Pike County Democrat, Volume 23, Number 15, Petersburg, Pike County, 2 September 1892 — Page 1

PETERSBURG, INDIANA, FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER, 2, 1892 I. HcC. STOOPS, Publisher,

-— PUBLISHED EVgBY SUBSCRIPTION TKliMSt INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. 1 85 ADVERTISING BATES) <11 60 •A* ^ootton •»•<*» on nlvertlfrementa turning three, its *nd twelve months. Ijn^nmeient advertisements moat be

PHOIES8IONAL cafim. j. tTkimeTm^, Pigrsfcfan and Surgeon, PETERSBURG, IED. Office In Bank bnlldlng, Drat floor. Will hu maud at office day or night, * GEO. B. ASHBY, ATTORNEY AT LAW V PETERSBURG, IND. Prompt Attention G ven to all Bnsirors awOfflco QTor Barrett * Son's store. Francis B. r Og*T. , DbwiitQ. CnAFrELL POSEY & CHAPPELL, Attorneys at Lav/S ,v4 Petersburg, Ind. Will practloa In all the eonvts. Sneclal attention gven t> all bnslrteu. A Notary t’lltille constantly In the offloe. £p-Ofi!oe— On flrst 11 >oi Bunk Building. . Elt. 8. G. DAVRJtroRT. ELY & DAVENPORT, LAWYERS, Petersburg, "Ind. ItSTOfflce oyer J. R. Adams A Sen’s drug tore. Tronipt attention given to all busilUBS. E. 1*. Richardson. A. H. Taylor RICHARDSON & TAYLOR, Attorneys at Law, Petersburg, I no. Prompt attention given to all business. A Kotniy Publ e constantly in the offl'-e, office In Carpenter Bull ting, Eigntli und Main. DENTISTRY. W. II. STONECIPHER,

Surgeon Dentist, PETERSBURG, IND. Ofiee In rootns6 and 7 In Carpenter Buildtng. Operations first-cla-ft. All work warranto l. Anto.tUotica uattd tor painless exfraction of teeth. L U. LaMAR, Physician and Surgson Petebsbubq, Ind. - WIHprnctloo In l'iko and adjoining connll«s, Offlee in Montgomery Building. Office hour* day and night. ‘ ' *S*Dlremes of W> nv>n and Children especially. Chronic and difficult eases solicited. NELSON STONE, D. V. S., PETERSBURG, IND. Owing to long practice and the possession of * fine library and case ot instruments, Mr. Stone is well prepared to treat all Diseases of Horses and Cattle SUCCKSSFUULY. He also keeps on hand a stock of Condition Powders and Liniment, which he sells at reasonable prices. Office Oner J. B. Yeung & Co.’s Store.

I MA0A.00 a year it being made by John It {iaadwh»,*t'roy,N.Y.,«t noth fur ua. Header, yon nmy not make as much, Imt we can touch you quickly Uuwr in ram from #5 to 910 a day at the start, and more at you go on. lluih ariea, all agt*. In any |iari of {America. you can commence at lioiua, glvin* all your tlme,nrtsi>»rc moment* only to the work. All I* new. t.rent | ay H WK for every worker. W’e alart von, fhrulahlug everythin*. KAS1LY. »I'jftl»XJ,Y leamcfC 1'A UTlCl'LAKS FliEK. Aduraaa bllAbOJI * U»M HR Ad cross at once, run LAND, JU1SK.

THIS PAPER IS ON FII»E IN CHICAGO AND NEW YORK AT TUB OFFICES OF A. I. KELLOGG NEWSPAPER CO. lltUSTEES’ NOTICES OF OFFICE DAT. NOTICE Is hereby (riven that I will attend to the duties of the office of trustee of Clay township at homo on EVERY MONDAY. A'l persons who have business with the Office will take notice that 1 will attend to business ou uo other day. M. M. GOWEN, Trustee. VTOTlOgr Is here tor given to all parties InIs ter cited C' ' I IICIWUT VH Ml. _ . _ that I will altond at my office In SlenJal, _■____ EVEHT STAUItDAY, To transact business connected with the i fflee of trustee of Lockhart township. All persona bur lug buainosi with said office wlil ' se take nolle please il S. BAHUETT, Trustee. rYJOTICE Is hereby given to all patties con ■ It ferried that I will be at my residence. . ■■every Tuesday, To attend to business connected with thi office of Trustee of Monroe township. GEO HUE GKIM, Trustee. J^OTICH Is hereby given that I Will be el I my reside den on Every Thursday To attend to bushfbs i connected with the office (4 Trustee of Lot,an township. Aa-Po»ltlvely no bus ness transacted exi ou office duys. SILAS KIRK, Trustee, <«pt i VTOTICE le hereby given to all partleeoonIs cerneJ that I will attend at my resldonce V EVERY MONDAY To transact business connected with the office of Trueteeof Madison township. Afl’oiltivcly no business transacted ex. “pt a“y4, JAMES RUMBLE. Trustee. ( K is hereby given to all utei that 1 will.attend In persons Inmy office l« To Iran «Ificc of BY FRIDAY, connected with the __nrlon township. All ng business with said office a nettop bboCK, Trustee.

