Marshall County Independent, Volume 6, Number 35, Plymouth, Marshall County, 10 August 1900 — Page 2

THE WEEKLY INDEPENDENT.

C V. METSKKK. Pub. and Prop. rLYIuOTJTH, - . - INDIANA. OUR CALENDAR

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Mill EVEHTSOF II HEEK Items of General Interest Told in Paragraphs. COMPLETE NEWS SUMMARY. Rnunl of Happening of Mach or Little Importance from All I'a.-tn of the CIv Ulxed W.rld Price of Farm Producta In Western Market. W. K. Yajib ; bilt, Jr., and wife had narrow escape from death at Newport, their autcmob:!.? running under feet of rearing horses. lov;e ciders prevented from leaving train m Ma a.? field, O., where mob awaited them; Zionists may be indicted for libel. Iora Ixpper. Fulton county, Illinois, nephew ct Senator Cullom, crazed by heat, attempted suicide. Milwaukee motorman's celluloid collar ignited by current. He may die. His name is Charles Saunders. Dr. Thomas McClelland accepted Presidency of Knox College, 111. "Washington cranks asked police to stop crying of babies. Circus toughs terrified Minnesota, towns; troops in pursuit. Dr. Thomas McClelland, head of the college at Foies: drove, Oregon, accepted the presidency of Knox college at Galesburg, 111. Four persons killed and several injurded by extreme heat in Chicago Saturday and Sunday. The British report they have such a strong cordon around Gen. Christian Dewet that he will not be able to escape. The king or Servia weds his mother's former lady-in-waiting. Four thousand Paris cab drivers go out on a strike. Italian deputies may take the oath of allegiance to the new kins in a body. King Victor Emmanuel III. proclaims he will protect liberty and monarchy in Italy against all foes, and will preserve the sanctity of Rome. American Anarchist Lanner admits a plot and says he would have killed King Humbert had Bresci failed. Queen Wilhelmina reviewed the fishing fleet of 1.000 vessels in the Zuyder zee and accepted flowers from fisher girls. The man who tried to kill the shah of Persia was identified as Francois Saison, a former French army corporal and an anarchist. Nearly 1.500 mechanics employed on the Canadian Pacific system strike, charging the company with bad faith. One death from yellow fever and two other cases reported from Tampa, Florida. In the Caleb Powers trial one state witness was impeached and another was shown to have been discharged for theft. The Homestead mine at Lead City, S. I)., has produced $G.,000,000 in gold in twenty-thre years and paid $9,000,(00 in dividend:; to its owners. Major George A. Armes, retired, most court-martialed man in army, sued for $.7.om for breach of promise by KIJa M. Piatt. Annual encampment of Illinois National guard ended amid wild disorder; court unable to fix blame for explosion. President McKinley and king of Portugal exchanged congratulatory messages our new direct cable. Population of Milwaukee by census returns, 2sr.31."; increase, 39.54 per cent for decade. Plague appeared In London, two of rrew of steamer Rome dying and two others in hospital; port officer not In fear of epidemic. Raising funds for navy arch in New York practically abandoned. Orimar wins Perwyn stakes in a romp at Hawthorne. Democrats carried the North Carolina election by about 40,000. An eloping couple in Misosuri are drowned while crossing a river to escape an irate father. Over .1.000 Roumanian Jews en route to Canada; majority penniless; ultimate destination United States. District and Metropolitan underground railways, London, to replace steam with electricity at once. Many small railroads absorbed by large systems; 147,000 miles of road now controlled by twenty-eight corporations; three over 10,000 miles Rumor Cuban postal frauds may result In arrests in postoffice in New York, where band that robbed Havana office is said to have had accomplices. Members of House Rivers and Harbors committee will Inspect lake ports and western rivers, expecting to reach Chicago on Aug. 20.

Deserts Coachman Husband. Mrs. Adrian Sehoenmacher, a Holland heiress, who eloped with her coachman from Amsterdam and went to Appleton, Wis., last April, has deserted her husband. Leaving him in possession of a farm in Iowa, where tney have recently been living, she has returned to Holland. Mrs. Schoenmacher was Marie Aaltsz. daughter of a professor of language in the UniveO sity of Amsterdam, and sister of a captain in the royal navy. She fell in love with Adrian Schoenmacher, her coachman, and eloped with him to America, being married at Hoboken, and going to Appleton, where they lived for a time with relatives of the groom, later settling on a farm in Iowa which the bride purchased She soon tired of farm life and her coachman husband, and her flight fo'lowed.

