Nappanee Advance-News, Volume 17, Number 3, Nappanee, Elkhart County, 3 April 1895 — Page 2

THE NAPPANEE NEWS. BY G. N. MURRAY. NAPPANEW ‘ ' INDIANA. The News Condensed. Important Intelligence From All Parts. DOMESTIC. The president appointed Col. Thaddeus H. Stanton to be paymaster general of the army, to succeed Gen. William Smith, retired. The commission sitting in Washington in the claims of American citizens against the Venezuelan government decided in the favor. Minister ThurstoA of Kuwait decided to depart from Washington before his government coWf officially recall him. John R. Tucker, aged 51, an attorney at Jeffersonville, Ind., was killed In an encounter with William Taylor, aged 70. Maggie Tiller, convicted of the murder of Freda Huntington in Chicago, was sentenced to be hanged. This was the first time that a woman had been condemned to death in the courts of Cook county. Another shortage of 8400,000 was found in Chicago in the accounts of the whisky trust. The seventeenth annual encampment of the G. A. R. department of Michigan commenced at Mount Clemens. Gov. Altgeld issued a proclamation designating Friday, April 19, as Arbor day in Illinois. Two men were killed and three others badly injured by the explosion of a sawmill boiler near Van Wert, 0. Closing arguments were made in the Debs case before the United States supreme court in Washington. An early decision was expected. Frank Sutler, an assayer, shot and fatally' wounded his wife at Sac Francisco and killed himself. A fire in the Bell clothing store in Chicago caused a loss of 8175,000. • It was said that a prominent citizen of Jacksonville, Fla., was Ujider contract with sympathizers of’lthe Cuban patriots to engage 10,000 negroes from Florida to go to Cuba to aid the patriots. Gen. S. B. Daboll, of St. Johns, was elected department commander of the Michigan G. A. R. at the annual encampment in Mount Clemens. TnE Commercial bank at Cincinnati, a state institution long regarded as financially solid, closed its doors with liabilities of $1,000,000. A settlement of the Davis will contest was effected by the heirs of the Montana millionaire. A RESOLUTION fixing May 2 as the date for final adjournment was adopted by the Illinois senate. It was stated in Chicago that the prices of all kinds of meats would be higher this summer than they have been for ten years past. Ten horses and twelve cows perished by the burning of Charles Jarrett’s barn near Fort Dodge, la. Fire at West Superior, Wis., destroyed J. f. Nelson’s property and his wife and three children were probably fatally burned. The home of Chris Christianson at Minot, N. D., was burned, and five of his nine children were cremated. The State bank of Stanton, Neb., went into voluntary liquidation. James Keelan, a celebrated confederate spy, died in a hospital at Kansas City and was buried as a pauper. At Jefferson, la,, the thermometer registered 90 degrees in the shade on the 27th. The mayor and board of trustees of Madison, 111., were found guilty of malfeasance in office for permitting a gambling house to run. Burglars, in an attempt to find hidden money, cruelly tortured Mrs. Mary Berger, aged 86 years, at Spr^igfield, Four counterfeiters, Jefferson May and John, James and Chauncey Boyer, were arrested at Rockford, 111. The Clarence bank at Clarence, Mo., suspended with liabilities of SBO,OOO. Attorney General Oi.ney says that the printing of facsimiles of foreign postage stamps is a violation of the act of 1891, which prohibits the counterfeiting of foreign obligations or securities. The Auburn state bank, located at the village of Auburn. 111., was robbed of something over SI,OOO by burglars. Officers of the Queen & Crescent railroad intercepted train robbers at Greenwood, Ky., and killed two of them. Miss Amy Thill, an actress, aged 24, was murdered in New York by John Bigelow, an actor, who then ended his own life. Mrs. Frank Annis perished in her burning home near Fenton, Mich. The firm of Malcolm & Wat ar bury, of Chicago, which did an extensive bucket-shop business in Illinois, Missouri, Nebraska and lowa, failed for *IOO,OOO. Statistics show that 373 railroad companies in this country are now building, or contemplating doing so soon, 20,547 miles of new road. By the bursting of a reservoir near Newcastle, Col., several bridges were swept away and many farms were ruined. A fire at St. Augustine, Fla., dentroyed forty-nine residences and business houses, besides several smaller structures, entailing a loss of SIOO,OOO. At Jackson. Miss , a negro who insisted upon riding in a wagon with three white women was shot to death. Mrs. Reach, an eccentric character, died at Oshkosh, Wis., aged 100 years. Twenty years ago she purchased a coffin, and at her own request she was buried in it after she had used it a ■core o£ years for a bed. Terrible prairie fires were raging in the Otoe and Ponca Indian reservations several miles north of Perry, 0. T. C. L. Williams, of St. Louis, while temporarily insane, killed Catherine Kaeser, his aunt, and then committed ■uicide.

