Indianapolis Journal, Volume 48, Number 45, Indianapolis, Marion County, 14 February 1898 — Page 2

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*r. It is said General Sangullly is the real commander, and col >r Is given this rumor by the fact that when the men left here they were In charge of Colonel Lechuga, who was lirst lieutenant of the personal staff selected by Sangullly when he failed to get away from Jacksonville. Superintendent Gaylor, his son and another Pinkerton man have been here looking for Sangullly, they believing he was somewhere near. It is alleged that the Cubans have -* nt Sangullly away on this trip to get rid "f him in the* United States. The detectives are totally ignorant of the departure of this expedition. It. in understood that s,oft) rifles, fi.ooo IKtunds of dynamite, 200.000 rounds of cartridges and a large lot of supplies made up the cargo. \ m inn ti i t ion for Cnbit. NEW YORK, Feb. 13.—A special to the World from Bridgeport. Conn., says that the local collector of customs at that port has received advices from Washington to the effect that a tug with three barges has just departed from Bridgeport, it is !>elieved, on a filibustering expedition. According to advices from Washington, the tug and barges are loaded with arms and ammunition and dynamite. The reports nave it that it is intended to transfer these articles to another boat while sum* where *>n the Lond Island sound. The Washington authorities, it is said, received their lirst intimation of this iilibustering expedition from Spanish spies stationed at Bridgeport. According to the advices received by the World, a United States revenue cutter has b*en ordered out from New Jvondon. Conn., with the expectation of intercepting the alleged lilibustering expedition. May Elect Successor To-Day. MADRID, Feb. 13.—The Cabinet will discuss to-morrow the choice of a successor to Senor Dupuy de Lome at Washington. The candidacy of Senor Folo-Bernabe appears to he abandoned. Several members of ihe Cabinet favor the nomination of the Duke of Arcus, Spanish minister to Mexico, because he could take charge of the Spanish legation at Washington this week.

OBITUARY. Count Knluoky. the Well-Known Hungarian Statesman. BIIL'NN, Feb. 13. —Count Gustav Sieg-' muml Kalnok.v De Koros-Patak, former Austro-Hungarian minister of foreign affairs. died here this afternoon. Count Kalnoky was bout at Lettowitz, Moravia, Dec. 29, 1832. He was descended from the Moravian branch of an old Bohemian family. He entered the diplomatic service of Austria in 1850. From 1860 to 1870 he was councilor of legation at the Austrian embassy in London. In 1874 he was minister at Copenhagen. In 1880 he was sent as ambassador to St. Petersburg, and in 1881 ho was appointed Austro-Hungarian minister of foreign affairs, a post he held With distinction until May 16, 1895. when he Was succeeded by the present Austro-Hun-farian foreign minister, Count Goluchowskl. The cause for his resignation was found in Count KaJnoky’s action in reference to the denunciation of ecclesiastic laws by the papal nuncio at Vienna, Monsignor Agliardi, who was charged by Baron Banffy, the Hungarian prime minister, with having made statements at Buda-Pesth which amounted to interference in Hungarian affairs. Baron Banffy addressed a note to Count Kalnoky. informing him that an interpellation was aijout to be put forward in the Hungarian Parliament concerning the utterances of the nuncio, which had appeared in the Hungarian newspapers and had never been disclaimed by their author. Count Kalnoky replied that the nuncio had displayed tactlessness, overstepped the limits prescribed for foreign diplomatic representatives, and that deserved that a Foreign Office note l>e sent to the Vatican to complain of his conduct. He went so far ps to sketch a communication to the Vatican, and the Hungarian premier telegraphed his approval of it. A few days after, Baron Banffy said in the Hungarian Parliament that the papal nuncio's acts weie not. approved in Vienna. As soon as this speech was recited to Count Kalnoky he telegraphed to Buda-Pesth that only part of his letter to Baron Banffy was for Dubllc knowledge; that the rest w*as confidential, and that the protest to the Vatican had not been sent. Efforts were made to reconcile the two ministers, but thess were unavailing. The Hungarian House approved Baron Banffy’s attitude unreservedly, and Count Kalnoky resigned. Rev. John Richardson Selvvln. LONDON. Feb. 13.-Right Rev. John Richardson Selwin, master of Selwin College. Cambridge, since 1893. died yesterday at Pau, France. Dr. Selwin, who was Bishop of Melanesia from 1877 to 1891. was born in New Zealand May 20, 1844. He was the second son of Right Rev. George Augustus Selwin, Bishop of New Zealand and Lichfield. He was educated at Trinity College, Cambridge, and from 1868 to 1871 was, successively, the curate of St. Airewas, Staffordshire, and of St. George, Wolverhampton. He entered on the Melanesian mission in 1872, and in February, 1875, succeeded Bishop Pattlson. tho first bishop of Melanesia, who was murdered by the natives in 1871.

Grace Stevenson's Father. BOSTON. Feb. 13.—Word was received here, to-day of the death at Old Point Comfort of James Stevenson, one of the largest real-estate dealers In this city. Mr. Stevenson was also the father of Grace Stevenson, whose mysterious disappearance caused a great sensation in this city last spring. Mr. Stevenson was born near Belfast, Ireland, sixty-one years ago, and as a young man came to this country, having •erved in the Twenty-tirst Devonshire Regiment in the Crimea. For the past ten years he had been prominent in the reql-estate business and one of the most daring operators in the Boston market. Old .In pa nose Editor. TOKIO, Feb. 13.—Koyasu Shun, founder of the Yomluri Shlmbuna, one of tho oldest papers frt Japan, in 1874, is dead, aged sixtythree. Tie was formerly junior secretary of the Foreign Office. He started the first mutual life insurance association in Japan, and among other achievements edited the best English-Japanese dictionary of Its day, in 1873. John 11. Mt’Keiulr, NEW YORK, Feb. 13.—John D. McKenzie died to-day, aged sixty-six years. Ho was chairman of tho committee of citizens formed for the relief of the colored people In the war riots. He was also foreman of the grand jury which indicted William M. Tweed.

