ordained in 1874 he iras given the M uncle church one year later, and has since remained here. He fr. not only popular with his congregation, but likewise is loved by all residents of MuncJe for his kind and amiable manner.

GOOD PLACB FOR JO 139. Deer War Is On nt Loiransport and the Price Cut In Trro. Special to the Indianapolis Journal, LOGANSPOHT. Ind., Sept. 8. A beer war is promised In this city and the probabilities are u win Decome so encap me lovers of that beverage will be able to use it for bathing purposes before the end of , the present week if they desire. There is a brewery here and a half dozen agencies for outride concerns. A few days ago one of the agencies announced a cut of from JS to $i.oJ per barrel. Previously the uniform price of ts had prevailed, but as a single as;ent had almost a monopoly of the outside trade a cutting of price was resorted to. Now comes the announcement of the first agency that beginning to-morrow a rate of 11 per barrel will go into effect. What the other agents will do has not yet been decided, though It is said that a combination may bo formed to drive out the two agents who are doing the cutting. Helleved of Saloon. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. . KOKOMO, Ind.r Sept. 8. The Nicholson temperance law failed ,to:acut.any .iigure. in this city as a prohibitory il rf4Trit it dU Its work in the smarter ti-vau ofthe county in an indirect way by frightening off the proposed applicants j. fjt jiloon, license. The activity of the temperance' eletnent in rr-aklng motions to remonstrate Beared off applications to establish saloons flt Russiavllle. Greentown, Young America, Burlington. Flora and other villages In this vicinity, the petitioners nelieving they would-be shut out if the cases cime to a test, as the majority of them undoubtedly would. The residents of the Fifth ward of this city will petition the Council at its next meeting to f xcludei saloons tram their part of town under the Moore law, which ftves the Council the right to exclude aoons from suburban territory aiwl confine the- traffic to the business center of the city. With such a law In force the Fifth ward (South Kokomo) will not be compelled, as formerly, to fight the applicants every term of Commissioners Court to (keep them out. South Kokomo has a population of and no saloons, and the Council will without doubt relieve the residents of further contests by giving them the benefit of the Moore law. Old Settler of Tipton County. Epecial to the Indianapolis Journal. JPTOX. Ind., Sept. 8. More than six thousand people attended the old settlers' meeting1 at Goldsmith, six miles west of this city, Saturday. Speeches were made by Judge Klrkpatrick, Judge Waugh and others. One of the most interesting" features of the meeting was a display of old relics of the early history of the county. Including the first school bell ever brought to the county, the first threshing machine, the first wooden moldboard plow, the frow that rived the clapboard for the old log courthouse, the hand-made padlock on the first. Jail, spanning wheels, cooking utensils and many other articles in oso in pioneer days. Since, the last meeting, a year ago. seven of the pioneer settlers in the county have died. Pearson Fn m 1 1 y Rennlon. - Epecial to the Indianapolis Journal. ' WABASH. Ind., Sept. 8. Last evening cne of the largest and most pleasant family reunions ever held in this part of Indiana closed In Pearson's grove, south of this city. The reunion of the Pearsons Is held cnnually and as there are many branches of the family the attendance is large. Yesterday there were three hundred present, llfty of them being members of the Million family, living in Cas3 and Carroll counties, the Millions being connected by marriage with the Pearsons. Dinner was erved in the grove and a waonload of watermelons was consumed. Addresses were delivered by Rev. Hartley, Mrs. Francis Jenkins, of Kansas City, and D. "W. Fowler, of Wabash. Struck by Llshtnlntr In Midlake. Epccial to the Indianapolis Journal. WABASH, Ind., Sept. 8. Lew P.. Davis, a well-known shoe merchant of this city, was a passenger on the Graham & Morton lake vessel City of Louisville, which was struck by lightning' while in midlake, between Chicago and Denton Harbor, Saturday morning. Mr. Davis was in his berth asleep, but the terrific shock, which stunned all the officers on duty, awakened, though It did not seriously affect him. Twelve feet of the foremast of the Ixulsvllle was torn off by the bolt and the deck enveloped In fire. The Louisville's " slpier , ship, .the City of Chicago, a few ml!es distant, was rlnaled the Louisville's captain, thinking his boat was damaged, but' no assistance was needed. . jir-. Wood shed Defeated Iloone Wilson. Special tt the Indianapolis Journal. WARREN, Ind., Sept. 8. Yesterday was the last day of the most successful fair in the history of the Warren TrI-county Fair Association. The crowds were enormous all week, no less than fifteen thousand being In, attendance on Friday. The features Saturday ware the free-for-all trot, and the match pace between Woodshed and Boone . Wilson, in which the State pacing record on cne-half-mllo tracks was smashed, one heat fceiny paced by Woodshed in the fast time cf 2:12V. Woodshed won the race. In the free-for-all trot Jllllsco won, with Hurlburt ccoond. Best time. 2:20. Crippled Peddler Killed. Cpeclal to the Indianapolis Journal. LAFAYETTE. Ind.. Sept. SVJoseph Bennett fell from a third-story window at the Lake Erie House this morning, and his c!:ull was crushed by contact with the brickpaved court below. He had been drinking v the night before. He was a one-armed ped- ' dler and a stranger here. Car Inspector Ate a Passenger. . Epecial to the Indianapolis Journal. WABASH. Ind.. Sept. 8. When train No. 2. from Indianapolis, on the Big Four line. tZo Drugs to CHEV7 CZo Ctcmc to CHOKE rf7V '' A. .-i w-r-x-v nn r TOBACCO tlo r.'crvea Quaking uo Heart Palpitating No Dyspeptio Aching f3 n u -UYGPLiPTIC

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arrived In Wabash yesterday morning Car Inspector Stephen Fuchs found sltttr.g serenely on a beam of the rear truck of the last coach a fine black pullet. The fowl was covered with dust, but otherwise was none the worse for its Journey. It is supposed that it climbed on the truck to roost, in the yard at Indianapolis, the night previous and failed to debark before the coach moved. Mr. Fuchs to-day dined on the hen; Mynterloua Murder nt Chnmpalgn. CHAMPAIGN, 111., Sept. 8. A mysterious murder occurred in this city last night. About 10 o'clock Jacob Klser, an ex-policeman, in company with two companions, was going home. Seeing a man lying at the side of th walk in an apparently drunken condition. Klser aroused him and Informed him that he had better get up or the patrol wagon would take him. The fellow Jumped up and. drawing a revolver, shot Kiser, who expired Immediately. The fellow Is a total stranger here, and since he has sobered up has refused to talk and refuses to reveal his identity. Iloy Shot Hln Tormentor. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. ELWOOD, Ind.. Sept. 8. James Lear, a farmer northeast of this city, who has been playing practical Jokes on a neighbor boy, thirteen years oil. was terribly wounded today. He had played a trick on the boy and was teasing him about it when the boy got angry ani threatened to shoot. Lear kept laughing at him and the boy finally threatening he was going to shoot. Iear grabbed holl of the gun with his right hand at the muzzle. The gun went off and the load shattered Lear's arm nearly to the shoulder. The boy is in Jail.