Wrecked ly an Explosion. By an explosion of gas two buildings in Lackawanna avenue, in the heart of the business district of Scranton, Fa., were completely demolished, and twenty-one persons were injured by being caught iu the wreckage or etruck by flying debris. The most seriously injured arc: F. W. Woelkers, Janitor of the bank; leg fractured and otherwise severely hurt; Miss Maloney of Philadelphia; struck by flying debris and seriously injured; Thomas Brennan of Moosic, one eye blinded; H. W. Skivington, artery in arm cut by glass; Anthony Patrolav of Green Ridge, back hurt and face cut; Mrs. Annie Clark, cut in the eye by glass; will probably lose sight; Miss Annie Klein, eyeball cut in twain by flying glass; Miss Mary Sandislaus. back broken, leg fractured and otherwise injured. Many More ltoem Surrender. Lord Roberts has sent the following report to the war office: "Hunter reports 1,200 more prisoners surrendered with Commandants Rouse and Fontenel, while Commandants Deploy, Potgieter and Joubert surrendered to Bruce Hamilton, who collected 1.200 rifles, GG0 ponies and an Armstrong gun. Lieut. Anderson, a Danish officer in the artillery, also surrendered. Hunter expects the total prisoners will amount to 4.000. An unfortunate accident occured near Frederikstadt, on the Krugersdorp-Potchefstroom railway. The enemy had torn up rails, and a supply train, escorted by the Shropshire's, was derailed, thirteen being killed and thirty-nine injured. New Philippine Kule. On Sept. 1 the commissioned headed by Judge Taft will become the legislative body of the Philippines, with power io take and appropriate insular moneys, to establish judicial and educational systems, and to make and pass all laws. No money will be perj mitted to be drawn from the insular I funds except by authorization of the ! committee. Judge Taft and his col leagues will also exercise certain executive functions. For instance, they will appoint judges, officials in the educational department, and officers of municipalities which the commission establish pending elections. General MacArthur will be the executive head to enforce the laws of the commission. Jiearrest "Jim the Penman. Emanuel Ninger, the famous counterfeiter, feared by bankers and the officials of the treasury department for over twenty years and known throughout the country as "Jim the Penman," after serving a sentence of eight years In the Erie county penitentiary, less time off for good behavior, will now have to stand trial on another charge. Ninger was arrested at New York Tuesday by William P. Hazen, of the United States secret service, as he was leaving the prison. He was held to await extradition papers from New Jersey. He is charged with counterfeiting two United States notes of the value of $50 and $20, respectively. Kngland Want a Loan. Four of the leading financial firms of this country have notified the British government that they are prepared to take the entire $50,000,000 of exchequer bonds, the issue of which the Bank of England announced Friday. These firms are J. P. Morgan & Co., and Baring, Magoun & Co. of New York, Drexel & Co. of Philadelphia and Kidder, Peabody fe Co. of Boston. The British government declined to accept their offer, but appointed the four firms as American agents of the loan, and they will receive subscriptions on the terms announced in a circular just Issued. Car Wheel Clips a Boy's Kar. In St. Louis, Friday, Fireman James Brannigan of engine company 17, at Easton and Leonard avenues, ran in front of a swiftly moving electric car and rescued from the jaws of death little Ira Marks, 7 years old, of C1C7 Brantner street. Brannigan was seated in front of the engine houso calmly smoking his pipe as he saw the child's body thrown on the car fender, then from it and forced beneath it. Braningan pulled him out. In doing s j the top of the boy's ear was clipped off by one of the car wheels. Itroom Corn Crop Kuined. Authentic reports received iu Areola, 111., by men who have covered the broom corn district state that Wednesday's storm did over a million dollars' damage to the growing corn. From one end of the district to the other the corn is lying flat on the ground as though a heavy roller had passed over it. Previous to the storm It was said that the crop would not make more than a half yield. Now men well up In the business claim that yesterday's wind and rain practically ruins the prospects in the central belt. Eznlt In Klnff'a Death. The assassination of King Humbert of Italy was lauded to the skies and Bresci, the assassin, was proclaimed a martyr to the cause at a meeting of "the anarchist group of Youghiogheny" Wednesday night. The meeting was held at Shaner, Pa., a mining town on the Baltimore & Ohio railroad. The orator of the evening was J. Ciancabila, editor of IAurora, until recently published at Hoboken, N. J., but now about to be transferred to Shaner. Clancabila has been in the Pennsylvania regions for three weeks.

i hi ni mi Severe Battles in the Empire of China.