Trimmed and Trained Skirts. Harper's Bazar. The fact is well established now' that long trailing skirts are to be worn with house gowns—by house gowns are meant evening gowns, reception gowns, or any gowns suited for house w-ear. As yet we have not gone back to long skirts for street wear, although even walking gowns have the skirts long enough to require holding up in the street. Many of the long skirts are extremely graceful. There is one style which is made with very little goring, tits quite sheathlike, with the fulness,laid iti small pleats, but cut to-flare out at the end Os The train. la soft silks, satins, poplins, and cashmeres this is very attractive, for the lines are so graceful. The plain look is broken by bands of trimming either down the seams or around the foot, or else with patterns of embroidery and cut work put on the fronth breadth. There is evidently an intention of restoring drapery, for some xery smart skirts have the front and side breadths long enough to allow of draping just a little back of the hip, anti showing a. glimpse of an under petticoat of different material. This is a becoming style of skirt, and looks especially well when the back breadths are long enough to train. Washington the Ideal Commander. Senator Lodge, in Scribner. Washington, a great commander, had tho genius for getting all that was best out of the men under him, but the work of organizing and disciplining the army at Cambridge was the least of the troubles which confronted him when he faced the situation at Boston. Moreover, he knew all the difficulties, for he not only saw them, hut he was never under delusions as to either pleasant or disagreeable facts. One # of his greatest qualities was his absolute veracity of mind; he always looked a fact >f any sort squarely in the face, and this is what lie saw- when he turned to the task before him. Movement* of Steamers. NEW YORK. Feb. 30.—Arrived: Paulo, from Rotterdam; Arubia, from Hamburg. Hailed: Spaarndara. from Rotterdam; St. Louis, for Newport News. QUEENSTOWN. Feb. 13.—Arrived; Aurajfla, front New York for Liverpool, and proceeded. Sailed: Campania, from Liverpool, for New York. SCULLY, Feb. 13.—Passed: La Bretagne, from New York, for Havre.

INDIANA CRIME RECORD A TOUGH'S DEADLY WORK WITH A REVOLVER 1\ VIGO COI'VTV, John \3 illluniN'a Funeral Excites Friends to Lynch Talk—Cocaine Victim Dead nt New Albany. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. TERRE HAUTE, Ind., Feb. 13.—“ Dode” Carrington last night shot and instantly killed Wesley Niece and fatally wounded Bayless Niece, r.n uncle of the latter, in Martin's saloon, at Grant, a mining town on the Big Four eight miles northeast of here. The sheriff and a posse searched for him during the latter part of the night and to-day, but he is yet at liberty. The three men are miners. Some years 4go Wesley Niece and Carrington had a quarrel and have ever since been enemies. The two Nieces were in the saloon standing at the bar when Carrington came into the place. He told several persons on the outside that ho was going in to “clean out the Niece party.” In less than a minute he had done so. Approaching Wesley Niece he said; “Wesley, you can't kick me now.”

“I never kicked you,” replied Wesley. “You are a liar,” was the retort, and immediately Carrington began, shooting. Thero were twenty men in the saloon, and all of them, as also the bartender, say it was done so quickly that they could not tell which of his victims was first shot. Wesley Niece was instantly killed by a bullet cutting his jugular vein, the bullet passing through his neck and lodging in a door. Bayless Niece was shot in the side under the ribs, and at last accounts was dying. When the crowd started for Carrington he held it at bay as he backed out of the door. He was pursued a short distance, hut again threatened to shoot, and thus made his escape. Carrington has a bad reputation, and at the time of the miners’ strike he left the locality and was gone until two months ago. He is about thirty years old. He had been married, but was divorced. Wesley Niece leaves a wife and two children. Bayless Niece also had a family. An open knifewas found in Wesley Niece’s pocket and a revolver in Bayless Niece's pocket. Nonunion Miner Killed at Lodi. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. BRAZIL, Ind., Feb. 13.—A murder was discovered in the Pratt mine, at Lodi, last evening, when the dead body of John Peste, an Italian, was found in water under the cage, where the murderer had carried it, hoping the water w*ould hide it. The murder had not been committed more than five minutes before the discovery, as the body was still warm. The neck was broken, which was probably caused by a blow from a miner’s pick. A hole four Inches deep, made by such an instrument, was found back of the left ear. No outcry was heard, and who committed the deed and how he escaped from the mine is a mystery. Peste hail words with two miners early in the day about him not belonging to the union, and the bank boss discharged both of these men. One left and the other denies all knowledge of the crime. Peste came to this country a short time ago. and knew no one. His body was brought to this city. Clew to the Mnrvler. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. PORTLAND, Ind., Feb. 13.—Acting on the story told by Thomas Head last night, that he had been approached by William Jarrett, the latter asking hint to join in a job to make some money at a widow’s home, Jarrett was arrested and brought here early this morning. He was given a preliminary examination before Mayor Berkman late this afternoon, but there was nothing to substantiate Head’s story. Head is still in jail and it Is thought he knows more of the cruel murder and robbery of Mrs. Louisa Stoltz than he has told. All day streams of people have visited the Stoltz home, where the body of the murdered woman lies. J. W. Polley, the attorney for the murdered woman, is authority for the statement that in his opinion not less than SI,OOO was secured. Tho authorities have a few other clews, and are basing a good deal on the bandana handkerchief which was wrapped around the woman's head. A small blue handkerchief was also found. There is bitter feeling against the murderers.

THE DISENCHANTMENT. Aged Dr. Cloutier Believes His Girl Wife Wa* Unfaithful. Special td the Indianapolis Journal. HARTFORD CITY, Ind., Feb. 13—The story from Muncie in tho Journal in regard to the venerable Dr. Clouser and his child wife has created a decided sensation here. It has been quietly rumored for several days that the doctor was secretly preparing for a legal separation. It has been known here for some time the two have not been living happily together in their beautiful and costly home. The doctor was seen in regard to the matter to-day, and tells a tale altogether different from that of his young wife. He says from tl. beginning she has been grossly extravagant, ’ purchased great quantities of goods v \ . he sent homo to her parents, hut t! raw which broke the camel’s back wa- p. 'etter ho received for her from ShideJ .. . which, he believes, proved her unf*:*i.*'.U. The old gentleman went to the postoffice, and in his mall received a letter addressed in a masculine hand to his wife. He opened the letter and read It, and it proved to be a love letter from a prominent your.g man of Shldeler, who told her how he still loved her, and requested her to meet him at that place on the following evening. The old doctor, in order to trap his gay and beautiful spouse, had an attorney copy it, resealed the letter and replaced it in the postoffice box. He went home ar.d told her that there was a letter in the box for her and he had neglected to bring it, as he was busy at the time. Mrs. Clouser went after it, and, after reading it, w-rote another and replaced it in the envelope, claiming that it came from her sister at Muncie, requesting her to come to Muncie at once on account of the sickness of her aunt. The letter, he says, was in the envelope bearing the Shldeler postmark, and the doctor immediately confronted her with the facts he had learned from the preceding letter. After a scene she departed the same evening and has not returned here since. The affair has caused a decided sensation here, where the doctor has been a practicing physician for over fifty years. He is one of the wealthiest men in the county. The doctor is anxious for a reconciliation with his wife, and will welcome her back, notwithstanding her past conduct. A divorce suit is distasteful to him. and he hopes to avoid trouble. Her attorney, Ralph Gregory, of Muncie, was here Thursday, and wanted to compromise for $20,000, but the doctor refused to consider it. What the outcome will be is yet uncertain.

