Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 37, Number 43, Jasper, Dubois County, 5 July 1895 — Page 2
flEEK
EKLY COURIER.
C. JDOjYSCIS, rubliwher.
fel'ER.
INDIANA.
K dispatch from St. Petersburg,
24tl. r.titlun -wv.il flint f'liimi li-nl r.
ied to ratify the Russian loan.
i JULY 1895.
JSrajMon,
ii i:i nn l tu w. invni vpv i n v u u
Kussia in connection with the Siberian railway.
3 7
8
It is the intention of the Gorman
emperor, iu me spring, 10 H'uu u squadron to visit the ports of the nations which were represented in the naval display at Kiel.
Commencement exercises took place
at Clnllocco Indian schools, in the
Cherokee strip, on the 26th, eight graduates, representing six different
Indian tribes, acquitting themselves with credit.
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CDRJtEXT TOPICS. THE NEWS IN BRIEF.
PERSONAL AND GENERAL,
The United States eonsul at Poo-
Chow, China, reports the appearance of the Hong-Kong plague at that place. 3Ie says it is already established as an
epidemic, but that so far. it is confined to the city proper. The gold reserve reached $107.4 7,-
es t. . . ... . 1. mi... . . : i .. . l i i
CO.I Uli IIIU -Ulli. ASIC MljlUIUiVII Kiii
payments into the treasury by the
Be1 s'": -Morgan rndicate under the
agreement of February S last have
been fully carried out.
Coi- A. St. Claik Denver, a brother of Gen. Denver, founder of Colurado'1 capital city, died in Washington c'ty on the VCtli. He was a California 4ei
and served in the .state senate. Unix Carplxtei:, an employe of the Armour Packing Co. at Atlanta. (5a., bw gone insane as areMilt of being exposed to the extremes of tent crat lire Wtwecn that of ..utdoors and that in the eotd-stontge room. Miss Remie Londonderry, of Boston, the round-the-world bicyclist, arrived at El Paso, Tex., on the 26th, from the west in good health and spirits. She will remain there until July 15, then ride north to Denver, en route home. Miss Londonderry says she has declined over 150 offers of marriage, and has $1,500 saved up. Ramon O. Williams United States consul at Havana, will return to his post direct from New York, without
going again to a-shingtou. It is said at the state department that there has never been any question a to Mr. Williams' return after the expiration of his leave. Two more alleged members of the firebug gang, whoe operations have involved the loss of hundreds of thousands of dollars and put in peril many
in .Sew York oitv
on the 20th. They are Max Gluckman.
the gang, and
INDIANA STATE NEWS.
A dispatch from Shanghai, on the
JGth, said the high officials in that city
are conntientiv expecting tnat war
will ensue between Russia and Japan
over the administration of affairs in
Corea within three months.
Is he United States land court at
Santa Fe. N. M., the Peralta claim for
Mr.OOÖ "MXt acres in Arizona was, on the
nrnn!inipf1 n frrtmt nn,! T-.,L,.-t..l
J M W .. ...... ........ .
t t i . i i nr'j i r'i.t.iri rt r Mil i i .
n t rn. :mmnifiiA r n nnnri nmiiii an.
rest
The figures of the passport bureau of
the sate department show that more peop.e will leave the United States for Europe this summer than ever before.
except during the Paris exposition of 13e9 an l :he exceptionally prosperous year of
Missions at the Cliicago World's fair have Ik u prepared at last, and the distribution will begin in a few days from
the Rta'i department, through Assist ant ntary Rockhill. There are Hftye h i hem.
Silas Watson Ford, aged 4S years, an eminent geologist ami paleontolo
gist, died at Saratoga, N. Y., on the -5th. of general debility. On the 25th Priuce Emanuel Filiberto, duke of Aosta, n phew of King Humbert of Italy, was married at the church of St. Raphael. Kingston-on-Thames.
K.t l. i...: i n .i ... .