The St. Paul Railway company discharged eleven engineers and thirtyfive firemen from its division running, into Fort 'Howard, Wis., because they frequented saloons. The district between Pleasantville, N. J., and Brigantine Junction was burned over by a forest fire, many buildings and a large quantity of timber being consumed, the loss aggregating thousand of dollars. Wyckoff, Minn., a town of about 600 inhabitants, was almost completely wiped out by fire. The New England co ist was visited by a hurricane, the wind attaining a velocity of seventy-five miles an hour, and doing much damage to shipping. Central lowa was swept by dust storms, which partially obscured the sun and hindered railroad traffic. The boiler of the Langston sawmill near Apple Valley, Ga.. exploded, killing William Goode, John Langston and a negro woman. The Nonpartisan Women’s Christian Temperance union at Kansas City decided to remove their hats at church services and all indoor meetings. Samuel McWilliams, a notorious bandit, and a companion were shot down while robbing a store at Braggs Station, Ark. Federal officials at San Francisco unearthed a gang engaged in circulating forged Chinese residence papers. The- wind reached a velocity of 75 miles an hour in New York, doing much damage to shipping. The theatrical company that left St. Louis to walk to New York in 105 days on a wager gave up the job at Effingham, 111. A mysterious man, alleged to have been private secretary to the king of Sweden, died in poverty at Clinton, la. Two American warships were ordered to Nicaragua, presumably to protect American interests.

TnE exchanges at the leading clearing houses in the United States during* the week ended on the 29th aggregated $888,359,464, against $952,491,395 the previous week. The increase, compared with the corresponding week in 1694. was 20.8. An anti-cigarette ordinance went into effect in Lawrence, ’ Kan., and no cigarettes can be purchased in that city. Silver in very rich quantities was discovered in the mountains in Wayne county, W. Va. The Bank of Canton, Kan., suspended. It had 56,000 capital and $17,000 deposits and was a private concern. All the plate glass factories in the country, with a few exceptions, have closed down and will not resume until May 1. There were 234 business failures in the United States in the seven days ended on the 29th, against 278 the week previous and 238 in the corresponding time in 1894. The Bristol (Tenn.) Bank and Trust company assigned with liabilities of $24,720. The hottest weather ever known in the northwest in March prevailed on the 29th, the mercury reaching 90 degrees above zero in some places. The average in lowa and Illinois was 80 degrees. The residence of Israel Higbie, a wealthy farmer of Northport, L. 1., was burned* and his daughter, Mrs. William Rfeeves, and her young daughter were burned to death. The direct inheritance tax levied by the last Ohio legislature was declared unconstitutional by the circuit court at Cincinnati. Reports from the middle and northwestern states indicated Jthat crops were in great danger by reason of drought. A million pounds of sugar, alleged to contain arsenic, was sold at auction at Philadelphia for $4,000. John A. Brown, aged 30, shot his wife, aged 24, in Philadelphia, and then committed suicide. Domestic trouble was the cause. The question of removing the capital of Minnesota from St. Paul to Minneapolis was decided in favor of St. Paul. The boiler in a sawmill at East Leon, 0., blew up. D. J. Ingersoll, the owner, and his uncle, Denziel Ingersoll, were instantly killed. A beef famine, the most alarming in the history of the trade for many years, threatened the entire eastern section of the country. Rev. W. E. Brown, of the Shiloh Baptist church (colored), at Fredericksburg, Va., baptized 150 converts, the largest number of persons ever immersed at one time in the state. Three persons were killed, two fatally injured and ten others slightly hurt by jumping from a runaway trolley car on the mountain near Janesville, Pa. Heavy pnowstorms prevailed in Colorado and rains fell in the western and middle states, greatly benefiting crops. Mrs. Wilbur Barry, of Battle Creek, Mich., while in a fit of temporary insanity shot her husband and then shot herself. A filibustering expedition, the object of which is to seize Honolulu and depose the present Hawaiian government, was said to be fitting out in San Francisco. Henry Thorne, owner of a stock farm near Fort Recovery, 0., shot and killed his wife and then hanged himself. Financial trouble had unsettled his mind. August Swanson,*of Clinton, la., beheaded his 7-year-old son, using a hand ax to commit the murder The official monthly statement of treasury receipts and expenditures for March shows the expenditures over receipts were $750,000. An assignment was made by the Willow Springs (Mo.) bank. An abstract of sanitary reports, as made by the surgeon general in Washington, shows the presence of smallpox in twenty-one states of the union, during the past winter, the total number of deaths from the disease being 393. Two bandits held up a train near Wheatland, Cal., and Sheriff Bogard and one of the robbers were killed. Edgar A. Cohen, commission merchant at San Francisco, failed for £331,• 000.