CARRIED OFF A BRIDE. Lively ami Romantic Episode for Mr anil Mrs. Hughes to Remember. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. KOKOMO. Ind., Feb. 13.-Mr. Judson W. Hughes, of Mpnsfleld, 0., superintendent of construction for the Aultman-Taylor Manufacturing Company, now- in this city with his new wife, is the hero of a romantic elopement, the heroine being a Miss Florence Chapman, of Saltvlile, Vo. Last month Mr. Hughes, who had been sent by his firm to Saltvlile, became acquainted with Miss Chapman, who was to have been married in a few- days to a William Akers. Miss Chapman, who was a mountain maid of attractive personality, had never been away from town, never saw’ a railroad or street cars and had no knowledge of the world, but she recognized a handsome man in Mr. Hughes, who is a well-known athlete and football player, and an elopement followed. Akers, the old lover, learned of tho scheme, but failed to stop it. The young couple rode thirty miles, pursued by Akers and his friends. After one of the pursuing party was shot and another disabled by a hand-to-hand encounter, the runaways arrived at Bristol. Tenn., and were married at midnight by Rev. Burroughs, a Baptist minister, at whose hotel they stopped. Akers, on giving up the chase, swore he would follow the fugitives to the end of the world and kill his successful rival on sight. The

THE INDIANAPOLIS JOURNAL, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1898.

. couple, after the hasty marriage, went to Braddoek, Pa., thence to Pittsburg, then to Kokomo, where they expect to remain for several days. The groom came here to supervise the placing of a battery of boilers at the Pittsburg plate-glass works, and. on completing the job, will take the bride to his home at Mansfield. O. Hughes is twenty-eight years old, the bride eighteen. INDIANA OBITUARY. The Rev. John Smith NVincheHter, Pioneer 31. E. Preacher. Fjiecial to the Indianapolis Journal. GREEXSBURG, lnd., Feb. 13.—The Rev. John Smith Winchester is dead, aged sev-enty-nine. He was one of the pioneer ministers of the Methodist Church, having entered the ministry in 1536, retiring in 1876. He served his church at Caaiaan, Wilmington, Vevay, Milan, Mllroy, Liberty, West Connersville, Shelbyville, Greenwood, Millord. Burlington, Greensburg, Laurel, Mt. Carmel. Fairfield, Rushville. Clarksburg, Saint Paul. Guilford and Westport. The funeral will be held to-morrow from the First Methodist Church, in tins city. Hanker .1. 11. Kabli. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. VINCENNES, lnd.. Feb. 13.—This afternoon Dr. J. H. Rabb, president of the First National Bank, died after a month's illness with a complication of diseases. He was sixty-nine year.s old and was a power in public and private affairs in this city. He had accumulated a fortune. He was a Mason. and in politics was one of the Republican leaders of this county. He leaves a widow and three children. John C. RluiieM. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. HOPE, lnd., Feb. 13.—John C. Blades, on© of the wealthiest men in Bartholomew county, died tills- morning at the age of eighty-four. He had been a resident of Hope for fifty* years. In politics he was a Republican and took an active interest in party affairs. Some years ago lie retired from farming and stock raising. Five children survive hint. 3llms 31>rtle (irnltlis, Special to the Indianapolis Journal. GREENCASTLE, lnd,, Feb. l-V-Miss Myrtle Grubbs, daughter of George Grubbs, of this city, died last night after a painful illness of inflammation. Miss Grubbs was one of the most popular young women of the city and was a highly cultured vocalist, having studied for a number of years in Germany. J. A. Read. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. FORT WAYNE, lnd., Feb. 13. —J. A. Read, one of tlie pioneers of this county, died at his West Main-street residence this afternoon, after a lingering illness of general debility. He opened the first livery stable in this city fifty years ago and managed it until failing health compelled him to retire. William Bennett's Funeral, Special to the Indianapolis Journal. MORRISTOWN, lnd., Feb. 13.—Th© funeral of William Bennett to-day was the largest ever seen here. It was under the care of the Knights of Pythias and the Odd Fellows. He was a member of the Grand Lodge of Indiana of both orders. ♦ A VICTIM OF COCAINE. Once Prominent Doctor Died in New Albany Sanitarium. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. NEW ALBANY, lnd., Feb. 13.—Dr. John R. Develi, once one of the most prominent physicians of Louisville, died to-day at a sanitarium in this city, where he was being treated for the cocaine habit. He and his daughter Cora, who -is also a victim of tiie habit, were discovered living in squalor in a Louisville hovel about ten days ago. Former friends, who had lost track of them, placed them in the sanitarium. Develi’s body was a mass of abscesses, caused by tlie hypodermic syringe. It is thought his daughter can be cured. Develi’s history before he came to Louisville, about thirty years ago, is a mystery. It is reported he was a political exile from Italy. Ha would never talk of his former life. Wealthy and influential friends of her father who reside in this city have taken the daughter’s case in hand, and they will care for her after her recovery. Dr. Develi was for many years a prosperous and highly respected physician, until wrecked by the morphine and cocaine habits. He was an Italian by birth, was highly educated and accomplished, and spoke many languages with great fluency. His learning, no less than the mystery of his life, which no doubt died with him, was a constant source of wonder to those wlhm were thrown in contact with him. He <flune to this city right after the war, though he is said to have been in Louisville during the war as a Confederate spy. Many strange stories have been told concerning him, especially since attention has been called to the sad ending of what once promised to be a brilliant career. It has been said that he was a political exile; that he killed a man in a duel in his youth, and other theories have been advanced to account for his reticence concerning his early life.