.... i4.v. uo, , runes neiene oi ur-, lives, were arreted
villi, M'tuiiu iiiiuguier oi "iiie countess '
r'' ' 4"UMMlTU1 UUf miKe m ur!the chief mechanic of
Worn, sv.i-,v.,r, ti,., ! Adolph Ilirehkopf.
man, kuown from ocean to ocean as a distinguished jockey, trainer and own-
er, and in late year a turf writer, died at his home in Lexington, Ky., on the 25th, at the age of 01. Some years ago he was injured in a runaway, and hud since been unable to leave the city, Gov. Matthews of Indiana has appointed lJenjamin Harrison, ex-president of the United States, a trustee for T..1 ! ! r .
i uruuc university lor a term oi six . , . . . . . . .:
years. Six other trustees were also I " . y njureU. while scv-
"i viv im iuinniii ami supposed
to be under the debris of the collapsed
I hk fifth meeting of the International Railway congress was opened iu London, on the SiJth, by the prince ol Wales, in a felicitlous speech. .;He paid Necial compliment to the American delegates Dritt:; a fire in a five-story building in Minneapolis, Minn., on the night of the -'Ttli, a number of firemen were caught and crushed under a falling wail. Six of these were taken out dead
Mks. M art ISkow.v, a juonogamian pens cner. diad, on the 16th, at her home " miles from Kno-xvillc, Tenn. She was the wido.v of Joe Drown, a so.d er ot..' nvV.ationary war, and v?a.. -m in .tj nt.r husband died fifth fie .ear-,.!,?..
named by tiie governor.
The London Time, on the 25th, published a dispatch from Tien-Tsin say
ing that alarming- rumors were bcinir
circulated there to the effect that the
Japanese were fortifying the Liao-
lung frontier.
The suit begun in New York a short
time ago by Mary Irene Hoyt against Hetty Green to recover $100,000 dam
ages lor slander has been compromised out of court by thft parties interested.
Dins were opened at the treasury de
partment, on the 2Cth, for the con
struction of two revenue marine cut
ters, one to be used on the great lakes
and one on the Atlantic coast, the cost of each being $175,000. Tor the lake
vessel the bid of the Globe iron works '
of Cleveland, 0.. at 5147.500, was the '
only one received. I P. Wat H.uiwn- was nominated for governor on the first ballot by the Democratic Mate convention oflCeu-'
tucky In Louisville on the 26th. lh
wall.
Sax Fisancisco was visited by a great conflagration, on the evening of the 27th, which destroyed property to the amount of $1,750,000, and rendered hundreds of families homeless. Oakland and Alameda each sent tire steamers, which materially aided in checking ami finally subduing the Harnes. Admiral Beardslee telegraphed to the navy department, on the 27th, from San Francisco announcing his re
turn to that city on board the flagship Philadelphia from Honolulu, where she
had been stationed since the latter
part of January. Ox the 2th Miss .Mary A. Dodge iGail Hamilton) was taken from the lUainc residence in Washington and sent to her home in Salem, Mass. The Coeopah mountains in Lower
California are again in a state of emotion. George Neal, a miner, recently returned from the Juarez placer d Is
is a pronounced advocate of free coin- ! trict rcPrl seeing a volcano in erupage, but will Imvo to make the race on ' "V" onTl,,u' M- , a sound money platform. r,IK ''v?g Express Co., of ChicaThe leading" Russian financiers are i P'"u:is granted incorporation paper said to be furiously amrrv at the nr. on lh' -"ln- 11 assume legal
tkm of Germany in sunnortinir En-' ownership of the Chicago Mail, the in-
iVfi IjIMuk. In the quarter-ses-
- A. I 111 -1 . I t I .
ii r in in t -i n n vin ruti r
COr ZiuIen Snondn. exminktr
lUMIIVtll Villas tO rCIII50 IO ' 1 v j UHtui JL mc
new nurcimscrs oi ihat nanr. ih nf
is Mr.
