Pike County Democrat, Volume 20, Number 19, Petersburg, Pike County, 26 September 1889 — Page 1

.■■■' ■ MOUHT 4 prrrs, Proprietor*, PETERSBURG* INDIAN, NUMBER 19 VOLUME XX

<a( «<)• ta ia>, a INVARIABLY IN AOVANCC. auvkiitisi.no katkh : One square (»Uoe». one insertion...*1 0. Kaeh additional Insertion.a,.. A libera l reduction made nU advertisements rnnnlUK t km, six and twelve months. r. Lr«ai >uJ Transient advertisement*. U.u%t be paid for in advaaeo. — _ ?a s

JOB WORK or ali, xmos Neatly Executed. —AT— REASONABLE RATES. NOTICE! Persons receivinjr a oopy of this paper with this notice crossed in lead pencil are notified that the time of their suDscription has expired. - “■

-I POWDER Absolutely Pure. Th'» powder never varies. A marvel of purity, •iirnrth and alioiisomness More economical than the ordinary kinds. and ran not he tout in comp-illlou with the multitude of low-test, abort weight alum or phosphate powders Sold only In nans. Koval Bakin* 1‘owder Co„ 1< Wall sir New York. rUOKK-lSIONAI. ttKIIA. E A. KEY, Attorney* at Law, I'ETBIRSBUBO, JND. Odlre: Over J. 11. Adam* A Son‘» IVue Store, lie is alio u mcrolier of the United States Collection Jiasoe.atkm, and give* prompt attention I to every matter in which he U cmployeiL K 1*. R K'HAIilh«IK. A. II. Tatu>« % K OHARIISON A TAYLOR. Attorneys at Law, i UETKRNBimo. IND. I’romut nttent >nn given to nil business. A Koiary rtthlieei n»tanHy In theortlee. Office InCnrpsnlnt Ho lding, "ho and Main. J. W. \\ II,SON, * Attorney at Law, rKTi?K8Btruo, imx "omn*: Ov<t J. U, Young ft Co.'* Rton.

I. II. LaMAHR, Physician and Surgeon “T rKTlIHHIUma, IND., Will |>rart*f« in l'ih** and adjoining noun lift « 'flirt*: Mi«nOmm’i balding. Oii» tioumiUjr and nij*ht. DlnriUM** of women 4in<1 elii -ifn a »i eeUtty. Chronic nod difficult vjuh'% >* Li st' d .. II EX ItY FIELDS, Insurance & Real Estate AQliMT, rETKUHBl Il«, : : INDIANA. L»ii4ii>| wnpairiw Wfnunlml Prompt ml f lent .ti'o l)U«ln<*»K: Notary HUondrtl j kv KoatoniNt ittrt. Office: Hank Hu»lU»i»£. f EDWIN SMITH. ATTORNEY AT LAW, |||[ -ANDReal Estate Agent PETMUBUHO, - IN MAX A. 'lffloo, overGo* Eimnk'n .lore. Spool*! »tIf in ion Riven lo I'olWwl <>»«, Huylm »nd mg i.nn<ln, Kxamlnlug TtUm *nd Kurnlnlilng IMnuU _ “ rTrT * J. T. KIMK. PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS, PETERSBURG. IND. OUlff In Hank Building; Kidmen on ncvrnit Blraet, lhif« >quorv« *ou«h ol UA mu. promptly ntlen.Ic.l la. dny or niglH. J. a 1>I N CAN, Physician and Surgeon I ETERSjiCRO, . IND. omco on (lm« iloor Cnrpontf r Building in. J-. iH AJT.H X A ■

Resident Dentist, PETERSBURG, I NO ALL WORK WARRANTED. 0. K. Shaving Saloon, I. K Tl'KNKR, Proprietor. PETERSBURG, IND. Par,w>* within* wort dono M thoir rr*. I'Moi will Imi* ordor* at the shop, la Ur Adami' now IwrkJia*. rear of Adams A Soo'i dru, l Kxw

THE WORLD AT LARGE. Summary of thb bally News. WASHINGTON NOTES. Tns Secretary of the Treasury has received a conscience contribution ot 1300 from Chicago. • R. V. Bklt has been appointed" Assistant Commissioner of Indian Affairs by Secretary Noble. A National convention of protectionist wool growers t as been called for Washington for the first day of the next Congress. Minister Ryan transmits to the State Department statistics ot tbe value of American machinery imported Annually from the United States to Mexico in 1830 If 1W inclusive. This shows that the importation < grew in value from $46i<tS4 in m? to f4.000,000 in 1881 The estimated requirements of the sinking fund for tbe present year are ftS.000.000. Tbe total amount already applied to this purpose since the beginning of the fiscal year for the purchase of bonds Is f31940,!>T9. Tbe principal of these bonds was $21,887, G00 and the premium paid $5,• T02.973L Captain Arsis threatens to bring'suit Against lieoeral Schofield, who, as Acting Secretary ot War, issued the order convening the board to examine into his mental state. Statistician Dodge, of tbe Agricultural Department, denounces as false the statement of a discharged employe that certain parties have access to the official crop reports before publication so that they can operate to advantage in the grain markets. * Secretary Tract haa decided the question of two S,0» ton cruisers, authorised by the laat Congress. They will be built by the Norfolk and Brooklyn yards. Secretary NoBUt(baa ordered the taking ot careful measures to protect the ruins of the cliff dwellers, receully found in Colorado. The fourth annual convention of the National Medical Association convened in Washington on tbe 18th. Tut GeooeYino, the new Chinese Ambasasdor to the United Slates, has arrived from China with a large delegation ot lignitarlea. 4k DoImir, of the Agricultural Department report, great ipip'ovemenl In the recalled Had I-and. for agricultural purposes. {’resident Harrison has commuted tbe sentence of Dr. Burke i’riddy, of Chattanooga, Tens., of two years for violating the pennon laws to on# year. ® The Senate Committee on Irrigation heard testimony at Cheyenne, Wya, on the 18:h from the Territorial engineer and one member ot the Constant tonal convention from each county. The committee then disbanded and the members left foi their homes. A CARLE dispatch has (seen race ved at the Departm-nt of Stale from Consul Allen, at Kingston, Jamaica, saving that a riot occurred at Navassa. an iennui in the Caribb’nn sea, in which a number of Americans wore kihen. A British wit ship had left Jamaica to protect the lemoning Americans. 'Assistant Sscuktary TicHENon, of the Treasury Department, was serious y ill at Ida residence in Wnshngtun and was said to be threatened with pneumonia. The naval court of inquiry in Washington into the chargss ot inhuman punishiu»nt inflicted by Captain 1‘opa on ex* Maria.. Hs-rev. have cymoietnlv i £onerate.I* < \