MORE TALK OF LYNCHING. John NY illiunis’s Funeral Excites His Friends Against His Murderer. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. COLUMBUS, Ind., Feb. 13.—The funeral of John Williams, who was shot to death by James Lewis at Jonesvillc last Friday night, was attended by throngs of people to-day. Many came from distant points, Seymour, Columbus, Louisville and Indianapolis being represented. Rev. H. A. Tritt, of this city, preached the funeral sermon. Much bittor feeling was manifested-and threats made which have caused the authorities of Bartholomew county to prepare for any emergency. At the first intimation of any organization of a lynching party the fire alarm of Columbus will be sounded and armed men will be placed in readiness to uphold the law. Lewis will be removed to Johnson county jail at the first outbreak if there be time. His mother at Jonesville lies at the point of death, prostrated by the tragedy. Edward Blanche and Eli Davis, w r ho were the only eyewitnesses to the shooting, declare to-day that Lewis was twelve feet from Williams when the shot was fired. The night police are on the lookout to-night.

CHARGED W ITH FORGERY. Mrs. Marie Kirkpatrick Arrested While Visiting' in Terre Haute. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. TERRE HAUTE, Ind., Feb. 13.—Mrs. Marie .-Kirkpatrick was arrested here today on a telegram from the sheriff at Pueblo acctising hUr of forgery. She came here recently to visit her sister, a wellknown and highly respected woman of this city. Mrs. Kirkpatrick lived here twenty years ago, but went West when she married Kirkpatrick, who died in Colorado. She will not talk about the case, but says she is willing to return to Pueblo. She intinates that possibly the charge against her grows out of a loan of SI,OOO she secured o i collateral. Headquarters for Elopers. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. TERRE HAUTE, Ind., Feb. 13. Four eloping couples is the record for the twen-ty-four hours ending last evening. Ora Peyton and Sarah Linkwaller, of Judson, went to Paris, 111., because Mrs. Linkwaller objected to Peyton, and were married there. On the return trip they missed the train in this city and were compelled to remain over night. They had intended keeping the marriage secret, but this misadventure changed their plans., and they telegraphed to Judson tho fact of their marriage. Joseph Lanigan and Mollie Swisher came to the city from Brazil on the same train, but in different coaches. A license was secured and they were married at the home of a prominent minister. Then they returned to Brazil to surprise their relatives. Oliver Evans and Emma Eseokke came from Toledo to escape the wrath of the girl’s father. Both were of doubtful nge, but the clerk consented to Issue a license, and they were married. Evans is an engineer on the Pennsylvania system. William O. Shirley and Dessie Shaw, of Vermillion, wanted a license, but the clerk was too much in doubt about the girl’s age and declined to Issue it. An Attempted Assassination. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. DANVILLE, Ind., Feb. 13. Georg© Pritchett fired several shots at William Neaville’s house, in Montclair, at 2 o’clock this morning. There was some feeling between him and Neavllle, and Pritchett went

to Neaville’s for rerenge. The bed in which Mr. and Mrs. NeaviUe were sleeping was near the window and Pritchett fired at them. Mrs. Neavile commenced to scream and Pritchett fled. Going to a neighbor, he begged him to uake him to Pittsboro. The neighbor refused and Pritchett told what he had done and said he hal shot Mrs. Neaville. Pritchett disappeared and the neighborhood was aroused. Pritchett was arrested at Pittsboro and this afternoon was locked up in default of $l,lOO bail to await preliminary trial Feb. 21. The shot fired did not strike either Neaville or his wife. Anti-Vaccination Paper. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. TERRE HAUTE, Ind., Feb. 13.—Mr. j Frank D. Blue, of the Vaidalia o.lices in | this city, who has led in the fight on the boards of health on vaccination, having taken a test case to the Supreme Court, where it is now pending, has begun the publication of a periodical named “Vaccination.” In the first issue, which came from the press yesterday, he says: “It is imperative that some ont tell the truth about vaccination. The d<ctors (which includes boards of health) are busy getting class medical laws against all quacks except themselves, for the especial benefit of the ‘poor people,’ so they can’t do it. The preachers ire busy saving souls (not bodies), so they can’t do i , and, as no one else has time, I concluded to do it myself.” New Window-Glaat Factory, Special to the Indianapolis Journal. HARTFORD CITY, Ind., Fell. 13.—A contract was made here Saturday between the citizens of this place and J. C. Hurrle, of Toledo, for a twelve-pot window glass factory. The city donated bin SI,OOO cash, gas well, building and land. r he plant will be in operation by May 1, and will employ 150 men. The old Congren cyde factory will be the main building, and groirtd will be broken Monday for the remainder of the buildings. The factory will run independent of the Window Glass Manufacturers’ Association, and agrees to run ten nunths in the year. The proprietor also contracts himseit to double the capacity of tht plant the second year. This will give Hartlord City a bigger window’ glass output than any single city m America. Stole a 3lareli oa Steele. Special to the Indianapolis Jciimal. KOKOMO, Ind., Feb. 13.-At the meeting of the Howard count.* Republican central committee Saturday t was determined by a vote of 19 to 17 to submit the candidacy of the congressional aspirants to the primary election to be h?ld in this county March 8. This is anew thing in Howard county politics and was done at the (solicitation of Hon. S. E. Nicholson, of this place, who is a candidate for congressional honors, to succeed Maj. Oeorge W. Steele. Nicholson wants the privilege of naming his own delegates to the congressional convention and will do so if he carries the county at the primary. The plan is opposed by a number who arc friendly to Steele. Tin-Plate Strike Settled. Special to tho Indianapolis Journal. ANDERSON, Ind., Feb. 13.—The terms on which State Labor Commissioner McCormick yesterday accomplished the settlement of the strike at the Irondale tin-plate mills, at Middletown, were on a basts of wages paid at the American tin-plate plant at Elwood. It was a reduction of about 60 to 70 cents per day, or little over a cent a box on finished tin. Though the scale is now the same as paid at Elwood, the men are not able to make near the wages because of the difference in the quality of machinery. The company was preparing to shut down its plant, and It was that or nothing, and Commissioner McCormick advised the acceptance of the company’s terms. The Trouble at 3leCloud’s Mine, Special to the Indianapolis Journal. SULLIVAN, Ind., Feb. 13.—The cause of the trouble at the McCloud coal mine is a piece of machinery in the engine house. Andrew Winterbottom, with whom the mine owner is having the trouble, sold the mine to William McCloud. Winterbottom claims a certain piece of machinery at the mine, but McCloud insists that he bought it with the mine. At the beginning of the trouble Winterbottom. it was reported, tried to steal the machinery, but he claims he had no such intentions. Several attempts have been made by Winterbottom and his friends to recover the machinery, and both sides have faced each other with arms. Returns to Thibet as a. 31isslouary. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. ANDERSON, Ind., Feb. 13.—Mrs. Jesse Mcßeth, of this city, formerly a missionary, will return at once to Thibet, Asia, for another seven years’ mission. She is sent and maintained by Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Poling, of this city, who are zealous in missionary’ work, and but for Mr. Poling’s extensive business interests w r ou!d have gone themselves. They provide her about $390 a year, out of their own pockets, for maintenance, which in that country is quite sufficient. Mrs. Mcßeth is w ell known by reputation among all missionary people and those interested in the work.