Fire destroyed a barn in Fowler, 0., belonging to Mrs. Ruth Sigler and with it fifty-six sheep and four horses. Prairie fires which had been raging in western Nebraska for three days had destroyed a large number of ranches. Fire destroyed the better part of the business portion of Hays City, Kan., including seven stone and twenty frame buildings. PERSONAL AND POLITICAL. Mr3. Agnes Monroe Russel, for many years the editor of the Club magazine, and a writer of note, died in New York. Presiding Elder W. S. Birch, of Kokomo, Ind., died while attending conference at Logansport, aged 70 years. Maturin M. Ballou, of Boston, the well-known editor, publisher and writer, died in Cairo, Egypt, aged 75 years. He was editor and publisher of the first illustrated weekly paper in this country, known as Ballou’s Monthly. Dr. William Hotchkiss, who was buried at St. Lou's, is supposed to have reached the age of 140 years. He had been a ma,son 100 years. Anton C. Hesing, president of the Illinois Staats Zeitung company, died at his home in Chicago, aged 72 years. The eighth annual convention of the Republican National league will be held in Cleveland, 0., June 19. Rev. A. B. Earle, the noted evangelist* died at Newton, Mass*, aged 83’ years. He had been engaged in evangelical work for more than forty years. Daniel Baugh, residing near Jeffersonville, Ind., celebrated his 106th birthday.