Iloy Drownrd In rigeon Creek. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. EVANSVILLD. Ind.,' Sept. 8. Harvey Gates, an eight -year-old boy, was swinging on a rope hanging from a limb of a tree that extended over Pigeon creek, to-day. and fell into a deep hole. He was drowned before help could reach him. The body was recovered. Drank Cnrltolie Acid nnd Cnmphor. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. ELWOOD. Ind.. Sept. 8. Jamea Cottrell's three-year-old son found a four-ounce bottle of carbolic acid and camphor linament and drank a lot of it. The mouth, throat and stomach was burned raw, and the child may not recover. ' Indiana Dendm. ROCKrOUT, Ind., Sept. 8. Benjamin Smith, aged flxty-flve. a well-known veteran of the Twenty-fifth Indiina. died at his home in this city this morning. GOSPORT, Ind., Spt. 8.-Nellie. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Myers, died on Saturday.-. COKEIiS MAY STRIKE. 3Ien Demand an Advance of 11 Per Cent. Thla Week. UXIONTOWN, Pa., Sept. 8. The situation throughout the coke region to-night is one of uncertainty, caused by the probability of a general strike this week. At the delegate convention held lat Thursday at Connellsville, a demand was made for an advance in wages. Reports from the various plants are to the effect that seret meetings were held to-day, but what action the cokers took cannot bo learned except in a few cases. At the mee-tings heard from, the men favored an .ivance and instructed the delegates to the convention to Insist on the increase. A representative of a leading company said to-day that the operators would not grant an atvance. The labor leaders lnsdst that coke has advanced from 05 cents to 51.25 ier ton, and the tnen'a wages should be advanced proportionately They further aver that a strike is .inevitable unless the wages are advanced this week. INHUMAN PARENTS. They Picket nn Idiot's Child Like n ' Domestic Animal. J FULLERTON, Neb.. Sept. 8. This community is greatly excited over a case of revolting cruelty brought to light by Sheriff Snyder. For several years it has been known that a family named Knaplk, in the Polish colony, had an idiotic boy, and lately reports of their 111 treatment of the unfortunate child have been circulated. Investigation by the sheriff developed that the boy, who is also partially paralyzed, had been picketed like a domestic animal in an out-of-the-way place during the day. aiid at night kept in a stable with the calves and other live stock. It was also ascertained that he was unprovided with clothing of any kind during the summer months, but was allowed to go In a state of absolute nudity. The unfortunate boy was taken charge of by the authorities and his parents will be prosecuted. FORESTERS AT CLEVELAND. Important Meeting of s'opremc Lodge to lie Held This Week. CLEVELAND. O., Sept. 8. Delegates are beginning to arrive to attend the meeting of the Supreme Court of the Independent Order of Ancient Foresters of America, which begins on Tuesday. It Is said the meeting will be the most important of the order ever held, and delegates will be present from all parts of the country. Among the questions to be discussed Is the proposed change of the name, dropping the word "ancient." It Is also proposed to change the endowment plan, and also to alter thev ritual very materially.. Sixty-two supreme officers and delegates are also here to attend the tenth biennial session of the Supreme Lodge of the Order of Chosen Friends, which begins to-morrow. A DOUBLE TRAGEDY. Captain of "Three Sisters' Shoots Ills Wife and Commits Suicide.

GRAND RAPIDS. Mich.. Sept. 8. At Ottawa Beach, this afternoon, Jacob Vaney, owner and captain of the little Bchooner 'Three Sisters" that runs on Black lake, shot his wife four times, then turned the weapon upon himself, sending a bullet into his brains. The man died instantly, but the woman may recover. Jealousy on the part of the husband is the supposed cause of the tragedy. Movements of Steamers. SOUTHAMPTON, Sept. 8. Sailed: Steamer Ems, from Bremen, for New York; Etruria, from Liverpool, for New York. GLASGOW. Sept. 8. Sailed: Steamer Pomeranian, for Montreal; Asiatic Prince, for New York. BEACHY HEAD, Sept. 8. Passed: Steamer Werkendam, from New York, for Amsterdam. P RAW LB POINT, Sept. 8. Passed: Steamer Australia, from Montreal, for London. BROWHEAD. Sept. 8. Passed: Steamer Tauric. from Liverpool, for New York. SCILLY, Sept. 8. Passed: Steamer Chicago, from Hull, for New York. HAVRE. Sept. 8 Arrived: La Champagne, from New York. HULL. Sept. 8. Passed: Galileo, from New York. SOUTHAMPTON. Sept. 8. Arrived: Saale. Trilby" in Englnnd. LONDON. Sept. 8. Mr. Paul Totter, author of the dramatic version of Trilby, which was performed at Manchester last week, was seen by a representative of the press to whom he said: "I am absolutely satisfied with the production of 'Trilby.' If Manchester represents England, it shows a strong similarity of the tastes of America and England. Every point of dialogue, of business and of scene which told in America, told here. The manner of the production was highly satisfactory. Mr. Iteerbohm Tree introduced features at his own instance. In the second act Svengall in a moment of passion and blasphemy suddenly falls upon his knees and prays. Then feeling better, ho resumes his blasphemy. In act four, instead of a photograph, a large oil painting of Svengall was used. Mr. Tree's performance is a great one. Miss Ralrd has a great future. She feels the part of Trilby entirely. The Trilby fever does not spread as in the United States, but I fancy Trilby will be worshiped enormously. I was gratified at the manner in which the audience received me." Mnnrr to f-'ltrht Nrnlhnm. ST. PAUL, Minn., Sept. 8. J. H. Herman, manager of the Lakeside Athletic Club. I.as matched Dick Moore and Pannv Needham for a twenty-round contest, Oct. 10, for a purse of 11.)0. The men also put up JMi) each and the winner will take all or t&eVpurse and stake.

