Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 38, Number 29, Jasper, Dubois County, 27 March 1896 — Page 6
i
WEEKLY COURIER.
C. XJOAXI3, l'ubliHhor.
JASI'Kft.
INDIANA.
It.vnox Ki.Km:i.siiKi:o wits mortal l.v wounded in a duel with sabers at Hilda1'es.th, on the lltth, by Huron Josika. O.v the 10th ex-Senntor Abbott, o! 3Iorgun county, 0., was found guilty by a Jury at Columbus, of bribery in connection with the pharmacy legislative bill. WiTiiofT the president's signature the joint resolution authorizing and directing the secretary of agriculture to purchase and distribute .seeds, bulbs, etc., has become a law. Statk Senator Gahfiki.d's bill tc prevent the corrupt use of money in elections passed the Ohio house, ou the ISth, and iH'came a law. It applies tc all elections, primary as well as regular. . i Commaxdkr RooTii-TccKBK. appoint- j
eu to the army in
wife sailed from Southampton for New
York on board the American liner St, Louis on the 21st. Mns. Abigail Kx.vit Hoi max, wife; of Hon. William S. llolmau, ex-con-pressman from Indiana, died suddenly, on the ISth, at her home in Wash
ington city. Mr. Hoi man was witb her at the lust moment. The reports that the Mahdist urm Is marching- against Kassaln is corn
A special dispatch from Washington, on the Isth, said the members oi the Venezuelan boundary commission liad informally concluded that Great Uritain's case is untenable, and that Venezuela's claim is a just one.
QUERENT TOPICS. THE NEWS IN BEIEF.
LIV. CONGRESS.
(Fl rat Seloo.) IN the senate, on tue Ifltli. three speeches .n ns ninny different subject Mere made, llv Mr.
I.odce Muv). favoring such c change tu the liimihtratlon laws as will keep out Illiterate ami lk-norunt foreigners; by Mr. Puuli (Ala.), in favor of the coinage of stiver with the same rights as fc-olil, uml by Mr. Morcan (Ala). In support of the conference report on the Cuban belligerency resolution. . In tho hou&e. It twltiir mspenston day n number of bills of no special Importance were jkiiscJ under suspon-
slon of the rules. The house agreed to take
up, on uio iMn, me report or the foreign affairs committee reirantlni; the speeches delivered by Atnbusador llayard at KdlnburRhaud lloston, Enelnud. In the senate, on the ISth. Mr. Morgan (Ala.), In a four-hours speech, closed his Ofnns.- of
tho action of the committee on foreign relations In reporting the Cuban reolutlons. Senator IMgh (Ala.) aUo brought to a closo his speech In favor of the free coinage of silver. . ...In the house the entire session was devoted to the consideration, in committee of the
wnoie, of the bill reported from the committee on way and means, providing for a revision of the euhtoms adiilnlMratlon act. No substantial amendment u-u muff m o.n i.oi
command oi ine salvation wnicn was reported to the house and pasted the United States, and his ' wlthout division.
in the senate, on the 18th. during a short debate upon a joint resolution directing the secretary of the interior to execute the law for
I opening to settlement some two million acres j of land In the eastern part of Utah, the secre- ; tury was severely censured-.bv several speakers for his nttempt to nulllf r th act of con- . gres. A number of bills unobjected t wero ! Passed in the house a number of prtvate ; bills were passed, but only one of public IraI portance a senate Joint resolution in-truet-ing the secretary of war to transmit an esti-
j mute or the cost of deepening the channel from j Hampton Haid, to the Norfolk n.vy yard. ! The Hayard censure resolutions were taUen I till 1 wt tw4 ..... 1 . . .
firmed 1-n .lU,t,.I. '1 oy Jir. w
H-i. r T. i-- t""- unu otners. and opposed by Mr. McCreary 1 he Italians are determined to hold (dem.. Ky.). Kassala, and with this object have for- Ln the senate, on the 19th. the debate on the
warded strong reinforcements. ! TCPn ot tle conference committee on the t'u-
i icnuiuiiun (K-cuniea nearjy the entire ses
t Mon. and was participated in by many sen-
murs. mu majority expressing themselves in
, iaor oi prompt action by the United States in
i oenai: or the struggling patriots ... In tho
i nouse tne debate on the llayard resolution of I censure was continued, and toward the close
I oi me session descended Into an exchange of
personalities nctween Messrs. Sulxer (ücui..X.