MANY NATIONS TAKE A HAND. AU led Force Clolntj In Upon the City of rekln and a Great Rattle I Anticipated J a pa nenn Suffer a Loss Itnsslans In Command. Tuesday, July 31. Minister Conger htard from indirectly through Colonel Daggett, Fourteenth Infantry, at Chcfoo, to whom Conger wrote saying truce since July 16, provisions for several weeks, little ammunition, all safe, well. Pekin message, July 21, to Tien Tsin said China declared war June 20 and put total dead in legations at C2; wounded, 35; Chinese kilted, 2.000. Letter from Lieutenant Colonel Shiba, Pekin, dated July 23. received at Tien Tsin, said legations attacked continually, n;ght and day. by Chinese soldiers and likely unable to hold out more than week. Sixty Europeans in ail killed. March of allies on Pekin to be hastened. Chinese legationary in London insisted allies' advance on Pekin will provoke general rising and massacre. Chinese authorities notified no arrangements to be made to keep allied troops in Tien Tsin pending delivery there of foreign ministers, without latters consent. Chinese minister at Berlin transmitted dispatch saying legatlonaries would be permitted free communication with their government. Li Hung Chang memoralized throne asking safe conduct of ministers and cessation of murders. Chinese again bombarded Amur capital July 26 and 28. Russian consul at Kashgar reported alarming situation. Russians busy in Manchuria. Wednesday, August 1. China fails to answer directly McKlnley's offer for mediation, but Indirectly the Chinese seek to impose conditions. German officer who was with Seymour's column says the wounded Chinese were killed by the Europeans. LI Hung Chang has 2,000 Chinese executed at Canton, subduing rebellious natives by a reign of terror. Allies start their advance on Pekin, reaching a point eighteen miles from Tientsin. Russian troops hold their own against the Chinese in Manchuria with difficulty. Thursday," August 2. Allies on march to Pekin score victory, Chinese troops and Boxers intrenched at Pietsang, eight miles from Tientsin, being dispersed and Russians holding position; allies have 21,000 men and 170 guns; Chinese force estimated at 50,000. Mohammedans aid allies. Chefoo report said imperial troops marching to engage allies wiped out Christian town, killing over 10,000. Reported confirmation of murder of fifty missionaries in Shan Si. English women beheaded in streets. War against China by United States and European powers deemed inevitable if participation of Imperial troops In attacks on legations is confirmed. At cabinet meeting in Washington Secretary Hay's course indorsed. State Department made public correspondence with Li Hung Chang, Insisting unconditionally on free communication with Conger and putting responsibility for safety of envoys on Chinese government. Friday, Aug. 3 Two members of the tsung-ll-yamen at Pekin were beheaded for urging protection to the ministers. The allies are said to have advanced to a point thirty-five miles beyond Tientsin. British member of parliament declares war is on in China and that the allies cannot stop it until Pekin is seized. Sunday. August "5. China backed down day after receiving Secretary Hay's ultimatum; imperial edict issued that envoys havo free communication with their governments and ordering escort by high officials for them to Tientsin; LI Hung Chang reported escort had teen provided; belief ministers may refuse to leave capital. Consul Goodnow, Shanghai, reported message from Minister Conger dated July 21, saying all well, no fighting, provisions enough, anxious for quick relief. English correspondent in Pekin wrote in similar strain; truce almost arranged after fall of Tientsin arsenals, when new generals beheaded peace party leaders. Amcri can and British forces began advance on Pekin Thursday; all allies now In motion, 30.000 to 40,000 men; Chinese attacked Tientsin Aug. 1 and were re pulsed. General Chaffee encountering difficulties. Russians and Japanese started flank movement from Shan Hal Kwang. Relief column expects trouble at Lang Fang. Chinese driven from Aigun. Father Marquet, Province of Chi Li, described incidents of upris ing; many missions wrecked and converts slain. Secretary of State I lay ill i from nervous exhaustion, due to lato arduous labors. Southern viceroys tcr rifled by executions of Hsu Chins Cheng and Yuan Chang. Gen. Miles has offered to take personal command of American forces In China. In Honor of Iiillan. To commemorate the enduring friendship of the Catawaba Indians for the whites and to honor the men of that tribe who in 18C1 entered the Confederate army and fought for the South, a monument was dedicated at Fort Mill, S. C. An Indian brave, chiseled from marble stands upon a gran ite pedestal, his bow bent and arrow on string. On the base are inscrip tions recounting the services of the In dians in the civil war; the names of those who fought and thoso who fell. Yellow Fever la Tampa, Fla. The governor of Alabama, having received authentic information of the existence of yellow fever in Tampa, Fla., has issued a quarantine procla mation against that place, covering persons, personal biögage and house hold furniture. IlUhop of Cleveland I IlL Bishop Ignatius F. llorstman of the Cleveland Catholic dloceso is seriously ill at his residence in Cleveland. He has been confined to his bed for ten days past suffering from a complication of diseases.