SAYED BY THE RAIN

TWO SIWDAY GAMES AT KANSAS CITY POSTPONED UNTIL, TO-DAY. The Pennant Winners-Elect Left Last Night nnd Will Trounce the Cowboys on Tuesday. St. Paul 7 Grand Ilnplds. O Minneapolis. .. .12 Milwaukee. . .. O Western League Standing.

Clubs. Played. Won. Lost. Per Ct. Inriianapolis ...112 73 39 .6T2 Kansas City ...112 fii ' 4 .fAl St. Paul 113 M 47 .584 Minneapolis ...113 56 57 .4r Milwaukee ....115 53 62 .461 Detroit 114 53 fil .45 Terre Haute. ..Ill 43 62 .411 Grand Rapids.. 114 35 78 .316

IIAIX AT KANSAS CITY. Two Postponed Games with Terre Terre llnate Played Oflf To-Day. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. KANSAS CITY. Sept. 8.-One of the larg-. est crowds of the season was expected to witness two games here to-day with the formidable Terre Haute aggregation, but a heavy rain fell In the morning and kept up during the afternoon, preventing the games. The locals were much disappointed, as they were determined on wiping out yesterday's defeat by twice scalping Denny Long's players. The "Blues" are having all manner of fun poked at them for transferring the Terre Haute series to this city, and then losing the only game played. -As Watklns and his terrible Indlanians from Indianapolis do not play here until Tuesday, the games spoiled by to-day's rain will be played tomorrow. This will provide work for two of the pitchers; and they will not have the expected day's rest previous to the Indianapolis series. However, they have all had a rest during last week since playing at the Hoosier capital, and are expected to be in fine shape for what will prove the greatest series of games on the home grounds this season. The club here has the stroncest possible support from the town and the greatest crowd of "rooters" ever seen at the -Blues' " park is expected. All realize that everything depends on this coming series with the leaders, as the only hope Kansas City has to reach the top is in defeating the leaders three straight. While St. Paul is only one game behind the "Illues." it Is not believed here that Comiskey's team is strong enough to get in the lead. St. Paul, 7t Grand Rnnlds, O. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. GRAND RAPIDS, Sept. 8. The Western League season at the local grounds closed to-day with another defeat for Grand Rapids. Until the seventh inning the locals had the game won. The "Saints" then tied the score and in the eighth got a lead of one and held it. It was a great game In the field and hard luck that lost. "Bumpus" Jones did far the best work, but the visitors' hits were lucky. Score: Grand Rapids.. 2 2 0 0 2 0 0 0 06 14 1 St. Paul .......2 0 2 0 0 2 0 7 10 1 Batteries Jones and Campbell; Johnson and Boyle. .Minneapolis, V2 .Milwaukee, 0. MILWAUKEE. Wis., Sept. 8. The Brewers arrived home to-day from their series of defeats at Indianapolis and Terre Haute the past week and proceeded to drop another game, the Millers leading from the fourth inning. Score: Milwaukee ...2 0 1 0 0 4 1 1 0 9 13 Ej Minneapolis .2 0031510 12 13 1 Batteries Stephens and Bolan; Healy and Strauss. THE DETROIT FRANCHISE. Will Watklns Have n Slice of Itf Cushmnn nnd Comlskey. The Detroit Tribune of last Friday has the following baseball gossip that will prove of interest here: "An evening paper printed a story to the effect that Charlie Bennett, Bob Leaaley and W. H. Watklrw had formed or were about to form a partnership, defensive and otherwise, in the baseball business. It was stated that it was the intention of the triumvirate to secure the Detroit franchise and put a winning club in the town. The statement read well on paper. It is not likely, though, that the league will consent to any underhanded work. C. H. Cushman, at present acting aa an umpire In the Western League, was one of the organizers of the association. " 'When the league was organized two years ago,' he said last night, 'the franchise was offered to Bob Leadley. Telegrams were sent to him every few minutes for three hours, but the league was unable to receive any satisfactory response. After waiting for two days for Leadley to answer the league dropped him. It had been the Intention to give Mr. Van Derbeck the franchise in Columbus or Grand Rapids. A message was sent to Mr. Van Derbeck at Los Angeles, asking him if he would take the Detroit franchise. He promptly replied yes, and . instructed the league to draw on him for necessary guarantees. The directors made up their minds that if Leadley asked anything from the league thereafter he would not get it. He refused to stand by us in our experimental hours. Now he sees that the franchise Is valuable and wants it. Wanting a thing and getting it constitutes two different questions.' "President Van Derbeck read in the Sporting Life that W. H. Watklns was after the franchise in Detroit. He wrote President Johnson, asking him if there was any truth in the story, in reply Mr. Johnson said that as far as he Knew there was no disposition on the part of the league to make a change in Detroit. He further assured the .Detroit magnate that nothing would be done to jeopardize his Interests. "Charles Comlskey, manager of the St. Paul club.who attended -the recent league meeting at Chicago, said while in the city that Watklns would never receive the Detroit or any other franchise at the hands of the league. Watklns only a few weeks ago told Mr. Van Derbeck that under no consideration would he ever manage a team in Detroit again. The league is anxious to get rid of Terre Haute and Grand Rapids, nonpaylng cltlra. Mr. Van Derbeck took the Detroit franchise when nobody else wanted it, and. the league will certainly treat -his claim with the consideration it deserves. "President Johnson, is canvassing the league presidents as to the coming league meeting to be held In Chicago. He asks If Sept. 28 will be an acceptable date. Detroit's president will vote for the date. Umpire Cushman thinks that Manager Comlskey accused him unfairly of unsportsmanlike conduct. " "Captain Comlskey accuses me of robbing him of games, and claims that I deprived him of the championship.' he said. 'He cites the game of the day before yesterday, which his team lost by two runs. Well, I did not make the error in the fourth inning that gave Detroit seven runs, neither did I make the mlsplay In the sixth that gave the Wolverines five more runs. He claims that I called a man out at the home plate that robbed him of a run. The man was squarely out. As for the Irwin case he was out in the first case and overrun the base and was really put out twice. As for the Milwaukee affair. Comlskey was not present and has no right to pass judgment. The story that I have been offered the management of the Minneapolis club next year Is untrue. I was offered the berth this season, but refused it. I umKired three games at St. Paul, and was beInd the plate in fifteen played by St. Taul away from home. St. Paul won ten and lost live. That certainly is not a bad showing. I mver rob any team of a game. All umpires occasionally make errors of judgment. I suppose I have made mine." Off for KntiNns City. The Indianapolis team left last night at 11 o'clock for Kansas City, where the final struggle I nween the clubs begins tomorrow. The players were all In fine condition and confident of winning at . least seven of the thirteen games they have to play. Manager Watklns believes they will do even better than that, for he .ays they are prepared to make the hardest fight ever put up by a club on a trip. Every member of the team realizes the importance of winning all the. games possible. Not only is it a matter of pride with them, but they also know that If they bring back the pennant the receipts of those benefit games three weekd hence will be very large. They are to have the Indianapolis share of the receipts of the games with Pittsburg Friday and Saturday. Oct. 4 and 5. There will be Intense interest manifested in the three Kansas City games this week, as well as thos at St. Paul later on. Never has baseball excitement run so high here as now. Winchester, lit KIwooU, 7. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. ELWOOD, Ind., Sept. 8. The ten-inning game of ball to-day between Winchester