lnsaranco Company Tottering. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. DANVILLE, 111., Feb. 13.—Danville’s new insurance company, known as the American Mutual, is threatened with dissolution. Four suits are pending against It for losses in the Circuit Court. The state superintendent of insurance has ordered a large assessment, over double the amount of premiums, on all policy holders. They have called a meeting for Monday evening to express their indignation, and, if possible, to wind up the company. The president is A. W. Heinly; secretary ar.d manager, T. H. Bolton. 910,000 Church Dedicated. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. PARIS. 111., Feb. 13.—The new Christian Church was dedicated here this evening by Rev. Rains, of Cincinnati. At the morning service the remaining part of the debt was cleared, SIB,OOO being subscribed in thirty minutes. Congressman Andrew J. Hunter is a member of this church, and subscribed SIO,OOO. Mr. L. A. Augustus gave the lot the church is built on, and also SIO,OOO. The church cost SIO,OOO, and has been built in two years. Indiana, Notes. In the primary election at. Bedford Saturday the Republicans nominated the following ticket: Mayor, D. Y. Johnson; marshal, Frank M. Russell; clerk, William M. Denniston; treasurer, William W. Ferguson; councilman, Robert McKinley, Richard Rowland and S. F. Buchannon. Frederick Fidlar, a school teacher at Grant Station, has been fined by a justice of the peace for compelling a pupil to remain outdoors for twenty minutes during the cold weather last month as a punishment for violation of a rule of the school. An appeal was taken to the Circuit Court. The Ripley county Republican committee met Saturday and elected the following officers: Capt. Charles B. Johnson, of Napoleon, chairman: G. W. Toole, Milan, vice chairman; L. B. Pickett, Holton, secretary; Chris. Stevens, of Versailles, treasurer. A vote of thanks was rendered to the retiring chairman, John C. Harper, of Versailles. General Booth in Pittsburg. PITTSBURG, Pa., Feb. 13.—Gen. William Booth, Booth-Tucker, his wife and other prominent members of the Salvation Afmy took part in three immense meetings held in the Bijou Theater to-day. The party will rtmain in Pittsburg until Tuesday on a general inspection tour, with the purpose of booming the order in this vicinity. To-morrow- morning the general will make a special address to the ministers of the two cities, and in the evening will conduct a public meeting at Carnegie Library Hall. General Booth and party are being accorded the heartiest co-operation in their work by the religious people. l pala College to Be Moved. MANCHESTER. N. H.. Feb. 13.—At' the session of the Swedish Lutheran Conference it was voted to permit the trustees of I’psala College, Brooklyn. N. Y.. to do as they please in the matter of its removal. This means that the college will be moved to New Orange, N. J.. where land valued at JGO.OOO and an endowment fund of SIOO,OOO have been offered to It. conditioned on the change. The opposition In the conference wanted the Brooklyn college abandoned, holding that Augustuna College, at Rock Island, 111., was sufficient for ail the needs of the conference. New President Elected. CINCINNATI. 0.. Feb. 13.—The Commer-cial-Tribune will print the following announcement to-morrow: “At a meeting of the board of directors of the OommereialTribune Company, held Feb. 12. the resigJ nations of Messrs, a. Howard Hinkle, Ju- • lius Fleischinann, Casper H. Row e and Nor-

man G. Kenan were received and accepted, and Messrs. J -nes M. Glenn, Herman P. Goebel and Albert Bettinger were thereupon elected directors and the new board organized at once by the election of James M. Glenn president of the company.” MASS FOR PILGRIMS Tlie Pope Token Part in tlie Imposing Ceremony at Home. ROME, Feb. 13,—The Pope celebrated mass to-day in the Basilica in the presence of a congregation of pilgrims from till parts of the country In honor of past and coming anniversaries jointly of his first mass, his election and coronation. His Holiness was borne to the church in the sedia gestaloria. and elaborate ceremony was observed. The Pope knelt while his chaplain celebrated the second thanksgiving mass, and then, seated on the throne, received the leaders of the pilgrims. At the conclusion he pronounced the apostolic benediction in a strong voice, after which he was carried from the church with the same ceremony. His Holiness appeared to be in excellent health. It is estimated that no fewer than 50,000 persons wbre present, of whom 20,000 were pilgrims. While the Pope was being borne through the church, amid the ringing tones of silver trumpets, the assembly was raised to a pitch of excitement almost reaching delirium. The ceremony was one of impressive magnificence, and the Pope’s appearance caused enthusiasm on all sides. T wait g-Ll-Au men’s BantinH. PEKING, Feb. 13— England is negotiating with China to open Yuen-Chau-Fu, in the province of Hu-Nan, as a treaty port, and is negotiating also on the subject of the navigation of inland waters. The Chinese government has paid the agreed indemnity of £4,1X10 ($20,000) to M. Lyaudet, the Frenchman kidnaped by Tonquin pirates in 1X95. The New Year’s audience for the foreign ministers has been fixed for Feb. 15 and the banquet by the Tsung-Li-Tamen will be given the following day. Owing to the long delay the ministers had declined an audience, but the Ts ung-Li-Yamen has now arranged the matter. Itluuco Elected President. LONDON, Feb. 14. A dispatch to the Times from Montevideo says the new State Council was installed on Saturday amid great popular enthusiasm. Dr. Juan Carlos A. Blanco was unanimously elected president of the Council. No Serious Outbreaks. PARIS, Feb. 13. Numerous meetings were held in the provinces to-day in connection with the Dreyfus agitation. In some cases resolutions against the government were adopted, but there sere no serious disorders. Cable Notes. King Oscar of Sweden has intrusted to former Premier Steen the task of forming anew Cabinet. Henry Gladstone, at Cannes, says his father and the whole family intend to start about the end of next week for a South-of-England watering place. Mr. Gladstone’s physician thinks his patient lias attained the utmost benefit from his stay on the Riviera.