CHAIRMAN TRACY. General Charles Tracy, the newly-

elected chairman of the national committee of the gold Democrats has a record as a hard money man, won during his four terms in congress. An In teresting episode In General Tracy's life was his experience as a soldier in Europe. While visiting Rome with his parents he enlisted in the Papal Zou aves and remained in that corps for two terms of service. His time ran out just as the government of the Pope fell. He was appointed an aid-de-camp of Governor Tilden In 1S75, and Governor Robinson made h!m commissary general in 1877. Governor Cleveland named him manager of the state "7 S GENERAL CHARLES TRACY. house of refuge, and General Tracy was reappointed to this post by Governor Hill. John Clark Kidpath Dead. John Clark Ridpath, ;lie historian, died in the Presbyterian hospital at New York Tuesday from a complication of diseases. He had been a patient In the hospital since April 2C. At the time of the historian's death his wife and son, S. E. Ridpath, were at the bedside. John Clark Ridpath, LL. D., was born in Putnam county, Indiana, in April, 1S41. He was graduated from Asbury (now De P.iuw) university in 18G3, taking first honors. After serving as principal of an academy at Thorntown, Ind., and as superintendent of public schools at Lawrenceburg, he was called in 1SC0 to the chair of English literature at Do Pauw. He was transferred later to the chair of history and political philosophy. In 1S75 he published his firs:, book, an "Academic History of the United States." In ISTt; he published his "Popular History of the United States," and afterward "The Lite and Work of Garfield." His "Cyclopaedia of Universal History" was published in 1SS3. In 18S5 he resigned his professorship in De Pauw and the vice-presidency of the university in order that he might devote his whole time to writins. Mlnlftsto to reople of Italy. In the absence vi the new king of Italy the ministry has issued in his name a manifesto to the nation, as follows: "King Victor Emanuel III., in ascending the throne, has to perform the painful dub oC announcing to the country the awful calamity which has violently cut short the valuable life of King Humbert. The nation, wounded in its sincere affection for the august dead, and In a sincere feeling of devotion and adhesion to the dynasty, while execrating the cruel crime, will be plunged into profound grief for the venerated memory of a good, brave, and magnanimous king, the pride of his people and . the worthy perpciuator of the traditions of the house of Savoy, by rallying with unshakable loyalty around his august successor. Italians will prove by their deeds that their institutions do not die." All the Italian troops took the oath of allegiance to the new king amid the applause of the people. Perfect tranquillity reigns throughout the country. Toadstools Are Fatal. Mrs. Edith Nurris and her children, Maud, 15 years old, and Thomas, 13 years old, died yesterday at the stock farm of her husband, J. A. Norris, just outside of Harvey, 111., from eating toadstools. The father and two other children, Eva, 17 years old. and Edith, 19 years old, with Robert Smith, a farm hand on the place, are critically ill from the same cause and may die. The death of the boy. Thomas, is largely attributable to the heroic effort he made to save the other members of the family. They were all Seized with excruciating pains about midnight and as his father was prostrated, the oy. though suffering Intensely, rode a horse bareback three miles to Ilomewood at breakneck speed, for medical assistance. The exposure and suffering caused by this ride made more sure the effect of tho poison. Had he not made the effort all eight must have died before assistanee reached them To N-arch for North Pole. Captain Banendahl of the German imperial navy, who has been arranging for an expedition in search of the north pole, will set sail from Hamburg on Aug. 11 on the Matador, a fishing schooner of forty-four tons burden. He now intends to enter the pack ice east of Spitzbergen. Drowned In Muskegon Lake. Two men and a young woman lost their lives by drowing in Muskegon lake, near Muskegon, Mich. The drowned are: John Mortwedt, Chas. Erickson, Selma Telefson. Three other occupants of the boat were saved. The boat in which the party was rowing was capsized about a mile from shore. Mortwedt managed to right the craft and saved two of the girls. This makes a total of nine persons drowned in this neighborhood in less than six weeks. Robber Steals Mach Jewelry. Twenty-five hundred dollars worth of jewelry was stolen from J. W. Talbot's jewelry store in Nevada, Mo., while the proprietor and clerks were witnessing a circus parade. There is no clew to the identity of the robber. Robbers Hold Up a Train. Two masked men held up Pullman passengers on Union Pacific train ninety miles east of Denver, killed W. J. Fay, a prominent Californlan, who resisted, and escaped with small booty from the passengers.