i.) anu cioson (rep.. Tenn ) at the end
Tin: La fit n it. Rand powder house at
Kilton, N. t., blow up shortly after 11 a. in. on tho ISth. Thu upper glnzer first exploded, sotting olf the dry house and wrecking tho corning mill, engtno house and lower gla?er. Five men wert killed und an unknown number injured. A i.l. the workmen employed in tho construction of the coliseum in Chicago, in which the democratic national convention will be held next .hi no, struck work, on tho morning of the ISth, because the contractors wero handling iiuu-uuioii cut Ktone. Rkpohtö received at St. Fetersburg,
! on the 17th. state that i:t0
were frozen to death in one night in the Russian government of Orel. Large numbers of horses and cattle were also frozen. Tin: well-known spirits and vinegar manufacturers, Michael Lofevre .fcCo..
.'lomroai, v-an., suspended, on the 17th,
cau.sed by the suspension of the Ranquo found in the river" at Ac lui tmi ' m l im,k,tüütl thl4t th0 ' Elkhart, a few davs ago. liabilities will be something over S.'.üö.- I Mlf- '. .,',......
! INDIANA STATE NEWS. Wii.i.um Roi'OliKU commttted suicide at his home, near Needliam, by taking morphine. 1 toucher was a farmer unci was about sixty-live years old. Domestic trouble is given us thu eaiibe of the act. Miss. Kn ICincm.r., wife of a maunfncturer of Mvausville. had her clothing burned off her body and her llesh blackened. She also inhaled llame.s. She died in a few hours. She was sitting in front of a grate when a live eoal popped out, setting her clothing on tire. Her little girl and a servant girl extinguished the blaze after the lady had run through the house. Uov. Maitiiiius was eontined to his bed by an acute attack of the grip, a
tew nays ago, unci all business was de
nied him.
Tiik body of a six-months-old boy wns
Adumsvillo, near
TUST BEFORE DAWN.
Doath Olitimod tho Vonornblo Deaq Sohuylor of St. Louia.
Ry a vote of 117 to SO the Methodist Episcopal conference.in session at Philadelphia, on the ISth. decided in favor of the proposed constitutional amendment admitting women as lay delegates to the general conference.
of which the former apologized for offensive ro-
raarKs inauiged in in the heat of debate.
PERSONAL AND GENERAL.
The decision of the powers comprising the dreibund to accept the pro
posal of Great Ilritain to use a portion
oi wie reserve Egyptian lurid for the Dongola expedition gives England a majority in the Egyptian debt commission.
It was stated in London, on the ISth, that the government would support the Whitley bi-metallic motion, but with the qualification that the
government does not intend
In the slightest degree from standard.
to depart
the gold
The Paris Figaro says that the British expedition into the Soudan is undertaken in order to enable England to say that her work of civilization in Egypt was only the first phase of her final development and annexation of that country. The suit for S25.O00 damages for libel, brought by Lady Henry Somerset against William Waldorf Astor, as proprietor of the Pall Mall CJazetto, has been settled out of court. Mr. Astor will apologize to Lady Somerset In the Pall Mall Gazette and '-'0 other papers will pay the costs.
The French minister of foreign affairs had an interview, on the 17th, with the marquis of Duffcrin, llritish ambassador, and asked the reasons for fireat Uritain's sending an expedition to Dongola. He pointedly called Lord DulTerin's attention to the gravity of the consequences of such a step. Ox the l.-.th the feature of theall-dav rally of the Salvation army, held n't headquarters, Memorial hall, New York city, was the conversion of 20 persons and the accession to the army of Francis E. Clark, president of tho united societies of the Christian Endeavor union, who resides in Itoston.
The Hritish Hying squadron, which was the center of so much attention a lew weeks ago, had to make for (.Jucenstown harbor in some distress on the 16th, the vessels of the squadron having shipped large quantities of water during the prevailing storms. Xo serious damage resulted to any of these ahips, however. Spanish detectives engaged in keep Jng watch on thu movements of the Cubans in this country were very much exercised, on the ISth. over the report that the steamer Hawkins did not sink on the morning of January -S. but Hint she made her way to Cuba, landed her cargo, and is now laid up at one of the Florida keys.
The press and public of Madrid ex press disappointment and impatience at Gen. Weylers failure to suppress the Cuban insurgents, who are still rcou ri n g the pro v i it ees of I la va na . Pi na r del Jlio and Matanzas, and burning plantiAions, villages, etc, on as extensive scale as they wero during (ion. Campos" command.