i hk .-secretary ‘ I >> ar on* ae term meat, to remove from Fort Meade, Dak, all but oue coiit|>miy of tba troop* to Northwestarn Montana. This virtually amount* te ihiWabolition of the fort, which wa* on* of Ilia n ut important Writ of tiio MU* »ouri. Ihk annual sessinn of the Araariran Prehistoric Society contmail at Washington ua thi- 2Hh wit i thirty delegare* present Scientific pnpers were read by Ur. I Huber, of New York; Ur. Karla of Chi* engu, ami Ur. Critic, of New York. THIS KART. lit attempting to jump on a hug# caank in Kupart’a brewery. New York City, the I other night Chariot Friese, siu.taiu engineer. mined hi! footing, (ell and wat maabed into a jelly. 1 UK itockholdrr* of the great Thomas Iron 1'onioany of Pennsylvania bare rafu MU, 000 offered for the property by aTTrilish syndicate. • AT Tioga Junction, Pa., the engineer of tha Klmira train south lost control of his engine, owing to a slippery tr ack, and crashed into one of th- heavy Jumbo onfines. Noth engines and seveu cars were wrecked and two persons were killed and rver twenty iujured- After the cobialuu he wreckage look Ilia Th* Nicely brothers confined in jail at Sourer at. Pa, under amtence of death for the murder of Farmer "Umberger, over* jMiwered the ihetiff and ahot a deputy recently and eacaped. They were tubasqnrnily recaptured. The deputy was ae* rioutly vroundeil A* evtraerdmary atory contai from Ncrwa.k, Conn., where a aix-year old child had been sentenced by a juitice I of Ihe peace to fifteen year! in the Stale rolorra ichooi, until he stall be of ! age. Owing to the indignation wh ch lias j been aroused it li not likoly lo be catried out. Th* prosecution in ^be case of Henry 8. j Ives unexpectedly rested in case at New York on the JMh. Lnwyur Brooke naked I for the discharge of Ivea but ibe conn decided that the case should go to the Jury and the trial proceeded. Mrs. KbixiBBTH K Mri ututt, widow of Ur. Oforgii McClel an end mother of tlenernl Uoorge B. McClellan and Ur. Joha H. R McClellan, the diatinguiahed surgeon, died at Dr if ton. Pa., on the 18h. She was ninety years of age. Th* dam at Hibernia, near Coatesville, Pa. burst recently, causing much damage. No lives were lost. Tns John Crouse memorial college for women, c mnected with the Syracuse University, New York,has bee r dedicated, kt cost (mom. Th* second trial of Ueaera! 1. ster B. Faulkner, charged with wrecking the National Sank of Dsnvdle, N. Y.. era* begun in the United 8 ate* U strict Court ut Buffalo, N. Y.. on Ibe 19 h. Th* Boston tllobo bus offered 81,000 to the Boetcn base-bull club it they win th* pennant this year. J B RaHSABT. of Providence, R. L, a welt Known clothing merchant, with store* in many WeaWrn cilia*, died recently. Battuta Ions Sthacsa of U William street. New York, has assigned and absconded. Liabilities about ♦SfiJ.O'tk Hu Kobkht Rat HaUHTur wat con. vie ted at May’s Landing. N J , on the 19 h of the attempted murder of her nurse. Mary Donnelly, and given two years’ imprisonment. Tag Pennsylvania Board of Tardon* has refused to release the notorious Dr. Cox, of N*w Jersey, convirte l of malpractice. two ii I >er* war* crushed to death iu a < colliery at Mount Carmel, Pa., the other day unde- a fall of rock. IUkmIcu primaries were held in New York on Ih* *Nh to eboose delegate* to th* State convention. They Were mostly uneventful, but in the famous Ktghth Assembly district th* expelled O’Brien men caused tom* disturbance by attempts to vote and some anti-O’Bri-u men were asawhed as thav went to the polling place. Hk ann Mrs Job.* F. Brow, of Ban Franc:-CO. celeb ato* their golden wedding ia Burlington, Mas*., recently, traveling from the Pacific < oast for the purpose. Jxpas WgxiwnnTB Patsos, Ibe noted leimsh »u Ikv of h* pry on, Ponton g 8crit n ‘I n;-> ! k . n ■ a j;y i*- Pa-1 b«r «**(«* ifcputiy, h*4 MTWIjftflMr.