f nni jfcft# torM,«h*w hew mw4*«I wwtfcr est 1>» A»"» EfiTtA"SLi*» ,T«t***» eni Jno |J«nw, Tolwo. 0M*> TeM*, ani «W0 «ww. wy*». l*r* wi. Otfa-r. arc doing *»wjl Whf net TOO? fiMM orct loW-OQ • ItMMHi. fo« raw do lfc« wo** »nd M fu 'aitaHMV.-Mii r:tilSr WrUlmt flM# to irlcocr* c-uiltjr cumin* f*«o to |^^;-|UWW. Weifcyw yes **** §H>tnUtrTtCiDOW JWBO *It4 M*: i JM»H C#« WOffc m»M« W «ir iSi t-M raM< ^*ST Wt&pg f°v worh #?«* * j^«r* unite «Wr> iiuaof flwm.

Castoria Is Dr. Samuel Pitcher's prescription for Infants and Children. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. It is a harmless substitute for Paregoric, Drops, Soothing Syrups, and Castor Oil. It is Pleasant. Its guarantee is thirty years* uso by Millions of Mothers. Castorladcstroys Worms and allays * feverishness. Castoria prevents vomiting Sour Curd, cures - Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. Castoria relieves teething troubles, cures constipation and flatulency. Castoria assimilates the food, regulates tho stomach and bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Castoria ii tho Children’s Panacea—tho Mother’s Friend.

Castoria. " Castoria Is an excellent medicine for children. Mothers hare repeatedly told me of its good effect upon their children.” Dn. G. 0. Oscoon, Lowell, Host-. " Castoria Is the best remedy for children of which I am acquainted. X hope the (lay i3 r.ot far distant when mothers will consider the real interest of their children, r.nl use Castoria in* stead of the variousquack nostrumswhichara destroying their loved ones, by forcing opium, morphine, soothing syrup and other hurtful os^ents down their throats, thereby sending them to premature graves." Dn. J. F. Kincheloe, Conway, Ark.

Castoria. ; “ Castoria la so well adapted to children that I recommend it assuperiortoany prescriptici known to me." It. A. Arches, H. D.t 111 So. Oxford St. Brooklyn, N. T. “ Our physicians in the children's department have spoken highly of their experience in their outside practice with Castoria, and although we only hare among cur medical supplies what is known as regular products, yet we a$e freo to confess that th« merits of Castoria has won us to look witl favor upon it.” United Hospital and Disfshsam, Boston, Hast Allen C. Surra, Pro.

The Centaur Company, TI Murray Street, New York City.

JOHN HAMMOND, 2STEiW O-OOIDS OF STTElie-Sr KIUTID To which h# dlreots Attention. His DRY COODSnre flrst-class, and the stock Is very l*n Hats, Caps, Boots, Shoes, Notions, Give him acoll, and yofl will be convlneed mat lie is giving BARGAINS on his entire sVict * SOLID GOODS AT LOW PRICES. C. .A. BURGER & BRO., THE FASHIONABLE MERCHANT TAILORS v - * Petersburg, Indiana, Have a Large Stock of Late Styles of Piece Goods Consisting of the very best Suiting and Piece Goods Perfect Fits, Styles Guaranteed.