The porto has demanded that the Armenian patriarch write an autograph letter admitting himself blameable for the outbreaks in Armenia, it "being the intention of the porte to print the letter, in the event of its belag written, in a red book, the purposes of which will be to show that the BtatemenU contained in the Urittsb blue book are false.
Ix the United States district court nl
1'iiuaclelplila, on the 17th, CnpL .1. It. iS. Wiborg of the filibustering stenmei llorsa. was sentenced to one year and four months in the Eastern penitentiary, and to pay a fln f 3(X) und costs. The mates, .lens P. Petersen and Hans Johatisen, were each soutencedto eight months in the count v
ww uu w Way u u er, oi siuuand costi
cn.
Tin: secretary of the interior has disbarred from practice before the department in all its branches Thomas G. Pike, an attorney of Laurel. Ind., on the ground that he was irregular in the execution of his pension vouchers and received illegal fees. At the regular meeting of the senate committ-e on foreign relations, on the ISth, the conference report on the Cuban resolutions was discussed at length. The committee decided to stand by the conference report and to urge as speedy action in the senate as possible. O.v the 10th tratlic on the Louisville, Evansville ,fc St. Louis railroad was completely blocked, by rea-
son of a cave-iii at both ends of tunnel Xo. 'J, 7.1 miles east of Princeton, Ind. The arch was made of cordwood, and this caught fire and was burned j out, allowing the hill to slip in.
J he German transatlantic steamship
companies nave agreed to. increase their rates for steerage passage ten per
ceiii.. wie advance going into effect on the ISth. Fiiaxk Xevt.i.8, colored, was found
guilty, at Topeka, Kns., on the 10th, of murder in the second degree for hav
ing Kiueci .Mrs. Matson. who was found dead in her house in Toneka with her
head crushed in with an ax over a year
ago. The president nominated John J.
Hoyce, of California, on the 10th, to
DC commissioner of fish and fisheries, vice Marshall McDonald, deceased. Ox the 10th a hastily summoned cabinet council was held in London, at which Gen. Lord Wolseley, commander-in-chief of tho army, was present. The council sat two hours. TKititim.E gales occurred on the 10th on the west coast of England and in Ireland. The force of the wind and waves was such that thepiersat Liverpool were washed over ami Hooded. Several derelicts and disabled vessels were towed into the Mersey. Tho ship canal was made unnavigable and t lie wails of the canal were severely tried by the wash of the waves. A dispatch from lloma, in the Congo State, says the Hritish steamer Mntmlf.
which sailed from Liverpool, January
-, and bierra Leon, February j, has
oeen destroyed at lloma by an e.vplo
sionof IS tons of gunpowder. Twenty-
ii ve persons were killed by the explo-
mon, anu tne vessel was blown to frag
uii-nis. Enwix P. Vuu. of Micjiigan, for
mcny assistant secretary of state-
sailed from .New York for Ilremen. on the 17th, on the Xorth German Lloyd steamship Saale, to assume his new
post as ambassador to Germany.
Till: Dominion senate, on tho 17th.
passed a bill giving the Canada it
-Michigan IJndgc and Tunnel Co nrllc... . ........ ... 1,. ...
i. ci iu uuiihcriiui a oricige Willi a
-pan of 1,100 feet across the Detroit
river.
I he House committee on naval af
fairs decided, on the 17th, to recommend in its appropriation bill an in
crease of the navy by four battleships
ami i.i torpeuo ooats.
In the Italian senate, on the 17th, a motion, supported by the marouls d
Itudini, thanking the British parlia
ment lor its sympatliy, was passed
umici great enceriug.
A dispatch from Hong-Kong says that the plague eon tin uvs there In
spite of the sweeping sauitary mean-
ures which the government has
adopted. A iit.w.v on tho Philadelphia, Wilmington .t Haltlmore railroad, on the night of the 17th, made the journey from Haltiinore to Gray's Kerry, li'J'V miles, In t8 taiiiiutes. ' Tun strike of the ship carpenters and caulkers along the Monongahela river, which had been in progress two nonths, causing much injury to coal operators and clock owners, was declared ff, on the ISth and work was resumed.