TltK WMt AkHA Ciibvian. eight year* old. of Chicago, wa* bitten by a rat terrier and died the other clay of hydrophobia. BIX children of Harry Baamthal, a mover by wagon from Boone, Iowa, to Milwaukee, Win, died on the trip of diphtheria. Tn Chicago World’* Fair manager* have indented the capital etoek to flO,»o,ooa A DtrtiUTi bridge over the Pataka ri ver near Pal aka, Ind., the other night canted the wrecking of a heavily-loaded freight train. No live* were lost Ait unknown tramp taved a train on the Chicago & Northweatem between Creecent and Stony Creek, Iowa, by die* covering a broken rail. Mm- AMtia Gaba and her baby were burned to death recently by a lamp expiation at San Francisco. Two other of her children were also seriously burned. Tag Chicago police, U le said, bate Cooney, 'the fox,” in cut tody. Titov bun with Indian* waa anticipated at Hatkbeirry, Aria. Settler* war* arming and aendlng their families nway. Two girls, aged seventeen, were killed in Sunday school at Columbia City, Ind., recently by a stroke of lightning. A aBociino and fatal prlae light occurred at Daly Bros.’ saloon. St. Louis, the other night. Thomas K. Jackson, aged eighteen, fooght Ed Abearn, the leeai champion. After eleven bloody rounds Jackson !*!! fainting nnd expired a few hours laner. Tha "blood*’’ -wh^ hid"chipped lia” to make up a purs* fojt the affair sneaked off and left the dying youth to his fate. HsaVi frosts wore reported In the Northwest; on the nights of the l?th nnd 18th. Harvet Gcrlbt, who wns undoubtedly connected with his wife in the abduction of little Annie Redmond, of Chicago, will spend thtee years making shoes ia the State prison at Waupun, Win F. W. Habei, a painter, claiming Abilene, Kan., as bis home, shot and killed Jimmy M<D maid, a waiter in the Mascot saloon at Dallas. Tex., the other morning. Habei and the waiter engaged in a diepula over the price of a bottle of beer. Jork Lester, a young man of Chicago, was convicted ia Duluth, Minn., of grand larceny. He is a son of the millionaire of Chicago, who it the largest glue and tallow maker in the country. Frederick Fchroeder member of a good family near New Bremen, O.. has been arreiited for counterfeiting and the outfit utedl by bim has been captured. Tub gits* packers of the Ohio valley have struck for Pittsburgh wages and the Flint Glass Workers Union has decided to support them. The strum yacht Leo was rscently lost iu Lake Erie She sailed from Lorain, twenty milea west of Cleveland, O., and the nine persons on board were drowned. They were all business men of Lorain. It was estimated that between 18,000 and SO.OOb Old Fellows paraded at Columbus, O., on the 18th.Colokek. George Flour sot, a noted Confederate officer and once AttorneyGeneral of Texas, died in San Francisco on the ]8thu

ii hhekt t nave neen maue ii nposane Falla Wash., of two or thraa city official* charged with embexsling money* and dealing supplies *ent for the relief of sufferer* by the recent Are.v A nxcfctiT number of the Chicago Evening Kail contained a long statement tbnt the detente in the Cronin case wonid be able to prove that Dr. Cronin was murdered by order of the British Government Iowa Democrat* met at Biouz City on the AM.b ,gnd nominated Horace Boies of Waterloo,' for' AVwr.cor; 8. I* Bestow, of Chariton, for LlentenariA-gov-ernor; W. H. Brannon, of Matestine, far Supreme Judge; Tboma* Irish, of Dubuque, for Superintendent of Instruction, aud David Morgan, of Poweschick, for Kailroad Commissioner. Among the resolution* adopted was one calling for the World’s Fair at Chicago. Rt the t urning of Mr*. Beacon's frame cottage in Los Angeles, Cal., the other day three small childirea were burned to death. Tug burning of Klngsnorth & Buxton’s livery sta trie at Sioux City, Iowa, caused a loss of mono. Sixty-eight horses were burned. TKBEZoiiner* have found near Dubuque, Iowa, a enve full of native galena almost pureMarkham. Field ha* followed the example of Ueorge M. Pullman and subscribed $100,000 to the Chicago World’s Fair guarantee fund. Man. CEanL.Es LaraaE, wife of a wealthy stockman, burned to death in her bed at Chouteau City, Mont. The fire was communicated to the bed clothes and before th* woman coaid be rescued she was t urned to death. Her husband was in the East. The noted suit of Augustus 1. Ambler against llodaey M. Whipple for infringement of palin', involving MJJ<0,000, has been Anally thrown out of court in Chicago, under the provisions of the statute of limitation*. Hi.ackm an Bbotheus’ big saw mill, sash and door facory and lumber yards, 8nokom sb. Wash., were destroyed by Are the other night, causing $130,001} loss with no insurance. A Fa sir freight Iran collided with a switching eng u -a on th* Lake Shore road at Cleveland, U., r>c»ntly. Both engines were badly damag d and several cars «mas!»d into bits. Patritk Moore, a tailor who was stealing a ride, was klllsd. The Sovereign Grand Lodge of Odd Fel o*i siili hold in next session nt Topeka, Kait. The Wyoming Statehood convention has adopted a elante giving women the right to ^ote. TUB SOUTH. CoiisiDlHABLE excitement prevail* at Calera. sixty miles north of Montgomery. Ala., oveir a threatened collision of races. The trouble grows oat of the discovery of an incendiary letter written by n negro which re vealed n plot against th* whites and urged the negroes to insurrection. Ah eng ineer, a brakeman and a Areman were killed by the wreck of a freight train on the Georgia Central near Atlanta recently. The National Paaaenger and Ticket Ageat*’ Association met In Atlanta, Ua., recently. Govxafon Fowls, of North Carolina, baa laiuod a proclamation ordering officers to t ake extra precaution* to prevent repetitious of the lynching nt Morgantown. Finn destroyed buildings valued at HhU00 in Wilmington, DeL. th* other day. The residence of Mr*. Lenbower, at Oakland, Md., was destroyed by Are and her two children, three and six years old, were burned to death. Mrs. Leo bower was absent at the time. Mitts Busts Catoh, of Georgetown, and Mis* Ell* Atwell, of Alexandria, V*.. two well known young iadiea, were accidenta'It drowned recently near the latter •place by their carriage being overturned 'while endeavoring to ford a swollen stream. Lovismxa • ffleinls claim to have discoveied bug* (rands in State bonds, msay canceled certificate* having been again put upon the market. Hon. Jfc 8* K. Htsieh, State Commiesi on or of I:»uraaoo and oae of the moat inAuentin] Democrats In Maryland, died on th* SOth. He was bom November It

