Indianapolis Journal, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 September 1897 — Page 2
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PERU’S GREAT OIL FIELD WELLS IX TOWS AX'D A REGULAR OIL BOOM SEIZES THE PLACE. Golden "Wedding Annivernary of JoHlnta Dvf* at Pari*, 111.—Indiana. Regimental lleunlonii. Fpeeiai to the Indtanapolis Journal. PERU. Ind., Sri>t. 17.—The greatest excitement that has yet prevailed since the first strike of oil in the great Indiana fields i now on in Miami county. There has, all told, been four wells completed with a combined daily production of seven hundred barrels. This is a phenomenal production for four wells, and that in new territory. This field is located forty miles from any other oil field in the State, and that makes it more promising. The oil is found between eight hundred and one thousand feet from the surface and makes operations much cheaper than in the Ohio, West Virginia or the Pensylvania fields. Five wells can be drilled in this field for the cost of one well in West Virginia, and the wells are of as large a caliber. It Is now evident that the Miami county field Is destined to be another like the Sistersville field of "West Virginia., which was opened up several years ago and made fortunes for many. There is but little gas in the wells here to speak of, and the wells only run over the casing, and are what an oil man would term a slop-over well. What some of the wells would do were they put to pumping still remains a mystery, but it is evident that the production be more than double what It now la. Not a dry hole has been encountered, ar.d within a very few weeks the field will lie pretty well defined as there are now twenty-four oil derricks under way in the new field. A well-known operator stated yesterday that if everything went well he would not be surprised to see at least two hundred wells completed in the new field within the next two months. This is very encouraging news for drillers that have been out of employment for the past several months, and it will bring thousands of dollars to the county and surrounding towns. Operators from West Virginia, Pennsylvania, southern New York, Ohio, Tennessee, Kentucky, Illinois and many other States have congregated here and are offering fabulous prices for leases. Several home companies have secured the bulk of territory within many miles from this place and companies have been organized and stock sold to mapy outsiders. Among some of the large purchasers are George W. Barnes. T. E. Klrkbrlde and Tom McDonald, of Toledo, P* oil Company has had men In the # field for the past month, but they ha.ve not met with very good successes so he farmers are very careful to whom they make a lease and when they do make one it calls for a well within a very short t me, and no rental clause, so that ♦imeThL i Ls not , com P ,e tl in the scheduled time the lease becomes null and void. This Is the only way the farmers sav that they can protect themselves and 6omi*U the bfner 3 *h'n P t < H' ak ' The n *' w neJd Is much v.fP" er P]? one at Alexandria or the , r l° ol at Tol , fdo ’ where at kat boen sunk <l*e Stilt* Against Oil Operators. •pecial to the Indianapolis Journal. ALEXANDRIA, Ind., Sept. 17.—Dr. F. G Keller, secretary of the Alexandria Board of Health, under the advice of the officials , s , tate ll board . has commenced war against the oil operators in the city. His fnt nter a tl ° n * ,S th{ L t the esca P of oil and gas into the atmosphere is injurious to health Notices were served on the offenders who however, ignored them. Prosecutions will be at once begun under the State laws. THE DAVIS GOLDEN WEDDING. Swell Event Arranged by a Prominent PnrU, 111., Family. •pedal to the Indianapolis Journal. PARIS, 111., Sept. 17.—Four generations have gathered here to-day to be present at the celebration of the golden wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. Joshua Davis. Mr. Davis is one of the wealthiest and most prominent citizens of the county. Tho four generations represented are as follows: Mrs. Mary A. Barnhill, ninety years old, the mother of Mrs. Davis and the great-grandmother of the youngest generation; Mrs. Davis and her sister, Mrs. John Merkle; Mrs. Merkle’s children, Oscar and John Merkle, of the Merkle-Wiley broom works, and Misses Sue and Grace and Miss Josephine Merkle, the infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Merkle and the freat-grandchild of the family. Mr. and Irs. Davis were married six miles south of the city, and have resided here continuously during the half century of their wedded life. are present who witnessed the original wedding ceremonies. They are Mrs. Barnhill, Mrs. John Merkle Rd Mrs. Lou Fortner, who acted as bridesmaid, and Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin Davis. Mr. Davis was one of the pioneer merchants of this section of the State. Long before the war the carriage and implement firm of Davis, Huston & Snyder was established. Many partners have passed through the business, but Mr. Davis’s connection with it has been continuous. In the troubled times of the tvar the firm passed through many vicissitudes, but the energy and tireless work of Mr. Davis were always able to bring it through. Mr. and Mrs. Davis have had but one child, Mrs. Abraham Huston, wife of one of the members of the firm. Between five and six hundred Invitations were issued to the celebration to-day, and it surpasses anything of the kind ever given in this little city, noted for Its swell social events. Chicago florists had charge of the house for a week, and Chicago caterers were on hand to-day to administer their department of the functions. Guests are present from California to Maine; in fact, from almost half the States In the Union.