IKK), and perhaps may reach 8000,000,
it is understood in London that 1 Senor Andrade, the Venezuelan minis- j ter at Washington, has decided to rec- I ognize the I'ruan incident as a separate question, nud good hopes are e.- . pressed that his entente will lead to i an agreement upon the scheme for the settlement of the boundary dispute. j Tub Congregational council bus dedared Rev. C. O. ltrown not guilty of : immorality, but lias censured him for '
unnilnisterial conduct. As the couneil apologizes for the censure. Dr. llrown considers his vindication com- , plete. j TiiEkhediveof Egypt, on the ISth, witnessed the departure of the Egyptian battalion for the front. He bade a cordial farewell to the officers. The 1 reserves were arriving at Cairo, and the new Soudanese battalions forming. Gi:x. Weyi.ek, the captain-general of Cuba, in an interview published in Madrid, is quoted as savinf that tin.
lumcuiiies lie lias encountered
compel him to resign
may
.Mit. John .MCGISA w. a nromineiit
woman of Knightstown, was stricken with paralysis, at her home, und is in u, borious condition. Xothe Da. me university, South Pond, bestowed its mid-Lent gift, the Laotare medal, on Gen. William Stark Hosecrans. The medal is of mirest irold und
set with rare gems. Lbo Goii iti:v was jailed by the police at Muneio. A few months ago John Smith called on Mrs. J. X. Templer, wife of the lawyer, asking her to donate seven dollars to assist in burying his brother, whom Mrs. Templer knew. She grunted the request. Saturday Godfrey made a like demand for 1 five dollars, saying John Smith was dead. Mrs. Templer investigated and found that she had been swindled. ' Hrronn Mahvi.v. an orphan boy of M, was playing with some gunpowder , fit Ilushville, which unexpectedly ignited and exploded. His face was ! burned and the sight of both eyes was j ruined forever. j KlCHiioxii people think the nrosnectK 1
of that city .securing the IM7 encamp-
Peaceful Clour of I.,1R Hml lf(oflll t,u I)ut.il to Co, IUU ltmimy I'orly.Two Vrnrt Sjn-nt
in M. I.oaU.
St. Louis, March 20. Very Paw. Montgomery Schuyler, 1). 1)., ,iean of Uirist church cathedral, died at the family residence at 5 o'clock Thursday morning, after an intermittent illness of a little more than a mouth. Ho was a years of age, the oldest clergyman in the city, and, with the exception of Uishop Williams, and perhnps one or two ot Iters, was the oldest Episcopal War in the United States.
THE NEW REIGEL TRAGEDY.
Ju'" Wh si.ot hu wir mm 7 ' Mini Arr,.t ,y - , , " luiik... on tin. Amn-,,,-.!.!,,, or Am '" Tirrix, O., March M Tim v Miel tragedy created u "eve Mlied this afternoon when Mai-slJ.i Lease an tl, o police arrived with i, i Mocs, who hist ev..,.l .i...
divorced wife and )... .!..""ul..MH
Katie .Smith.
Moc
Noes spent the night in thu home of 1ms '..other with the doors and wi, dovvs barricaded and heavily arl,
one tue citizens would not attempt to capture him, thu house was cloJv-
Coxsi'i.-Geneuai, Chittenden reonrts
irom the City of Mexico to the state j merit of the Indiana G. A. II. are bright, department that American capitalists j W. J. Stkano, a Terre Haute jeweler, have purchased the entire street nM- , has made an assignment, owing to dull
"". it-iii oi wie city ot .Mexico. Price, S7,7.')O,0O0; but contemplated reequipment of the lines will involve an expenditure of SiO.OOO.WX). Mits. John X. Stcdeiiakeii, aged .2, died suddenly of old age at Shideler, Ind., on the night of the ISth. Extensive preparations had just been perfected for the celebration of the sixtieth wedding anniversary of Mr. and
Mrs. Studebaker on the 21st,
The yacht nice for the cup given by Haron Hirsch was sailed at Cannes, on
the 19th, and won by the Satan ita. The Ailsa was second, and the Hritannia third and last. The Satanita won
easily.
I he act to authorize the St. Louis
.t Oklahoma Kuilroad Co. to construct and operate a railway through Indian
and Oklahoma territories has become a law without the president's signature.
ironiiERs blew open the safe of Whit,lock A Fields' privatu bank at Ladora, la., at 2 a. m., on the 10th. and secured
1,(KK) in cash and notes. It was reported in Athens, on the 19th, that King Alexander of Servia had been betrothed to Princess Mario of Greece. The eoo,000 suit which was begun in 1S!2 against the Grand Trunk Kailroad Co. by Swift .t Co., the Chicago packers, was dismissed, by stipulation, in Judge Hurke's court, in Chicago, on the 19th, a settlement having been reached out of court.
trade and poor collections. Liabilities.