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IIS 10 II IS

Daring Attempt to Assassinate Muzaffer-ed-Din. ASSASSIN HAD A PISTOL. Man Springs Upon Step of the Iioyal Carriage and Endeavor to Shoot Occupant Under Arrest and Talks. An attempt on the life of the shah of Persia, Muzaner-od-Din, was made Thursday morning in Paris, but it resulted in no harm to his majesty. A man broke through a line of policemen at 9:15 o'clock as the shah emerged from the court of the sovereigns and sprang upon the step of the carriage. The man was dressed as a laborer, and leaped from between two aatomobiles, where he had been hidden, overturning a bicycle officer in his path. In one hand the man had a cane, which he raised as though to strike, but this movement was only intended to hide his real purpose, for in the other hand he held a revolver. Overpowered ly the l'ollee. The attempted assassination there came to an end. for the grand vizier struck the weapon from the man's hand, and at the same time officers caught his arm from behind and overpowered him. A crowd of Sou people who witnessed the attempted assassination made a rush toward the wouldLe murderer and tried to attack him, but there were many police in the neighborhood and these prevented the mob from doing any violence. At the police station the man expressed regret that he had been unable to carry out his intentions. He said: "This is an affair between me and my conscience." The would-be assassin declined to give his name or nationality. He speaks but little, and that with a southern accent. The police believe him to be an Italian. Shall Warned by Letter. Just before starting from the palace the shah received a letter dated from Italy, signed with ar. Italian name, but posted in Paris, announcing to him that he would be assassinated to-day. The police believe the man who attacked the shah wos not alone in his effort. The whole of the police department is at work ."eking for his accomplices. When the officials tried to interrogate the prhoner this afternoon he maintained absolute silence. He struggled desperately to avoid a picture being taken, and had to be bound hand and foot ar.d his head held between the knees of the photographer's assistant. lcriiiioii of the 1'rUoner. The prisoner has chestnut-colored hair, a large mustache and blue-gray eyes. He was dressed in a blouse and wide trousers, the usual clothes of a carpenter. In his pocket was found an ugly knife and a handkerchief marked "12Sth regiment infantry." When this was discovered the man said: "That will not aid you in your inquiries concerning my identity." Later to some officials of the household of the shah who tried to interrogate him the prisoner said: "Your master will do well to resign; otherwise we will kill him." "Why did you attempt to assassinate the shah?" the officer asked. "Because." was the reply, "It pleased me. That does not concern you." Passing of Georgo Ditou. "It's no use trying to go on, Tom; this arm feels as if it were dead," George Dixon, the great little colored fighter, told Tom O'Rourke, his faithful manager, at the end of the sixth round of his fight with Tommy Sullivan at the Coney Island boxing arena Tuesday night. O'Rourke picked up the arm that was then hanging lifeless by the side of the fighter, and as he pressed his fingers into the flesh Dixon uttered a cry of pain. Then the bell sounded for the beginning of the seventh round, but Dixon did not even look up. One of the seconds In the corner tossed a big towel into the center of the ring and the passing of George Dixon had been announced. A physician was called hastily and It was found at once that the fighter had suffered a compound fracture of the left arm between the wrist and the elbow, one of the bones being badly Eplintcred. Canada liars Out Paupers. The Canadian government has caused a proclamation to be issued decreeing that pauper immigrants arriving at any Canadian port cannot be permitted to land until the captain of the vessel has put into the hands of the government immigration officials a sum sufficient to meet their temporary requirements and to pay their traveling expenses to point of destination. To Sail for the North Pole. Capt. Badendahi of the Gorman imperial navy will start for the north j pole in a fortnight. He will sail di- : rectly into the pack ice regions north ! of Spitzbergen, and then eastward to the open sea, when he believes that he can reach the pole. He will take three years provisions. Somnambulist 1 Impaled. William Cuddy of St. Louis walked in his sleep to the roof of his back porch and jumped olT into the yard. becoming impaled in his flight 0:1 the sharp end of a clothes pole. He was rescued by his family, which was awakened by his cries for help. Cuddy dreamed that he was on a mountain with a tobaggan and jumped off, expecting a slide down its precipitous sides for about seventy miles. Instead of the mountain peaks and snow he expected to see there was nothing but his back yard and a burning thirst. Poisons Ills Father's Coffee. At Fresno, Cal., Fren Himes, aged 13, has made the startling confession that he poisoned his father, who is dying at the county hospital. The boy stated his father had treated him cruelly and refused to allow him to drive his team. He therefore concluded to kill him, and he and his younger brother put their heads together and bought poison, which Fred, who did the cooking, put in his father's coffee. Himes called for three cup3 and a portion of poison was added to each cup.