--- Th* new ary doc* at tn« navy yard at Norfolk, Va.. was formally opened on the 19th In the pretence of n Urge gathering. The Yantic wot the first Teste! to enter the dock Th* Pacific express car on the M., K. ft T. was entered and robb;d of 110,000 at Belton, Tex., on the 90th. There was no clew to the robbers. Otm KM A IChairman Walk**, of the Inter-State Railway Association, takes a decidedly hopeful Tiew of the railroad situation. A sqcaob of small buildings «t Beauharaais. Can., woo destroyed by fire the other day. Loos, $38,000. Th* Spanish Tessel plying between Malaga and Tangier* was ransacked by natives off the Riff coast of Morocco • few days ago, find th* captain, foUrsallots find one poss*ng«r were made pristta; era A Spanish war ship was about t» leaks Cadis to rescue the prisoners Rid nunish the offenders Bishop Fowl**, of the M. E Church, lately Returned from China, says that that country is quietly biding iu time to retaliate for the enactment of the Exclusion act H Cholera has made its appearance In Jlagdad. Japanese papers place the number of persons drowned in the floods of August M in the eitly of Wayakayamo and to th* dis riels rf Mtnamhro, Nisbi-Mufu and Picaka at 10,009, and the number ot persons receiving relief at NX 414. lH* steamship Alberta, which arrived at Quebec recently from Singapore, landed at quarantine a passenger suffering from a severe attack of cholera. After being thoroughly fumigated the Albqrta was allowed to proceed to Montreal. Th* announcement is made that * stringent compact has been entered into between England and Italy on the slavery question. Sbvsrai. persons were fatally injured ] at a riot in a meeting of Boulangists at Chantilly, France, th* other day. Aovicbs from China state that th* boiler for the launch built for a Chines* mandarin recently burst in the river at Shanghai. Twenty persons were killed or drowned and an equal number more or less injured. Da. Lot’is Maas, famed in th* old world and the new as a pianist and composer, died at his home near Boston the other night of peritonitis. He was born in Weisbafien in 1851. r Th* po ice within the last few days have shown an increased activity in different parts of Russia in their pursuit of suspected Nihilists. The students every where are objects of suspicion, and twenty attending the university nt Kieff were arrested on the 18th.

There are persistent rumor* at Belgrade that ex-King Milan contemplate* a coup d’etat for the purpate of securing the Regency of Bervia. It is said that he asked the Austrian Government for military support, but his request was refused. Tbe King of Portugal, whose health bad been precarious for some time, was reported as seriously ilL The Alton railroad was report >d considering the purchase of the Missouri, Kansas & Texaa The recent yacht disaster on LakeKrie, by which nine lives were lost, was believed to have been due to an expiosiou of naphtha A large mass of rock composing the bead land known as Cape Diamond at Quebec suddenly detached itself from the main body on tbe 19th and crashed down upon the buildings below. Many person* Were killed and injured. Att excited state of feeling was reported at Dungannon, County Tyrone, Ireland, on tbe 19th, between Orangemen and ^Catholics, growing oat of tbe home rule qMvjqiou. An EngilW> .svydUpate has purchased the Northwest Central raliVqy of Manitoba and will push it through to the- Une^Sc coask The salary of a French curate has been | stopped by order of M. Thevenet, Minister of Justice, on the ground that he was ; canvassing against the Government j Other clerical* have been threatened that j they will be served in a similar manner. The freedom of the City of Dublin bat been conferred upou Lady Sandhurst and Right Hon. James Stansfeld. The steamer Florence sn rout* from | Garston on the Mersey, near Liverpool, to Belfast, foundered recently. Nine ol j her crew wrrj drowned. A bill has been introduced in tbe Parliament of Holland to impose a duty on | cereals. Bcsiness failures (Dun’s report) for the I seven days ended September 19 numbered 199, compared with 19* the previous week I and SS8 the corresponding week of last | The British gunboat Lily struck a ro<k I off Point Armor, M. F.. recently and sunk, j Seven of her crew were drowned. THE LATEST. j A chapter on irrigation, testing the ! ownership of water in the Slate, and recognising the right of prior appropria- ; tori, was adopted by toe Wyoming Con- ! stitutional convention on the Met An j eight-hoar chapter and a proposition j creating a State board, which shall settle ; difference* between employer and em* { ploys, were presented. The long strike at the Columbia Roll- | tog Mill* at Lancaster, Pa, was formally . declared off at a meeting of ths Amalga- | mated Association cm the Sisk The strike had lasted nearly seven months, j and most of the strikers' pises* had been filled with non-union men. Da. Gnomon H. Coon, State geologist of Mew Jersey and vice-president of Rutger’s College, died suddenly, on toe { ttd, of heart failure, in hi* ssventy-sse-and year. H* was born in Hanover. K. J. Ah attempt was made at Oklahoma City, L T, on the Slst, to vote on a charter which, if carried, would end toe toms of the present cityoffloers. At the request of Mayor Couch n company of United States troops, under Captain Stiles, cleared the street* in front of too two polling plaoee, clubbing citisens with their guns and using their bayonets. Tn election in France, on the 99d. passed off quietly in most plaoee. The latest returns up to t a. m. of the fiM show the election of eighty-nine Republicans and fifty-eight anti-Republicans, with ninety- tores re ballots necessary. The coroner’s jury ** Chattanooga. Tana., after investigating the cause of to* death of Mrs. Adams, of Casey, Hi, on* of the victims of the electric railroad disaster, rendered a verdict, on to* **4, charging negllgeno* on the part of the company in not providing adequate machinery to prevent such accidents. Tn oyster-gathering citizens of Maryland accuse Virginia oystorars of a wanton violation of to* oyster laws governing the Potomac river, and say they are determined that their Bute shall hold to* violators to a strict observance of the iator-State compact entered into in USA Mart Mollies, aged twenty-thresv deaactasl hw )iaa> KiluhnnH end iipiTOfft frillU aeriffu uy nor jhhwmh mu