ES.-'iOO; assets, S,r00. The Methodist Episcopal Ministerial institute, of tho Connersville distriet.
-..w.i.wi J11U1.WIU coiuereuee, win oe ' "reu mm nttle rest except one son held at Milton. May 4. 5 and 0. j Mr. William Schuyler, who remained'
ii AMr.H iiiTCo.Mit kii.ky. the poet, j duelling with the nurse. The evening has taken judgment at Indianapolis j before the venerable ecclesiastic hnd against Ed Weeks ,t Co. and George : greeted his physician and his old friend Oglevie for publishing unauthorized i "f- Co-igrove, with a hearty i-rasn of l-IilldMinnii liio ........... tl... 1 1 1 . . .
James Pell, a well known young mnnof Fairland, was married the'other day and died that evening of a hmorrhnge of the lung.s while celebrating his marriage with friends. Moijto.v Xkwhoi-se, of Jerome, Howard county, a prominent farmer, was pronounced insane and will be sent to the asylum. Mr. Xewhou.se was injured in a railway wreck several years ago, and his present condition is the result of that accident Thkbk men named Hogers, Morris
to
I .
uri-ll-l.il nllt m,U1 th "'"eers;
When Moes saw the officers his bra", gadocia disappeared and, coming from the house, hu threw clown his gt, nud revolver and announced his Willing. moss to submit peacefully to arrest Ho was brought here, arraigned b." fore the mayor and entered a plea uf not guilty. He was rciniii-ixl i.. i..M i..
default of SH.,000. At S o'clock to-ni.rht M
sinking rapidly and the indications were that she would live but a few hours. Her condition is rendered ".ore erltica! by the fact that she. would soun have become n mother Miss Smith is resting well and hopes' for her recovery are entertained.
THE BOUNDARY
DISPUTE.
Honor Arnlnnli. Contluu,. Uriiiiforiin..! ...
rv Her. Montimcr Mtuuler to ,,,, ,,r,if""' f .Ni-Ktiutio.iH.
His death was unexne cted tn 11 ihn . " ASI,i-'itdX, March 21. -Seuor An-
family, for, although his sickness was tlr:i,k'' thlf Voiu.iieImi miuMer, coutinbronehial ptieunioiiia. he was natural- "us "l,,l,funod as to the progrcs-, ,,f ly so robust that it was thought he ,a"rolhlU,,I vital to his own emu. would overcome the attack. , j J' l.",lhti "oumlary dispute, but siucu A week ago last Sunday, he rend Chl ,l cluvul!l'"ls message to e nthe speis for the morning to his eon- t''ss. resulting in the high emmUsgsvgation at Christ Church cathedral I Mo"' l,MOZ,leI:i longer inquisitivu This last ellort fatigued him uniisuaH Ü"S lw ,,luans PnrsI .' the United ly. and on Monday he took to his bed I to ,h0lt, lhu atter, relying gradually growing weaker and niorc1-1 1 cln''('t!"t-'u upon the good inietifrail, and for the last 4S hours of his i .'.,S f t,IC l''nitu1 States.
, Hiuiii.ineou.siy with the admission
mine house of commons, on Monday
l illness Ins children and his wife had I remained by his bedside night and day.
"ii eunesda.y evening he rested somewhat easier. Xo one thought that tho end was near, and at three o'clock I hursday morning all the family re-
the hand, and then had tnrnpinii.: f,.
to the ivall, as if to say: "This is goodj "J"j Or. Schuyler was born in Nor York cltv. JicnuaryP. lhH. He was clpsrcacled of old Dutel: stoek hli remote nncestor. Phillip IMeterso van Schuyler, havinu como to Xe-w y(irk early In the seventeenth cantury. Dr. Mont- , pomery Schuvior wa the clxth In line of dcj M'tin frora this early ancestor, nml wns the , cm of Anthony Ucy chuvlcruml Snm, im,i..
ipubK Koing on. which is now , Jlmnncentmr! "T ZZ'l ttl by all the parties concerned.