RELIC OF LORD FAIRFAX. The Romantic History of an Ancient Strong Box. Washington Star. In one of the apartments of the Hotel Raleigh, now occupied by Philip W. Avirett, is a remarkable relic, which has a history of great interest. It is nothing more or less than the iron strong box of Thomas, Lord Fairfax, first lord proprietary of Virginia. The box or chest is made of heavy wrought iron, into which have been welded iron straps crossing each other at right angles. The slight ornamentation on the front of tiie box shows it to be of Italian workmanship. The box is in a state of remarkable preservation. The keyhole is in the center of the massive lid, and a largo heavy key, black with age, turns easily in it. A wonderful thing about the lock is that the key in turning sends sliding bolts out from all sides of the lid to cling beneath heavy extensions of the four sides of the box itself-, upon precisely the same principle as that upon which the modern bank vault loelt in universal use to-day is managed. We history of the relic is romantic. The strong box was buried by Lord Fairfax at his home, Greenaw’a.y Court, near Winchester. Va., where ho died. The reason that Fairfax buried it was that he had tilled it with money collected by him in the shape of revenues for the crown, but he died before he had an opportunity to take it up and enjoy the treasure. The only person who knew about the burial of the box W'as Dr. Thomas Woodcock, of Winchester. After the death of Lord Fairfax, Dr. Woodcock dug it up and took it to Philadelphia, w'here he gave it to the agents of the Bank of England, who sent it to England, still tilled with money and muniments of title. When the contents had been removed the box was given to the Fairfax heirs in England. The Fairfax heirs sent it back to ’Dr. Woodcock tilled with silver plate, and the strong box eventually passed from Dr. Woodcock to Mrs. Hannah Dunbar, of Winchester. At Mrs. Dunbar’s death she willed the box to her daughter, Mrs. Philip Williams, of Virginia, during her lifetime, and pre t ided that it should then descend to Mrs. Williams':* heirs, among whom was Mrs. Aviretr, wife of Rev. James B. Avirett, formerly of Silver Springs, and now of North Carolina. During the late war the chest was again buried by those who had it in possession at Winchester, and a large quantity of valuable silver plate w-as placed In It in order to protect it from possible seizure by the soldiers. Several years ago the box was dug up again. Its whereabouts having been discovered through information received from a former slave named Granderson, who had helped to bury it, but who preserved the secret of its location until he found death was near, when he divulged It to the proper party. The heirs of Mrs. Philip Williams gave the strong box to Philip Williams Avirett, who now has it in his possession. Among the treasures which were contained in the strong box at the time it was buried during the late war was a miniature portrait of the late Philip Williams, painted on ivory by Rembrandt Peale. The miniature is incased in a quaint oval silver locket. and is also in the possession of Mr. Avirett. Authorities on such matters have expressed the opinion that the miniature is as tine a specimen of Peale’s marvelous art in miniature portrait painting as there is extant.

The Great Seul of England. Pall Mall Gazette. The great seal is not allowed to leave the kingdom without special permission. In 1521 Cardinal Wolsey carried the seal into the Low Countries, and sealed writs with it at Calais: a violation of duty which formed one of the articles of his impeachment. Nowadays, if the chancellor leave London, the great seal goes with him, and if necessary the traveling sealer attends the chancellor for the purpose of actually applying the seal to documents. When the great seal is to change hands, the retiring lord chancellor goes to the Queen, attended by his purse bearer, who carries the seal in its purse. The purse is handed to the Queer by the purse bearer, given back to that official by her Majesty, and is then handed by the purse bearer to the incoming chancellor. In our concluding picture Lord Eldon is seen carrying the seal in its purse, but now the chancellor’s purse bearer performs this part of the high function of transferring tne great seal of lingland. Murder at Elmira. ELMIRA, N. Y., Feb. 13.—The mangled body of William Murray, of Waverly, was found on the Lehigh Railroad tracks between Athens and Sayre, Pa., early this morning. Several knife wounds, which surgeons say caused his death, were found on the body. William Wolf, who was seen with bloody hands near where the body was found, is held In jail to await the result of the inquest. He tells conflicting stories. Receiver for Harvey Company. CHICAGO, Feb. 13.—The Harvey Steel Car Company, of Harvey. 111., has been placed in the hands of receivers, on a Judgment for faS.OOO. secured by Lobdell, barwell & Cos., of this city. The judgment was secured, it is said, on the default of interest due on a SIOO,OOO bond issue. Ferry Boat Fast on the lee. MUSKEGON. Mich., Feb. 13.—The Detroit. Grand Rapids & Western Railroad s car ferry Shenango is fast in the ice four miles out in Lake Michigan. The Grand Rapids & Indiana Company’s steamer, Osceola, attempted to leave for Milwaukee, but could not get out beyond tho harbor piers. _ Portland Cement Plant Burned. CHICAGO, Feb. 13.—Fire destroyed the plant of the Chicago Portland Cement Company at Hawthorne to-day. The loss amounts to $100,000; insurance, $50,000. The fire originated In the drying rooms and consumed everything on the premises. TO CURE A COLI) IX OXE DAY Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All druggists refund money if it falls to cure. Silk:. The genuine has L. B. Q. on each tablet.