A fti RT-AKTIAL sitting at Przem-
s , Austrian ualaeia. convicted twnn-
six hnsvars for the murder of
quart" 'master and three nnnenm.
kSV.r" I officers. Ten of thi ?nnrit-
ieT -ere so i-.el iy lot. sentenced
to a . and ss. .t on the 24th. Th.
" V T. , 1 r- M'lll ri TH1 1,1 II..
err r
-;?ains Malr s f ue r
i t.
f a - e n !
1 !ait
irnlierof the Railway iis;es showing that of track laid in the
m J.nriary 1 to July ' ini:'s on 65 lines, n 51 lines for the in 23 of the 4Ü ' .-V no track has thus vr ar.
H
31
in
' -a
. s r t j
iv T. H atwaru. of Minneapolis, the condemned murderer of rociing, has formally applied Vmv York Life and Travellers'
Insurance Ca for the $10,000 carried by his victim. Actio taken hr the executors of ie of the murdered woman to assignment of the policies to 1 set aside.
I'm
vernment of Venezuela hav-
u it-std the government of the
. ti.ivu ii iu UJACUb tl tcww of Hploinatic relations bewer araensand Paris, the Ameri- " g eminent consented to act in ' a,ae t of mediator. The French v -rr. -lent has. however, intimated at ii..s not desire any relations v i le-pos. government. ' stoms .'flleials at Port Townsend, U.s arrested ttvn Inilinnsfrnrn OnU.
n the 27th. for smufftrline-.
gahon showed that the Indians en buying merchandise in Drltish tr'.ia for the past twenty years bringing it into the states in ca--elling it to fanners. It is ght that many thousand dollars utles have thus been avoided.
! Itf
I 1, K
oitni.vo t ti,e cens,u.s report cor- - c the htatistics of churches, which ust enme from the press, the total f 'mmunicants of all denominations i ie I'nited States is 20.Ö12.SÜ0. who leiug to 1W.177 organizations or congregations. These eongreirations have
M edifices which have sittings for
11
n.i,H,si persons. The value of all
church property used exclusively for purposes of worship is W9,G3Q,13'J. The Chicago & Alton Railroad Co. will show its appreciation of the fidelity and courage of Engineer Prank Holmes, who was murdered by train jobbers at Carlinville, 111., recently, 1y building his widow a 31,000 cottage
in moomington, Her home, and
senung ier with $000 in cash.
Holmes will also receive $1,5
'tho Rrotlierhowl of
Eeers.
00
Locomotivo
pre-
Mrs. from Kngi-
atm-pi i.uacMii iiHtu proposals m tneir t
present form. A cvclo.vb hit Anderson, Ind., on the 2lth. nnpffing houses and tearing up trees. Lightning struck the hie-h
school building, burned two barns and set on fire a big and dangerous gas well. Emperor William is preparing a brilliant patriotic celebration for the inauguration of the monument commemorating the battle of Woerth, during the Franco-Prussian war. The expenditure of $.000.000 marks about $2.000,000), on the Kiel celebration is severely criticised by a large number of the newspapers of Rerlin. It is claimed that an examination of the books and records of the Rrotherhood of Railway Trainmen shows a deficiency of $75,s:t. Of this deficiency $2s.215 wa incurred previous to September 1, l'.t. and $7,M7 rep
resents the deficiency incurred from
St-pteinbtir 1 to December Si, ISO. Pciu.ic memorial services were he!l at South Rend, Ind.. on the evening of the 2iHh. in honor of the late ex-Gox Ira J. Chase. A liberal contribution was added to the subscription being raided for the relief of Mrs. Chase. R. Vk Patterson, register of the United States land office at South Hnid, Okla.. and City Marshal Williams were killed, while J. L. Isenlerg, editor of the Daily Wave, was badly wounded, the result of a sensational street fight that occurred there on the evening of the 2öth. Isenberg will recover. Mary Snyder, a member of the class of 1SD5. of the Keystone State normal school at Kulztowti, IV, who would have Wen graduated on that day with high honors, died suddenly, on the 20th, the result, undoubtedly, of overstudy. Hon. Emily Jane Mercer, dowager marchioness of Lansdowne, and in her own right Daroness Xairtie, mother of the present marquis of Lansdowne,
who was formerly governor general of Canada and later governor general of India, died in England on the 20th. She was born in IS19. Aaron Altmeyer, 73 years old. a wealthy Hebrew, was found de.nl of asphyxiation in the parlor of his home, New York city, on the 20th. The dead man was at one time a merchant, and is reputed to have owned $1,000,000 worth of real estate. On board the steamship Rerlin, which sailed, on the 2Gth. for Southampton, was a company of 100 Presbyterian
clergymen and laymen, who will spend eight weeks in visiting the scenes of interest in the old world connected with the early history of their church. MAOGiK.Tt'RriE. aged 28. forewoman in the office of the Riverside Printing Co., St. Louis, fell through the elevator shaft from the third floor to the basement, on the evening of the 2Gth, and received injuries from which she died en route to tin; city hospital. A RICH stream of petroleum has been discovered near the Narrows of Harpeth river, in Cheatham counts, Tenn. An explosion occurred in a In ' there recently, and afterward a strong stream of oil began to How. An expert
from the oil region of Pennsylvania is iHukhnr an iiive.slltf.-it inn. I
paper.