O- &Z 2^£. OHIO&MISSISSIPPI RAILWAY. the fast uxte EAST & WEST. 4 Solid, Bally Trains to Claelniiattt, 4 Solid ilolly Trains to St, Louis, 5 Solid Bally Trains to Loulurille. CokUretlng In Union Depots, with trar.is, of all Uncsfor the East, West, North and South. Through Vestibule nay Coaches, Pullman Parlor Cars and Bloopers on all Train*. DOUBLE DAILY LINE. -orPullinati Vestibule Buffet Sleepers rroui St. Louis and Stations on Main Line Washington,Baltimore,Philaclelptia and HewYork, without change, Ersi wmii) Fnost Washington No .8 Accommodation 12 07 P, M. No. 2. Day Express *<■ No. 4. Night 1: spies* 1207 A. M. No. fl East Express !. C5. A. M. Wt.HTWAKP FonM WA8UJNOTON No. 7 A ecom modatlon 12 42 P. M. No. 1 Day Express 12 .57 P. M N o. 8 N itrht Express 12 88 A M. No. 6 Past Express 205 A tu. Home Seekers MovinG WesT Should take thl* Hue as It has less changes Of cares and better accommodations than other route*. , , . Our Vestibule cars are aluxury, which may bo enjoyed by all. without extra charges, and overs" alien lion is given our passengers to make their Journey pleasant and comfortabOnr agents will take pleasure in answering Inuulrtestn regard to rates for both passengers nn l freight, lime, roulos and connections; call at your home If dastreil and utiond 10 shipping freight by the most direct routes and cuce-klng baggagt^wlthout charge iormiy assistance they may ho able to TenN. B.—Passengers should purchase ticket* berore entering the ears, as the ticket rate I ten cent* loss than the train rate. Commu ideations addressed to the under signed will recede prompt attention, THOMAS DONAHUE, •nttts&ttaffasssst'’* Vincennes Did. » J.K. BARNARD, W.B.8HATTUC Pres, and M’gr. Ge’n. Pa’s Agi C1NOINNATTI OHIO.

Ashby & Chappell, | Real Estate Agents, Fire, Life, and Live Sleek Insnranoe Agents, Cftilectloiig and Abstract* of Title* J Specially, P*n*ion and U. S. Cl Agent*.

F. A. SHANDY. piommm FAMILY GROUP AND RESIDENCES A SPECIALTY. All kinds of out-door work, por* traits, copying and onlargingf rom old] pictures &c. Birthday and surprise party groups a specialty. Satisfaction guaranteed or no pay, Givo me a call, or address F. A. SHANDY, Petersburg Indiana. 1*. ISBABY, pptier, Petersburg, Indiana, Will make yon Photos In any nnmbcr - at most reasonable rates. ear-Hcmem' 9.- that ,my work is war. ranted. If voj want PORTRAITS enlarged call and ’.ave the work done right. All work guaranteed to stand the test ot nges and still he as bright as when taken from the gallery. Studio equipments of standard modern makes. Our motto—“The Best Is As Good As Any,and Always the Cheapest." M. J. BRADY. Gallery 1h El serfs Building, Main, between 8ixth and Seventh ..

Monuments Best material, most reasonable prices,satisfaction guaranteed at !•««orabjir» Slar ble Work* J.A B. ToUNQ, Proprietors. ADVERTISERS this papar.cr obtain oatimatea on advertising tpaca whan in Chicago, will find It on float ^049 "n^5'LORD RTHMASd •St Advertiaing Agarcv of | Machinist W. AND Blacksmith. I am preparodto do the hart of work srltli satisfaction goStouteed In all kinds of tfl»ek< smithing. AU«« Moving and Heaping Machines i the beat of workmanship 1 emml Arsl-ebm* workmen. Do uni 5 to get your work, but call oi on Main Street, Petarsbuff VKECK. - '