INTELLIGENCE, ra on lO lot Mrs. Ass Mitchell, of Mi aged almost 90 years, who fall home some time ago and broke hi hone, died from the effects of it age on the iTth. The second$T00,000 loan ordered Legislature has been placed by tb officers with Lake Bros. A Co., York, Who Offered a premium of the $1,000. Including the loan » refunding the school funds, the State has now borrowed the sum of 555,1!.' 5,000. Tuk Controller of the Currency has authorized the Citizens’ National Bank, of Kokomo, to begin business, rlth a Capital of $100,000. The Terre Haute Iron and Nali iVbrfcs has been purchased by the Terre Haute Iron knd Steel Company, reoen ;ly organized with a capital of 960,001; The purchase price is said to Ha t a been 950.000. Two confidence and three-cam -monte men came near making a rich haul at LaPorte. the other day,the viet i n being an octogenarian named Jacob Stoner, j and worth a quarter of a million dollars. ! Ho went so far as to go to hi: banker ! for 95,000, but, the cashier wu suspl- | clous, and after questioning the dd man learned the whole plot. Stoi upon saw what a sucker ho and informed the sheriff, fled, with the officers ifi hot M Aitv Goff, a widow, of Ri i f thereI id been sharpers nuit. ( ellville. in a ended her life by hanging barn. '€, lumbus. hen elf Thomas Frt, a farmer near was fatally gored by a vicious bull the other day. 1 Allen McDoxali*, barber, an cided at Plymouth. Poor health. ^ ! NathaSi Mt'BPHT and Sheii an 1^ ‘ have been arrested for comp i dty In a 1 burglary at North Salem, la-1 winter. ! James and David McCloud, i #ing a^ term in the penitentiary for (I n crime, gave the information Which i i plicated them. Tuk superintendent of- the Indiana State Blind Institute has selli ited Dr. | J. O. Stilt son and Miss Addie If yan for j the positions made Vacant bjr the re- j moral of Dr. Stone, physician, t nd Miss IiOomis. governess. Done by rder of j the trustees. Hkxhy Hkckklma.v, a brakei ran on a west-bound Lake Shore freigl !; train, fell between the oars at Bunl. ;k, and was instantly killed, fifteen can passing over his body. His wife and fa.i lily live at Elkhart. Extensive preparations a:i' being made for the annual reunion of the Ninete#h Indiana Battei-y, win i'h is to lie held at Knightstown the lut kcr^jmrt of November. Ahtkt.es of association hn o been fill'd in the recorder's office ij : Union County, for the Southern Incli ina Gas Company. This company pro toses to lay a pipe line from the Affil.i rson gas field, extending through I olaware. Madison. Henry, Randolph, Wayne, Fayette and Union Counties. Ptae capital stock of th» company 1# fixed at Si,000.090. Jons Bakkett, aged sixte« n years, living with his wffiowed mo icr near Salem, hitched a young horse a a farmwagon with an old one, to reak the colt. It became unruly, thu boy lost control of the team and the orses ran away. Barnett was thrown nder the wagon wheel and his neck w s broken. Omer Briscoe, a young mm who was -jwith him, had his leg caught in the whAf^.and badly broken. Bt the Brooking of a scaffoi at Washington. two \\S<irkmen, Rilis - Sparrow and Lot Emery, went; preci Bated to the ground. The forms'^ » is fatally and the latter seriously injure .. James ltn.i., wboy of sixtef rt, fhl^under the wheels of a gravel agon, 'ads Shelbyville and was crushed t ,i death.

Waiter Morris, aged In been convicted of pocket-]| Richmond. Hahvet J. Shirk, ex-judge ami and Wabash Circuit Corn Peru, a few days ago. agedWi. After fifteen years of “inn? uetude” the Putnam Count; taral Society is again on deck hold its fair this year at Bain first Week in October. f*lv«, has eking at the Midied at Agrieuland will >ridge the Damki. Coates was kick* l to death by a vicious horse, near Jelt rsonville. At Connersville typhoid fie rer has almost entirely disappeared, a: i business is rallying. No new cases at ; reported. A. T. Swift “recovered *37 from the town of Angola ad damages f >r injuries received from a defective ski? walk. The other night Marion Reynolds, mmarried. track, at passenger i-ir I—is. Hi: home * County *4Ted twenty-one years, went to sleep on the Mono Crawfordsrille. A passing train cut him to pii at Ladoga. The managers of the Cl fair have paid ail premium! and a net earning of $500 remains in i) eir hands. This leaves a margin for thi; stockholders, the first time in the history of Clark County fairs. W.v. Neal, a farmer, wn instantly killed south of Frankfort wli le blowing up stumps with dynamite. A piece of one feir, breaking his skull. Deceased was forty years old. The suit for *3,000 of Ju ies Wiley against the city of Wabash w Injuries received some two years ago y the falling of a bridge which Wile lag on a traction raised a few days since by 1 lag WUey 9350. The Connersville schools I with the old books, and not be made there unless I the patrons. ' A white oak tree i was croasu compro- ' city payre opened hange will * urged by had nt for the f,of LafayNor few