LATEST MABKETJUOTATI0N&;AWEEK 1N INDIANA.

Sprint: Wheat No. 3. &'?73c: No. 4. 60S CSC Winter Wheat No. 2 red. TtTTUc: No. S. T4,.fT5Uc: No. 4. TCi?iT4c: N". '2. hard. "i?.'U tike; No. 3, 72c; No. 4, tJc; No. 3 white, T.TiTö'ic Corn No. 2. 3rV,T;S?8;r; No. 2 yellow. SSHc; No. 3, Si', (JiW:'-8c; j.no. 3 yellow, ii-'.zc: No. 4, 2S' .... Oats No. 4 white, 22c: No. 3 white, 23V" 2:14c: No. 2. -l'c. Millstuffs Kran. Jl?.: 12.75. Cattle Native steers, Jl.öO: stockers and feeders. ?3.X''' 4.;; butcher cows and heifers. J3.-.i5; camiers. $2.C.'.i3.23: fd westerns, JKnO: fed IVxans, prass Texans, JS.2i4. Hugs lieavv, ?v.lj S.2Ö: mixed. J5.1KJ."..2'i: light, $.". 3.10: :igs, $4. GOV 4. JO. Sheep C'lokt' to irime wethers, J4.iJi4..ro: m ilium to choice mixed natives, $;;.T0f;4.LV: crass Txans and western sheep. '.j 4.40: plain ewe? and coarse lots. . colls, bucks and poor stock. -'.". M.U'; iM.j to choice yearlings. t. :iö.o . : poor to fair yearlings, S:;.."'i A.'S,; spring lambs. toor to fair, J". 7". spring lambs, good to lancv. f .! ': .xe Ulackbi rrie -Mi h'.i'an. iv;e prr 16 c.ts 1 ;::. k r;(Si i rri. per 24 p and It; its. P.I n b r! M..r" 1.7Ü per M qts. tJoosi berri s. To'iTTc ;t r I'j c,ts. K d raspberries. S . Jl.l". ;. r 14 ;ts. Whrrtleberries. $i.'.il.! p. r qts. Hut tr Creamery, extra, T'e: dairh s. fancy. Iv'.-c: packing, 14 . !':. 1- uil -r anis, daisies. I'.'He: Young Ann ti-a. new. V,'Ac: twins, r.cvv, lVf I'1.,?: sik:ni:r,i. poor to fr'l. 4'i tic. Ki-'cs At in. ni:, c.iss rvt urr.-d. 71 Gtlv'c. t; reen fruits At;-. s. r.-w. common to cbitiee. per bu. 2.". 7.V-. i' tatoes New, ".'! 1 V'lUry - 1 sunk: Turk"ys, ii 7'--e : c)rc k ns. s.. :: st-rings. '.'3 ! c ; roosters, r.:c: rei-se. .".'7c: iueks, 7-(S: spriti::s. 10.'. Hay- " tiintl'y. $i:-il3.r.y: N. 1 timothy, 1-.: ehuice prairie, J:;v f'.f). Tivoli Iw:i':d aue a Punic. No such wholesale raid of welldressed men and women has been recorded in the tenderloin umler the present administration as that which closed up the Tivoli in west 35th street New York, Wednesday right anil landed 1Ö4 men and 54 women in the west, 30th street station. Capt. Thomas and forty of his men made the raid. The place was full, an orchestra was playing and waiters were serving drinks when the captain and his men in uniform entered. Men swore and women screamed or fainted. All the women were arrayed in expensive Stimmer finery, and sleeves and low-cut bodices of almost transparent material were the rule. Many wore diamonds and much jewelry. Ackron. the proprietor, was no: to be found. Many of the prisoners were prosperous business men. The raid was made because the chief's order for the Tivoli to close had not been obeyed. Increase of OlO Pensioner. The lorihcumiLg annual report of the eoMu'.k-oicier of pensions, Mr. Evans, will show a grand total o: i'L'J.