wns officially denied on the 20th Tiie cholera scourge rages with unchecked virulence throughout Persia, end countless corpses lie everywhereunburied. JTbs. Wilson, of New Athens, G»., -lost three children by snake bites and a fourth by drowning, all within a few minutes, on the 25th. Anti-Belgian sentiment in Eleven, a French mining town, culminated, on the 28th. in a serious riot, which had to be quelled by soldiers. Commander Hasenclever, military attache of the German embassy in London, died on the 24th. He was very popular among military men and ia society. Supt. Stephens of the Cincinnati ecological gardens, had a terrible fight, on the 25tb, with a 14-foobpythpn. He was bitten in the struggle, but will recover. - District Attorney Geoboe 8. Graham, of Philadelphia, was, on the 26 th,.. appointed receiver of the Iron Ball for the state of Pennsylvania by Judge Hregy. _______ Jesse Bennixghoff, a private in Co. K, sixteenth regiment, at Homestead, was accidentally shot and- killed by Private Smith of the same company on the 25th. The letter of acceptance of Gen. Bid well, of California, nominee of the prohibition party for president of the United States, was given out for publication on the-25th. .Tames C. Hat, of Kansas, chief-of the Indian division of the interior department, has resigned in order to accept a position at the headquarters of the republican national committee. Six men employed by the New York department of public works were nearly suffocated by gas, on the 24th, while working in a sewer along the East river between Twenty-fourth and Twenty-fifth streets. During the month of August the United States treasury sent out, principally to the west and northwest, south and southwest, about #7,000,000 in silver certificates of small denominations for use in moving the crops. Alexander Kirkland, a prominent resident of Chicago and well known throughout the country as a leader among Scotch Americans, died, on the 28th, at the home of his son, Robert B. Kirkland, in Jefferson, Wis. The discrimination by Costa RJpa against vessels and trade of the United States, arising from the rebate allowed heretofore by Costa Rica of 5 per cent, on customs duties in favor of certain foreign vessels, has been discontinued by repeal. / 't _ • Augusta, Ga., was visited, on the 27th, by a #200,000 fire. The daily Chronicle’s morning edition was^worked off while the* building was in flames. Everything in the office was consumed, save the files of the paper for 100 years.

While provisions had been made in Kansas City, Mo., to accommodate 100,000 Pythian knights the crowd which remained there over night never at any time exceeded 80,000 people. The net result was a great disappointment to the people of the town. The dark picture of the awful mine disaster at Aberkeufig, Wales, was someHvhat relieved, on the morning of the 37th, when nineteen of the imprisoned miners were found alive and brought to the surface. Others, to the number of over thirty, were afterwards rescued. > The business failures occurring throughout the country during the seven days ended on the 30th, number for the United States, 165, and for Canada 15: or a total of 180, as compared with 107 for the previous week, and 200 for the corresponding week of last year. News came from Honolulu by steamer, on the 14th, that fresh excitement had been caused there by the rumored purchase of the island of Nyhan by England. At present the Hawaiian government. is very short of funds, and a good round sum in cash would be very acceptable. One hundred and fifty minerswere entombed by ah explosion in the Aberkenfig mine, near Bridgend, Wales, on the 20th. Strenuous efforts were made to'reach and rescue-them until, flames issuing from the pit, all hope of saving any of the unfortunate men alive was abandoned. Health Officer Keeney, of San Francisco, has written a letter to Mayor Sanderson calling attention to the spread of cholera throughout Europe. He suggests that immediate action be taken by the city authorities to prepare for its advent, even though its coming be only remotely probable. A DISPATCH from Lyons, France, of the 24th, says- the Russian Jews detained there ■ on account of the refusal of the steamship companies to’ carry them to New York owing to the strict quarantine regulations at that port are to be taken to Havre and there shipped on a steamer for Boston, where it is expected they will find no difficulty ir landing. * '' Grand Secretary Dsns, of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen, ■aid, on the 3Sd, that no strike of the firemen at Buffalo could be legally ordered under existing conditions without conflicting with constitutional laws of the order. He was sure that the men would remain at work, and declared that a sympathetic strike was entirely out of the question. T»E Canadian Pacific steamer Empress of Japan arrived at Vancouver, B. 0., on the 2f«tl», from Hong Kong. When 800 miles from Yokohama fire broke out in her hold. Which was ex tinguished by water and steam forced through holes cut in the bulkheads. About ten tons of tea and burned. The danger at one considered so serious boats were lowered, that the ship's