SEACAPTAIN’SSMALLPAY MASTER OF V BIG OCEAN STEAMSHIP BY NO MEANS A PLI TOCRAT. • ♦ I.ow Wages for Officers—'The Pnnet and the Doctor Have Slim Pnrsei —Thrift on Tramp Vessels. New York Mall and Express. It is the general impression among those who do not know that the duties and responsibilities of the average skipper of a regular liner are as many and onerous as the successful bank president, and that in addition his salary is just as large. The responsibility of the one is about as great as the other, but when It comes to duties the sea dog has, as a rule, much more to bear, while, unlike the bank president, his salary is as small as his duties are large. It may surprise some of the regular transatlantic travelers to learn that their beau ideal of a sea captain who in faultless gold lace goes about the deck laughing and chatting with the tourists, patting the half-fare tots on the back and doffing his cap to the rug clad occupants of an easy steamer chair between that he spends in his berth, in trie chart room or on the bridge, gets little more money a month than the detective sergeant or the average steamboat captain. In many Mr. Gold Lace gets less. One of the most successful lines running between this port and Europe pays its commodore, who has been over twenty years in this particular service, £35 a month, or about $175. This is about S4O a week. The other captains in this line are paid the equivalent of $125 for thirty days’ labor. Any number of matter-of-no-fact stories have been printed with the object of showing that the commanders of the great liners received in some eases sums ranging from $7,000 to $12,000 per year. But such talk is idle. There is not a single captain on the ocean who enjoys such an income. That many of them deserve to is another matter entirely. In an argument that master mariners are well paid the point is advanced that the officers are fed while at sea and even alongside the wharf with the best that the market affords and at the expense of the steamship company. Yet SO per cent, of these well-fed gold laces are married and have big families that demand food, clothes and a home either here or abroad, whether or not the ship is in port. This establishment costs as much while the master mariner is on the bosom of Old Neptune as it dofs when he is playing dry cob at home for a short period. His going or coming adds or deducts little from the general cost. THE PURSER’S PAY. There are few pursers on the Atlantic who command a higher monthly salary than £lO. They must have years of experience, a host of friends and be ‘‘top-sawyers,” as they say at sea, to command even this ligure. Unlike the stewards, and, in the majority of eases, the ships’ surgeons, the purser is seldom made the recipient of a generous tip. Nobody seems able to explain why it is so, unless it be that the purser, handling all the money of the voyage, which includes extra passage money, the receipts from the smoker made through the chief steward, the wine bills from the tables, all amounting to a pretty large figure, is recognized as the financial end of the floating hotel, and is treated accordingly. There is no man aboard ship who is more generally thrown in with the passengers than the purser. And there is none who is capable of making himself more popular or the reverse: Seven-eighths of the complaints go to him, and he has the power to rectify them if he will. He can change the berth, or even the room of the passenger who thinks the accommodation assigned him not up to expectation. That in itself is the source of a great deal of his popularity. He may go Into the smoker at night when his assistant is maintaining the rigor of office hours, puff away at his brier, sip his grog with the tourists or make himself generally agreeable with the poker crowd between card draws. The smoker and its many attachments are luxuries which the captain is not permitted to enjoy, or if permitted, rarely indulges in. Any skipper who would make himself a jolly good fellow in the smoker would lose the confidence ol’ those under his care as fast as a trout taking a May fly. Not that his appearance there would make him any less the sailor, but passengers, for some reason or another, seem to believe that the only place for the master of their ship is on the bridge or in the chart room. And if they can picture him on this bridge in oilskins and so’wester with the wind and sleet ami ice blustering around him so much the better to the perfection of their idea of the practical and capable mariner.

THE POOR DOCTOR. The poorest paid man in an official capacity on a great liner is probably the surgeon. Some passengers have the opinion that as the company pays the ship’s doctor those using him on a trip are not supposed to give financial recognition to his attention. It is true that none is obliged to. but he should. The demand of a doctor at sea is in no wise different from that demand on land. The steamship companies give a passenger board, lodging and transportation at a cost that could not be equaled on any railroad of the earth, when distance, accommodation and attention are considered. The luxury of a doctor, while generally forced, is at the same time an auxiliary of sea travel for which the company receives nothing, and which, when free medicines are included, as they invariably are, costs quite a good deal. Experienced ocean travelers seldom forget the surgeon when necessity makes them call for his attention during a trip. But these experienced tourists arc few and far between. The majority of patients troop ashore at the end ol a passage without so much as a flourish ot an empty hand to the sawbones of the aood ship that brought them over. On many of tho t>i& liners tho chef receives as compensation more than any two of the gold lace brigade. The truth of the old saying that the easiest way to reach a * man's heart is through his stomach, is just as applicable to the gentler sex. at least it is on shipboard. A superior table with all other conditions equal means the superiority of any or every steamship line. I 1 or that reason the kingpin of the cuisine controls the biggest salary, which not infrequently equals if it does not exceed those paid to the captain and his chief officer. Economy is rarely applied to the head of a floating culinary establishment, even though it does attack Mr. Gold Lace. Yet if more liberal salaries were paid these sea dogs it is doubtful if their standard of efficiency could be improved, for those on the Atlantic cannot be equaled anywhere, not even east of Suez, where the skipper of a regular liner is the monarch of all he surveys. ON CARGO VESSELS. But if economy Is practiced on the "lady” of the ocean, as Kipling calls the liner, it is on a small scale compared to that followed on the “poor old cargo boat.” An examination of the annual statements of a number of tramp steamer concerns flying the British flag will show that the masters of these vessels receive not more than S6O per month. The deck hand of an ordinary river craft would howl like a Ceyloji pirate if he had to do as much work as some of these captains for as little money. Os course, where such poor salaries are paid to master mariners who have hundreds of thousands’ worth of property at their command there is generally a leak, and the butcher, baker, candlestick maker and even the stevedore and the ship chandler at ports where this cheap sample of tramp touches has to furnish a rebate, which the captain pockets without the formality of informing the ship’s husband. Tho other day the British Board of Trade suspended for three months the certificate of the captain of tho Beeeroft. The investigation, held at laverpooi, showed a unique and startling device on the part of the master of that vessel for pocketing the wages of his crew during a voyage. It was shown that the captain took a big stock of liquor to sea with him. which he retailed to the men during the trip. He hud among other spirits twenty cases of whisky, for which he paid $3.50 a dozen bottles, and this stuff he sold to the men at about $2 a bottle. The carpenter’s bill for whisky, gin and beer during the voyage amounted to $67. The Ashby, of West Hartlepool, is run on air economical plan if ever a ship was. On a passago from Baltimore to Bilboa the ship averaged nine and a half knots an hour on a consumption of ten tons of coal a day. This coal cost but six shillings a ton, which made the daily expenditure for fuel about $14.80. The engines of this ship, although or the triple expansion tyi*e, are made with a view to economy as well as for spend. T 1 er.