and Elwood was one of the best played here this season, and resulted In a victory for Winchester. Score: K. 11. Elwood .. 2 00 0 4 01 0 0 07 6 Winchester.. 130011010 H & Two-base hits Winchester, 2: Klwood. 1. Struck out Elwood. 8; Winchester. 4. Batteries Elwood, Knipper and Bryant; Winchester, Mendenhaii and Murray.

Pennant Goe to .nshvllle. NASHVILLE, Tenn.. Sept. 8. To-day at Chattanooga, at a meeting of the representatives of the Southern League clubs, Nashville was awarded the pennant, Atlanta being second. Atlanta and Nashville will play seven more games, beginning with three this week in Nashville, three following in Atlanta, and one In Chattanooga. . Hope, 22i Indlannpolta, 4. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. . HOPE, Ind., Sept. 8. Smith. Dar & Co.'s team, of Indianapolis, was defeated by the home team yesterday.- The score was 22 to 4. - Western Anaoclatlon. At Rockford R.H. E. Rockford ... 30022100 1 lo 4 Qulncy 000 1 0012 04 6 4 Batteries Thornton and Snyder; 1'arvin and Boland. At Dubuque R. H. E. Dubuque .... 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 24 7 2 Des Moines.. 10021030 6 11 3 Batteries Sowdera an-d Dixon; Roach. Figgemyer and McFarland. At Peoria R. H. E. Peoria 0 0 8 1 3 0 0 0 o 1 ift 7 Burlington ..0 0004010 1 6 6 3 Batteries Thomas and Collins; Nicholas and Lynch. t Sporting Notes. Roat made twenty-one safe hits in the eight games here last week. The Indianapolis Juniors defeated the South Side Juniors, yesterday, by a score of 28 to 8. Indianapolis has won twelve of the fifteen games played with Milwaukee. That team captured only one game on the Indianapolis grounds this season. 'McFarland will catch every championship game this season unless crippled in the. next two weeks. Mac has not hit nearly as hard thin season as he did last, but has been a tower of strength to Indianapolis behind the bat. The annual meeting of the Western League will be held Sept. 2. when the pennant will be formally awarded ani the circuit for next season talked over. Comlskey and Manning are going to take teams to California this winter, and will leave before Oct. 1 for the slope. There will no doubt be many changes Inthe positions of the Western League teams during the Western trip. Indianapolis may have another slump, and Kansas City, winding up with a series at home, is likely to improve? in position. The odds are 10 to 1 that Indianapolis will take the pennant, but Kansas City will give the Hoosiers a pretty race at the finish. Van Derbeck will have men enough o that he will not have to present a team of cripples, and Detroit should finish at least as good as fifth In the race. Detroit News. Some of the "rooters" have Induced Frank Fuller, the efficient Western Union operator who sent and received all the games at the Ohio-street grounds this season, to put In a wire at 68 North Pennsylvania street, where he will receive in detail the three Kansas Clty-Indiananolis games this week. He is going to "photograph" the games, as it in termed, that Is. call balls and strikes, base plan's, etc., as they occur, taking a minute description of the games right from the wire. This will give baseball enthusiasts a chance to-morrow, Wednesday and Thursday to "root" for their favorites, though unseen and unheard by the latter. It will be a novelty to Indianapolis, and will arouse much Interest. The news will begin to come at 3:30 to-morrow afternoon.,, A misunderstanding has arisen between the Boston and Louisville baseball clubs regarding the recent recall of Collins, the second baseman of the latter team. Collins was released to Louisville last spring by Manager Selee, of the-Boston club, on the condition that should Boston need him during the season ho was to come back. Last week, it is said. Manager McCloskey was notified that Colllns's services were needed in Boston, and . that Manager Selee would allow Nye. a player who has been In the New England League, to go to Louisville. Nye. however, refused to go, and Manager McCloskey wants to retain Collins, claiming that the Boston manager did not keep his agreement. Manager Selee savs he has broken no agreement, and will insist on Collins returning to Boston. Hunky Hlnes was very 'sick at Indianapolis Wednesday,- and unable to play in the last game with the