A Summary of PERSONAL AND GENERAL. O.NE nUSBBED AND FIFTY glass blow - ers employed by Demuth Brothers, Williamsburg, N. Y., struck, 4>n the 24tb, because of the refusal of the firm to re-employ three discharged men. The men resolved to stay on strike pending the decision of the national council at Pittsburgh. The Northwestern, the largest hotel In Liverpool, has been deprived of its liquor license for having violated the excise regulations. The violation was unintentional. The treasury department has issued a circular requiring all rags imported from abroad to be disinfected. There were S46 new cases of cholera in Hamburg, on the 24th, and 130 deaths. « Elizabeth Hushes, of Hyde Park, Pa., was found dead by her husband tipon his returning home from work on the 23d. Disgrace over repeated arrests for drunkenness had caused the woman to commit suicide. While inspecting storm-damaged bridges on the Pittsburgh, Shenango & Lake Erie railroad, on the 25th, Bridge Foreman Fisher was instantly killed and Conductor Deifelifer was fatally crushed by the locomotive upon'which they were riding going through a weakened bridge into the torrent which still raged in the deep ravine below. A Bcda-Pksth correspondent gives an account of the military maneuvers at Fuenfkirchen, Hungary, on the 24th, in the terrible heat. He says that ont of the forces engaged in the evolutions, four officers, eight corporals and ten 'privates have since died of sunstroke. \ An official dispatch-from Porto Novo, qf the 25th, states that when Col. Dobbs advanced against Salrele, the Dahomians, not only in Sakele, but in all the neighboring country, evacuated the district and fled northward, with the French in pursuit. A dispatch from Calcutta, of the 25th, says that the Anchor line steamer Anglia, bound from Calcutta to London, capsized in the Hoogly river on the way to the sea, and of forty-seven persons on board fifteen were drowned. Michael Broderick, of Buffalo, N. Y., was shot in the pit of the stomach, on the 25th, by a militia sentry at whom he, with others, was throwing stones. He ipay die. THERE-were 2,743 deaths from cholera in St Petersburg, on the 24th, and 5,679 new cases reported—an increase over the previous day. Two bombs were exploded in front of the official residence of the stadtholder of Trieste, on the 25th, doing slight damage. The ameer of Afghanistan has appealed to the Indian government for aid against the aggressions of Russia. At a joint meeting of the eastern and western sales agents of the anthracite coal companies in New York, .on the 25th, a further increase of twenty-five ceats a ton in the price of stove and chestnut coal was ordered, to take effect September 1. The preliminary examination of Miss Lizzie Borden,' on the charge of killing her father and step-mother, was begun at Fall River, Mass., on the 25th. The court room was packed with spectators The Metropolitan rolling mills, nail, spike and horseshoe works, owned by Abbott & Co., at Montreal, Can., were completely destroyed by fire on the night of the 24th. Loss, ?12o,0D3; fairly covered by insurance.

A pamc was said, on the 25th, to exist in Hamburg, and large numbers oi cholera victims remained unburied, the undertakers’ assistants deserting their posts. Grand Master Swf.kney of the Switchmen’s brotherhood was viciously assaulted by a striker named Quinn on the street in Buffalo, N. Y., on the 3E,th, because the latter had lost his job on account of the strike. Hon. John Randolph Tucker, of Virginia, delivered the annual address before the American Bar association at Saratoga, N. Y„ on the 25th. Advices from Berlin of the 25th stated that there were grave fears that cholera had gained a foothold in that city. Seven miners were crushed to death and three others injured by the falling in of the roof of a mine near Swansea, Wales, on the 25Wi. The reported interview between the Borden sisters in the jail at Fall River, Moss., in which Miss Lizzie, who is accused of the murder of her father and step-mother was said to have made compromising statements, is declared by Matron Regan and all parties concerned to have been entirely without foundation. J. The notorious Bi^d Lindsay, who figured so conspicuously in the late Tennessee miners’ riots, was released on $5,000 ball, on the 26th, and boarded a train at Coal Creek for Knoxville; but a squad of soldiers took him from the car and locked him up in the guardhouse. . The clearing-house returns of the United States for the week ended on the 26th, according to Bradstreet’s table, aggregated *1,008,610,857. The New York board of health is making a gallant fl§ht to "keep the cholera out The international peace congress at Berne voted, on the 26th, to hold its next meeting in Chicago in 1893. The failure of the brakes upon1 some Pullman cars while making up a train at the Union depot in Pittsburgh, on the 26th, caused a serious crash by collision with the standing portion of the train, resulting in tbo crushing of platforms, the breaking of windows and serious injury to several persons. Rev. R. M. Brown, pastor of the First Lutheran church at Wynantskill, N. Y., was knocked senseless by a stroke of lightning, on the 26th, while addressing the young people of his church, His injuries are not necessarily fatal. The health authorities of New Yorli City, on the 26th, issued stringent orders for the cleansing and disinfection of some of the more filthy quarters oi the city in view of the possibility of an importation of choleraD. H. Monroe, one of the leaders oi

