Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 35, Number 8, Indianapolis, Marion County, 27 March 1889 — Page 2

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THE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 27, 1889.

' we shall not stay you long. Tis now eke nigh unto the proper season when in the papers you shall perceive the mighty advertisements of advertising mites. Tis in Organs a wondrous trade they promise you, but when your eye is on the trade they do send, you shall spell it not trade, but tirade, c Exceeding angry shall you wax, and you would, nothing loth, put whacks upon the dealer were he by. Buy of another dealer and he will not so deal by you. Beseech you trade with Estey of Brattleboro, Vt, and you shall dance with joy, the Organ playing your accompaniment. HER MIND IS SHATTERED.

HARRIET BEECHER STOWE INSANE. Th Renowned Aothorfii of "Cnel Tom'i Cabin a Mental Imbecile and he I, At Best. Intellectually Now Bat n Mere Child Her Genta Gone. Haktfokp, Conn., March 2". It if now about six months since Harriet Beecher Stove was b roti cht a an invalid from Sag Harbor to this city. Mrs. Stowe went early last season to Sag Harbor, to spend the summer. For a time she seemed benefited by the chancre; for sveral weeks before she returned to Hartford her life was despaired of. Every one supposed the renowned authoress of "Uncle Tom's Cabin" bad but a few weeks to lire, at best; and by many of her friends her life was measured by days. Only the care of her physician and the attentive nursing of her children brought her through her illness. But Mrs. Htowe finally recovered of her ailments, and is seemingly now in as good health as she has ever been of late years. The true mental condition of Mrs. Stowe, although well-known here in Hartford, is seldom alluded to. It is, however, a fact that Mrs. Stowe's mind is shattered, and ehe is, at best, intellectually now but a mere child. Jler friends will not say that she is insane, nor that he is an imbecile, but her mind is almost completely rone. Her memory is that of a baby. When former dear friends visit her, people whom she has known for years, she greets them with a vacant stare, so indicative a symptom of cases of that kind. Of course Mrs. Stowe's relative view all thi with feeling of dimay, but they have now b"one reconciled to the chance, and her whims are treated with th utmost tendtrpes. For some time it was given out that Mr. Stowe Hid not reoo-rnize her friends because of failing eyesight, but this excuse is no longer lluded to. and the fact that she is now no longer mentally capable is recognized by every rne. It was also or a long time thought to be an attribute of g:nius when Mrs. Stowe showed these idiosyncrasies, but the genius which r-.ade "Uncle Tom's Cabin" the moot popular l-ok of the century ha" departed. The father of Mr. Stowe, the Rev. Lyman Beecher, passed the closing years of his life with a cloud restintr over his mind. His symptoms were preatly similar to those which "now afflict Mrs. Stowe. DIED ON A LIFE BOAT. The Bodies of Two .Sailors Ticked Up By a Passing Steamer. NEW Yoek, March 2.5. The bodies of two sailors were picked up from a life raft on Saturday by the Mallory line steamer Colorado off Cape Charles. Later on the steamer passed through a large quantity of wreckage, such ns would indicate the loss of a good sized vessel. Jvothing was found upon the bodies on the raft to tell who the men were or to what thip they belonged. They were given decent burial at sea, and the raft, which had been the stage for so terrible a tragedy, drifted away with the current. There was a pood breeze on Saturday morning, and Second Officer Frank V. Thomas was fa the bridge. The course was due north, the vessel having left Galveston, Tex., March 9. .T'ist after seven bells, or 11:30 o'clock, Mr. Thomas sighted, a quarter of a mile ahead, sliehtly on the port bow, what looked like a white bolt, bottom up. lie told the quartermaster to shift the helm so that the Colorado would puss close enough to the object to make rut hat it wa., In a couple or minutes the floating thing was abeam about a hundred yards on the porr si'ie. A handful of passengers and all the s:iilors on deck crowded to the rail to look at it. It was a white life raft, such as is used on stf-nmers. Two metal cylinder?, air-tight, supported a platform intended for the aoc'Jiiimod.'itioa of pase'jers. The raft was ar.out ten leet lonir by four and a half feet wide. Cpoo. the raft, which wtts vigorously tossed ab-it by the waves, lay two men. It was plain thst they were dead. One of the men looked 5 if he had died while in the act of clambering further on the raft. His riht foot was well in th warer. The other man, whose still attitude bowcd that he too hud been holding on like grim death, had evidently been assisting Lis weiker companion to maintain his grip. A. boat was lowered and Officer Thoma, F-catwain Hermann Echenagnca and two seamen manned it. There was a pretty strong sea runring and they had to be careful not to ride ver the raft and swamp themselves. First they raised the body of the man who had been fcelpinj his companion to hold on. He was very tail, with dark complexion and dark hair, cat qaite close. He had on two sets oi trousers, a Hack pair over a blue one, a striped waistcoat, a whit shirt and around his body be wore a belt. The men in the boat thought he was about twenty-five years old and a ship's officer. The other body was that of a man of the same age, but much shorter. He was dressed in Dungaree overalls and had on a gray flannel shirt. He looked like a mulatto aol was probably a ship's fireman, both men were clean-shaven; their clothing was wet throngh. The life line, which goes around ench rafts as the one they had, had been cut away. After the corpses were taken aboard the bont a search was made through the clothing. The pockets of the larger man were etufJed with ships Lucuit. He had had time ifore leaving the ship to make this provision for a lonely cruise on the raft One of the cylinders of the life raft had been stove in and was full of water. The name of its builder, Capt, Jonathan Cones of 'Wilmington Del., was stenciled upon iL CapL Daniels ordered the men to row the boat along by the side of the vessel. Then some old irons were brought from the engine room and tied to the dead sailors and they were gently dropped-over the gunwales and disappeared at once and forever in the deep bosom of the sea. The engine room bell racg and the Colorado continued her trip. Ihis entry was made in the lo? book: "At 1 1 :30 a. in. stopped ship and lowered boat and eunk two dead men that were found on an unmarked life raft, latitude 37 north, longitude 74.4 west. Builder, J. Cones, Wilmington, first part of the afternoon passed a great quantity of wreckage, such as doors, tables, etc Detention, one half hour." Is It the Conserva? Borrow, March 23. The steamer Gate City, from Savannah, report on March 23, in latitude longitude 78.30, she passed one metaliio life-boat and one lap-streak boat, the latter newly painte l white. The first three letters of the name on the large boat looked like Con. The Gate City passed also in the same vicinity a v fa and other furniture and joinerwork, the latter painted white. The wreckage apparently eorne from a steamer and had not been long in the water. This is regarded as strong evidence th3t the wreckage belonged to the gunboat Conrrva, the vessel which had so much trouble fc-r tting away from this port because of being t".iM eted of beinac intended for the ifsytian insurgent.