SURVIVORS OF TUB TWEBFTH. Gen. Reuben William* Addresses the Old Boy* at North Manchester. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. WABASH, Ind., Sept. 17.—One hundred of vhe surviving members of the Twelfth Regiment, Indiana Volunteers, originally commanded by Gen. Reuben Williams, of the Warsaw Indianlan, concluded a pleasant reunion at North Manchester to-night. Many of the members cam's long distances to attend, one traveling 800 miles. Speeches were made by General Williams and Chaplain Lucas, of Indianapolis, while the old soldiers Wbre entertained by the citizens of North Manchester. Officers of the Eighty-Fourth. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. RIDGEVILLE, Ind., Sept. 17.—The Eigh-ty-fourth Indiana assembled this morning at 8:30 ociock and after some routine business Department Commander Dodge was introduced and delivered a stirring address. He made an eloquent appeal to all soldiers to identify themselves with the G. A. R. New Castle was selected as the next place of meeting, on Sept. 19 and 20, IS9S. George H. Cain, of New Castle, was chosen as president; W. B. Buck, viefe president; W. It. Way, of Winchester, continued as secretary, with William E. Livezy, of New Castle, as assistant secretary. A vote of thanks was tendered the citizens of Ridgevilte for the royal manner in which the regiment had been entertained, and then they adjourned to the G. A. R, Hall to enjoy a banquet prepared by th'e citizens. When the toast, "The Heroes of Chiekamauga,” was proposed, Colonel Martin B. Miller, of the Eighty-fourth Indiana, responded. At 3 p. m. ninety-two people boarded the excursion train, awaiting them at the Grand Rapids Ac Indiana depot for the excursion to Chiekamauga. FLINT GLASS SCALE. Cliimney-Gln Men Will Hecclve Same Wage* a* Last Year. PITTSBURG, Pa.. Sept. 17.—At a conference of chimney glass workers and manufacturers In this city the wage scale was settled by the manufacturers’ conceding last year's scale, after demanding u cut of 10 per cent. The fires have been lighted at all the factories and work will be resumed at once. This is the lust of the tiintglass scales to be arranged for this season. Lehmnnotvsk v Mystery Deepen*. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. NEW ALBANY, lnd., Sept. 17.—For several weeks a discussion has been In progress among a number of newspapers of this State relative to the authorship of a book entitled "The Life of Napoleon,” a copy of which was recently found at Salem and Is now In Indianapolis. It was
printed in Salem In the early part of the present century. Count Lehmanowsky, a resident of Salem and this city years ago was credited with the authorship, the author simply signing himself “An American Citizin.” To-day General Joseph Packard, of the New Albany Tribune, who has been endeavoring to trace the authorship, received a letter from Lehmanow.sky's son, who is seventy-four years old and an inmate of the Old Men s Home In Cincinnati. He says his father never published the book to his knowledge. He had written the life of Napoleon in French, but the manuscript was stolen from him. Escaped Kentucky Convict. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. ANDERSON, Ind., Sept. 17.—Detective Amos Coburn and Superintendent of Police Mark Robbins, of Anderson, were instrumental lri effecting the arrest in this city, last night, of Bish Lucas, an escaped convict of the Kentucky penitentiary. Lucas was sentenced from Kentucky for horse stealing fur seven years, but effected his escape and since that time has served two short sentences in Jeffersonville, this State. Lucas was released a short time ago and recently summoned to testify in a case at Franklin, but failing to appear was attached by the court. He eluded the officers and came to Anderson, where a divorced wife and her daughter have resided two years. Word was received yesterday to arrest the man and he was caught late at night in the act of leaving the city. Imlinnn Obituary. RICHMOND, Jnd., Sept. 17. Joseph M. Bulla, aged eighty-five, died last evening at his home, near this city. He was one of the most prominent of the older residents of Wayne county. He was born in Wayne county in 1811. He was county commissioner for six years at one time and forty years ago represented the county in the Legislature for two terms. He was a member of the convention which adopted the present Constitution of the State, and also served as pri ?idt nt of the Wayne County Horticultural Society and vice president of the state society. Eight children survive, one of them being Dr. J. M. Bulla, of this city. Voung Jap at Rose Polytechnic. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. TERRE HAUTE, Ind., Sept. 17.—The school year of the Rose Polytechnic Institute has begun with an increased attendance. The freshman class has thirty students, and all the other classes are full. Among the students of the year will be a young man from Japan, who comes for special preparation in civil engineering. A former graduate of Rose made a great reputation during the war with China and is now chief engineer of the railroads of the country, which are under government control. The new student at Rose comes through his recommendation. Daughter* of Reltekah Meet. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. ANDERSON, Ind., Sept. 17.