FOREIGN. Manitoba was in a state of open re hellion against Canada over the order to restore separate Catholic schools. Great Britain will demand of Spßin an explanation of the'wanton killing of an English sailor at Cuba. The Spanish primeminister said that he would send 100,000 troops to Cuba if that number wasnecessary to put down the rebellion. 'l&KMiEii Greenway adjourned the legislature of Manitoba until May, pending legal opinions on the Catholic school fight. Field Marshal Patrick Grant, the oldest officer in the British army, died at his home in London, aged 81 years. There was talk of J war between France and England as a result of France’s sending an expedition to the Niger in Africa. In the British house of commons a resolution to give home rule to England, Ireland, Scotland and Wales was adopted. It was announced that the emperor of Japan had declared an unconditional armistice pending peace negotiations with China. The government forces won a decisive victory over the rebels in Colombia and the revolution was believed to be at an end. Five .men, including the American superintendent, were killed by an explosion in the San Rafael (Mexico) mine. Oxford defeated Cambridge in the annual boat race in London, leading throughout and winning by a length and a half. * Enthusiastic celebrations of the eightieth birthday anniversary of Prince Bismarck were held throughout Germany. Koyama Rokunieki, the Japanese who attempted to assassinate Li Hung Chang at Shimonoseki, was senteneed to penal servitude for life. LATER. Reports to the director of the mint show coinage the month of March as follows: Gold, $2,866,102; silver, $573,535; minor coin. $80,195; total coinage, $3,509,835. Elections were held in Ohio and in most of the larger cities the republicans were victorious. Two children were murdered at Columbus, 0., by their mother, Mrs. H. H. B. Williams, who confessed the crime. Five persons lost their lives in forest fires in Kentucky. George N. Scott, cashier at Beef Slough, Minn., for the Mississippi Logging company, was reported to b5820,000 short. The Colorado legislature adjourned sine die. The courthouse building, containing all the records of the horthwest territories and the valuable government library, was destroyed by fire at Regina, N. W. T. Six men were killed and several seriously hurt by the explosion of a boiler in the Cann tannery in Woburn, Mass. The United States Rubber company at Springfield announced to the trade an advance in prices of 6 per cent., which is to prevail for the coming year. lowa was visited by a snowstorm, while heavy rains in other states allayed all fears of drought In the war between China and Japan the record shows that 7,803 Chinese have been killed and L 459 taken prisoners, while the Japanese have lost 814 killed and 2,027 wounded. Over 2,500 miners in Appanoose county, la., quit work because of a reduction in wages. Postmaster General Bisskll issued an order restricting second-class matter to actual subscribers for journals entitled to the pound rate. The twenty-first annual national soldiers' reunion will be held at Caldwell, 0., June 14 and 15. Misses Anna K. Wells, Eugenie Armstrong and Maggie Farrelly, of Ellensburg, Wash., left Tacoma, Wash., to seek their fortunes in the gold fields of Alaska. I The Spanish government called out ! 20,000 reserves, owing to the reinforceI men ts sent to Cuba. I In the Michigan election the republicans carried the state by 35,000 majority, electing Joseph B. Moore supreme court judge and R. W. Butterfield and Charles H. Hackly regents. In the Third congressional district Lieut. Gov. Milnes was elected to congress to succeed Burrows by 1,75a

AN ARMISTICE. Japan Grants a Trace—lt Does Not Apply to Formosa. Washington, March 30. The ~following telegram was received by the Japanese foreign office: “On the opening ot the negotiations the Chinese plenipotentiary proposed an armistice, which the Japanese government waa willing to accept on certain conditions While this negotiation was going on, the untoward event happened on the person of the Chinese plenipotentiary. His majesty, having In view this unhappy occurrence, commanded the Japanese plenipotentiaries to consent to a temporary armistice, without conditions.’ This was communicated to the Chinese plenipotentiary.’’ Washington, April ■>. Secretary GTesham has received official Confirmation -of the declaration of an unconditional armistice by the emperor of Japan. It is not understood here that this is in any sense equivalent to a declaration of peace, but it is believed that there is not likely to be a resumption of hostilities. The armistice established by the order of the mikado extends to April 20, but it will terminate if the peace pour parlers are broken in the meantime. According to the terms of the armistice the movement of troops and the transportation of contraband of war by sea is forbidden. The new distribution of troops not intended to augment the armies in the field is allowed. * Japan originally proposed as conditions of an armistice the occupation of Shan Ivwan, Taku and Tien Tsin and Japanese control of the Shan Kwan and Tien Tsin railroad, China to defray the cost of such occupation. Lillui)g Chang has vainly sought to modify these conditions, and it was proposed to continue the negotiations without an armistice being established, when the attempt on the life of the Chinese plenipotentiary occurred. This led to the declaration by the mikado of an unconditional armistice. As the terms of the armistice do not embrace the island of Formosa the Japanese operations there will continue. London, April 2.—A dispatch from Tokio to the Central News says that Koyama, the young Japanese who shot Li Iluug Chang, the Chinese viceroy, lias been sentenced to imprisonment for life at hard labor.