Hoosiers.' He overworked himself Tuesday, when his brilliant fielding was a leading factor In the Bliies victory. Frank Connaughton has been suffering from a severe strain for a week or more, and In the last Indianapolis game he injured himself again in sliding into second base. He may be forced to lay Off for a few days, but hopes to be able to play by the time Indianapolis gets here. Jet Goar, the crack pitcher of the Terre Haute team, will Join Charley Hastings in Pittsburg next season. President Long Is said to have received $3,500 for his release. Goar has been the pitching find of the peason in the Western League, and his work -puts him on a par with the other two cracks of the league, Hastings and Fisher. Kansas City Star. LANDED THEIR ARMS. Fate of Another Yncht Load of Supplied for Cubans. NEW YORK, Sept. 8. The Morning Advertiser will say to-morrow: When the Ward line steamer Santiago arrived at this port, about two weeks ago, she reported a strange incident. On the first day out from Havana, while steaming along the Cuban coast, she sighted the hull of what seemed to be a small pleasure craft, hauled imnn a stretch of sandy beach. The rig ging and spars of the vessel were gone and a great hole had been knocked In her port quarter. The hatchway, combings and cabin lights had disappeared and the vessel looked a total wreck. The damage seemed to have been uone by men rather than by the sea. The wrecked vessel left pier No. 10. North river, a little over three weeks ago In charge of Captain Sam Elliott. She had been chartered by the Cuban revolutionary party in the United States to convey arms and ammunition to their copatrlots. In the hold of the vessel were stored five hundred Winchester rifles, a million cartridges, five hundred pounds of dynamite, furnished by the American Dynamite Company, and large quantities of provisions and medicines for field use. . . The crew was made up of twentv-one young Cubans, all sons of the wealthiest Cuban merchants In the United States. After an uneventful voyage the Cuban coast was sighted one evening. Simultaneously the smoke of a steamship was seen upon the horizon. The yacht was anchored in a small cove marked upon the chart as a coast rendezvous of the insurgent army, and the cargo quickly taken ashore. The next mornmg the yacht stood out to sea. A steamer was sighted: It was evidently the same one whose smoke had been seen the night before, and it was discovered that sho was a Spanish cruiser. .To run out to sea meant inevitable capture, so they had a hole knocked in her port Quarter with an axe and her upper works totally destroyed. Then the young patriots struck inland, where they found shelter in the insurgent camp. Two of their number left Cubalast week, reaching Key West Saturday. Their companions will follow them by clrcultlous routes. Then they will man a second expedition similar to the first. More Troop to lie Sent. MADRID, Sept. 8. A third army corps of twenty thousand is to be organized ready to sail for Cuba in November in case of necessity. Official advices have been received from Cuba that the Spanish defeated the insurgents at Seboroucal on Friday. The insurgents had ten killed and the Spanish one. A Spanish deserter. was recaptured and shot. The Imperial's Havana dispatch says that the troops under Colonel Ollverla defeated a strong band of Insurgents at Rltlo Grande after a hand-to-hand tight. In which fifteen insurgents were killed by machete wounds. At Glna Guayada the rebels surprised thirty soldiers who were out foraging. The latter beat off the insurgents, losing three of their number, while the Insurgents lost six. llljc Brewery Burned. AM.STERDAM. N. Y Sept. 8. The large brewery of H. W. Bowler, on West Main street, this city, and adjoining birns and heds. were destroyed by fire to-day. The loss la Jmooo, with an Insurance of Jlo.ooo. The brewery was an immense three-story building, filled with valuable machinery, including an ice-making michine which cost $20,000. The bams and storehouse of Bank Bros.' shoddy mill adjoining the brewery were also burned, causing a loss of $10,000. Obituary. PORTLAND. Ore., Sept. 8. Circuit Judge Hartwell II. Hurley died at his residence in this city to-day of pneumonia contracted while making the ascent of Mount Adams a few weeks ago. -