—Delegates from Alexandria. Pendleton, Summitville, Frankton, Anderson and Elwood representing lodges of Daughters of Rebelcah, are in Anderson to-day celebrating the forty-sixth anniversary of the Degree of Rebekah. Hon. M. A. Chipman, of Anderson, welcomed the visitor, Mrs. Sarah Roberts, of Frankton. responding. Mrs. Sarah Carter, of Camden, who is at the head of the order in Indiana, is a guest, also Jacob Crouse, deputy grand master, Gln* Scale Reported Signed. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. ALEXANDRIA, Ind., Sept. 17.—Word was received here to-day by the president of the local Flint Glass Workers’ Union that the scale of wages had finally been signed at Pittsburg. The settlement is the cause of much rejoicing among the men as well as the merchants of the city. The officials of the Llppincott Glass Company state that the factory will resume work at once and that within ten days the entire plant will ba In operation. •booting Scrape at Richmond. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. RICHMOND. Ind., Sept. 17.—Omar Murray and Will Vanetten had a disagreement here to-night and Murray shot Vanetton in the leg. Murray was arrestvd and gave bond. He Is proprietor of a grain exchange and is prominent in society circles.
B. & O. Carpenter Killed. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. VINCEJsNES. Ind., Sept. 17.—Jesse W. Chauncy, a Baltimore & Ohio bridge carpenter, was killed by th’e fast mail to-day at Wheatland. He lived at Olney, was for-ty-four years of age and leaves a wife and four children. IJe Pauw President Entertain*. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. GREENCASTLE, Ind., Sept. 17.-Presi-dent and Mrs. H. A. Gobin entertained a large party of citizens and college people this evening in honor of the new members of tho faculty Indiana Obituary. ELWOOD, Ind., Sept. 17.—One of the saddest deaths that ever occurred in Elwood was that of Miss Chet Langan, early this morning, who passed away in her twentysecond year. She was a woman of charming personality and more than ordinary beauty. Bert Estell, a well-known young man, died suddenly this morning of heart disease. GREENCASTLE, Ind., Sept. 17.—The death of Leroy Call occurred this morning at 5 o'clock. Mr. Call was a prominent citizen of Greencastle and was fifty-four years old. His death was due to paralysis. Mr. Call was an Odd Feliow r and his remains will be interred Sunday at Cloverdale. Indiana Xote*. The safe In the office of the Oldfather flouring mill at Warsaw' w r as blown open Thursday night and several hundred dollars in money and many valuable papers were stolen, Capt. G. K. Perry presided over the recent reunion of the Thirty-eighth Indiana Volunteers at Jeffersonville. The report In the Journal gave Ills name as Benjamin Perry. Winchester has again organized a highschool football team and is practicing for a game to be played with Larlham. The team is now open for engagements. Homer Tripp is manager and Frank Bates captain. H. A. W. Brown and Theodore Hansen, tho counterfeiters who were arrested at Valparaiso, were taken to Laporte yesterday for a hearing before United States Commissioner Wilson. An effort will be made to secure bail for Hansen. A huge beech tree fell on the Sample farm In Wabash county, five miles west of Wabash, Thursday and crushed Solomon Helvey. an old resident of the county. Helv*ey and George W. Sample were working in the forest when the tree was overturned by the gale. His doctor does not think he w’ill survive. TELEGRAPHIC BREVITIES. Harriet Prescott Spofford, wno has been 111 at Amesbury. Mass., is rapidly improving in health. She is now able to take carriage drives. In a letter to the New' York Mail and Express, W. J. Bryan disclaims having done anything in the recent Kansas railroad disaster to merit praise. The National Road Parliament, in session at Nashville, has selected Omaha, Neb., as the next place of meeting. Papers on road building were read and discussed yesterday. The dead body of Mrs. McDonald, of West Hoboken, was found by a diver yesterday in the saloon of the steamer Catskill. which collided with the St. Johns in the Hudson river on Wednesday night. Chief of Police Harrigan. of St. Louis, has issued an order for the arrest of Officer John E. Keidy. treasurer of the Police Relief Association of that city. He is missing. It is alleged that hv is short SG.2.’O. The schooner Rattler has arrived at San Francisco from the Arctic, having secured twenty-six sea otter skins and 193 fur seals. She brought back one white sea otter skin that is 'expected to sell for nearly *I,OOO. Tom Lane, a miner, shot and killed Jim ShVa, shift boss at Mountain Iron mine, Butte. Mont., and then turned the weapon on himself and committed suicide. Lane had been discharged by Shea for drunkenness. Emma Davis, the little English girl who was rescued from slavery at Madeira, Cal., by the California Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, is on her way home to England, in charge of trainmen and ship officers. Ono thousand operators on the Chase lasting machine in the shoe factories of Brocjuon, Mass., and vicinity struck yesterday. The strike fever has already spread to the edge setters, and at several factories the men are on strike. Action of Ohio Methodist Laymen, CANTON, 111.. Sept. 17.—The Methodist Laymen's Association of the Central Illinois Conference to-day adopted resolutions favoring tho continuation of the time iun.it of pastorates at five yearn and a national convention of the laity to be called not later than October, IS9B, for the purpose of establishing equal lay representation at genertu conferences.