among whom is Mr. Rooth. of Grand
Rapids, Mich. There will be no change in the name or jwlicy of the paper. On the 27th Gov. Morion of New York informed Mrs. Annie Ruchanan that he must decline to hear any far. ther appeals for clemency iu behalf oi Dr. Rolert W. Ruchanan, the condemned wife murderer. Ruchanan applied to Judge Lacombe, in the United States circuit court, on the 27th, for a writ of habeas corpus, but it was de nied.
Seventeen new iron bridges and a hew jail have been built in Pike county since the present board of commissionerr. took their ofilce. At Madisou Thomas Donlau. Win. Starling ami John McDaniel, found
guilty of attempting to dynamite the 'Red Onion" saloon, were each en-
tenced to 2 years in the penitentiary.
av.m: county commissioners pur
chased the last toll road in that county the other day. Elkhart claims to have saved $400 in one job of street jwving by the city doing the wo-k. Ex-.U-piTou James C. Lavelt.e, Daviess county, (serving eight years in the prison south for attempting to burn the courthouse at Washington, is dy
ing of dropsy. Max Dart, the new warden of the prison south, has resigned his municipal position at Rrazii. Stonlwoekkr-j on South Henri's newlibrary building struck because they did not like their foreman. .Ninety-seven taxpaying farmers of Jjt. Joseph county have formally protested against the building of the new courthouse. The Akron Oil Co., of Hartford City, which recently purchased the Columbian Oil Co.. of Itluirton. has struck a
three-hundred-barrel well on the Alspaugh farm, ten miles sotitii of that place. Ciiari.es. the 14-ycar-ohi son of Dr. Rush Fee. was drow ned at Kokonic. Forest fires near Decatur have burned over a territory eight miles square. At Frankfort, while George Hath, a bartender, was separating two men w ho were engaged in a savage light, he received severe injuries. One of the men, Heck Shinn, attempted to throw
a mustard bottle at his adversary, but it Hew wide of the mark and struck Rath in the face, knocking- out one of his eyes and tcrriblv 1 nppmtinir Iii
face. Shinn made his escape. Jay Huiiiahii, the I S-y ear-old son of Mrs. George W. Hubbard, was fatally injured by falling from the roof of the Rrazii Rrick and Pipe Co.'s building the other morning, a distance of forty feet.
rti.t.omi.No to me last enumeration Montgomery county contains $,50J voters. Hon. W. D. HvNot is billed for a "sound money" sncech at Frankforton July 30. t Article incorporating the McParland Hotel Co.. capitalized at Ss.OOO, have been filed with the Favette coun
ty recorder by Harry R. Upman and others. The long-v-ontinued drought in Madien county was broken a few days ago. The Iownponr lasted about two hours, and in that time the rainfall j amounted to 1.2 inches.