NATIONAL PjT|k Tube Works drought-iron Pipe for Gas, Steam and Water. BoilerTube*. Cast and Mai!*KHW . —A*'jim. ablo Iron Fittings (black and M&yU galvanized). Valves. Stop Co'ts. Kngine Trimming, St#an Gauges, Pipe Tongs, Bf w Pipe Cutters, Vises. Screw fMJ b -It Plates am! Dies. Wren- hen, ■SJH WEa Steam Traps. Comps, Kltrb--sk'-3 eu Sinks. Hose. Belting, liab- * 1 bit Metal, Solder, White end L'Wj U Colored Wiping Waste, and t s < all other Supplies used in KM M connection with Gas. steam Inn BJ ami Water. Natural Gas 11 u£d( Supplies a specialty. Steam. ■SI K 9 healing Apparatus for Pubr •’ lie Buildings, Store-rooms, > Mills, Shojis, Factories, LaunVj , I dries, Lumber Dry-Houses, * | ; i etc. Cut and Thread to or■gl der any size Wrought-lroa Egg Pipe, from u inch to ll S/*T; lnches diameter. H KM&HT 5 jillson, V ttao . PENNSYLVANIA B*. are but three engineers on the Ashby, Including the chief. The donkeyman stands a watch, but does not, of course, get engineer’s pay. The ship has a dead weight capacity of 2,650 tons, and notwithstanding this fact, her entire crew' list, including officers. numbers only twenty-one men. This is certainly one of the samples of tramp steamers that has reached the point where freights must be remarkably low if she cannot be made to pay. The Buckingham is another sample that averages ten knots an hour on a consumption of fourteen tons of coal a day, has a displacement of 2,701> tons and carries a crew of twenty-nine men all told, the A. B’s, or sailors, of which get only sl2 a month. Os course the shareholders of these ships make a lot of money through this economy. Take the Crescent as a sample of profit. Here is a craft that has paid £3S 10 shillings per sflxty-fourth share for live and one-half yeai's’ work. Her original cost is understood to have been £335 per sixty-fourth share, so that she left over 21 per Cent, per annum continuously for five and one-half years. Rock-bottom prices for wages and Klondike finds for profits were never In the rush for gold with the successful "poor old cargo boat.” WORKING PLACER MINES. The Three Methods In line Are Panning, Rocking and Sluicing. San Francisco Chronicle. There are three ‘ways of working placer ground, as the gravel beds or valley bottoms are called. They are mining, rocking and sluicing. A pan is a broad, shallow dish of iron or copper. The miner throws in a shovelful of sand and gravel, fills the pan with water and then with a twdsting sifting motion works whatever gold may be therein down to the bottom of the pan, where it tends naturally on account of its greater weight. As he sifts, the miner tips the pun gradually and works off the gravel and sand until he sees what is caught In the lower edge of the pan. The pan is a most essential part of th' prospector’s outfit. It give# him his cue, 1 it is easy to pack. A rocker is too large to be packed about when prospecting. It is a labor-sav-ing improvement on the pan, with greater capacity, tend can be worked with an easier motion. It is a box three feet long and two feet wide, in two parts. The ton part is shalk 'th a heavy iron bottom full of holes .ter of an inch in diameter. Beneat’ . in the lower half of tha box is a hea’ uth set in an inclined piano, sloping eight inches in the length of the box, or about three inches to the foot. Sometimes there are a series of these inclined planes, one below the other, sloping in opposite directions. The whole is mounted on rockers like a cradle. When the rocker is set tip convenient to the "dirt” and the necessary water he tills the top compartment with gravel, and then rocks with one hand and pours in water with the other. When the washing is done the "nuggets” will be found in the top and the "dust” collected along the blanket. The finest dust, in grains too small to see, will be in the mud at the bottom. If quicksilver is mixed with the mud the gold will unite with the quicksilver to form amalgam. Tha amalgam, which is like putty, is put in a buckskin bag and squeezed. The quicksilver comes through the pores of the leather and leaves the gold in the bag Tha blankets have to be rinsed in a barrel every now and then and the contents of the barrel treated with mercury. Sluicing is the most effective way of all, and is done always whenever there is sufficient headway of water and lumber can ba had for making the sluice boxes. Sluice boxes, or troughs, six feet by ten by twelvo inches are run end to end something like stovepipe. They taper a little to allow tho end of one to fit into the end of another, or else one end of each box is fitted with a collar. The bottoms of the boxes have slats and gratings in them to catch the particles of gold. A sluice runs from a dam down along the route most convenient for throwing in gravel from the "pay dirt.” There is no rocking nor twisting sifting necessary, aa the force of the water stirs up the gravel sufficiently to give the gold a chance to settle. The men stand alongside the sluices and throw in gravel with a strewing swing, and careful to avoid splashing. When enough gold has collected he shuts off the water, takes out the gratings and "cleans up,” ready to begin again. Sluicing is three times as rapid work as rocking.

Latin Pronunciation. New York Evening Sun. According to his own account, an elderly college graduate who was recently called upon for his first speech at an aluinni dinner spent days and nights in rehearsing before the mirror. He decided to begin "G viri alumni;” it had a cassical savor and it showed that ho hadn't allowed his cbllcgo “lamin’ ” to languish or grow rusty. But tho very day before the address was to b made the graduate’s niece, a Smith sophomore, came home for her Christmas vacation, and happening to catch sight of her uncle before the mirror, heard him declaim the opening phrase. “Oh! Uncle Ted.” she cried; “you mustn't say it that way. That’s the old pronunciation. Nobody’s used it for thousands of years. You must say, ‘Oh! weary aioomneye’ "at least,” said the graduate iri telling the story, “that's what it sounded like, though I must say it took considerable courage on my part to get up and tell my fellow-graduates that they were ‘weary,’ and that, too, before I had even begun my address.” This reminds one of the class in the girls* college out West years ago which adopted as its motto, ‘‘Jubet viclssem.” But before the year was out the new pronunciation came in, and the phrase was changed into •‘You bet we kiss ’em.” Hnlr Turning; White from Fright. Philadelphia Record. Dr. Parry, in the Dublin Medical Press (1861), gives the following instance of hair turning white from fright; On Feb. 111, 1853, the command of General Franks, operating in the southern part of the kingdom of Oude, had an engagement with a body of rebels. Several of the enemy were taken prisoners. One of them, a Sepoy, was led before the authorities to be questioned. “I then had occasion,” said Parry, “to observe in this man tho events that I propose to relate. The prisoner, for the first time, seemed to be conscious of his danger, when, deprived of Ids uniform and completely nude, he saw himself surrounded by soldiers. He then begau to tremble violently', terror and despair were depicted on his face, and, though he responded to the questions uddressed to him, lie seemed actually stupefied by fear. Then, under our very eyes, and in the space of scarcely half an hour, his hair, which we had seen was a brilliant black, turned gray uniformly over the whole head.” What is Scott’s Emulsion ? It is the best cod-liver oil, partly digested, and combined with the hypophosphites and glycerine. W hat will it do? It will make the poor blood of the anaemic rich and red. It will give nervous energy to the overworked brain and nerves. It will add flesh to the thin form of a child, wasted from fat-starvation. It is everywhere acknowledged as The Standard of the World. yoc. and fi.oo, all <lruggi*. H SCOTT & BOWNE, Ch*nmts, Ntw York. M