BRIEF FUNERAL SERVICES

OVER THE LATE JUSTICE'S REMAINS Held at the Family Residence In Washington The President and His Cabinet Attend The Body En Route to Glendale, O., For Bnrial. Washington, March 25. Funeral services over the remains of the late Associate Justice Stanley Matthews were held this afternoon at the family residence, corner of Connecticut-ave. and N-st. The remains lay in the music room adjoining the reception room on the south, and the apartment was almost filled with flowers. The casket was cloth-covered with silver rails and handles, and on the cover was & Biker plate bearing the inscription: c - 1 STANLEY MATTHEWS. ! j BORN JULY 21, 1824. :" i DIED MARCH 22, 1S?9. i - i The face and bust of the deceased were exposed to view and presented a life-like aspect. On the casket were bunches of Easter lilies end lilies of the valley, a laurel wreath and a large wreath of white roses tied with purple ribbon from Justice and Mrs. Field. The piano was covered with o Oerings from friends, the principal one being; & massive pillow of white roses from President and Mrs. Harrison. On the face of the pillow in purple immortelles was inibeded the sentiment: "Say not (rood nU'ht. but, In some brighter eliine, bii ine goiyi morning." A large wreath of white roses from Justice Matthews' surviviug comrades of the commandery of the District of Columbia, order of the loyal legion, was prominent on the stand. In attendance were a large number of prominent persons in all ranks of official life, besides many family friends in the private walks of life. Among the earliest arrivals were the members of the supreme court, who had seats in the room where the bier stood. In this room were also the president and vice-president, members of the cabinet and the family. The presidential party gathered at the whitehouse at 12:30 and arrived at the residence just at the hour fixed for the beginning of the services, 1 o'clock. Gen. Schofield represented the army and Admiral Porter the navy. Among those present were: Senators Butler, Hoar, Farwell, Sherman, Payne, Evarts, Morrill, Hale, Mauderson. Cockrell, Call and Paddock; ex-Senators J. E. McDonald and Conger; ex-Speaker Carlisle; Representatives McKinley, Springer, Cabot Lodge, Butterworth and Cox; Interstate Commissioner Schoonmaker; ex-Atty-Gen. Garland; Judge Davis, of the court of claims; Judges Hagner aud A. C. Bradley, of the district courts; Judsre Wylie; ex-Secy. Hugh McCulloch; cx-P. M.-Gen. Horatio King; the F.ev. Father P. S. Cooney, of Notre Dame university, Ind., who was chaplain of Col. Matthews' regiment in the war; 1. II. Warder, Prof. Alexander Graham Bell, Mr. Carter, the Hawaiian minister; Col. John Hay, Admiral Calhoun. President Welling, of the Columbia university, and the Rev. Dr. Wynkoop. The services, which were conducted by the Rev. T. S. Hamlin of the church of the covenant, pastor of the deceased, and the J!f v. Dr. Leonard, rector of St. John's episcopal church, were brief. Dr. Hamlin began with a short invocation and closed with the Lord's prayer, in which many persons present joined. The Schubert male quartet rendered "Jerusalem, the tiolden." Justice Matthews' favorite hymn. Dr. Leonard read Paul's assertion and description of the resurrection, in the fifteenth chapter of the first epistle to the Corinthians, beginning at the twentieth verse. Then the quartet saug "Abide With Me," and Dr. Hamlin made a closing prayer. The remains were taken to the Baltimore fc Ohio station, and the journey to Glendale, O., where the interment in Spring Grove will occur, began. The party that accompanied the remain was composed of the following persons: Mr. MatthewH, Mortimer Matthews, Miss Matthews, Miss Evtl.. Matthew Mr. C. R Matthews, Henry C. and Mrs. Webb. Prof. Moffat of the chair of church hipt"ry in the Princeton college, and Dr. lleury Monat, his son, Justices I-amar, Blalch ford, G ray and Hsrlan; Reporter J. Bancroft Davis. Marshal J. M. Wrisht, Assistant Marshal W. II. Keardon and W. U. Spear, undertaker. Rapidly growing Worse. Washington, March '2' The case of exRepresentative Peter Paul Mahoney of Brooklyn has taken a decided change for the worse, and it is feared he cannot survive much lougcr. There has been a recurrence of the heart troubles and the bae of the brain has also been affected. INDIANA COAL DISTRICT. The Situation Discouraging Denunciation ot the Failure of the Screen Bill. Brazil, March 23. Special. The miners' raass-nieeting held at this place to-day was largely attended but the situation was thoroughly discussed by those presenL The immediate purpose of the meeting was to consider the 6'tuation at what is known as the Jumbo mine, north of Knightsville. There the miners are at work 10 cents under the district prices. The meeting to-day appointed a committee to wait upon tiietn to induce them to come out and maintain the joint agreement which holds until May 1. The failure of the screen bill to become a law was considered and the parties responsible for its failure were roundly de-nouM-ed. Themetting adjourned until next Tuesday, when they meet again to hear the report of the committee above referred to. The miners' outlook is very discouraging at this time, there being only about one and two days work per week, notwithstanding the fact that several hundred miners