t-iLAM: memorial services were held at Anderson the other night. Rev. RIaek, the evangelist, delivered the eulogy. A generous sum was subscribed to the Chase fund. A iior-e driven by Mrs. Mary Hoohn, of Sell erburg, took fright wiiHe Mrs. Hoehn was on her way home from Jeffersonville and ran away, throwing her out and probably fatally injuring
CARROLL D. WRIGHT,
StatUttrUii unit 1 1 I Stntm t'i)iiiinlloH ,r l.alxir, KiicoiirMurtl Ity Hit luitxir Out look-Tin' try liiuiicuriitt-d und Vrry ii-n,T)l I'rurtlre or Voluntnrlly lUUInt; Wmk ItrliirHlne I'rtMiprrUjr ltd Omen for I.iiimI. CiiiCAOO, June VS. Tiie famous Tennessean, Carroll I). Wright, United States commissioner of labor, who is
attending a committee meeting of statisticians in this city arranging for tho annual September meeting of official statisticians, which will be held this year in Minneapolis, takes an enthusiastic view of in- labor outlook. "I have al-.vay.s held," said Mr. Wright, "that as soon as manufacturers uuri other extensive employers of
labor put into active ojieratioii the plan of raising the wages of their employes the moment that business would warrant such an advance, strikes will be effectually done away with. It is u popular error to suppose that the strenuous opposition which craftsmen offer to a reduction of wages, even in times of financial depression, i.s simply from a consideration of the amount of wages sacrificed by the cut. Often this is an entirely secondary consideration. Perhaps it might Ik? sah 1 with approximate accuracy that such is generally the case; the main motive of their resistance to the reduction beim? the knowledm
gained by sad experience, that restored prosperity in their line of business does not mean a restoration of wages to the point from which they were reduced to meet the exigencies of trade depression. "They have been taught by almost universal object lesson that a raise of : wages is a very difficult thing to at- I tain.and that it often.if not generally. 1
follows with dilatory ami halting stops any improvement in the general financial and business conditions of the country. In other words, the la
borer has come to reganl any accepted cut of wages as so much ground permanently lost. Consequently they contest every inch of gound in the way of reduction with all the power that
organized labor can summon. This, of course, means strikes: and not until the workiiigman sees that the employer will voluntarily restore wages that have been temporarily cut off because of poor business will he i?iv. nn tin.
strike attitude and idea for one of confidence that any improvement in the trade in which he is engaged will bring ,hira n benefit approximately in proportion to that which it brings to his employer. "That this happy principle is becoming more and more generally accepted by the extensive employers .of labor is a matter of national congratulation, and that there are substantial proofs on almost ever hand that this just and fortunate movement is becoming characteristic of the hour cannot be disputed. It isjiot too much to
say of this significant sign of the times 1 that it marks a new era in the pro- I
gressot the cause of labor, awl that
THE TIMBER THIEVES
Wlto, Without .ur Authority of raw Wfiwtetrr, Hhvi- Itrrii UovwvUllwc IIIForrtlanr Ihn .Sort lirrii lWlloti nf S. Ht-atft la bit Mro-uclit In Account for Thrlr .MUiJ-.-J -Suli for Nearly llHf Mülle Dollar It.-gHu. Si. Pail, Minn., Jubc 2.-The United States of America, in nu action brought yesterday in the circuit court at St. Paul, by its special counsel, John E. Stryker, alleges that a number of the most prominent lumltcrmcn in Minnesota have, without uny warrant whatever, been devastating the northera part of the state, denuding the, territory of its timber, and that they must pay the full market value of the hi in tar to the extent of the round sum
of $107, 71.31 and interest. The defendants are. the Pine River Logging and Improvement Co., J. I!. Rassott Co. and C. A. Smith ,fc Co. The technical name of the offense alleged in the action is conversion. Defendants are charged with unlawfully entering on the territory within the Mississippi and Winuihagoish reservation and systematically cutting the timber and converting it to their own use. The timber has been worked into
lutulH'r. and the market value of the lumber is represented iu the amount of damages demanded. W. L. Rassett, of J. 15. Hassett ,t Co., said this aft ernoon that the new suit i?. a revival of the controversy of several years ago. The interested firms had a contract with the government for cutting timber on the Indian reservation ar ind Loach lake. At the time there arose a question as to the number of feet that had been cut, the governments agents claiming that the number, returned was below the number actually out. THE CRUISER OLYMPIA
fo Ii
Tltoriiiichly ' Ch Incur
Was
Itcil anil Sent, lo WMtCM.