Ghicka t<JGA. The Army o'r the Cam land Meets It» 014 A lleeme.!.. a.. 4 lt.ltl.. nf Adversaries on t Chlckamann—The Meet and the Pant J by Gordon and Kim Chattakoooa, Ten -os a glorious clima the Army of the Cun llattle-Field of ae and the Uray rotten- Addressee Sept. 89.—To-day i the reunion of rland. The grand barbecue and the p jauent organisation of the Ohiokanis A Memorial Asso elation took place flb the edge ot the f Chlckainauga. fal sand people were ot Blue and the Gray past forgotten. At John 8. Gordon of ® dress of welcome. Governor Gordon Wfc tHAIRMAtV ASp Rbra Aiistiss—On tb the Soutb solutes you hlth open arms and k not receive you with « monies, hut with simp triotie purposes she g and gonerous of each : tion. To this renowr by American blood. The Sooth ooagratul that these h'storlo p years ago you met in d are to become the sot Trawflsh Spring*, ms battle-field of twenty -fire thou* he grounds. The ere together, tho ) o'clock Governor rgla mode the adit of ,8niversarjr mOrnlag h uncovered. heads,ist hearts. She eari T and Imposing cereiv ot speech and paly greets the brave y audjtt every aeo-battle-ground, made bids you welcome i the whole country s, where twenty-six ly sectional conflict, and witness of yonr loiht pledge of restore d enduring fraternity, She congratulates Republic that here. here the North ant their hosts for battle, living, lasting brother! inutual respect and cd inade better, braver at cherished and imperis To you, General tie diers ot the Army of with a soldier's greet! dier's sympathy in t those who I am call® their earnest co-opera' which convene you, i pfrtain to the peace, t American pgople. In their et-rnal fealty to tlon which Is thoir p American Republic, w their fathers' hands: t ie American Gnion of ,8tates from which t withdrew for their pnfety. but which, now at the causos of dlsle South marshaled A hosts now meet ta t United in bdnds of -nee. a brotherhood rudder by mutually !e memories. -an*, and to the solCumberland. I come .n my lips and a solheart. Speaking ot 1 represent, I pledge in the sacred mission in all things which arc and union of the sir name I proclaim American Omstituacting shield; to thd i is the joint work of sensioua ate gone, the defend for their filtUrt We are here to unite Internal sepulcher of Vsoses which produce since engulfed in the x jrohd the power of rest fore, "bury the passli feto’ied Ida still deep? font spirit of discord the partisan, political: 11 loyally and bravely ) lection. th you in a final and ional hostility. The dtenation were long sx of revolution bectlon. Let us, thereWhich these causes ■are. Let Us bUry th« leep thst no bln at of ampet, however Widesounding sad peuetn: e. can ever wake It V aevvlce again, gains it who will. Sine«i slavery is abolished a: he Chinese wall alon j down, there is at iarr er of separatum .God speed the dry ■■■■■■ ommadd reeogirttlun throughout the Rep® : God sp-ed the day when unworthy do shall give place to the line of St-3 > Is br aottttely no legtttma and no cause for stri when this truth aha Universal trjut. Unimpeachable and American people sh: Passport to publio st least for party and n proclaimed by the pr Wisest statesman and Tho addross of w to by General W. f Rnsecrans was Vir eloquent and patri ernrft- Gordon and grand sight and Confederate and F aide by side and friendly converse, that the day won! last vestige of feoii astlnted fslih in he rtotism ot tho wh >le become the essem ial n, when he who flf hts tor country shall M and the people as tUO est friend of llbcrtr. owe was respon led oseorans. Gent ral y affected over tho o language of G jvke feelingly of the no presented, old ral soldiers sitt in? ngling in pleas int* ad he prayed Jod oou come when the over the wnr »< old be eradicated. E believed that thia scene was an aught it the glorious t access of the project, make the ChU ka* mauga battle-field ational park to appropriately mark greatost battl > of the civil war. Clot , be said:

now, ieuOW'OHUOn^ am sorry j not able to flulngly e* *s the feeling I f lave on this occasion nor to »e speech to the ;lad thoughts that come to ■ t am sure I hare not tt the Toioe. to appropr »n<l pray that the fnli ■access of oar fra tern: After addresses gnnizatlnn of the Cl. Association was fc attendance at the . mini! as 1 stand 1 ere. rords, neither hare I Jy do so, but I lope may see the emi tent mdertattln*. a permanent or* amanga Mem* rial ed. The crow 1 in sting was rery enthusiastic, and the t seeding* gave tvi.dence that the move nt will be a gi and sutccess. General H yll. Cist, of < Jin* cinnbdi, was eleote temporary chairman, addl^ Major * »rd F. Manning, secretary. After a dUcnswjp >f the objects and purposes of the orgfc ttion the foil owins officers were eie d for fonr ye trst President, General J. ''JtTilder, of 1 ‘ennessee; vice-presidei Getwtral Jos eph Wheeler, Alabama; Morons J. Wright, orer, General John Louis; board of direct side. G. C. Kniften, G M. Cist, C. H. Grns verm, 8. P. Thurston. J. Reynolds, J. Y, .1 ire t ary, tSgn sral shington; tr NasFnllerton, o! 8V i from the Union f. Bishop, Hi nry or, Fred Yainle* & Fullertoi t, J. der, A C. McClnngi A. Baird. B. Kellogg. W. & Rosecrans, H. V. B* ton. From the Confederate side: H Joseph W H. Wheeler, C. R. Brec ridge. Jese-i T. Findlay, David H. 1. E. M. law. Marcus J. Wright, Ro( !J. Mills, G* -rge H. Col astructed t« aciarge nunber iatlon were so* D. Wiss, Alfred H. Col tt, James L< ng* street Joseph H. Lewi tandall Gib ion, Charles E. Hooker. F. Cockrell. The charter as pre; *d was ordered filed and the chalrma B| f e«pt it when returned, of members of the as rolled. After the meeting barbecue :ook place, audit was th« ost tremen loos affair of ths kind » known in this jponnty. Thirty tobies, eh 850 feet 1 an* were spread. Ail wer imply provided for. The day passed boat the all jhtest jar or accident On the train this at noon retnr iln* from the barbecne rernor Gordon, commander of the A> Nation of t Son* federate Veterans. :sd an of Ida) order for ths associnti o meet in C hattan ooga on Jnly 4 next --- * » - —Bessie—“Ma am quarreling, haven't “Yep.” Bessie—“W; worst of it—do you k “Not yet I’m waiti one of them slams the —Burlington Fred Prt • have wea iyF” WUi loll one got the •r Will into see w iich or going cut” Iron —The following ex et is pupil’s composition < “The B smith:" '“Man in h state o carnation has various jrt of ms money to supply him; with meat so that the body exhilarate its immor aouL’ The one above speak is the smith, momentous important amusing to hear him » ing a piece of malleabl a way of striking the n......... . .. — be ab ear s «*• in* 3 eto

1 TANNER a martyr. An A bused IndifkTrtmi 61 Whom Hwrtlon Will How in tiM fruiter* The Administration can not load ail its sins, blunders and extravagance of! 1 tH*? l«wk of Corporal* Tanner and send i him out as & ftmpo-goat into the wil- t derness. The evidence id too strong 1 in h is favor. He has been accused of I rerating and spending the pension ap* 1 propriation in an improper manner, i But he did not insult the Grand Army 1 of (ho Republic by announcing that i deserters, bummers and bounty jump- i ers were as much efl titled to pensions 1 as those who were honest add brave ; soldiers. That was the edict of the I Assistant Secretary of the Interior, i Bussey, who has been Tanner’s enemy ] fro id the beginning. The dismissed i aiftl disgraced Commissioner of Pen- < sic as, with all his faults, blunders and ] perverse ways, is worthy of more re* sp< “Ct than Bussey, who tried to bring do wn the pensions to the lowest level an i to ffiske the Union veteran the follow of the blackguard and mercenary. Tanner did not sp4>d ail the rotney that has made such a hole in < the Treasury. Bussey’s decisions in esses which were passed upon during the former administration form no inconsiderable amount of tho enormous ■ expenditures for pensions during the post three or four months. There : v ere seventy-seven of those decisions Slone which cost the Government in tie neighborhood of $200,000- But Bussey is Noble’s creature and Noble has the ear of Harrison. When he was at Indianapolis, last Hummer and fall, and tho pension •harks were gnashing their teeth because the Democratic President and the Democratic Commissioner of Pensions stood between them and the appropriation for Union veterans, Harrison was loud in his demagogic speeches on unrestrained liberality to the veterans. It was easy for him to promise every thing there and to intimate that the veterans had the first call at the treasury without limit He outlined a policy that made the mouths of the pension sharks fairly water. He took the man the. sharks wanted and made him Commissioner of Pensions, clapping him on the hack and telling him to go ahead and “take care of the boys.” Tanner, unfortunately for himself, took Harrison’s words literally ^nd went ahead. He did not know that the words were to be taken in a Pickwickian sense, and that scattering millions by anteelection promises and fulfilling those promises were entirely different things- He was not enough of a hypocrite for this Administration, and consequently he had to walk tho plank. And what a disgusting display of hypocrisy there is about his dismissal. Harrison administers taffy in regard to Tanner’s honesty and the private secretary, “Lije,” says that there never was any trouble between Noble and Tanner, and there was no question in the President’s mind as to which of them should go. The most nauseous compliments are poured over the head of the “fired” representative of the Grand Army by Harrison and his spaniels.