! ler was n personal friend of r.on. WashWton- ' strictest secrecy is maintained us
, nci tne Ccn. Schuyler of the n-vnlntl.,nn-
war as a member of a collateral branch of th
1... M.. '
.....v.uriini, parliamentary secretary of the foreign office, that Hi-Cut in t Inno
had been resumed, which probably had reference to the preliminary disensbioris by Ambassador llayard and Lord Salisbury, full instructions reached the ilriti.sh ambassador here which are understood to he of Mich scope as to give him plenipotentiary powers to Ohiev :i;r0L"",L'nt wilh Secretary Little doubt is expressed that Sir Henry Stn fiord Xorthcotc, who reached here Sunday, will also be an active participant in the negotiations to which, under ordinary circumstances, the Venezuelan representative would not be invited until considerable advance had been made.
Heyond the fact that negotiations
and augh, under arrest at Hvansvillo. ' family.
have been identified as the men who 1 on'somery enU.rC(, Geneva (now Hnl.arti
to any concessions made by either of the interested parties.
A FIGHT
LATE NEWS ITEMS.
IX the senate, on the 2.nh, the debate ou the Cuban question occupied most of the day's, seldom .A motion that when the senate adjourn it be to the 23d. was adopted by a large tna-jority-42to 22 -which 'was taken to indicate the sentiment of the senate on thequestion under discussion In the house the three days battle over the resolutions censuring Ambassador Ijuyard for the use of certain expressions in public speeches in Scotland and Fngland. ended in the adoption of the resolution!, by a vote of ISO to 71. Gov. Tiiounion of Xew Mexico and Col. Gildersleeve, of that territory, ou the 20th, addressed the house committee on territories in opposition to the
amendment ottered by Senator Price to
Hie statehood bill, regarding the issu" of bonds. Col. Ilnl...
. , - - ' i vi r city, appeared in supported the amendment. The war ship Cordova reached Odor, on the 20th. Her arrival caused great rejoicing among Colombians. The Cordova was formerly the American steamer Xeptune. She wns recently purchased by the Colombian government and refitted at Perth Am boy for use as
a war vessel. Gi:n. Xeai, Dow, the father of prohibition, celebrated his ninety-second birthday anniversary at hi,s home in Portland. Me., on the 20th. There were no formal exercises, but he received
congratulations from many friends nil over the I'nited States. ( Jen. Dow is in excellent health.
Five men were burned, two of them
fatally, on the 20th. in a foundry nt
Ashland and Archer avenue, Chicago. The cupola in the converting shed Ml
from its supports, hnrlinir the molten
metal on orory side. The men who
were injured were working near In-
ami could not escape.
1 iio.mas A. Lnisox has discovered, in
connection with Ids . ray experiments, a substance so sensitive to tho rays that by using plates edited with it. In.
can see through the human hand at a distance of 1.', feet. The substance is tungstate of calcium.
I'iie senate committee on terrltor!..
on the 20th, with a bare quorum present, ordered a favorable report on the bill admitting the territory of Arizm.n
to statehood. .Mr. Call, of Florida, voted against the report. PAlLültBs throughout the United
States during thu week ended the20tb.
as reported by K. G. Dun it Co.. were
201, against 278 for the corresponding week last year. For Canada the fail.
ures were 42, against 35 last year.
held up a train at Xussau Junction, M., January 1.". Tub Wayne County Horticultural and Agricultural society already has preparations under way for the entertainment of the summer meeting of tins State Horticultural society, which will be held in the public park, at Richmond, in June.
for a year ami a half; ami at St. John's Muflalo! X i .. for ten years. He then came to Christ church. St. Louis. ?L i V.'.!arh,M hls ,lrst wnnon Oc-
Thb examination of 0 applicants for Ouute,.' 7t the 'corner of Troal, positions as mail earners and clerks in ; Chestnut street. In ls,M the t,rok..nt im .
iiuriccnth unci Locust streets, was jmr-eiiase-l. anil the jot was soM to n i estate linn. In the Interval botcveen this time and the time of the complet.on of the., rhureh services were held In the old Mercantile Libra -
i - - "nur m i-aurs rhureh. The. church was bulhlim; during the civil war. ant! .YN lJi,r."l',nforc,,10 llrsl 1,0,0 Christmas d.i, M.. Dr. Schuyler has beca Its rector ever since, and six years apo. v.htn the church was made a cathedral, he became its dean JTl'? U C.ivU w,1r 1,0 'Mil the cause
' -"j. in mciaco oi untvopular ty and desertion of friends, ministorlne to the sfck
iV . . . Inu,,uri hospitals.