1IINOTON, June 2. The new
cruiser Olympia went to San Francisco
from the Mare Island navy .yard Thursday, preparatory to a cruise at sea for the final inspection, when she will be driven at various speeds and turned to determine her technical diameter as well as have her armaments thoroughly tested. Her stability will also be carefully noted under varying conditions, recent official reports having indicated that she is rather cranky in heavy seas, rolling badly and recovering her equilibrium slowly. In this respect she is similar to the flagship Philadelphia, and it is not thought that her propensity to. roll will necessitate any change in her weights, as it is not desirable to have n war ship too stiff at sea, stiff vessels having a tendency to jerk themselves to pieces. From an official renort received yesterday it is demonstrated that the Olympia is a very fast vessel under
LATE NEVS ITEMS. A 15-YKAU-OLI boy named Kirk McMurtrie, employed in the state department at Washington to distribute the mail, has been defected in robbing letters addressed to the passtxirt bureau of the inclose! fees, and to cover up his tracks destroying the applications and in many cases the naturalization papers contained therein. He is supposed to have secured betwevn $;00 and $500. Mb. Hasiiigi-chi. the Japanese consul-general at New York, in an interview, on the vsth, said among other things: "I wish to say emphatically that Japan is not afraid of Russia. I will go so far as to assure you that there are Japanese who are not carried away by enthusiasm who would not be astonished lo see a Japanese army in St. Petersburg within the next two 3'cars." Tiie cruiser Columbia is to race against time from Southampton to New York under instructions from
Jnieretnry Herbert. She will not. however, be ri riven at her highest sjeed, the effort being intended to determine what the famous triple-screw flyer can do under actual service conditions without subjecting her to strain. The Rowers Dredging Co. of Chicago has been awarded a contract which
covers the dredging and excavating of
,.,irv,vv tunic yarns oi earth, by which a 3-mile canal will lc constructed Ik-t ween Puget sound at Seattle, Wash., and Lake Washington. The cost of this dredging will le in the neighborhood of $j,000.000. In an encounter, 4 miles from the
cy oi pariaiiburir. S. C. on tin.
her.
The preliminary hearing- of John Holzheer, charged with the murder of his wife, was held at New Albany the other day. Thirty witnesses were examined and Justice Richards committed Holzheer to jail without bail to await trial at the October term of court. The evidence was very strong against Holzheer. The Gas City and Jonesboro Electric railway is to be consolidated with the Marion line. An order will be issued by the governor directing- that the state military encampmeut this year lie held at Fair-
view park, near this city, beginning! July 22 and continuing until the 2Sth. At a Sunday-school children's meeting southeast of Waterloo, two young ' men. named Klinger and Albright. hZ I
gan a quarrel, and it was not ended until ICIinger drew his knife and stabbed Albright several times, inflicting serious gashes. Albright will recover.
most economical conditions. She rejcently ran from San Francisco lo Santa
iLs growth and continuance means the J Gruz. a distance of sixty-eight miles,
realization or many sood things which I ,n IO" ' a half hours, using but
can now be only diuilj- foreseen and
hoped for. "I do not nssume to know anything about finance, save as directly relating to labor, but I am convinced that the reported voluntary increase of
wages by great concerns throughout j the country is not only genuine but
general, and to my mind it cannot fail ! over twenty-two knots.