THE INDIANAPOLIS JOURNAL, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1897.
OUTRAGE BY DEPUTIES FORCED TIIEIR WAY INTO THE HOMES OF LYNCHED VICTIMS. e Xo Evidence of Attempted Arrest* of the Leader* of the Mob—Merrill Moores'* Report. ♦ - CINCINNATI, 0., Sept. 17.—The Commercial Tribune's correspondent at Osgood, Ind., says: It was feared to-night that there would be more bloodshed here than at Versailles Tuesday night when five men were lynched. Sheriff Busehing sent twenty-five deputies here to-day to search the houses of the lynched men and others for stolen goods. The only search warrants known to be Issued were for the house of Mrs. Rittenhouse, who was suspected of having a “fence,” and of Jenkins, one of the victims, Mrs. Rittenhouse and her son had been called to Versailles before the grand jury and in their absence the deputies brolce into her house and captured many goods. It is claimed that she can prove from whom she purchased most of these goods, but the deputies took them. Mrs. Rittenhouse and her son were afterward arrested, but released on their own recognizances and left for North Vernon to prevent trouble. ) The citizens say the deputies made a mistake in going through the home of Mrs. Rittenhouse in her absence and taking her goods. Merchants in this place say they will identify them as purchased from them and not the booty of the Levi gang. The deputies say they found silverware and other articles that were questionable in the house of the late William Jenkins, but they did not take anything from that place. Excitement runs high here to-night and trouble is predicted by all. The feeling between the residents of Versailles and Osgood is more intense than ever. VERSAILLES, Ind., Sept. 17—This town has quieted down, and the only visitors are reporters and sketch artists from city papers. No one is expecting any further outbreak of mob violence. Charles Kelley, the fourteen-yeal'-old boy who occupied the cell with Henry Sehueter, was sent by Judge New to the State Reform School, at Plainfield, this morning. The toughs are beginning to clear out of Osgood, being frightened by the reports that the mob might come back after some of those left behind. Dr. Alexander Joseph and his son, who were at first implicated in the Cammon brutal robbery, and who were great friends oi the gang that was lynched, have pulled stakes and departed. Dr. Joseph’s connection with the gang was published in the Journal yesterday. His wife is reported as saying to-day that Dr. Joseph left for his health. He is not expected to return soon. The grand jury has examined several witnesses to-day, but nothing is given out forecasting any probable action. The acting coroner has not yet returned his verdict on the lynching.
THE GOVERNOR'S TW O LETTERS. Scat to ltipley Comity Official— Mr. Moores’* Report. Deputy Attorney General Moores filed a report with the Governor yesterday of his investigation of the Versailles lynching. The report was as follows: “As directed by your order, I proceeded on Wednesday afternoon to Osgood, in Ripley county where 1 found no indications of disturbance and consequently went at once to Versailles. There had been no outbreaks since sunrise, and were absolutely no signs of further trouble in that vicinity. “As the Ripley Circuit Court was in session, I called on Judge Willard New and assured him of your hearty co-operation in every effort to enforce the law. Judge New stated that unfortunately Prosecutor Connelly had been absent from Versailles on Wednesday, but, having returned, he would instruct the grand jury at once. “As soon as court met the grand jury were called in, and Judge New clearly and forcibly charged them as to their duty to bring to justice the murderers of the men in the charge of the court, assuring them that this was their immediate duty, and that all other business must yield to it. “Upon the withdrawal of the grand jury, I had a consultation with the prosecutor, Marcus R. Connelly, who manifests a proper spirit of determination to bring the guilty to justice, and is proceeding with the grand jury, as he assures me, to give the matter the most thorough investigation. Mr. Connelly, unfortunately, has no deputy in Ripley county. He does not live in Versailles, but at Batesville, some distance away. His circuit is large, and his duties onerous. His duties as prosecutor require fiis presence in Vernon Oct. 4, and in Seottsburg Oct. 18, in attendance upon the courts in his circuit. Counsel resident in Versailles or Osgood should be immediately appointed to assist him- He cannot at the same time procure evidence and advise with the grand jury, and evidence in cases of this sort must be sought. It does not volunteer itself. If Mr. Connelly has immediate and competent assistance the grand jury should get the names of the murderers and evidence of their guilt before the adjournment of the court. “There is absolutely no danger of tnrther outbreak in Ripley county, nor is there any good reason why those engaged in the crime of last Wednesday morning should not be discovered, indicted, apprehended, prosecuted and convicted.” Attorney General Ketcham was tailed into a conference with the Governor and Mr. Moores and the Governor afterwards announced that every effort would bo made to secure the indictment of the lynchers. He sent the following letter to Judge Willard New at Versailles: \ “I am glad to learn from the Hon. Merrill Moores, deputy attorney general, of your prompt action in calling together the grand jury and giving to them vigorous instructions to probe to the bottom the recent diabolical crime that has tarnished the fair name of our beloved State. It was not for lack of implicit confidence that you would act promptly and with becoming energy that I sent Mr. Moores to Versailles, but because I could get no information from the sheriff, and because of rumors of further outbreaks. I desire to congratulate you upon your promptness, and to assure you that the executive authority of the State will sustain you and aid you in any lawful way that may be deemed by you necessary in uncovering and bringing to justice the perpetrators of this horrible crime.’’ The letter sent to Prosecutor Connelly read as follows: “I am pleased to learn from Mr. Merrill Moores, deputy attorney general of the State, whom I sent to Versailles to investigate and report upon the recent lynching, that there is no.further cause for alarm. I am glad to know prompt action has been taken by Judge New in calling the grand jury and giving to that body a vigorous charge to probe to the bottom this outbreak of lawlessness and the unjustifiable murder of prisoners awaiting due process of law. “I hoj>e the judge will furnish you able local counsel to aid you in your arduous and responsible duties during the investigations and prosecutions that must follow the indictments found. “I wish to assure you that the executive authority of the State will support you in your efforts to expunge from the good name of Ripley county and of our honored State tl%* stigma that has been brought through the recent acts of mob violence, and that the perpetrators of this diabolical crime snail be brought to justice.” DEVELOPMENT OF THE SENSES. Some Have Degenerated and Some Improved Since the Early Age*. Philadelphia Times. It is a very curious question, especially if the question include the first animals created as well as the first men, whether there be any difference between sight, hearing and sniell in those early days and at the present time. Smell was one of the most important senses then, for it aroused appetite, enabled the animals to seek and find their mates and to track their prey, and it gave them warning of a foe’s approach or presence. With man now it is only of thirdrate or fourth-rate importance. The organ of smell, among some of the first creatures, was not near the end of the snout or nose, but near the brain, and was well padded or cushioned with fat. and protected by a tender skin, or by scales overlapping each other. But it was not more keen or more delicate then than it is now, especially in our hunting dogs. Cats, too—and these are strnong the later animals-—have this sense in great perfection. A cat has what is called the horning instinct, and if carried away from home in the dark it can return by precisely the same road. It is said that this is because every field, ditch, village or house leaves Us own odor in just the right order on the cat’s brain, like a succession f pictures, and the animal *mells its way back as we would see ours. The organ of smell seems to communicate with the memory, for the scent of a flower will sometime*
bring back ?o a grown man the scene associated with it in his childhood, and a thousand other subtle thoughts and feelings so that he seems literally carried back into his past life. _ , The first creature knew nothing of fragrance. The sweet-smelling flowers were not then in existence; besides, their brains were too small to enjoy the delicate pleasures of sweet odors. , Hearing was comparatively poor with the first animals, for often an external ear was lacking. The outside ear not only protects the delicate nerves within, like a hood, but also gathers or collects sounds. A man of defective hearing instinctively puts his hand behind his ear for this purpose. Birds that have no external ear can easily be surprised by night and taken, while their acute vision shows them every movement by day. The savage races had little idea of music. They liked noises as children like drums and horns. The savages on the Midway Plaisance had great delight in their native music, which was discord to our ears. It required larger brains and finer training to have the full delight in melody anc! harmony that our musicians now possess. The eye, also, in the gigantic creatures of early periods, was "sometimes rudimentary, though again it was of large size and protected by a ring of bony plates instead of the lovely silken eyelashes that protect and adorn the human eye now. In some of those lizard-like animals that burrowed in the mud there were three pairs of eyelids, one of them transparent, so that the animal might see through it closed. It is said that early writers, like Homer, speak of very few colors, chiefly red. or “purple.” as they called it then. Enjoyment of beauty, of graceful curves and lines and proportion or of harmonious and varied colors and their delicate tints belongs to a later state of cultivation, a more developed brain, than most of the early races knew. BLOODTHIRSTY "NAPOLEON.” Actor AiigrnntnM-Cook: Attempt* to Kill Hi* Wife, Baby and the Nur*e. NEW YORK, Sept. 17.—Augustus Cook, an actor, was locked up here to-night on the charge of attempting to kill his wife, baby and nurse. Mrs. Cook is suffering from severe scalp wounds, the nurse has her fingers slightly cut, and the baby, although besmeared with blood, escaped unhurt. The alleged attempted triple murder occurred in tho luxuriantly furnished apartments of the Cooks. The attack on the woman was preceded by a wrangle which disturbed the other tenants of the building. The woman’s wounds are not dangerous. Mrs. Cook has gone to her father’s home with the baby and the nurse. The weapon with which the women were attaeked is supposed to have been an ax. Mrs. Cook will make no statement. Cook denies that he tried to kill the women. Cook played the part of Napol'eon in “Mine. Saris Gene” last season and was with Daniel Frohman at the Lyceum Theater several years ago, where he made many hits in character roles. His reputation as a stage manager covers many theatrical ventures of more or less prominence. He formerly supported Rhea. The trouble with Iris wife is beli'eved to have sprung from jealousy.