...... v .rauoiiH were resented lj -outhem sympathizers, but when confeih-rate so Hers l.a-nn to nil the hospital,,
ni. . . , V . . . e'l'iany uind totlicm
'" , """"K ' "iscaamcter was appreciated, wal.he was h. nored by both north and -south. Ho urn mi ureal Kc-ntlenoss and wisdom in kceii-
...c, uun ci ssonsion in his church durinc this 1 erl.Hl. and it has oflen been suld that had a le-s able man been at the holm it Is m.oly tho
.V ;. ,!01 "!IV" hc,, toKctimr
lilt ft tili b.i.. .
... ... ; , ;:r "' iru-iiiurec times.
.. VJ... . . V.nra rnniirm. of NVcv Yrk
' "l '!,r','"i'. -Mich., after bear nil, nim three children. All these illml
cvuiiii Mrs. SC llivler u:i- I ,..n.. ,..
- - .II
: couce, but was cradu.n.-.i nt i-ni., n :
..Schenectady. In l.-ai. after which he . studied' ! Ut'lw,tn Troop and lusurRi-iits I'ollow I m Ii P lwi'e:lrs- " "'ed his attention to tin- I.:,i,dliiR f nillnistem. theology and ftuercd the ministry In lfll. iris' Ilivivc M-.,-,., n rt chaw was Trinity church, at .Marsh-ill 1 1 , , ' -1 , "Ü'A ffwrninciit j Mich., where he was rector for three vear" . ! lttl,,!s ;h ,IUS nrrlvu, 11 1 Cardenas, havi He was rector ut (Jracn chnr.-h r ...... V i nur ill tow three row lunt. tl, 1....I
1 , ' " ' ----- . r... VIlUb 141 14
the Wabash post otlice under the free
delivery system, tobe installed April 1, wan conducted by Civil Service Commissioner George W. Leadley. There will be appointed four carriers, a sub-
; Plume earner arm one cleric. The pa- ) per.s were forwarded to Washington I timl t result of tliQ examination, i with the appointments, will be made J toon. KoiiKitT II. .Mono, aged 73, for many j years a lumber dealer and prominent j it spiritualistic work, died suddenly the i other night at Muneie. ! Josi.th Co.vit.vi, a prisoner who wnt I sent to the Michigan City penitentiary from Lebanon about a year ago. wrote I a letter to Hev. K. W. Lawhon, pastor j of the Zionsville Methodist church, in ' u.l.i.li 1... 1.!. ... .
...v.., u, .niiuiiiuci ms gum ami begged thu forgiveness of the Zionsville citizens. Conrad shot John Martz. a shoe merchant of Zionsville, and came near being lynched. The feeling against him was very bitter and he was .riv..
nn eleven-year sentence, A short time
ago he claimed to have lxen converted and concluded to wrtto the letter to the Methodist minister. The letter lmd
Kcarcelybeen mailed when word reached the prison that this supreme court had granted him a new trial on the grounds that jurymen had violated their oaths. He will be returned there for trial. Tin: M. K. church at Sheridan, conducted by Hev.C. H. Wilkinson, is hold, iriß-n revival that started on December 1. There have been 215 conversions and l io added to the church. Those
.i.noers include nil ages from children to people almost 70 years old. Casehardened men have come to the altar and confessed their sins ami received pardon.
toxTii.vf-T- have been closed whereby Huntington secures the central colloge of the Radical U. I!, i-lmi-i-li im. I
uill beltitown as the IIimtiiiR ton colege. '1 wenly-flve acres of land have been donated by the Huntington Land Co. The church will expend HS.OOO this summer cm one building. Tin: largest plate of glass ever turned out of the factory at Khvood has just been completed and is an object of wonder to all who see it. It is H2 by 200 inches in dimensions and completely filled one of the largest polishing tables when it was 'finished," tho process requiring a day and night for the two tides, and is without a single flaw or blemish of imv kind.
The
blemish of any kind.