have gone from here to other localities. HAD A TRAGIC SEQUEL. Another KenturUy Fu4 Cnlminntes In a Poii hie Marder. PlNF.vu.LE, Ky., Mareh 2 The sequel to the arrest of Geu. Sowders by Jell Kin?, Alvis Turner and others, and the subsequent arrest and conveance of Harvey Iiureuer and John Cadle to the Tazwcll (Tenn.) jail, and the arrest of John Cook Turner by Sowders' friends on Friday and Saturday, was enacted this morning two miles from town on the Cumberland Gap road. Alvis Turner and Jeff King were going toward the gap and James Ilurch was coming to town. The meeting was celebrated by Alvis Turner firing at liurch, the ball striking Burch's gun. P.urch returned the fire promptly, killing Alvis Turner, and then King fired on Burch, killing him and beating a hasty retreat up Clear creek. The double tragedy was witnessed by two men at work in a field near by. Ihey Broke the Bank. Wii.kesbarre, Pa., March2L John Morris of this city refused to put the savings of a lifetime, $1,-5, in a bank, as he thought it would not be safe, and he had his wife to sew the money up in her petticoat. On Saturday night three masked men entered his wife's bedroom, gagged her, stole the petticoat from tinder her pillow and then escaped. Morris was not at nome at the time the robbery was committed, having been invited out to a neighbor's. It is now thought this was a conspiracy. William Standish, a neighbor, has been arrested. The wife identified him as one of the men in her bedroom. Tramps Captor m Train. Pitts BURtr, March 2L A large party of tramps boarded a freight train on the Pittsburg & I.ake Erie railway, near Alliquippi, Pa., last night and for five hours held the train, refusing to allow the crew to move the train unless permitted to ride on it A telegram was sent to Pittsburg for assistance and a special train, with officers, was sent to the rescue. Twelve tramps were arretted, but a large number of others escaped. Those arrested were sent to the work-house to-day. An Old Man White-Capped. Kiss5 Citt, Marrh 25. John Corlew, aed sixtyfour years, wu seized by a mob of a doz o or more men as he was e nteriug his home, near Lee's Summit, late Wednesday night, and clubbed almost to desto. Hi ailanU then trmm Mm twpntr-four hoars to lese thn country. His alleged offen was imirper relations with to jouug girls. He U now In ted at Iadeindenre, nd bis too, who is a prominent eitiiu of this county, protniwt a hot reception to tbe White Csps If tbry attempt to repeat their

THE REAL FACTS

Regarding the Crown Prince's Tragic Death Tbe New Crown Prince. Detroit, Mich., March 25. Mr. Maurice Hardtmuth of Vienna, a member of the Vienna and London firm of F. Hardtmuth t Co., and who is now traveling in this country in the interest of his firm, was interviewed by a reporter to-nighL In answer to a question as to the feeling in Austria over the tragic death of the crown prince, he said: "It is regarded as a most unhappy and deplorable event A friend of mine gave me the true facts in the case. He was with the crown prince on his hunting expeditions and was, to a large extent, his confidant. Tbo crown prince was madly in love with a beautiful and pare young girl and desired to obtain a divorce from his wife for the purpose of marrying her. This the emperor would not listen to and mach trouble re suited between him and the heir to the throne. Then the latter wrote directly to the pope, appealing for his intercession, but that diguitsry returned the letter to the emperor. The next scheme on the part of the crown prince was a marriase of the left hand only of course an unholy bond of anion. This waa also defeated by the emperor, after which the young people determined to die together." "How is the new crown price regarded?" "Most unfavorably. He will never be emperor. The people will see that he does not Austria is now one of the happiest countries on earth, but his accession to the throne would be fatal to it. He is a very bad man. For instance, a few months ago, when intoxicated, and riding with a party of friends, he met a funeral cortege on its way to the cemetery. He halted the procession, forced the mourners to deposit the cofiin upon the ground, and then he and his friends amused themselves for some time by jumping their horses over it as it lay upon its bier. On another occasion he took a party of his roystering companions home with him late at night and insisted upon conducting the entire party to his wife's bedchamber. An old and faithful servant barred their passage, but the new crown prince shot him down in cold blood and led his companions over his dead body and into the room. He ia not in the direct family line of succession to the throne, aud the people of Austria will not submit to the indignity of be ing ruled over byuch a demon." A BREAK FOR LIBERTY. Boys In the Cincinnati Boas ef Berage Make m Bold Attempt to Escape. ClNTLVXATI, March 2L This morning about 11 o'clock thirty-five out of 160 boys at the house of refuge made a break for liberty. They were from ten to fifteen years old and were under four leaders, the chief of whom was a negro boy. These boys, when it came time for them to retire to their rooms preparatory for dinner, instead of doing so marched in a body, armed with base ball bats, to the front entrance, where they found four guards stationed. They