ÖHS pensioners on the rolls on July 1 last, an increase of 2,010 for the year. The figurea on which the report will be based are now complete and ready for incorporation in the repoit. Tluy show that on July 1, isij?. there were 93L511 pensioners on the rolls. During the year 40.C15 original pensions were granted and 4.G1U nam's were restored to the rolls. To offset these 43.334 names were dropped from the rolls during the year, including 35.S09 by reason of deaths. fn': by remarriages of pensioners and C.C.I G for other causes, leaving the total number 011 the roll at the first of this month '93,32 S. Storm Doe Evil And Good. A clouuuursi Luo uoouvu canyons and valleys and caused disaster along the banks cf many small rivers and creeks tributary to the Verde river. Many campers along the banks were caught unawares and wagons and tenta were washed downstream. So far as known, but two lives were lost, J. H. Jacobson and his partner, believed to be one Williams, prospectors from Iowa, were drowned while engaged in an effort to save a horse and mining outfit. The hailstorm was terrific, stones as large as walnuts failing between Pima and Prescott. The storm will feed the canals which irrigate the principal agricultural regions of Arizona and be worth many hundreds of thousands of dollars to ranchers. Itobbers Seenr 828.O00. At New York one of three leather mail pcruehes in transit from the general postofiice to sub-station O.at Fifth avenue and Thirteenth street, was robbed on Thursday last of more than $2S,000 in drafts, checks and cash. While the bags lay on the platform to await a certain train a slit eight inches long was cut in one of them, and through the cut nearly all the mail In the bag was extracted. The matter was kept secret and the postofiice inspectors set to work to find the robbers. So far nothing has been discovered. Tieket Nominated In Ioirti. The Iowa republican convention at Des Moines made these nominations Wednesday: For secretary of state, W. II. Martin; for auditor, F. F. Merriam; for treasurer, G. S. C.ilbertson; for attorney-general. C. W. Mullan; for judge supreme court. Hmlin McClain: for railway commissioner. D. J. Palmer; for presidential electors at large. John N. Baldwin, Ole O. Roe. Yellow Fever In Iluvutnt. The navy department has received word from Surgeon Marcour. in charge of the naval station at Havana, that two suspicious e:i?cs. supposed to be yellow fever, had appeared there. Orders have been issued to send every one north who can be spared. The navy department has between fifteen and twenty men at this station. Sees lVary'n Shl WindwardThe Labrador mail steamer Virginia Lake, which has arrived at St. John's, N. F., reports that the Peary relief steamer Windward passed through tho Straits of Delle Isle last Sunday, bound north. It also reports that immense ice floes still block the northern coast of Labrador. This will seriously impede the Windward's progress. The mall steamer was unable to get beyond Double Island, the floe there being impassable. Hundreds of fishing schooners were similarly blocked. Nine Saved from Drowning. Capt. M. A.Cusack, master of the teg W. G. Harrow, bound from Cleveland to Michigan City, picked up five men and four women in an open boat in Lake Michigan, ten miles from St. Joseph. The Harrow was en route to Michigan City to engage in the fishing business for a Chicago firm. Fire Coiisaiues a Warehouse. At Muscatine, Iowa, the warehouse of Huttig Brothers' sash and door factory was destroyed by lire, entailing a loss of $100,000.

RECORD OF HAPPENINGS FOR ! SEVEN DAYS.