Tiik inmates of the county Jail in Ivokomo nre alarmed. Thu other morning a caso r.f malignant diphtheria developed In the building, tho victim belüg Daisy Johnson, a H-year-old girl. County Physician Smith gave thu nnti. toxlucj treatment.
i . . .
u neven, or ssirancvitnles. N. Y who died at J."iti "' or this tnarrlaire there were three
, .- V- K "'Hrj -Koc.st.veit Schuyler. now
.... ruy ,ri""i Se"uyiir. who died w hen n c'.ild. and Uev. Louis S S.-huvler. who died in September. IW. a victim of tho yellow fever at ..Irmphis. t was minj; In thr north
.-..w. ,.iu jt.cr iiroitci out. but his onerous
uuiur.i as couca-u wuii the story of suflerlnc and he voluntarily oüore.l himself as a priest
.-- ..............Hu un; lasi sacraments to the clylnp. He was oniy years old when he diod. and tho
u.U.. .i n neavuyon jus father, who had
mim min nn ins mvorlle sou. In 18-.I Dr. Schuyler inarrle 1 Miss SonhU
i-.iuanetti .Norton, of HufTnlo. who survives
mm. jmmoaiateiy nffr this miirrlnj;o ho
L.une m .-su Louis. Tliero were olnht children
ui nun marriaKC. tut follows: I. , ........ .... .
.i . i ouip .cnuvier. trie rector of St. Ani-
i.rwv-nnirca. .ow vorn city, who is said to
in- iury imp ins latnor in eharactor and man .1..-. M.a IB ....... ... .
v- iiiiiiny-i, oi j,cw voru city: Mr. Walter Norton Schuyler. William Schuyler, of the City hlirh school! Mrs. John I. Miliu
and Misses Sophie and Ocrtrude. nnd Mr. i:ii-
ki-iii: .-scuiiyicr, wno lived nt homo with their
IJ.irciii.s.
After solemn services in the eathij.
urai, eonclucted by Ilishop Tuttli. the
remains wore taken to .Marshall, Mich., for Interment. Without tho I'rinlUenfs Signature,
AHiiiNo ro.v, .March 20. The act to uthorize the St. Louis .t Oklahoum
Kitilrorvd Co. to construct und operate u
railway inrougii tnu Indian and Okla-
Jtoma territories lias become a law
without the president's signature. Fieiml Ii-ui In t,, Danvillk, Ky., March 10. Mrs. Wil.
Ham I. Moore, uged 71, was found dend in bed Wednesday morning. She leaves
two children, lliu wife of I W. A. II. Xelson, of Center college, and thu wife of Hanker Henry 1, Magill, ut J,a Crosse. Wis.
been used in landing a lilihttstering expedition on Kl Varadero beach. A light between troops and insurgents followed the landing of the expedition. No accurate account of the result of the fight Is obtainable. Additional troops have been sent in pursuit of the rebels. There is no news of Maeeo's operations in the province of l'inar del Uio. liight train-loadh of troops and one ambulance train have been sent to reinforce the columns operating against them. iHincd.j Fh.vnk Cl.vuk. NOT SO BAD AS REPORTED.
Ilm Srlzuru of .Inns and Ammunition by ihn SpmiUh In Culm. I'Hii.AiUM.i'in.v. March 21. From information received here yesterday, tho hcizttre of arms and ammunition made Thursday by the Spanish in Cuba is not so important as the oilieial dispatches from Havana would indicate. The munitions seized were not those taken out on the Mallory, but wero from the schooner Arkell. The Arkeli was at anchor at a place called HI Varadero. All the arms aboard her had been landed save 11.. cases of runmunition when the gunboat hove in
sight. The men on the Arkell abandoned the schooner and hastily escaped to the shore. The Cnradad seized tho Arkell and 1 !. cases of ammunition.
A VERITABLE BLIZZARD.
Tho Worst Snow Storm KvixTleneed In
lliiiiy' Vi-arh. MoxTim.vi.. March ','(. A heavy snow
storm has prevailed all over this section for the last ",'l hours. The fall is the largest in many years. Kailway trallic is much interrupted.
Toiio.vro, Out., March 20. One of
the worst storms in many years, so
far as its cfl'ects on railway trallic is
concerned, has been raging all over Ontario for the past 21 hours, unci as u result train service throughout the province is almost paralyzed.
Watkhtow.v, X. V., March 20. A
blizzard has prevailed throuirhout
northern Xew York to-day, blocking
the highways with drifts of new snow
uud delaying trains on all roada.
A HOLY WAR
Declared gainst -?VI't by thu Dervlihat
Cetil tu Arms. Loniio.v, March 21. A dispatch from
Cairo to the Globe savs:
The khalifa has proclaimed a ho!y
war against Kgypt, calling upon all Dervishes capable of bearing arms to
enroll themselves under the irreen
banner. It is asserted that Osman Digma will quit Kassala and join tho
ucrvisli forces around Dongola,
I ho ornish and Lgyptiati troons are
in a healty condition and are drilllinr
dully.