THE CIRCASSIA SAFE PASSED KIXSALE HEAD YESTERDAY IN TOW OF THE MEMNON’. ♦ Shaft of the Dig Anchor-Liner Broken on the 4th Inst.—Story of a Saloon Passenger. . QUEENSTOWN, Sept. 17.- The overdue Anchor line steamer Circassia, which left New York on Aug. 28 for Glasgow, and which should have reached that port on Thursday, Sept 9, was sighted this morning off Kinsale„Head, in tow of the British steamer Memnon, Captain Bates, from Montreal, on Sept. 3, for Avonmouth. On Sept. 5 the Circassia was overhauled by the Thingvalla line steamer Island, from New' York for Copenhagen, and was taken In tow by the latter, as she was in a disabled condition. Owing to the heavy rain which prevailed, however, the hawser parted and the Island was unable to again take the Circassia in tow r . F. J. Firth, of Brooklyn, a saloon passenger, says: “About 2:45 p. m. on the 4th inst. the Circassia suddenly shook violently. The engines were stopped and an examination showed that the shaft had broken in the tube and that the damage could not be repaired. The same afternoon wo sighted a steamer and fired a gun to attract her attention, but no notice was paid to It. Wo then drifted helplessly until we met the steamship Island, of the Thingvalla line, about daylight on the following day. Two steel hawsers were first atatched to the Island, but they snapped. Then the Circassia's anchor chain was fixed as a drag rope, but, owing to the heavy sea, this also broke about 8 o’clock on the following morning, after the Island had towed the Circassian about seventy miles. The Island then left us. The bad weather continued and the crew rigged up the foreyards. On the morning of the 7th the foretopsail yard was hoisted, and with this and a fore and aft canvas the ship became somewhat steadier. But she merely drifted. On Thursday, the 9th, the weather was hazy; on Friday it was fine, and on Saturday and Sunday the wind freshened and increased, so that on Monday. 13th, the Circassia, rolled considerably. We sighted the Memnon at 8 o’clock that morning. The seas were so heavy that a boat could not be iowered. so a fine was attached to a life buoy, which was droppe?d overboard ar.d picked up by the Memnon. Two steel haw'sers were connected in this way, but at the first strain they snapped like a ribbon. It was then decided, in spite of the heavy seas, to lower a boat, and this was done about 4 o’clock in the afternoon. Simultaneously the Memnon approached the Circassia. A moment of tremendous excitement follow'ed, for it was feared that the boat would be crushed between the steamers. It was a thrilling scene as the boatmen, rowing like grim death, forced their tiny craft between the great vessels, then so close together that its destruction seemed inevitable. A line was thrown across, a cable was attached and there was no further hitch.” Purser Brown says: “Without the slightest warning the shaft broae with a terrific report. Most of the passengers were on deck at the time and crowded about the officers to learn what had happened. There was no panic, though the ladies were nervous until they had been assured that there was no danger.” * AH the passengers highly praise the conduct of the officers of the Circassia. Movement* of Steamer*. QUEENSTOWN, Sept. 17.—Arrived: Indiana. from Philadelphia, for Liverpool; Etruria, from New York, for Liverpool, and proceeded. Sailed: Scythia, for Boston. LIVERPOOL, Sept. 17.—Arrived: Cevic, from New' York. Sailed: Tauric, for New York. CHERBOURG. Sept. 17.—Arrived: Augusta Victoria, from New' York. NEW YORK, Sept. 17.—Arrived: St. Louis, from Southampton. GENOA. Sept. 17. Arrived: Kaiser Wilhelm 11, from New York. GLASGOW, Sept. 17.—Arrived: Assyrian, from Philadelphia. LONDON, Sept. 17.—Arrived: Cambrian, from New York. Xatiouul Kmbalmcr*’ Association. DETROIT. Mich. 17.—The convention of the National Embalmers’ Association ended to-day after selection of Cincinnati as next place of meeting. William Norwood, of Galveston, Tex., was elected president; Charles L. Blake, Detroit, first vice president; J. W. Carroll, Chattanooga, Tenn., second vice president, and N. J. Timeson, of Schenectady, N. Y.. third vice president; J. Henry Long, Pittsburg, secretary; William J. Otter. Detroit, treasurer; E. S. Best, of Ontario, guard. This afternoon the embalmers had an excursion to the St. Clair Flats. Insurgent* Surprised. HAVANA. Sept. 17.—1 tis officially announced that a detachment of troops belonging to the battalion of Cuba recently surprised an insurgent camp in the bushes near Baracoa, province of Pinar del Rio. and after killing several of the enemy captured fifty-six boxes of ammunition, fiftysix rifles of the Remington and Mauser pattern and four mules. The military commander at Canipo Florida, province of Havana, reports that while reconnoitering he found 15.000 Remington cartridges and a medical chest. Fire ut Cincinnati. CINCINNATI. 0., Sept. 17.-Fire to-night damaged the willowware house of Compton. Ault & Cos. to the extent of $50,000. Most of the loss falls on Joseph Butler, owner of the building.
FIVE PEOPLE KILLED AND THREE INJURED IX A COLLISION BETWEEN FREIGHT TRAINS. DUaPtrons Wreck on the Wisconsin Central Railway Near HowardOther Fatal Aeeldenta. - CHIPPEWA FALLS, Wis., Sept. 17.—Five men were instantly killed and three were badly injured in a head-end collision between freight trains on the Wisconsin Central Railway, near Howard, Wis., to-day. The dead are: RICHARD WARREN, Chippewa Falls, engineer. EDWARD J. SMITH, Chippewa Falls, engineer. JOHN SMILEY, Oxfordsville, fireman. LESTER RYAN, Faribault, Minn., stockman. GEORGE SCHAEFFER, Faribault, Minn., stockman. The injured: C. H. MILLER, Chippewa Falls, brakeman. WILLIAM DIXON, horseman. W. F. MILLER, horseman. The wrecked trains were heavily loaded with general merchandise and met on a sharp curve near Howard. Roth locomotives were demolished and the fireman of the west-bound train was the only one of tlie crew 7 who escaped, it is supposed that one of the trains was ahead ot its schedule time, r.o telegraphic orders having been issued. Five Little Ones Cremated. LITTLE ROCK, Ark., Sept. 17.—News of a terrible accident near the little town of Richmond, in Little River county, has reached here. Mariah Billingsley, colored, living on Ben Love’s place, went to church, leaving her five children, the oldest being eleven years of age, locked up in her house. About 10 o’clock the house caught tire and burned to the ground, the five children being burned to death in tiie Humes. The bodies of the younger children were consumed and only the charred bones of the older children could be found. TJiree Children Ptrisli by Fire. CHATHAM, Ont., Sept. 17.—Three daughters of Preston Howard were burned to death to-day in their homes at Port Alina, on the shore of Lake Erie. The rest _ of the family escaped frem the burning building. The girls were aged sixteen, ten and six years. One of them had escaped, but met her death in returning to, assist her sisters. Mrs. Howard and two sons were seriously burned. Three People Fatally Injured. DENVER, Col., Sept. 17.—Three persons were fatally injured in a runaway in the southern part of the city. While Robert Creek, a ranchman, living near the city, with his wife, was out driving on Broadway his team ran away, dashing into a buggy driven by H. \\. Hildebrand, a painter. The three were thrown out and suffered fractured skulls. r