demanded free passage, but were driven back. Then they used bats and rocks, breaking in windows and doing damage to the extent of not above $25. They were so noisy that their whooping and shouting excited and alarmed people in the streets outside the walls and caused widely exaggerated rumors to spread which, reaching the ears of the police, caused them to voluntarily cend two pat rol wagons with fifteen officers to the bcene. In less than three-fourths of au hour from the outbreak the four ring-leaders were locked up in their rooms and everything wns quiet. All exeept the four conspirators appeared at the dinner table at noon and at chapel exercises in the afternoon as usual. The ring-leaders were participants in a similar outbreak two years ago. Suj.t. Oliver says no oue was even hurt and that there is perfect order to-night. HOVEY DENOUNCED. The nibernians Intimate That the Governor Prevaricated. The Irish have publicly condemned Gov. Hovey for the slight which he administered to them on St. Patrick's day. The county board of the A. II. held a meeting yesterday at Parnell hall, when the invitation committee of St, Patrick's day made a re)ort stating that the governor was in due form invited to preside at the meeting; that he accepted the invitation and that be failed to put in an appearance at the hall. The committee concluded: "We, your committee, hold lhat the verbal excuse he offered at tbe last moment to a member of the order and his ubüequent excuses through the press are very unsatisfactory to us." The committee's report met the hearty approbation of all and Hovey was roundly denounced. The bills for expenses for the celebration were allowed and ordered paid. A generous voting of thanks was then indulged in. The Metropolitan police, the Kornau Knights of SL George and the 1'ice guards were thanked for turning out in the parade. All the speakers received an individua 1 vote of thanks. J. A. Ileardon was thanked for decorating the hall and the daily press was thanked for "kind notices of the celebration." DIED WITH HER BOOTS ON. Boaann McC'ormick, an Eccentric Character of IVincbeftter, Vs., Found Iead. Wis chest KU, Va., March 2.". Rosanna McCormiek, aged sixty-five, an eccentric character who has resided by herself near Jordous, White Sulphur Springs, this county, for many years, and who was well known by thousands of people from the North and South who have been patrons of these springs, was found dead at home yesterday, lyin on rheep-skins. She had a number of feather-beds, but never lept on them. She always wore lonif, heavy boots with nictols in them for protection, rarely ever taking them oil and died in her boots. At the coroner's intjiiest a verdict of "died of pneumonia" was rendered. She was a great reader, very intelligent, a fine historian, aud owner of two farms, a number of cattle and sheep, which she amassed by her industrv. She told the fortunes of many a fair maiden and old-time lady in the United States. She was a great pede.ftrian, always walking to the city clad in the roughest material, accompanied by her faithful dog and carrying a long sta!f. A number of handome uncut silk dress patterns were found among her effects. She never took medicine and would not have a physician in her last illness. ROBBED HER EMPLOYERS! A Young Lady In Springfield, O., Arrested For Tu eft. Spp.lNf.FlKl.n, O., March 23. Special. Miss Lena Wagner, a pretty dry goods clerk in Ilolert Willis fc Co.'s establishment, was arrested here to-night, charged with stealing from her employers. She has been employed about two years by the firm, and at one time moved in the best society. The alleged peculations amount to about $400. Nearly all the goods stolen were found in her mother's house, and her mother ttas arretted for receiving stolen property. Hoth mother and daughter have been releaed on bond. The Klection Rascals. Lvantvllle Courier. Taking Judge Woods' action in Dudley's case as a sample of his ideas of justice, no one need expect that the men who have been indicted for frauds on the election will be puninhed unless they are democrats. Some of them are, we understand, and if they are guilty, they should be punished. But so should the republicans be punished if they are guilty. Laws that punish democrats are intended to punish republicans too, whatever Judge Woods may think to the contrary. The trials that will soon take place will be watched with eager interest by the whole country, and public sentiment will demand that democrats shall be treated as republican are treated. If Judge Woods is determined that no republicans shall be punished, then no democrats must be. The idea that there shall be one law for republicans and another for democrats is simply insuperable, and the feeling in Indiana has reached a stage where such discriminations will not be meekly borne hereafter. Will lie a Tammany Itrave. New Yofk, March 20. Ex-President Ororer Cleveland has beea elected a member of Taintoaay Lall and will "ride the goat" at the first meeting ia April. Mr. Cleveland will he supported on the oeraiIod ol bis initiation by bis ex-secretary of state, Thomas F. Payard, and x-eecretary of the navy, Whitney, both old nieralrsof the Columbian order; and at th me meeting bin ex-aecretary of the interior, William Yilaf, will be wade I Taoimior bun.