THE BALFOUR LETTER

ENGLISH THINK IT COVTAIXS LITTLE BIMETALLIC COMFORT. Emperor YVHllnma Characteristic L'tterunee on the Battle CelebrationsForeign evr. LONDON, Sept. 9. The Graphic thinks that the bimetalllsts will get cold comfort out of Hon. A. J. Balfour's letter explaining his recent utterances in Parliament against the feasibility of an international conference. "The letter." the Graphic says, "virtually confesses that the cause of which he is the most prominent champion, is hopeless. The fact is, that even assuming a theoretic excellence of the bimetallic system, there i3 not sufficient motive power behind the nations to unmake the currency and other revolutions which. please the academic disputants. In America, returning prosperity has forced the silver men into silence." The Dally News says on the same subject: "Mr. Baifour's letter is one of the most extraordinary documents that .was ever signed by a British Minister. Mr. Balfour Is now the authorized exponent of the government's financial policy. What he says, the treasury says. Is R to be endured that the First Lord of the Treasury should treat the gold standard as a mere subject of academic debate? Ho docs not seem to grasp the monometallist's view of the situation. A Mohammedan archbishop of Canterbury would not be more incongruous than a bimetallic First Lord of the Treasury." The substance of Mr. Balfour's - letter, which was yesterday cabled, was that his views of bimetallism had undergone no change and that he was and always had been in favor of an international agreement, but he did not believe that international conference at this time would affect such an agreement. KaUer's Letter to Holienlohc. BERLIN, Sept. 8. The Relchsanzelger publishes the following rescript of the Emperor, addressed to Chancellor Von Hohenlohe: "During the celebration of the twenty-fifth anniversary of the victories of 1870-71 many thousands of participants in the festivities sent loyal greetings from every quarter of Germany and from distant parts of the world. Much to my regret, it is impossible for mo to reply separately to those manifestations of patriotism. I wish, however, to express my imperial thanks to all concerned, especially to the veterans who Joyfully threw their lives Into the scales, and to let them know how sincerely pleased I was at their courteous remembrance. It filled me with satisfaction to see with what enthusiasm the German people celebrated the regeneration of the empire, and how again brought home to all minds for what marvelous! achievements, with the visible aid of God. we have to thank the wise guidance of the aged hero, William the Great, his illustrious allies, his eminent councillors, his tried generals and his brave troops. Countless monuments to the Emperor and our warriors testify to the piety and gratitude of our time, and remind us and distant peoples of the bloody seed from which has sprung our newly-united Fatherland. A people which so honors its dead, and which is mindful of its past, will, I confidently hope, ever remain true to the Emperor and the empire, and will know how to defend itself against those enemies of the Fatherland and of the divine order of the world, who seem in these days of enthusiasm to audaciously raise their heads, and who have not hesitated to revile the memory of the great Emperor, and thereby to wound the German people in, its noblest recollections and sentiments." DeeUlon of the Porte. CONSTANTINOPLE, Sept. 8. The dragomans of the British, French and Russian embassies have received the decision of the Porte with reference to Armenia. The Porte's expressed concessions entitled the dragomans of the three embassies to deal direct with the president of . the Turkish committee of control, which is to superintend the application of the reform. No Christian Vail or Mutessaria will be appointed, but other administrative officials will be chosen in proportion to the population. Christians will also be admitted to the gendarmerie. Mudirs will be elected by councils of elders and a rural constabulary will be established. It is not believed that the concessions will satisfy the powers. It is pointed cut that, owing to the persecution, the Christian population is so diminished in many districts that it Is noW in a minority. r ne officials, therefore, were always Mohan.medans. - Xcffroea Stranded In London. LONDON, Sept. 8. Rev. John Jenkins, colored, president of an orphanage, accompanied by fourteen negroes ranging in age from five to ten, has made application to the magistrate of the Bow-street Potfce Court for assistance to return to. Charles-, ton, S. C. He said the boys had formed an orphanage band, and he had been told by a committee of pastors of the orphanage to bring them to London, where they could perform and thus raise money, ne found that the laws would not permit children under eleven years to perform in public, and they were now stranded without money and he feared that they would starve. The magistrate was unable to help the party. The party arrived in England on board the Paris, which arrived at Southampton -on Sept.- 4. Gen. P. A. Collins, United State Consul-general in London, said that he could not assist them either. Hull Fighting: in France. v LONDON, Sept. 9. The Paris correspondent of the Times says that the Minister of the Interior, Intimidated by the violence of the population of southern France, has made a compromise on the question of allowing bull fights and has Issued orders to permit the bull fights in Provence, but on conditions that the bulls must not be killed in the Spanish manner. Hohenlohe on Ilia Way to Rnssla. ST. PETERSBURG, Sept. 8. Prince Von Hohenlohe, the German Chancellor, will arrive here on Tuesday next and will dine with Prince Radolin, the German embassador to Russia. The other guests will include Prince Lobanoff-Rotovsky, the Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs, and all the Russian ministers and foreign embassadors in St. Petersburg. Alleged Jack-the-nipper Murder. LONDON, Sept. 8. Another supposed Jack-the-Ripper murder was discovered this morning at Kensal Green. The victim was an unfortunate woman of the demimonde class. Her throat was cut from ear to ear and her head fearfully battered with a stone. No trace has been discovered of the murderer. Emperor nnd Empress nt Stettin. STETTIN, Sept. 8. The Emperor and Empress this morning received the Choral Association of Stettin and the Teachers' Union, and listened to patriotic recitations from the windows of the castle. Floral offerings were then presented to the Empress by the girls of the Augusta Victoria School. Th rent from n Purls Pnper. PARIS, Sept. 8. The Echo de Paris, in speaking of the Waller case, says that exConsul Waller was convicted in the regular form and the clamoring of his friends will only retard his pardon. (able !N'oteM. A Capetown dispatch to the London Times says that the discoveries of gold in Griqualand are genuine. The alleged bomb found outside the Palais de Justice in Paris yesterday morning is probably a hoax. The Emperor Francis Joseph, of Austria, has started for Stettin to attend the German army manoeuvres. The. Grand lrlx of the wheelmen, at the Vcndome du Liene, was carriel off yesterday by the American cyclist Banker. A Vladlvostock dispatch to the Novoe Vremya says that cholera is raging in China and that two thousand deaths occur dally in Peking. Senor Canovas del Castillo, Spanish Minister of Foreign Affairs, utters a denial of the representations made by the United States with reference to the language of the Spanish newspapers in regard to the Alllanca Incident. The Outlook for Apple. Jack. Orleans. Ind., Examiner. The output of the distilleries in this district this season will be larger than any previous year. The aonla crop of southern

Indiana has been immense, and the distilleries will use many bushels of the fruit that would otherwise decay on the ground. Traveling Deputy Collector James Sriwth. of New Albany, hay been very busy starting the distilleries in his district, and the following are now in operation: Three at Tell City, two at Stamper's Creek. Orange county; three at Lanesvllle, Harrison county, one at Georgetown, Floyd county: one at Pilot Knobs, Crawford county, and one at Amsterdam. Harrison county. A number of others will be started in a fewdays. United States Gauger S. D. Brown., who has been gauging the product, reports that the "apple Jack" In the New Albany district will more than supply the home demand.