Prominent Tanner Killed. NEWARK, N. J., Sept. 17.—Daniel Kaufher, senior member of the firm of Kaufher & Loehenberg, tanners, of this city, was instantly killed to-day by a drill engine ot the Pennsylvania road at the Chestnut-street crossing. He was fifty-five years of age and was well known in the leather business throughout the United States. Section Men Mangled. LEADVILLE, Col., Sept. 17.—Two section men wvre killed and two others fatally hurt in a collision yesterday between a Midland passenger engine and a handcar near Resalt, fifty miles west of Leadvilie. The dead are: Thomas Lucas and Michael Welch. The fatally injured are James Coney and John Lyons. JEWISH DREAMS OF ZION. Other Hopes Cherished Besides Dr. Herar-Ps Project. New York Sun. The idea of re-establishing a Jewish state in Palestine by no means originated with I>r. Herzl, and the Zionist Congress over which he presided at Basle, Switzerland, forms only one chapter in the history of an old and interesting movement which has spread in Russia and Austria and has some ardent followers among the Jewish immigrants of this country. The origin of Zionism is traceable to the anti-Jewish riots which broke out in southern Russia in 1881 and were followed by a policy of increased discrimination against the unhappy people on the part of the Czar’s government. Young Hebrews, previously proud of Russia as their native country and disregardfui of the traditions of their fathers, were suddenly awakened by atrocities and persecutions to the fact that they were children of Israel. Tire assimilation craze v/as in some instances abruptly submerged by a wave of Israelitic nationalism. Distress is a great unifier, and the oppressed Russian Jews of those days found themselves brought together by their common misfortunes. College students and professional men who had not attended divine service since childhood rushed into the synagogues with glistening eyes to prove that the spark of Judaism was not extinct in their hearts, and mingling their sobs with those of their less educated brethren, spoke to them of shaking the dust of the “stepmother country” from their feet. Two parties then came into existence—the “Americans,” who advocated emigration to the United States, and the "Palestinians,” who urged the plan of colonizing the Holy Land. The point at issue between them became the subject of heated discussions and the all-absorbing topic in every Russo-Jewish home, and for many months almost monopolized the editorial space in the three Russian weeklies devoted to Jewish interests. Then it was that the influx of Jews to this country suddenly assumed great dimensions, and that the' first Jewish agricultural colonies w'ere established in the promised land. In point of practical results, the “Americans” have been by far the more successful of the two factions, for while shipload after shipload of Hebrew passengers has been carried across the Atlantic, the number of those who have responded to the call of the “Palestinians” has thus far been comparatively insignificant. And vet emigration to America, as a solution of the Jewish question, as an idea, has little by little fallen into oblivion, while the cause of Zion as a moral force, as an inspiring “ism” among certain Jew's, has been growing. As to Austria, the Zionist movement was first set on foot in that country, some ten years ago, and as its chief raison d’etre then was to serve as a counterpoise* to the organized activity of the anti-Semitic party its original phase naturally was of a ou’relv political character, the name of Zion* being invoked to band Austrian citizens of the Mosaic faith together into a Semitic party Gradually, however, this purpose was abandoned, and the Zionists became interested in the settlement of Palestine, whereupon in Austria, as in Russia, many a former “assimilant” who had plumed himself upon his ignorance ot’ Hebrew stuck a shield of David in the lapel of his coat and took up the study of the holy tongue. In Russia the Zionist movement has long been legalized by the government, so that the organization, which has branches in every city with a considerable Jewish population, collects dues and transacts its other business openly. It is aiso allowed to hold meetings, but as each meeting rcouirts a special police permit secret gatherings are often found more convenient. Odessa has for many years been the capital of Russian Zionism. It is the scat of the society’s central committee and the home of the leading spirits of the movement, although Hamelitz (the Advocate), a daily paper which is printed in the pure Hebrew of the Old Testament and is tHe official organ of the party, is published in St. Petoisburg. All the money collected is forwarded by the local agents to the chief treasurer at Odessa, the fund being devoted to the gradual establishment of new colonies in Palestine as well as to the improvement of the old ones. Altogether there are in the Holy Land at present twenty-two agricultural colonies of European Jew's, all of which have sprung up within the last fifteen years. The majority of them have been founded and supported by Baron Edmund De Rothschild Only one colony is made up of Rouman an Jews, the remaining twenty-one consisting of Russians. The Austrian Zionists, whose activity was unti) recently confined to theoretical propaganda, have now also started a fund tor a colony of Galician Jews. A characteristic feature of the movement is the tendency of its adherents to use Hebrew in place of Russian, German or even Yiddish. Thus the Sr. Petersburg Hamelitz and the Cracow Hamegid (the Messenger), the organ of the Galician branch, and most of the books and pamphlets of the party are printed in the holy tongue, as are also the records <>f the various local Iwanches. All the colonies bear Hebrew names, and the children of the settlers speak as their native tongue not the Yiddish of their parents, but a species of Hebrew Jargon, while the local schools teach them the use of good Hebrew and of modern languages. The pnesent revival of interest in the tongue of the prophets among the Jews of Russia and Galicia, which is due to the