IT WAS A RUNAWAY MATCH

A HASTY WEDDING AT MILWAUKEE. Mist Panllne, Daughter of Chief Justice Fuller, Klopee With a Well-Known Chicago Young Man Married by a Justice of the Teace. Milwaukee, Wis., March 20. Miss Tauline Fuller, the fifth daughter of Chief Justice Fuller, was married here last night at the Kirby house, by a justice of the peace. Tbe groom was J. Matt Aubery, jr., of Chicago, and it was a runaway match. When the :.'0 train arrived last evening a petite woman was helped off the steps of the parlor car by a well-knit young man with a smooth face. The lady was closely veiled, and was escorted to a carriage by her companion, and they were driven at once to the Kirby house, where they registered. No room was assigned to them, and the lady and her companion f pent the early evening in the hotel parlors. About 9 o'clock the young man came down stairs aud informed the clerk that he wanted a justice of the peace. Inside of fifteen minutes Justice Gregory arrived. There was a hurried consultation, and then the young man brought the blushing young lady forward. The ceremony was a brief one, and the justice, who is a very prosaic old gentleman, put on no extra frills. lie did not know that the bride was the daughter of the chief justice of the United States, and neither did any of those who were present, outsido of the con trading parties. ÄVheu the ceremony was concluded, the old justice called for witnesses, and two young men were captured in the billiard-room, and ran to aftix their signatures to the necessary document. The knot was legally and firmly spliced. Mrs. Aubery, nee Fauline Fuller, is nineteen years of age, highly educated and a remarkably handsome woman. J. Matt Aubery, jr., is twenty-three years of age. lie is the son of the general western agent of the Merchants' Dispatch fast freight lme. J. M. Aubery, sr., has been a resident of Chicago since 1876, when he left Milwaukee. He is well known here, and Congressman Jsaac Vanschaick is one of his most intimate friends. Young Aubery is employed in his father's office in Chicago. He is a handsome young fellow. As near as can be learned, the acquaintance of the bride and groom began about three Lears ago. Justice Fuller, who was then plain awyer Fuller, lived with his eight daughters on Lake-ave., only a short distance from the home of young Aubery. The young people first met at a party given in the neighborhood. An attachment sprang up between them, and, when it became apparent, it was opposed by the Fullers. Miss Pauline declared, however, that she would marry whom fhe pleased, and her father recognized her rijrht to do as she pleased. Mrs. Fuller continued to oppose the match. About this time Lawyer Fuller was named as chief justice of the United States. Mrs. Fuller packed up and carried Miss Pauline away to Washington with the otherMisses Fuller. About the first of last January Miss Pauline came to Chicago and has since remained in that city visiting friends of the family. The story of the elopement of the young pair id an interesting one and demonstrates that young Aubery has cut his eye-teeth. To begin, he hired two detectives to shadow him and his atlianced until they left Chicago. His object was to learn if any one was following them and to prevent the young lady from being rescued. It was early in the afternoon when he met Miss Fuller, and a Chicago candy Moro was the trysting place. They boarded a Milwaukee & St. Paul train at the union depot at 0:''0 o'clock and came direct to this citv. The correspondent called on Justice Oregory early this morning and greatly astonished that gentleman by informing him that he had married a daughter of the chief justice of the United States. On looking at the marriage certificate, however, he was more surprised that the fact had not struck him before, for there before his eves were the full names of the chief justice and his wife, as well as these of the groom's father aud mother. Young Aubery formerly lived in Milwaukee and has many frieuds here, who, to-day, called to extend congratulations, and before noon he had received at least thirty telegrams from friends in Chicago and elsewhere. Mrs. Aubery remained quietly in the hotel all day. "No, I Lave not heard from Washington yet," he said to-niuht. "In fact, there has hardly been time. Oh, I think the matter will be settled all right, for I think my wife's lather will look at it in a sensible way. He in a sensible man, very." "How long do you expect to remain in Milwaukee?" "A couple of days at least. I had engaged no house before we came away, and I really don't know where we i-hall live, further than that it will be in Chicago. I have a great many friends in Milwaukee, as I lived here for a long time, but my wife has no Milwaukee acquaintances." Mr. Aubery interrupted his chat with a gleeful laugh, and referring to the story that he had employed a Piukerton detective to assist in the escape of himself and his bride from Chicogo, said: "I had protection, but it was not furnished by Pinkerton's men. You see, I knew well enough that we were both old enough not to require anybody's consent to our marriage, but I was closely watched and took every precaution. You know that when a detective wants to hold a man, he can easily trump up something that will delay him long enough to spoil all his plans." Mr. Aubery, armed with a big cane, went out to see some of bis acquaintances, and waa pointed out to an admiring crowd of loungers about tha hotel corridors as the "mau who ran awav with the chief justice's daughter." Frank Cole, the clerk of the hotel, said: "I have assisted in marrying a number of couples, many of them very fashionable people, since I have been in the hotel business, but this one beats them all. Yes, sir-ec, this is tbe corker." Mr. Cole could not have looked happier had he been the bridegroom himself. Mrs. Aubery preferred not to be interviewed, but a glimpse was caught of her as she passed along the corridor to her room. She is precisely five feet five inches in bight, and has a great abundance of chestnut brown hair, which, curling around her face and neck, makes a very pretty frame for a very pretty face. Her eyes are pray and thoughtful and her nose decidedly aquiliue. Her lips are inclined to be full and the general character expressed by her face is of resolute firmness which would countenancebut little opposition to any plan that she made up her mind to. Her figure is excellent, her hands and feet albeit the is from Chicago are small, and her tailor-made traveling suit unexceptionable in fit and style. An amusing feature of the interview with Mr. Aubery was the fact that be almost invariably spoke of his wife as "Miss Fuller," and would then look a little confused at not having become quite accustomed to his new relation to her and correct himself by 6aying "Mrs. Aubery." The Home Market Km ad. Chicago Globe. During twenty-seven years the farmers have been taxed to build up a "home market" for their productions. The market thus built up by their enforced contributions to monopoly lords has taken the prodigious amount of 5 per cent of the products of the American farms. The farmers themselves have consumed 44 per cenL of their own products and the foreigners have consumed 45 per cenL That is, after submitting a quarter of a century to taxation to get a "home market," the foreign market is worth to the farmer nine times as much as the home market Still, with persistent intellectual immobility, the farmer continues to sutler himself to be humbugged with the costly deluion that he must pay tar.s to build up a home market! Slandering a Ueiuocrat. A subscriber writes from Fowler asking The Sentinel to deny the statement w hich is being circulated by republicans that Kobert Bryaut, an old soldier of that vicinity, committed a brutal assanlt upon one Obadiah Thomas when the latter was drunk. It is admitted that Bryant thrashed Thomas, but it was under great provocation aud the latter was entirely sober. Bryant was a g;od soldier and is a good democrat During the late campaign republicans wrote him that if he did not vote for Harrison his pension would be cut ofi', and Bryant has these letters in his possession. Ills Crushed. Colcmbcs, March 22. Thursday night William Monroe, a well-known engineer late of the JM M. A I. railroad, made a misstep and fell from the train in the yard here and had one leg mangled at the ankle.