The most disgusting part oi me atfair is the sudden change on the part of the Republic*^ organa Tanner is no longer the model Pension Commissioner, the pride of the Grand Army, the most valuable member of the Administration. It is said that when a traveler in Russia is pursued by wolves he contrives to gain a little on the ravenous pack by shooting some of them, which causes the others to stop and devour their fallen companions How the Republican papers pounce upon the strickon Tanner and tear him to pieces in "ghoulish glee!” But they seem to forget that, apart from their inconsistency in abusing what they a few days ago slobbered over, they are making a serious mistake in thinking that Tanner has no friends. Theburden of the Republican* organs, Rattle him hones over Ue stones, He’s only a whom nobody owns, will be considerably' trfCwed when the Grand Army is heard from. Twiner labored sealously for that organises tion. and is entitled to its support. While the Grand Army demands unlimited pensions it can not find fault with the man who was doing his best to procure them. The Republican party is pledged to unlimited pensions, and on the very day that Tanner was bounced the Republican President pro tern, of the United States Senate, Senator Ingalls, who represents the banner Republican. State, said, at a gathering of Kansas veterans: "There are just three things that ought to be done: First the limitation on pensions ought to be removed; second, the disability pension bill ought to become a law; third, every goldier who received an honorable discharge ought also to ireceive a pension. These were the results that Commissioner Tanner had sought to attain in his administration of the office of Commissioner of Pensions, and 1 honor him (or his high desires and brave efforts in behalf of the veteran soldier. The only fault I have to End with Tanner is that he j did not have two feet while be was in office, so that he could have made more rapid progress in the attainment of his policy.” Evidently Harrison has not yeft heard the last of Tanner The martyr of the Grand Army is very much alive and kioking,—Albany (N. Y.) Argus. Ben Harrison's Duplicity. Since Bl Harrison became President the total cash in the National Treasury haa been reduced nearly $30,000,000. Some of this money, however, hhs been drawn from the National banka, although B. Harris^. Jim Blaine and their fellow demagogues last Ml condemned, in the very strongest terms, the policy of keeping the public funds on deposit In the National banks, and the Indianapolis Journal, then conducted by the present private secretary of the

UNITED EVERYWHERE. he Educational Campalgc Carried On in / Various State*. It fs a source of gratification tc eriff reformers all over the country hat the Democrats of Ohio, Pennylvania and Virginia have stuck so oyally to their party faith in the iQite campaigns of this year and are ighting so valiantly under the tariff* eform Sag which was unfurled at St. Aiis last summer. A tariff campaign Hist of neoessity be an educational me. Thee Ohio and Pennsylvania lemocrats may not win victories this •ear, yet they are keeping the great 8sue before the public and are doing koble missionary work for the cam* taign of 1SWL The Democratic party s no longer open to the charge of oompylng an uncertain or vascillatmg losition on the tariff. When Mr. Cleveland planted the banner of tariff ■eform in his celebrated message to Congress the Demooratig party rallied iround the standard and have been itanding loyally to their colors ever ilnce. They were not a whit dis:ou raged by defeat in tho Iasi eleoion, as Is demonstrated by the ad* ranoed position on the tariff qoes,ion the party has taken in the vari>us Slates where elections are to be leld this year. Nor have they -eason to be discouraged. There is nany a man who voted the Repubican ticket last fall who went home rointhe polls to regret it During ,ho last six months a groat many Republican business men, who voted for Harrison last November, have come » see the folly of supporting a party ihat is pledged to making raw mate* Lear. New England manunow say that unless they _my raw materials at a cheaper ite they See nothing but disaster for .e future In their business. That is hat the Democrate told them last lar, but they didn’t see H then. The ales have since fa'leh from their •es, and, if the Presidential election en) to take place next November, stead of last, tariff reform would i an established fact. Thus the emocrats are encouraged to keep U| leir educational campaign.^ immon sense of the people linded for awhile, but in tht m the crooked things are strs led out—St. Paul Globe. ^ THE PARALYZERS* HOWL. | bus the keep up L* itraighb Let HarrUon Tremble When Fairchild and Furaker Shall let Loom. The shot which brought Corporal Tanner down the tree of liberty resounds over the continent There is such a sensation among' paralyzers as has not been felt since an honest President vetoed a dishonest pension steal. The Captain Lemon, the Colonel Dudley, the Private Dalaell, the General Butler, the Judge Advocate Ingalls—all those great hearts who saved the Union and preserved the Btars in Heaven are now preparing such a curse as shall wither and blast both the religions hopes and the political prospeots of President Harrison.

The wagons that were naming gmu and silver out of the Treasury and across the road are idle. Only fortynine of the Pension Commissioner’e assistant tellers have received their quote of $3,000 and $6,000 each. The portcullis of the treasure house falls. The noise echoes into the hearts of the hindmost surplus-buster. The Private Dalsell grasps his terrible stylus. “I am too indignant and exasperated to write it coherently.” he screams. “I wish Tanner had gotten in deeper,” says the candid Judge Advocate Ingalls. “It is an infernal outrage,” says Colonel Dudley. ‘‘Me too,” says Captain Lemon. “I should not have cared a copper had I been Tanner,” says Benjamin F. Butler. These ara but the bugle calls. Let Harrison tremble when Fairchild, Tuttle and Foraker shall let loose!— Chicago Herald. ^ POLITICAL NOTES. .The Harrison Administration will forever enjoy the distinction of .being the first to increase the public deV*in time of peace. — lIWesjfO-Herald. _IiAwfipay has a tremenctoils army and a fhrge navy, but her army and navy expenditures are very little in oxoees of our annual pension expenditures —Buffalo Courier. r—-The Republican party appears to be daily becoming infatuated with the beauty of the idea that a tariff should be imposed sufficient to keep imports out, while ships should be subsidised to bring them in.—Providence JournaL -Minor, the Republican candidate for Congress in the Third Louisiana district, has disgusted his party friends by announcing that he will not contest the .election of Price, although the latter s majority is 7,507.— Louisville Courier-JdurnaL -With a President who was not elected by a popular majority, and a Congressional preponderance by throwing out members who have been chosen to seats in the House, the 'V a P. ought to get along swimmingly. —Louisville Courier-Journal. -The six great coal producing companies have agreed to curtail the September output 1,000,000 tons, in order to keep up prices and keep down miners' wages. These great monopolies are the prime foundation of Republican power in the land.—Springfield (HL) Register. Free Raw Material, Free hides and paper stock with free tuel will alone in tie course of time papers ___tfte cc- . _ ._ ave to this section Its immense leathr and paper industries. When coal as been liberated artificial restriction fill have here given way to the play tagjjB' M And unless the contracted ■