RAMBLE OVER CHICKAMAUG A. A Njatnrallat'N Note on the Field as Seen To-Day. "Bradford Torrey in Atlantic Monthly. The field of Chlckamauga a worthily resounding name for one of the great battlefields of the worl3 lies a few miles soutji of the Tennessee and Georgia boundary, and is 'distant about an hour's ride by rail from Chattanooga. A single morning train outward, and a single evening train inward, made an all-day excursion necessary, and the time proved to be none too long. Unhappily, as I then thought, the sun was Implacable, with the mercury In the nineties, though it was only the Si of May; and as I was on foot, and the national reservation covers nine or ten square miles. I saw hardly more than a corner of the field. This would have been a more serious disappointment had my errand been of a topographical or historical nature. As the case was, being only a sentimental pilgrim. I ought, perhaps, to have welcomed the burning heat as a circumstance all in my favor: suiting the spirit of the place, and constraining me to a needful moderation. . hen a man goes in search of a mood, he must go neither too fast nor too far. As the Scripture saith: "Bodily exercise profiteth little." So much may readily be confessed now; for wisdom comes with reflection, and it is no great matter to bear a last year's toothache. From the railway station I followed, at a venture, a road that soon brought me to a comfortable, homelike house, with fine shade trees and an orchard. This was the Dyer estate so a tablet informed all comers. Here, in September, 1S63. lived John Dyer, who suddenly found his few peaceful acres surrounded and overrun by a hundred thousand armed men, and himself drafted into service-lf he needed drafting-as guide to the Confederate commander. Since then strange things had happened to the little farmhouse, which now was nothing less than a sort of government headquarters, as I rightly inferred from the general aspect of things around about, and the .American flag flying above the roof. I passed the place without entering, halting- only to smile at the antics of a white-breasted nuthatch my first Tennessee specimen which was hopping awkwardly about the yard. It waa a question of something to eat, I suppose, or, perhaps, of a feather for the family nest, and precedents and appearances went for nothing. . Two or three minutes afterward I came face to face with another apparition, a horseman as graceful and dignified, not to say majestic, as the nuthatch had been lumbering and ungainly: a man in civilian's dress, but visibly a solur,,T'lth a pose anJ carriage that made shoulder-straps superfluous: a man to look at: every inch a major general at the very least; . of whom, nevertheless the heat or something else giving me courage I ventured to inquire, from under my umbrella, if there were any way of seeing some of the more interesting portions of the battlefield without too much exposure to the sun. He showed a little surprise (military gentlemen always do, so far as I have observed, when strangers address them), but recovcredw,?lmsClf' and answered almost with affability. Yes, he said, If I would take the first, turn to the left. I should pass the spot over which Longs treet made the charge that decided the fate x)f the contest, an! as he spoko he pointed out the field, which appeared to bo part of the Dyer farm; then I should presently come within sight of th Kelly -house, about which the fighting waa or the hottest; and from there I should do well to go to the Snodgrass Hill tower and the Snodgrass house. To do as much as that would require little walking, and at the same time I should have seen, a good share of what was best worth a visitor's notice. I thanked him and followed his advice. The left-hand road, of which my Informant had spoken, ran between the forestmostly of all tall oaks and longleaved pines and the grassy Dyer field. Here it was possible to keep in the shade, and life was comparatively easy; bo that I felt no stirrings of envious desire when two gentlemen, whom I recognized as having been my fellow-passengers from Chattanooga, came up behind me in a carriage with a pair of horses and a driver. As they overtook me. and while I was wondering where they could have procured so luxurious a turnout, since I had discovered no sign of a public conveyance or a livery stable, the driver reined in his horse and the older of the two gentlemen put out his head to ask, "Were you in the battle, sir?" I answered in the negative, and he added, half apologetically, that he and his companion wished to get as many points as possible about the field. In the kindness of my heart I told him that I was a stranger, like himself, but that the gentleman yonder on horseback seemed to be well acquainted with the place, and would no doubt answer ail inquiries. With a queer look on his face, and some remark that I failed to catch, my interlocutor dropped back Into his seat and the carriage drove on. It was only afterward that I learned on meeting him again that he was no other than General Boynton, the man who is at the head of all things pertaining to Chickamaugu and Us history. Tv'hen our talk was ended I returned to the hill, and thence sauntered through the woods the yellow-throated warblers singing all about me in the pinetops aown to the vicinity of the railroad. Here, finding myself In the sun again, I made my way toward a shop near the station shop and postofilce in one where, fortunately, there were such edibles, semi-edibles, as are generally to be looked for in country groceries. Meanwhile there came on a Tennessee thunder shower, lightning of the closest and rain by the bucketful: and. driven before it, an Indiana soldier made his appearance, a wiry little man of fifty or more. He had been spending the day on the field, he told me. In one hand he carried a battered and rusty cartridge box, and out of his pocket he produced and laid on the counter a collection of bullets. His were relics of the right stamp found, not purchased and not without a little shamefacedness I showed him my three minie balls. "Oh, you have got all federal bullets," he said: and on my asking how he could tell that he placed a Confederate ball beside them and pointed out the difference in shape. He was a cheery, communlcatfve body, good humored but not Jocose, excellent company in such an hour, though he had small fancy for the lightning. It seemed to me. Perhaps he had been under fire so often as to have lost all relish for excitement of that kind. He was not at the battle of Chickamauga, he said, but at Vicksburg; and he gave me a vivid description of his work In the trenches, as well as of the surrender, and the happiness of the half-starved defenders of the city, who were at once fed by their captors. All his talk showed a lively sense of the horrors of war. He had seen enough of fighting, he confessed; but he couldn't keep away from a battlefield, if he came anywhere near one. He had been to the national cemetery in Chattanooga, and agreed with me that it was a beautiful place; but he had heard that Southern soldiers were lying in unmarked graves Just outside the wall (a piece of misinformation, I have no doubt), and he didn't think it right or decent for the government to discriminate in that way. The Confederates were Just as sincere as the Union men; and, anyhow, vengeance ought not to follow a man after he was dead. Evidently he had fought against n army and a cause, not against individual. SOCIALISM A FAILURE. . DIastronneuIta of ait Experiment Conducted In Australia. . New York Sun. The French Foreign Office has recently issued a report on a socialistic experiment begun two years ago in Paraguay. The Paraguayan government conceded to a colony of discouraged Australians just gone through the panic of ISM a rich tract of nine hundred square miles on the river Tlblquarl. upon condition that within six years 1.3X) immigrant families should be settled there. Colonists presented themselves in large numbers, and $100,000 was raised in subscriptions of tlZO each. Any colonist withdrawing from the scheme was tivloso all. The settlement was baptized iew Australia In advance. The colonists arrived upon the ground in September. 1W3, and found themselves la a wilderness. Tibiquarl proved to be a niterable little stream, dry half the year, and In the wet season navigable only in flatboats. Equality of pay for all was a principle of the organization, and each was to live upon the goods of the community. The abrogation of all authority was declared by the constitution of the colony, but the manager took upon themselves the right to regulate the community and to . exclule without the formality of a vole drunkards and idlers. They also surrounded themselves with a strong police force. The colony at once dlvldl Itself into two camps. One supported i-the cnerjsetlc.