MISCELLANEOUS ITEMS.

The Kews ot the Week Told la Brief Paragraphs. Katural gas has been found near Clinton, 111. Natural gaa has been discovered at Aitken, Minn. A cable will be laid between Bermuda and Halifax. Associate Justice Matthews died at Washington Friday. Navigation between Detroit and Cleveland has opened. Floods have done enormous damage in Prussian Silesia. The president has signed the Oklahoma proclamation. The solicitor for the Farnellitcs has secured Piggott's diary. Louis Vitt of Cincinnati has been missing since March '20. Fli Gross was killed by a falling tree near Tiflin, O., Friday. De Motte & Durant, stock broken, New York, have failed. John Kyle, a well-known Cincinnati insurance man, is dead. The strike of the New York feather-workers has proven a failure. Mary Anderson's English company has sailed for Liverpool. The Hon. John Scott died at Pittsburg. Pa., Sunday of pneumonia. An earthquake of considerable strength was felt at Smyrna, Thursday. A compromise of the weavers' strike at Fall Iliver, Mass., is looked for. A bill taxing sleeping and dining cars has passed the Nebraska legislature. At Julien Station, Ky., Thursday, Robert Tyler was shot by Grant Hawkins and fatally wounded. The friends of Gen. W. H. Gibson are making eilbrts to secure his nomination for governor of Ohio. John Sarsfield has been sentenced to five years in the New Hampshire state prison for wife murder. Capt W. A. McCov, a prominent citizen of Priadelphia, XV. Ya., has been arrested for pendon swindling. Herbert Bismarck has started for London, it is said, to complete negotiations for an AngloUermau alliance. Wash Baker of Scioto county, Ohio, drew $18 in pension money and mysteriously disappeared last week. Pan Ward, aged sixteen, 6hot and instantly killed Ed Burke, aged fifteen, at Birmingham, Ala., last Friday. The I.ev. Ezekiel G. Robinson has resigned the presidency of the Brown university at Providence, It I. Vicar General Routhier of Quebec forbids his parishioners to waltz and the ladies to wear decollete dresses. The president has sent to the senate the nomination of Corporal Tanner to be commissioner of pensions. Princebs Irene, wife of Prince Henry of Prussia, brother of the emperor, has been delivered of a son. 'The British commons debated Irish matters Thursday on a motion to reduce Balfour's salary, w hich was lost. It is stated that Judge Gresham of Indiana will be appointed to succeed Justice Matthews on the supreme bench. The Norwegian bark Orvar Odd, Capt. Torkelsen, from Brunswick for Buenos Ay res, has been abandoned at sea. John W. Moore, formerly a publisher and writer on the subject ot" music, died at Manchester, X. IL, Sunday. Dr. Osiah Stovel of Atlanta, Ga.. aged eighty-two, married a j-oung lady twenty-lwo years of age last Friday. Fd Iliirgs, colored, was shot and killed Saturday near Louisville, Ky., while in the act of robbing a money drawer. Francis S. Brady, an old lake captain, was struck by a locomotive at Cleveland, O., Saturday, and instantly killed. The body of William Ryan was found in a lake near Beavertown, O., Friday. He had been missing for a month. Elsie James, a full-blooded Chickasaw squaw, has been convicted in Arkansas of murdering a white man named Jones. Arrangements have been completed for the construction of a new railroad between Pittsburg and Wheeling, W. Va. The Hon. John Scott president and one of the receivers of the Allegheny Valley railroad, died at Pittsburg Sunday. The president has issued a proclamation warning all persons against violating the law regulating the seal fisheries. Whitelaw Reid and Fred Grant as ministers to France and Austria, respectively, were confirmed by the senate Saturday. Forty cases of typhoid fever are reported in Luzerneborough, Pa. Physicians say a second Plymouth epidemic is threatened. The Northern Pacifio railroad has secured control of the Wisconsin Central railroad, and, through it, an entrance to Chicago. The copper crisis was diäcussed in the French deputies Thursday. The government will investigate to locate the responsibility. It is said that the Northern Pacific railroad has secured control of the Wisconsin Central and through it an entrance to Chicago. Fred Nelson, a traveling salesman for Cheney Bros, of Chicago, committed suicide at Moline, 111., Tuesday by cutting his throat. Charles Watson is hiding in a dense wood near Santa Fe, Ind., to avoid arrest on the charge of outraging a thirteen-year-old girl. The great scheme of Henry Villard, w hereby all the Edison electric companies were to be consolidated, is reported to have collapsed. Daniel S. Lamont, ex-sccretary of ex-President Cleveland, has been elected president of one of the New York street railway companies. Peter and William Layman, prominent farmers of Stark county, Indiana, have been arrested for complicity in freight car robberies. A West Virginia constable, who shot and killed a man named Moore in an attempt to arrest him, has been convicted of nianalaughter. The four-year-old daughter of Joseph Mes" eher of Dayton, .)., w ho was run over by an electric car Saturday night, died of her injuries Sunday. George R. Carlton, bookkeeper for Smith Bros, k Co., Seattle, W. T., is an embezzler to the amount of $-0,000. He was formerly of Chicago. Several houses and a mile and a half of railroad track at Dayton, Tenn., were swept away by high water Tuesday night. One man was drowned. A (ierman baron's son. who ran away from his native country in 1SS7 to escape military service, died in the poor-house at Cleveland, O., last week. F. J. Fitch, a graduate of the college of metaphysics of Chicago, ha been refused a license Et Indianapolis because he wants to practice healing by faith. Andrew Stroup, while burning brush near Atwood, Ind., last Friday, dropped dead from apoplexy aud fell into the fire. Ilia body was burned to a crisp. Judge Bates of the superior court of Cincinnati has decided that the law imposing a fine on restaurants for refusing to feed colored people is unconstitutional. Mrs. Russell, a lady seventy-nine years of aee. and two girls named Trueheart were burned to death Thursday lit a