to have a wholesome effect nmm tin, i two-thirds
general business f the country, 1 see no reason to doubt that this movement has just begun, and that it will stead- I ily increase in volume to the satisfac-
lion ami, joy or all. " Mr. Wright regards arbitration as a moral rather than an economic feature, and says that its chief value must be in bringing the employer and tho employed into closer relationship. Thirty-one states with the national government will be represented in tho coming convention, which will chielly be given over to the discussion of imnrnt'iui ...tl.swl. I.. ....;...-., ....
v" vni- in auiiisiicai wor e, i amount nr--iv...l f.,. . t Conventions of this kind have I.,.,, ! c' S.l fr " "r,le ls
. .. .,vi..v.j in im iiiornmt?
two of her six boilers with fiveeighths of an inch air pressure: and returned the same distance on two boilers with natural draft at a tweive-knots gait. Forced draft is 2 inches air pressure, and it is believed that with this ressnre and all her boilers the Olympia will make
as it was. on
boiler power ami verv
slight pressure, she maintained over fifteen knots. The Olympia leaves for China to replace the flagship Raitimorc about the middle of July.
STRIKING FOR BIG STAKES. Tho ll.-nw r Tarn-rn ,s,., for .ur H linn IloUnr. Denver. Col.. June 2'J. Yesterdac afternooii five suits for damages were filed in the civil division of the district court against the Denver Republican and Rocky Mountain New-. The
uum ior ten year-. Nearly all of thobe who attend these conventions are employed iu the labor dpartments of the various states or the national government, although many college professors, economic writers
of various
nected to
attend the convention, which will lw the largest of its kind yet held.
AT foliiml! Vi vrft I I AM .... If-
while driving a harvesting machine the n L?r 01 " .,mrMlit other niornimr. un tW.v Hues of investigation are ex
wire fence bv a runaway team of mujes and dragged some distance. He received twenty-one cuts across his stomach and abdomen, two of which are believed to have entered thecavitv. His arms and legs are also badly cut, and he may die. Ike Hex person-, a Fulton county farmer, claims his wife beat him anil then ran away with another fellow. He sues for a divorce. There's a post office in Harrison county named H. Attica will have a free mail deli very after July 1.
The intenso heat killed a lot of stock
the morn i nc
. - - -
organs. 1 he complainants in theVuits are the memln?rs of the board of aldermen and board of supervisors who comprised the water commit'ee of the city council. They are Aldermen" A. D. Young, Peter Fidel and Daniel Hingley, and Supervisors Abrain Ruckton and C. S. Phister.
Miller, of near Hagers-
for Farmer town.
inc coopers nt hvansvillc engaged . . t i .... "
v nvvr-ieg worK are striking against
rruucuon in price demanded by the
j Each complainant asks for the sum 1 rtf V.fi linn .....I ..... . . ..t. t .
Wl.nt, f.u,...i r. , . " vWni S1..i irom eacn
'V 'V vApiession as to ; oi tiie defendant tue general attitude of the ranks of ! th I lift ?! tlftt:
papers involved in
labor regarding
V right said: "That is something do not claim to know consequently I cannot
say a word in relation to it."
the silver issue, Mr.
about which I
VALUABLE FOR MARINERS.
For cause of acti&n the complainants recite at length the various alleged libelous
. I .1 Kilt fcttW
nn. ii nig, ami ; pajH-rs since the beginning of Hie be induced to ! strinrirl., flVl'r flit tif ?
AN UNSATISFACTORY ANSWER
lly Tiirklimi
breweries.
A Ni.w York syndicate is ncgotiat-
Ulf IT1 lf?1-Jtl n t! .t.J
2Sth. between Stnt.. r.5 V..,7'v V f1 "g" nl
t .! i . . n-uioH-s i runway iranctiiso
. vi.nKiv .in .soianu and two moon- Harves
sinners nnmeil Ms her n rwi
were inor-
the two latter and Pottim-.
trilln.t ..... , , .
.....v... w..i, ,Ki. ., oiaiui was tally wounded.