, Tonne Man Trefen Do.Uh to Man led ! Life Cda-sn Plant to Keouuie La Eatern Indhtu l'Miuttrs lliituiifil m I Ian Name. ralnttr Made .iim "DnUn." For over twenty years William Dowling and his large family in L gansport have betn known un : r t.ie name of Dolan and that ge-ütleiai-a has just announced th- tru'h. In lSf he was a grower h' : ami mplo;. el men to paint a sign, the ;, en made a mistake, making th name "Do. an." The work v.-as paid i-.-r in ioivane. Mil could not be donee. r. He ac tpied the work. . 1: i . ir up ?' si: n ;mi 1 gradually drifted f; q t! name o: ' D wiing" to "Ihdan" a:u; v.-i -t v writing it hims'-i;. Win be - , have his name pla-.-ed :; hj:i:s:.!i:e monument for his dece.. i v,:V kr.ew th 1 'it the truth wou'd buy' n i known. He owns v Lu is known as the "Dolan" theater and that, playhouse will now sa;l as "Dowling's"' theater. Mr. Dowling is widely known over the state. Kiepert Y;tile Deep Creek.. John W. Clenimons eloped with M'ss Florence Jackson of Uridg iort, lud. Muddy Fork Cnek. whUh the couple had to ford to reach the home of Magistrate Coombs, was a torrent from rains, and when Clemmons waded in he was swept away and hal to swim for his life. He finally gained the bank, where he found Miss Jackson. Putting her on his shoulders, he carried her across the creek, although they were both in danger of drowning. Magistrate Coombs married the couple, and with th- ir clothes still dripping they went to the home of a farmer friend cf Clnnmons to borrow dry clothing. The farmer suspected burglars and !irel on Cl:tnmon. but missed him. Mrs. Clemmons screamed and the farmer recognized his callers Preferred Drsth t Married l ife. Otto Cottcm. aged 17, until fiva wc(ks ago elevator boy at a Ter re Haute dry goods hou?o, shot hirr.S"!; in the yard of his father's ho-tse. ar.d the doctors say he car not 1 clover. : Cottom left a rote to Iiis sister saying : he had married Miss Louise chandler : of National City. 111., on Jalv in Terre Ilar.te, and that he wo:I 1 rather I die than live with her. lie ad 1 that : she was in Peoria new. Letters were found from the girl's father, who is a ' bicycle dealer at Nat 5 on al City, threatening him with arrest unless he mari ried her. Publication was made in the local newspapers cn July 4, th:it tbey hod been married, but Cottom denied ' it to his parents, and they had disi-red-: ited it. NcMci to Seirt 15:tnk. The American Prot' ! ive b a-tte Co'dored) closed its derberations at Indianapolis with th3 election of the following national ofil-ers: President. Joseph W. Henderson. Providence, R. I.; secretary-treasure", the Kev. G. W. Gaines, Chic? go: natioral organizer, J. W. IT. Powell. Tn.liar.npolis. Lfc was decided to estaHisb the financial headquarters of the league at Chicago. Next December tho national organization, with th noney already collected from colored people throughout the country and with the amounts expected to be subscribed, will establish a bank of deposit in Chicago. Itrokern Turn to Telephone. Indianapolis brokers assert that the independent telephone companies of tho central states may come, to the assistance of the new Chicago company that has been organized to put up independent telegraph lines to carry i stock and grain quotations. Harry B. Gates, secretary of the new tele phone company of Indiruiapolls, which is connected with the independent telephone lines cf the state, said he had been asked by the Chicago company If his company would help carry quotations from the Chicago board of trade. He is willing to enter tho arrangement. Anil-SHhMHii-t Ac tive. Dr. Hollingsworth, president of the Terre Haute branch of the Anti-Saloon League, says that the formal charges and affidavits in the matter of the complaint against the police commissioners will be filed with the governor one day next week, and that, no doubt, the governor will have the commissioners present. Two of tho commissioners have been interviewed ' and say that they are doing all in j their power to nfor.-e the law. j IVir t'ls:ir t at A inon:t. Indiana camp-mov-t iugs are joining ! In the war agnirft cigarcts. The ' Winona Park assembly has mrvle a ' rule prohibiting cigarct smoking in the park, and the cigarrt users, are oVying the order by substituting cob pipes. Women at the l.otol made complaint. Ula IMant to Kesuto. John Gray, traveling representative of the American Window Class company, arrived at Muncie and ordered the fires to be lighted in furnaces of the factories in eastern Indiana next Monday, preparatory to general resumption or. Spt. IS. This means that all trust plants in the country arc to resume on that date. Workmen are Jubilant, anticipating the mest prosperous season in the window glass history in America, as the trust officials will endeavor to flood the markets. She Canned Her lta J Ieath. Mrs. E1 PhlllipjH of Bicknell, gave her baby a dose of morphine to make it sleep while she went to church. Th balby dld en hour later from th effectj of the drug. A dose of paregoric, administered earlier, had failed to put the child to sleep. Terr Haute Grocer Hissing. Joseph W'eible, a grocerat Fifth and Lafayette avenues, Terre Haute, la missing. His store has been taken in charge by creditors.

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