Q2S3EIS OWN may be r'.-iced la woman's cheeks by one of iht greatest antiseptics n.n.n.n.n.rn rsrinrJ ft f a con-poisoncms aotiMttie a&d for th rlif and cure of all dite of tta Vin and scalp r or toiirt um it 11 iwc yooa pim Kp for the Mine prif. A trf ct vp for th K.h For t&le by U ?roMit 25c. tAKAloa JlICiaL Co., 10 A 12 V.niw:er M.. N. V. NATIONAL TubeWorks 1 teStt-lrn Pipe for Gas, . Stan and Witcr. Bmler TuNm. Cmt and Malleable Iron KiuirC black 4 g&lnnlzed), ajtea. Stop (Vttka, Lug-hM Trlmmtc, Kteair Gaiures. ripe Tor.jr. Pipe Cotter. VUee, tmw ri&let and Pa, Wrenrhe Menra Trap, rmrpv Klt hen Mn. IIom. it itine. DbMt Metal. Jlder. Wlut an t Colored Wiping Wate. ana all otLfr Suw:if Ue1 I, connection with Ou. Meant and Water. Natural tiaa up plies a rjrlkliy. Mearabelting A nratu for PuV lle UuIU11df. f-tnre-rooinn, Mtlla.Micpa.Vart.oriee. Laun lrie. Lumber Dry-Houses, etc. Cut an i Thread to order any s'.ie Wrouchuiron ripe, from X,' lack to IX Inches diameter. MIGHT & JILLSON, ;$an(in S. PENXSVIVXNLA ST. DIED. HEELER Eliza Ann Beeler. wife of Fielding Heeler, at her home, thla morning, at 15. Notice of funeral later. though very moderatclv intelliKcnt, old maa that had made himself master cf the colony. The other, made up of dissidents, eventually quit the colony and reTumed t Villa Klca, tho port of doharkation. This took eighty-five persons from the community. They reported that mutual fear and incessant strife made New vVusdralla a:i inferno rather than a paradise. The dissidents 'were on the pnint of returning to Australia in great distress when the Paraguayan government conceded to them a, new territory in the department of Gonzales. Hero they began to rrPr. though, with small regard to tho original principles of the colony. Meanwhile there, had occurred a fecona schism in the colony at New Australia. This time the director yielded to the schismatics, and. .with fifty eompar.Ums, settled in another part of the country. What waa left of the original colony aia prey to continual bickering, and in September, 1891. twenty-five colonists went to Bueno Ayres. where they became a charge upon the public charities. Those left behind reorganized the community ind dropped th socialistic features. They chose for leaders the men they took to be most Intelligent an! hroad minded, and fettled down with the determination to succeeed by tha use of the best agricultural methods wuhnnt.attmntlne to present to the world ft society formed upon the socialistic idea. TREASURER CLAY SHORT. InveatlKatlon Shows f 18,HM Mining from the Vnulta. CINCINNATI, Sept. S.-A shortage of 18,000 has been discovered in the accounts of County Treasurer M. G. Clay throush the investigations of examiners appointed by Trobate Judge Husscll in fulfillment of the statutes. The treasurer admits th shortage, but claims !,000 of the amount was lost by the failure of the Merchants' Bank several years ago, and the rest waa missing when he assumed office, three year ago. He has assigned all his property for the benefit of his bondsmen, but thn amount will not cover the deliquency. Thus far no legal action has been taken against him. Expert accountants will be put in charge or the treasury to-morrow. FAMINE IN KNEE PA NTS Mr Result from the Strike fn 'eT York Yesterday. NEW YORK. Sept. S.After having decided four times to strike, end having changed its mind as many times, the Knee-panU Makers Union did at last c out 2.501 of its members tills morning. Fifteen hundred had struck two days before without wa.tlng for the official order, and the strUe almost completely ties up the trade. AX IXPIAX'S AWFIL VATIZ. Ills Alcoholic Breath Caught Fire and lie Was Horned to Death. Alaska Mining Record. The manufacture of distilled spirits, locally known as Hoochinoo, has been carried on bA he natives of Alaska for ( a Ion nerlod and at times durinic the early days of the Cassier excitement it waj fre J r nurchased by the white miners as the only Kr obtainable, owing to the strict . enforcement of the prohibitory clause against the importation of liquors Into the territorv Hoochinoo is nothing more or lest Jh?n raw alcohol, being distilled mainly from brown sugar or molasses and corn, meal. Undiluted the stuff has a. double proof strength, makes the "drunk come freely, and but a few swallows of It win set a man howling In demoniac glfe and nothing but an Indian, with his copperlined stomach, can stand a protracted spree 0The Kako Indians probably lead all others in the manufacture of these spirits, and as proof of their knowledge in the art of making a double-rroor article we g.a the particulars of an expert Kako distiller which happened recently on that island. It seems that this Indian, while "naged In the manipulations of his little coal oil ran still. Imbibed too freely of its tricklings and In a drunken stupor lay down by his fire of cedar logs and fell asleep with his face uncomfortably close to the firo and his breath fanning the flames. Through some reason known only to the medical fraternity gas accumulated in th etomach and the breath of th sleeper reaching the flames the alcohol gas ignited. The sleeper suddenly leaped to his feet with a terrifying scream and fell back again writhing in agony. The man was burning Internally. Smoke tnd even, flames were Issuing from his mouth and his agony was something awful. His loul screeches brought the members of the camp about him, who looked on in silent, terrorstricken awe. unable to do anything for his relief. The combustion continued until the Indian was literally consumed Ins'de and for time time after the spirit had fled. Xotorlons Womnn Thief Caught. MOORESTOWN, N. J., Sept. K Fannlt Waldron. an alleged professional thief, n ho Is said to have been operating extensively in Chicago. Pittsburg and other large cities, was arrested here to-day on the evidence of a Chicago detective,- wlio had traced her here. At her home a wagonlad of gold watches, silverware and . lothlng was found. She had been known here as Fannie Spangler. She workM on tlie sympathies of the charitably disposed. She was committed to Jail. Fatal llrad-Knd Colllalon. LEXINGTON. Ky.. Spt. R.-A head-end collision occurred on the Cincinnati Southern railway last night, near Blanket, between two freight trains, one ct them a double-header. Two engines were demolished and the third was badly ued up. nl four freight cars were smashed. Jchn Slosser. the rlreman. and Jame.-t Henrncks. a trainman, were killed, and engineer Roberts was Injured, perhaps fatally. Mr. Fleldlnur Heeler Dead. Mrs. Fielding Peeler died this morning, shortly after 1 o'clock, at her home, near May wood, after an lllnens of about two weeks. She has been suffering frm peritonitis. She has been a resident of this county for many years. She was mrred fifty-one years ago. anj has lived la tha nrescat family residence ever Since.

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