house near Baldwinsville, Mass. Put Trainer, a Cincinnati carpenter, went home under the inHuence of liquor Thursday night and after beating his wife broke her jaw with a heated poker. A bill was passed by the Michigan house pro hibiting the sale of liquor in any place of amusement or any adjacent room by a rote of sixty-two to thirteen. A blue book on Samoan aflairs has been issued by the English government It shows that Eneland has been throughout in cordial accord with America. A bill introduced in the house of lords, Thursday, by Lord Carnarvon to expel from the house any peer guilty of discreditable acts, was defeated, 73 to 14. Sir Thomas Gladstone, barrister, is dead. Sir Thomas, who was the only surviving brother of the IU. Hon. William L. Gladstone, was born July 104. Milwaukee brewers have decided to be responsible for no more saloon-keepers' licenses, and a diminution of the number of saloons is expected to be the result Aaron York, living near Peru, Ind., whose wife and daughter were killed by the explosion of dynamite which he had placed on the stove to dry, has lost his reason. The thirteenth annual commencement of Ohio college was held Thursday at Cincinnati. The degree of doctor of medicine was conferred upon eleven persons. John Fpssett of Hillsboro, Ind., becoming iealous of his wife, last Friday dragged her into the yard and shot ter four times, one of the bullets passing through her body. He is

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in jail at Covington, while his wife lingers in a critical condition. The property of W. A. Thomas of Virginia, who did intestate, is worth a quarter of a million dollars, and is claimed by his only child, a daughter by a colored woman Edward Lowric and E. I Addison cnarreled near New Albany, Ind., Friday, over the ownership ot seme property, and the latter was shot and killed by the former. Timothy and Peter Barrett, who killed a street car driver for the purpose of seenriner his cash-bos, were hangf d on the same seaüold at Minneapolis, Minn., Friday. At Findlay, O., Saturday night, a raid was made on the gambling den. Over fifty men and $3,000 worth of material were captured. The fines amounted to over jJtiO. The congregation of 8t. Francis de Sales, catholic church at Toledo, ., is excited over the removal of their pastor, the Key. Dr. Quigley, by Bishop Gihnour of Cleveland. Figures presented to the Xew York legislature show that the telephone company of New York has made in live years on a cash investment of $(500,000 a net profit of $2,813,4 1. Further rioting occurred in Pesth, Hungary, Thursday; 100 arrests were made. The emperor has authorized Premier Tisza to take decisive measures to suppress further disturbances. It is reported that the New Jersey steel and iron works at Trenton, of which ex-Mayor Hewitt and Edward Cooper are proprietors, will shortly be removed to Chattanooga, Tenn. Tunis Labbe, in jail at Paterson, N.J., for wife murder, has confessed. He claims that his wife wa unfaithful, and says that he toot her life while laboring under a fit of jealousy. William Goins, one of 'the Lima (O.) election rioters, has been granted a new trial on a charge of murder in the second degree, because the jury agreed to arrive at a verdict by flipping a coin. Theophile Schoss, aged twelve, and his brother, Theodore, aged eighteen, have been arrested at Detroit on a charge of placing obstructions on the track of the Michigan Central railroad. "William Sweet ot Troy, N. Y., has deserted his wife, Sarah E., afterpawning all the furniture and clothing in her absence, and eloped with Mrs. Sarah Kratzer, the mother of eeven children. The circuit court of Zanesrille, O., has decided, in the case of Wheeler against the city, that property not benefited by a public water-works cannot be tased for water-works purposes. Near Irvington, N. J., Joseph Salzman, a farm hand, brutally assaulted and fatally injured Mrs. Ferdinand Mutter, the wife of his employer. Tho latter went crazy when he found it out. Joseph Chamberlain's orjran announces that the tones have agreed with the unionists to bring forward an Irish land measure in 1:X, followed by a scheme of local government reform in 1801. Mr. W. II. Smith, first lord of the English treasury and the government leader in the house of common, is sufierine from insomnia, and will probably be compelled to abstain from othcial work. Emin Tasha defeated 6,000 Mahdists in July, killing most of them, and rapturing their steamers and ammunition. Chiet Senonssi has also occupied Darfour and Kordofan, expelling the dervishes. At Casky, Ky., in a fight between a white section hand named Spy, and a colored section hand named "Wart'ell, the former's skull was crushed and his head terribly bruised by stones thrown by Warf ell. In the house of commons a motion to reduce Atty.-Gen. Webster's salary was defeated '2ti to "JOtJ. In the debate Harcourt mercilessly scored the attorney-general for his conduct in the Parnellite case. The car and paint hhops of the Central railroad of New Jersey at Ashley, Pa., burned Wednesday. The workmen loft all their tools valued at $10,000. Iss on buildings, rollingstock and material. $100,000. In a prize fight between Jack Burtress of New ork, and Tom McDonald of Elkhart, Ind., near South Beud, Ind., Sunday morning, McDonald was knocked out in the eighth round, his jaw being broken. Eastern capitalists have just bought 140,000 acres of mineral and timber lands in Cumberland and Morgan counties. Tennessee. The price paid was ?l,o00,000. The property is to be developed in the near future. The New York state brewers' and malsters' association met yesterday and adopted a resolution that they would buy hops grown only in that state, and would co-operate with the hop growers in asking congress to tax foreign hops. Jefferson Davis has written a letter denying the report published iu the Philadelphia Prttbyterian that the leaders of the late confederacy proposed, among other novelties, to establish a church in connection with the state. Fred Münchrath, jr., under sentence of four years in the penitentiary for complicity in tho murder of the llev. Dr. Haddock, but out on bail, pending an appeal to the supreme court, was elected street commissioner by the Sioux City city council. Socialists succeeded in distributing pamphlets throughout tbe Hamburg district before the police became aware of their action. The police have since been making domiciliary visits, arresting all in whose houses seditious documents were discovered. In the house of commons Tuesday, Sir William Veruon Harcourt challenged the conduct of the government in placing Irish officials, paid by the public, at the service of the Tinws Children Cryfor,