FOR WEST POINT. Portlal List of Huccessful Candidates for Cadetships. Washington, March 29.—The following is a partial list of the candidates who have passed successfully the examination for cadetships at West Point military academy. They will enter the academy in June next: Illinois—F. Van S. Chamberlain, Chicago; G. V. H Moseley, Evanston; C. C. Farmer, Jr. Mount Carroll; William B. Burtt, Hinsdale; J. W. Johnson, Sterling. Indlan%—C D. Herron. Crawfordsvllle. lowa-Mj. S. Slmonds, Cresco; W. W. Stickle* Anamosa. Michigan—la B. Kamer. Grand Rapids: J. G Clipper, Springfield; J. L. Rowley, Port Huron; T. H Jackson, Muskegon; L. W. Oliver, Escanaba. Minnesota—Ray Cornwell. Winona: CL G ame Moorehead. Nebraska—E. H. Humphrey, Omaha. Ohio— lm Halstead, Cincinnati; R. 11 Armstrong. Cellna; R E. McNally. Springfield; H. S. Commager, Toledo. Wisconsin— C. A. Trott, Milwaukee; Ij\ W. Oldenburg, Antlgo. Has No Assets. Chicago, March 29. —The firm of Malcolm & Waterbury, which did au extensive bucket-shop business in Illinois, Missouri, Nebraska and lowa, made an assignment Wednesday to George Wiley, a board of trade man. The crash came suddenly at the noon hour in the head office of the concern, room 52, 121 La Salle street, which was in charge of T. B. Waterbury. It was an unpleasant surprise to the patrons and creditors, the liabilities, it is understood, being SBO,OOO, and the assets nothing. The house was heavily on the bear side of the market, and the recent rise in wheat and pork proved too much for the firm. Thurston Leaves for Honolulu. Washington, March 29. —Minister Thurston’s formal note to Secretary Gresham, announcing his intended departure from Washington, whiSh reached the secretary Wednesday morning, is understood to be brief almost to the point of curtness. It contained no reference to a leave of absence or cause of departure, but under Tuesday’s date simply stated that he intended to depart for Honolulu Wednesday afternoon, leaving Secretary Hastings in charge of the Hawaiian legation. Spain and the Allianca Incident. Washington, April 1. Reports that the Spanish government is taking steps to meet the requests of the United States in the Allianca affair, that the commander of the offending Spanish cruiser has been relieved from his ship and that orders have been sent to the other Spanish commanders in Cuban waters to observe the requirements of international law and refrain from improper interference with the ships of the U nited States or other foreign nations,have caused much gratification in official circles here. Oxford Wins Aeala. Putney, Bngland, April 2.—Oxford won this fifty-seventh boat race Saturday between the crews representing .the universities of Oxford and Cambridge, crossing the line two lengths ahead. The official time of the winning boat is announced to be 20 minutes 50 seconds. Explosion Kills Five Men. Jiminizi, Mex., April I.—An explosion occurred in the San Rafael mine west of here Saturday from the careless handling of a large quantity of blasting powder. John Warren, the American superintendent, and four miners were killed. The shafthouse was blown to pieces and much valuable machinery completely wrecked. Sold Mortgaged Property. Spbingfield, Mo., March 29.—Tretas Stowe, a prominent business man of this city, has been setfteneed to two years in the penitentiary at hard labor for selling mortgaged property.

WEAK NERVES

Indicate as surely as any physical symptom shows anything, that the organs and tissues of the body are not satisfied with their nourishment. They draw their sustenance fi;om the blood, and if the blood is thin, impure or insufficient, they are in a state of revolt. Their complaints are made to the brain, the king of the body, through the nervous system, and the result of the general dissatisfaction is what we call Nervousness. This is a concise, reasonable explanation of the whole matter. The cure for Nervousness, then, is simple. Purify and enrich ypur blood by taking Hood’s Sarsaparilla, and the nerves, tissues and organs will have the healthful nourishment they crave. Nervousness and Weakness will then give way to strength and health. That this is not theory but fact is proven by thp voluntary statements of thousands cured by Hood’s Sarsaparilla. Read the next column.

Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is the Only True Blood Purifier

The Hammock That Swung; Id the Fast. Against the clouds of memory two trees stand tall and high. .With arms outheld entreatingly before the glowing sky, \ To gather all tho happiness of dreams fast floating by And hold them for the dreamers that beneath their shelter lie. * ." •,.' For from those trees there used to hang, in long-gone childish days, • The hammock of our silent times, the hami mock of our plays; That swung and swayed to laughing heights and wild and romping ways, | While all looked haply hazy in the sunlight's reeling rays. Or else it rocked and wavered with a creaking, sleepy strain As dreams dropped from the shadows to a story-weaving brain, © Till birds and bees about me sanjfa drowsy sweet refrain I That slippod away upon a thought where slumber came to reign. I swing my mind from present time till life Is yqt aglow, Through mists of thought and tears of years I see the long ago; For childish hours are brightest and the world I used to know Was sweetest in the hammock old which swung me to and fra —Edith L. Crary, In Judge. “Sometimes,” said Uncle Eben, “when er man tells you he’s discouraged he doan’ mean nuffin’ by ijb ’ceptin’ dat he’s ’bout made up ’is min’ ter be good an’ lazy de res’ ob bis life.”—Washington Star. “If I could only,” she exclaimed, “get it ■ through my head.” She gazed at ths)arge hat pin and wondered how she was going to fasten her new street bonnet in place.—Detroit Tribune. “Kind hearts are more than coronets,” But somehow with the belles, In choosing mates for life, it is The coronet that tells. —Washington Star. “Go slow when you gits mad,” said Uncle : Eben. “Ermanthat’buses somebody when he’s excited am pow’ful liable ter bite his own tongue.”—Washington Stkr. There is nothing more foolish than to advise a man to grin and bear it. If he bears It patiently, he does enough without grinning.—Atchison Globe. WAGGs-“Did you have a fine time last night?” Jaggs—“No, I had it this morning. Ten dollars fine; three dollars costs.” —Philadelphia Inqiiirer. “Dah am only one day in do y’ah.” said Uncle Eben, “when folks orter look at de dabk side ob life, and dat’s ’Mancipation,, day.”—Washington Star. * “Why on earth is Mrs. Robertson studying law?” “She intends hereafter to secure her own divorces.”—Brooklyn Life. “Mamma, see how cold that poor chestnut man looks! Do give me five cents so he can earn something.”—Flicgendo Blaetter. At any rate a man who is drowned in a waterspout Will never be killed by falling : out of a balloon.—Philadelphia Inquirer,. [ Popular rights are those that are coming our way.—Galveston News.

KNOWLEDGE

Brings comfort and improvement and tends to personal enjoyment when rightly used. The many, who live better than others and enjoy life more, with less expenditure, by more promptly adapting the world’s best products to the needs of physical being, will attest the value to health of the pure liquid laxative principles embraced in the remedy, Syrup of Figs. Its excellence is due to its presenting in the form most acceptable and pleasant to the taste, the refreshing and truly beneficial properties of a perfect laxative ; effectually cleansing the system, dispelling colds, headaches and fevers and permanently curing constipation. It has given satisfaction to millions and met with the approval of the medical profession, because it acts on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels without weakening them and it is perfectly free from every objectionable substance. Syrup of Figs is for sale by all druggists in 50c and $1 bottles, but it is manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Cos. only, whose name is printed on every package, also the name, Syrup of Figs, and being well informed, you will not accept any substitute if offered.

“With pleasure I will state thatj Hood’s Sarsaparilla has helped me derfully. For several months I could not lie down to sleep on account <>4 heart trouble and also Prostration of the Nerves. For three years I had been but could not get cured. I received re* lief for a while, but not permanent,, Soon after beginning to take Hood’s SarsaparilJadhere was a change for the better. In a short time I was feeling splendidly. I now rest well and am able to do work of whatever kind. If I had not tried Hood’s Sarsaparilla I do not know what would have become of me. I keep it in my house all the time, and other members of the family take it, and all say there is Nothing Like Hood's Sarsaparilla. I have highlv recom* mended it and one c my neighbors has commenced taking it. I recommend Hood’s Sarsaparilla at every opportune tv.” Mrs. S. Braddock, 404 Erie Av., Williamsport, Pennsylvania. Be sure to get

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