A report has gained currency that Chauncey M. Depew Is going to'marry a lady who is a member of one of the first families in New York, and an orphan with Sd,000,000 in her own right. The modest Chauncey denies the soft impeachment. Minnie Lynch, aged lt, of Chicago, committed suicide, on the 2stht by taking carbolic acid. She was a pupil of the Lake high school, and expected
lu grmmate tins year, but failed pass the necessary examination.
IjAtkr advices fcay that the loss by the recent fire in Minneapolis, Minn., xviil reach $250.000. I.m-ll K 1 1 ten,-,,.. ! ..
; -"--. iu isMic me man
to
Ti.so is on in several iirtR
H-.I...I. 7
nnasu county, mis is thecar est in
twenty years The wheat and hay crops
.nu vrv snort ami naif or nn nv,..--..,,.
yield of wheat will greatly please tho farmers. A LAWYEitat Frankfort married three days after securing a divorce, and rented a home from his first wife. A I'amily of freaks was discovered in Madison county. James Leonnrd, living nine miles west of the city, was
.-v-iii iiiioui, teem anu never had one. He married a woman with teeth and they had four children, all of whom arc half-grown. All are like their .athcr in one respect, Hint they have never had a tooth iu their head. Their gums are like bone and answer all the uses of teeth.
Svn.vct sr, one of the oldest towns in
I'mmIih will l.ruil ton IVrrmn-
w ii in! IliitiiUniin. Clntrt iir 1 lory I)iiii:iiii ,M M. pr.
prrlor mnl Huron ,lut Cninplrtp.l. CONSTANTINOPLE, June 2'.i Thr, fW
Washington, June 23. The navv rin. dragomans of the Rritish. Freneh ml
nn ri inmil li..u .......1 l. .1 . ' Itiikvtri,, I i .. i . .
r.. ......... v .... i I.1.1UUU o.iini.tuilie Cliart5 i imwiraira n;ni 11 lOUg COIIICr
oi lanes .superior and Huron, which, eon .Mine 2Ü with Turkhan Pasha, unlike any of the maps hitherto pub- f 'nter df foreign affairs. Tho forlisheilof those regions, are designed j 'rT representatives insisted that the wholly for the use of mariners. Ai ' Ioi te should indicate what particular rapidly as possible similar charts will i l"ts in the proposals In reganl to the be prepared for all the great lakes ar, ' tlininislrntioii of affairs in Armenia well as for interior navigable watvm ! t,,e Turkish government desired to generally. Heretofore all government mm' Iscussed. Turkhan Pasha was maps have been with special view for j TCry 'ilalory in replying, and the landsmen, and were not adapted to tho 'wer ho finally made was equivocal purpose of navigation, as they allowed ! rather unsatisfaetorj. It is now no compensation for magnetic compass expected that tho powers will present
ueriation. and the direction of straight- tt nole lo Porte asking for a spc-
away count only iw found upon them
Willi great diiliculty.
DA GAMA'S DEATH. Ho 1'rcfrrrril tn Tmkv III Own Mfe to llrlnjc Captiirpil anil TortiirrtL Nr.w York, June 28. The Herald' special cable from Ruenos Ayrcs says: Rio Janeiro ndvices state that tlm
report of the death of Admiral Saidabona Da Gauia is confirmed there. It
seems arter the defeat of the rrJ1
forces near Santa Ana, Rio Grande do
Sul, by the govern meiit troops. Admb
ral Da (in inn concluded to escape Gen. Cnstilhes, who, he lelleycl. would torture him The details have not yot been received.
cific and satisfactory fixed period.
reply within a.
THE SAN FRANCISCO FIRE. No of Mfe Itr ported Tho Dimu Hone und thr Inauranrr. San Francisco, June 20. There was. a rumor that a woman had lost her life in Thursday night's fire, but there was no foundation for iL The total loss is estimated at $1,200,000, with insurance amounting to S2HO.O0O. The heaviest losers were the Pacific soda works, SOO.OOO, ami tho Fifth-street Furniture Manufacturing Co., $55.000. Steps were taken yesterday to provldo for the ninny poor families who lost their all in the flames.