212 OIlZG-XNAZi

VeSeab,e and Perfectly Harmless. in connection with that paper's charges against the Irish members of the house. Simon Jenning, a member of the Connecticut legislature, president of the Jennings bit and auger works at Deep River, one of th larcost manufacturers of the state, and whoM fortune amounts to fVO.OOO, was taken to a private insane asylum Thursday. Ex-Gov. Georsre Peabody Wefmore, whi seems the favorite in the i ace for the chair vacated by Senator Chace, is the husband of the handsome Mrs Wetmore who is said t have declined at Hamhure last summer to b presented to the prince of Wales. Notwithstanding assertions that Lima oil could not he refined, the Standard company contemplates enlarging the Solar refinery at Lima, O., which at present has a capacity of 20,XX barrels per day, and has been running day and night ever since it was built. The Cincinnati express, west-bound, on th B. k O., was caught by fifteen or twenty tons of earth and rook just as it entered West Alexander tunnel late last nitrht. The whole train was thrown from the track, but, almost miraculously, no one was killed or even seriously injured. It is believed that Gladstone will shortly present to h's followers anew scheme for home rule for Ireland. The unionists are reported as much alarmed at their position, and desirous of doing something for Ireland in the way of land purchase to strengthen their position, if possible. Antonio Bevinino, who assisted "F.ed Nose Mike" in the murder of Paymaster MeClure, rear Wilkesharre, Ta., has been arrested in Italy. Yillalla, the other mnrderer, has been in jail for some time. Both will be brought to Wilkesharre for trial, and if convicted hanged with Mike. The mission of Herbert Bismarck to London is to arrange for the visit of Emperor William to Queen Victoria this summer. He will also confer with the foreien minister regarding colonial policy, with the view of an agreement which will prevent conflict of English and German interests. In the house of commons Tuesday the P.t. Hon. Sir James Ferguson, parliamentary secretary for the foreign office, announced thst certain serious questions between England and the sultan of Morocco had not been settled, and that a portion of the British chaunel squadron had consequently gone to Tangier. During the debate in the lower house of th Hungarian diet Tuesday, a man in the vestibule, supposed to be a lawyer, insulted Herr Kohonczy, a liberal deputy. The latter fired a revolver at the man, hitting him in the thigh. The w ound is not serious. The shooting caused great excitement among the students, who had assembled in large numbers outside, but they dispersed quietly. AVhen Herr Von Tisza arrived at the lower house of the Hungarian diet, Wednesday morning, the large crowd that had gathered outid the building groaned and hissed at the prime minister, shouting "Getont,'' "resign.' An altercation took place in the house between Herr Polonyi and Herr Kroitzik. The quarrel will probably lead to a duel. The house held a secret fitting to discuss the matter. The rumors that the V. S. S. Yantic had been ordered to get ready to go to Hayti to relieve the Galena, which was at Cape Haytien at last accounts, are denied. The officers of the vessel fear that if tb Yanti should be sent to Hayti yellow fever would again break out on the vessel, and expose the lives of the officers and crew to the dangers of that disease, notwithstanding that 6he was thoroughly cleansed and fumigated since she returned from Hayti. The superior court Mond.iy morning handed in two opinions in the cases testing the constitutionality of the public works and police and fire board acts for this city. The majority opinion, written by Judge Howe, Judg Walker concurring, maintains that the bills ar unconstitutional. Judare Taylor dissents. II finds the bills sound and valid. However, th supreme court's opinion will be the final test. The cases by common consent go at once to tha. tribunal. At the -lose of the week the leading branches1 of trade show no decided change for the better, cither in tone or in the volume of busines transacted. Breadstuffs continue to show a downward tendency, but provisions are better sustained. Groceries are more active, and prices on all leading articles show a strong appreciation. Dairy products remain easy. The money market shows but little variation, under liberal supply of idle money, and but little improvement in the demand trom borrowers. The New York banks have lost over l,20,0iO in reserve during the week. The Ilev. Sam Small seems destined to create a big disturbance in Georgia politics yet Indications now point to his candidacy for congress in the Atlanta dtrict, and if he goe into the race he will make things lively. Of the eleven counties in this district nine are prohibition counties, and in all of them Small ia very strong. He is probably the best political organizer and canvasser in the district, and ia the Hammond-Arnold race, when Arnold ought to have been declared elected. Small was Arnold's right-hand man. Judge Stewart, who now represents tbe district, lives ia Griffin. Should s;mall, an Atlanta man, mak the light against Stewart, the Atlanta feeling would alone be enough to carry Small through. Sam has begun petting on the inside with th prohibitionists of the district by olfering prize in each county for the best prohibition essay by boys. ' Mr. J. A. Price, deputy inspector, Stat tobacco warehouse No. 5, Baltimore, Md., cordially recommend Salvation Oil for neuralgia. Price, 25 cents. Pitcher's Castorla.