Zionistic movement, has in its turn lent a fresh impulse to the literary activity of Hebrew scholars. There are in Russia and in Austria hundreds of men and some women who write in the language of Isaiah with the same fluency as they do In their mother tongue, and some of these have within the last decade been indefatigable in turning out all sorts of Zionistic literature. Novels of modern life, too, are written in what these enthusiasts consider an immortal tongue of an Immortal people, and, whatever might be said of their average merit, since It is deemed legitimate to write romances of the times of Joshua or Isaiah in English or German, why not repay the ancients by a story or two of the life of to-day in the language of Isaiah or Amos? Moreover, some of the Hebrew fiction is really good literature and deserves to be translated into English. There are some Zionist writers and workers who lay little or no stress upon the gradual settlement of the Holy Land with Jewish immigrants and the restoration of the wandering people to agricultural pursuits. They dwell upon what they call the historical mission of the Jewish race to serve as the torch-bearers of a higher civilization. To this end, they say, it is necessary that an independent Jewish state shall be founded in Palestine, so that the children of Israel may work out their great historical problem undisturbed, and Jerusalem may in process of time become the intellectual and ethical center of the world. This doctrine has been the source of considerable enthusiasm among the Zionists. The majority of them, however, including the Odessa leaders, look upon the movement primarily as a philanthropic project, calculated to better the economical and political condition of as many Russian. Austrian or Roumanian Jews as possible by rendering them self-supporting farmers in the promised land. As to Dr. Herzl’s scheme, it does not seem to meet with unanimous approval among the Zionists of Russia and Austria. Thus the two Hebrt>w organs of the movement oppose it as impracticable in itself and as ruinous to the cause by reason of the attention it takes away from the work of gradual colonization. The enthusiasts of the Jewish mission theory, on th'e other hand, place little confidence in the movement led by Dr. Herzi. particularly in the manner in which he proposes to put his plans into execution. They look forward to thV; rehabilitation of the race as a natural outcome of th’e troublesome Eastern question. The Zionists are for tho most part recruited from the educated classes. The oldfashioned JVw regards the whole movement with distrust and scoffs at the notion of people who shave their beards and speak Russian or German undertaking to rebuild the temple which God alone can restori?. These people patiently await the advent of the Messiah, and in the meantime they look upon Jerusalem as an ideal place for old Jews to end their days in. It is not an uncommon occurrence for an old couple to sell all they have in this world and to go to the Holy Land to die. The many synagogues at Jerusalem give shelter to many thousands of such immigrants, who are supported from the “Meyer the Wonder Worker” fund, which is keut up by contributions from almost every Orthodox household in the world and is just now the cause of trouble between two rival societies in the United States. The fund is not made up of regular dues, but of occasional contributions. made mostly upon the deliverance of the faithful from som’a danger, sickness, or trouble. For this purpose a tin box bearing the name of the Wonder Worker is nailed by the door of every religious family. The Orthodox masses hav’e therefore little faith in the Zionist movement, which is led by men with a liberal education, such as Dr. Herzl. of Vienna, and Lili’enbluin, of Odessa. FAIR WEATHER FOR RACES. Another Pretty Antumn Day Predicted by Forecaster Wnppenlinns. Forecasts for Indianapolis and vicinity for the twenty-four hours ending 11 p. m. Sept. 18—Fair weather on Saturday. General Conditions Yesterday—A very large area of high barometric pressure covers the country. The temperature fell east and rose west of the Mississippi. Fair weather prevailed and local rains fell only in Virginia and in Western States. FORECAST FOR THREE STATES. WASHINGTON, Sept, 17.—For-Ohio Generally fair; warmer; light westerly winds. For Indiana and Illinois—Fair; warmer; light to fresh, variable winds, becoming southerly. Local Observations Friday. Bar. Ther. R.H. Wind. Weather. Pre. 7 a. m.. 30.28 60 73 N’east. Pt. cl’dy. .01 7 p.m..30.31 66 87 North. Clear. .00 Maximum temperature, 70; minimum temperature, 60. Following is a comparative statement of the temperature and precipitation Sept. 17: Temp. Pre. Normal 64 .10 Mean 65 .01 Departure from normal *1 —.09 Departure since Sept. 1 *152 —.91 Departure since July 1 —B6 —I.OB ♦Plus. C. F. R. WAPPENHANS, Local Forecast Official. Yesterday’s TUmperatnres. Stations. 7. a. m. Max. 7 p. m. Atlanta. Ga 74 92 76 Bismarck, N. D 40 76 70 Buffalo, N. Y 64 64 £6 Calgary, N. W. T 46 78 74 Cairo. 11l 68 7S 72 Cheyenne, Wyo 34 74 66 Chicago, 111 56 62 68 Concordia, Kan 50 72 66 Davenport, la 50 70 60 Des Moines, la 46 68 64 Dodge City, Kan 52 72 64 Galveston. Tex 78 88 86 Helena, Mont 42 76 72 Jacksonville, Fla 78 92 82 Kansas City, Mo 48 70 68 Little Rock, Ark 72 82 78 Marquette, Mich 46 54 54 Memphis, Tenn 72 82 76 Nashville, Tenn 72 76 74 New Orleans, La 78 86 76 New York, N. Y 74 78 64 North Platte, Neb 42 72 66 Oklahoma, O. T 54 74 64 Omaha, Neb 46 68 64 Pittsburg, Pa 64 72 62 Qu’ Appelle, N. W r . T 40 72 68 Rapid City, S. D 42 78 70 Salt Lake City, Utah 54 78 76 St. Louis, Mo 60 74 70 St. Paul, Minn 42 62 58 Springfield, 111 54 72 66 Springfield, Mo 56 74 68 Vicksburg, Miss 70 90 82 Washington, D. C 76 80 70
FEVER IS SPREADING. (Concluded from First Paste.) and brought to this city and placed in the Marino Hospital. The physicians have not declared them to be suffering from yellow fever, but they aro being treated as suspects. * NO QUARANTINE HERE. Indianapolis Is Not Afraid of the Yellow Fever. The exodus of thousands of people from the fever-stricken districts of the South, with Northern cities as their destination, has excited some apprehension in the minds of timid people living in these cities to which the refugees are flocking. Cincinnati has established a partial quarantine, but Indianapolis will do nothing of the sort, says Dr. Frank Morrison, president of the local board of health. There is no need of such precautions. Even in the remote contingency of the fever reaching this city there is no danger of it becoming epidemic. "Yellow fever never becomes epidemic in Northern inland cities," said Dr. Morrlsbn last night, "although there have been a number of cases in Northern cities cn the seacoast. In these instances, however, there has been little difficulty in stopping the spread of the fever. Where a case appears in the North the fever seldom communicates to others. It seems that it cannot exist in the North. My impression is that there was one case of ys;U>v lever, or what was suspected to be that fever, a number of years ago on Worth Pennsylvania street, near Massachusetts avenue, but I think the patient recovered. It occasioned no excitement. I was a medical student at the time, and I do not no.v recall whether, indeed, the case was tver definitely determined to be one of yellow Lvei. I never heard of Indianapolis quarantining against the fever.’’ While Indianapolis has had no experience with this plague, it lias contributed a number of people who died of it. These were people who went to the plague districts in 1875 and 1879 to volunteer their services to the sufferers. A notable case vvo3 t! at of Dr. Benner, a young physician belcnging to the Second Presbyterian C*iu*vi: congregation. He felt it his duty to volunteer his professional services at Memphis, and while there was sedzed with the fever and died. Ilia death occasioned much sincere regret in this city. The case of an ex-city librarian who went to Memphis io iinse patients and also died is recalled. Jt seems that he failed to be reappointed to the position, and. feeling keenly the disappointment, he went to Memphis and volunteered as a nurse. Town Ruled by Women. COLUMBUS, 0., Sept. 17.—1n a letter received from Mayor Silas S. Drake, of Lincoln, Neb., he announced that the members of the Council of that municipality, ail
Royal make# the toed pure, wholesome hod delicloas. POWDER Absolutely Pur© rovu B4toNO powers co., new rom. women, will attend the national conventior of mayors and common eouncilmen. which meets here on Sept. 28. It is the only municipal corporation in the Unit and Stale* whose legislation Is wholly controlled by women. THE SPEED OF A TRAIN. So Slow that the Axle Grease Froze Hard and Tijght. Washington Star. The visitor in Washington from the sweet potato dunes of New Jersey was trying tha cable and electric cars around ibe city, accompanied by a War Department clerk, who had known him years ago in the mosquito State. “Yes, yes,” he remarked as he came whizzing along Connecticut avenue, “I’ve saw a good many trains of cars, some slow and some not so slow, and some kinder betwixt and between, but the very goldernest beatin’est train of cars I ever did see was one that used to run across the northwest of the corner of the county I was born and raised in. I don’t remember the name of it, but it used to run two trains a day, carrying pasengers and freight and anything it could get, and many’s the time when I’ve took milk to our station and got left that I’ve took a short cut through the woods to the other station and had to wait so long there that the milk ’ud sour.” The Jerseyman’s companion looked at him as if in doubt. “It’s shorer’n gospel,” continued the speaker solemnly. “You don’t s’porse I’d be lyin’ while I was flyin through the air like this, do you, and not knowin any minute where I was goin’ to light, ner how hard? No, indeedy. And I’ve seen that train when it supprised everybody. I sjnind mighty well one time when she struck a down grade jist over the county line, and we had a candidate on board that was anxious to git to the next town, where he was going to make a campaign speech, and the conductor said he’d git him through er bust a biler, and the candidate took the conductor to one side and he come back wipin’ his mouth on his coat sleeve, the conductor diu. “I remember it v/as about 4 o’clock of a sizzlin’ hot day when that old ingine got herself straightened out with her nose p’inted dow r n the grade and the conductor stuck his head out of the ear winder and hollered to the engineer to let her go to beat the band, and I guess that’s what he done, for the train got to shakin’ and joltin’ in the next ten minutes' worse’n a thrashin’ machine with a dropped cog. At first I had an idee we was goin’ like the conductor hollered to the engineer to let her go, but when I got enough used to the shakin’ up to let go the handles of the seat and take a look around, which was in half an hour or better, I wa3 supprised to see the secenry adjoinin’ the tracks that she had stopped plumb still, and the conductor went out a-flyln’. In a few minutes he come back, sneakin’ In and lookin’ as if he had a pain, and steerin’ away from the side of thVi car, where the candidate was tajtin’ a nap, and him ten miles from his speaking place, and trustin’ himself to the conductor like a woman. “ ‘What’s the matter?’ says I to him. “ ’Sh, sh,’ says he, holdln’ up a finger and noddin’ over toward the sleepin’ candidate. “ ‘What’s wrong?’ says I In a whisper. ’Hot Ik>x?’ “ ‘Not hardly,’ says he, blurtin’ It right out. ‘Frotfe box. Grease hard as a rock and freezin’ tighter every minute. Had to stop and thaw out, and only got sixty minutes to git that candidate to town in, and he’s a friend of mine, too.’ ”
Both Are Sad Cases. Pittsburg Chronicle Telegraph, "Mine is a pitiable case/’ said the man who had reached the melancholy stage as he leaned against the bar. "What a woe it is to have a wife who has a habit of locking you out of your own house,” "You ain’t one, two, three with me,” said the other melancholy man. "Mine has a habit of lockin’ me in.” Trivial In Comparison. Minneapolis Tribune. The corporation of Brown University may have erred In trying to draw the lines too taut upon President Andrews, but their offense was trivial compared with that of the Kansas board of regents, which meets with no rebuke from the majority of tha critics of Brown. To Conjure With. Philadelphia Press. There seems to be a way of prospecting for and gaining Klondike gold without subjecting one’s self to the hardships of an Alaskan winter. Thus far a dozen or more playwrights have copyrighted the name Klondike in the ofticy t>f the Librarian of Congress. im% a— Both Barbarous. Florida Citizen. The only difference between the Georgia farmer’s counterfeit “convict camp” and the real article is that the latter is lawlessn<*s under the protection of law and the former is lawlessness not legally recognized. The difference to the sufferers is not obvious. Good Advertiser. Chicago Post. Dr. E. Benjamin Andrews has withdrawn his resignation as president of Brown University and intends to stay where he is. In some ways Dr. E. Benjamin Andrews makes us think of an operatic star—almost any operatic star. He Wasn’t a Bank Official. Washington Post. The Indianapolis papers and the Indianapolis people don’t take kindly to the unconditional pardon of Bank Wrecker Coffin. There is but little sentiment in a community that is looted by a dishonest hunk official. Too Dear. Detroit Free Press. The price of American wheat is making bread too dear in London to be cast on Ui water for many days, as it would keep a heap of money tied up. Had Overcoat* to Sell. Will Carter, who claims St. Louis as his home, and Edward Shafer, living on South Delaware street, and well known to the police, were arrested early this morning and are held on suspicion. They were trying to sell a boy’s overcoat at Pray & Petrie's stable, on North Alabama street. Patrolmen Streit and Lancaster arrested them. They had already sold two other overcoats which still had tags on them. Shafer says that Carter told him the coats came from dhree hundred miles away and that he need not be afraid to sell them. NATIONAL jgfi Tube Works wffiyij Wrougiit-iron Pipe for Gas, Steam and Water. Holler Tube-i, Cast and Malia* K able Iron KitUnn(b]ack acd pJjte/jjj. galvanized), valve*, St of Er wtfSf&T Cocks. Hi.glae Trimming, BNIUtWa Hr Steam Cause*, Pipe Ton**, E<” tr-r:'h '1 ” Pipe Cutter*. Vise*, Sere* BSB Hell Plate* unit Die*. Wrench** JHQR Steam Trap*. Pump*. KttcliJMM fcrjl en Mnkt, Hone. Pelting, Hab* K'So bit Metal. Solder. White and Ilia m4 3 | Cdored Wiping Waste, and p| Mn all other Supplies used la Sh fc-TjM connection with Can, .steam jjijJ HA and Water, Natuml Oa IV—l Hupoiie* a specialty, steamkS beafit.g Apparatus for Put*- >. B 1 lie building*, Store-room* Sand Mtils. Shops,! actortes, haute >5 akS dries. Lumber Dry-Houses, r> 1 ■, etc. Cut and Thread to orIS* f. I der any size Wrought-troa |*( [‘•'i Pipe, from % inch to ti Inches diameter. M MIGHT JJLLSOH, 9 f|p . MtiiNSV’ VA,VU ST