j Gov. Eagle of Arkansas, who is at the home of his sister-in-law, Mrs. John j Dpty, near Richmond, Ky., was, on the j 25th, declared by his physician, Dr. ' StncUey, of Louisville, to be in a serf- ‘ ons condition. i ’ Dispatches of the 28th indicated an 1 increase in the virulence of the cholera j epidemic in Russia aud in Hamburg1, Germany. j Joint.. M. BrnKE, of Spokane, was nominated by the democrats of Idaho, on the 27th, for governor. Hon. J. Randolph Tucker, of Virginia, was elected president of the American Bar association at Saratoga, j N. Y., on the 36th. Hal Pointer won the pacing match with Direct finished at Columbus, O., on the 28th. Best time, 2:11%. A company has been incorported under the laws of New'Mexico for putting a big international dam across the Rio Grande five miles above El Paso, Tex., for the purpose of irrigation, both in Mexico and the United States. The construction of this dam will create an inland lake fifteen miles long and about five miles wide, with an average depth of twenty-five feet. Dr. Thomas Neill Cream, the alleged American poisoner, was up again in the Bow-street (London) police court, on the 27th, and held, on the evidence, on four charges of murder, namely, the poisoning of Matilda Clover, of Ellen Donworth, and of the girls ShriVell and Marsh. The cases now go to the grand jury. The prevalence of cholera in Western Europe is generally ascribed to Russia’s inhuman policy of driving out the Jews, who carried broadcast the seeds of the pestilence. The tug Cornelia, lying at the foot of Baltic street, Brooklyn, sprang a leak, on the 27th, and immediately sank. The engineer, William P. Seid, was drowned. The Russian town of Mozir, on the river Pripets, was destroyed by fire, on the 27th, and nearly all of its 5,033 population are homeless and in great want The Afro-American Migration society has been incorporated at Chicago for the purpose of assisting southern negroes to go to the north and northwest Three hundred of the Tennessee troops at Coal Creek have been granted on furloughs. Thebe is great disquiet among German farmers over the proposed treaty with Russia. The Blue Grass exposition and fair atCreston, la.* a proved great success. A California judge has decided that, the day of execution having passed, a condemned murderer is dead in the eyes of the law, though not hanged. Thomas Woodlet, consular agenl for the United States in Corfu, Greece, died on the 27 th. An investigation by the Porte reveals the fact that the burning of the house of Rev. Mr. Bartlett, the Americah vys:, sionary, at Bourdour, in Asia Minor, was due to the carelessness of an American servant and not to the fanaticism of the natives. Several persons, including three oi four firemen, were injured during the progress of a fire in a five-story building in Wooster street, New York city, on the 27th. The Joss reached $100,008. The theater end of the Metropolitan opera house building in New York city was destroyed by a fire which started in some unaccountable manner on the. stage in the forenoon of the 27th. The loss is estimated at $500,000. The Chilian government has prohibited sealing in the straits of Magellan, the Chiloe islands and Jnan Fernandez. The main building of the Muncie, (Ind.) nail mill was destroyed by fire on the morning of the 27th, together with forty-eight nail machines. Loss, $100,000; about half covered by insurance. Three hundred men are thrown out of employment.

A sensation was caused in Buffalo, N. Y., on the 27th, by the announcement that Bank Examiner Witten had found two of the dime savings associations, of which there are a large number in the city, in a rotten condition. The story of the loss of the steam yacht Wahpiti, with Iliram W. Sibley, of Rochester, N. Y., family and guests, ten in all, in Georgian bay, made public on the morning of the 27th, proves to be a cruel canard. LATE NEWS ITEMS. On the 29th architects began preparing plans for two hotels of about 100 rooms each to be erected just outside of the mill yard at Munhall station, Pa., for the use of single employes of the' Carnegie Steel Co. The buildings will be fitted with all possible conveniences, and the men will be furnished with nice rooms and good food for a small sun. per week. The steamship companies of Glasgow have telegraphed to their European agents to suspend for the present the acceptance of any emigrants by the Glasgow lines for American and other destinations Considerable apprehension already exists in Glasgow in regard to the Russian and other emigrants who have recently arrived there to take passage. Regarding the ehange in the class of armor plate for the war ship New York, now being built at Cramp’s shipyard at Philadelphia, Secretary Lovejoy of the Carnegie Steel Co. says that hia company is acting under orders of the navy department. The secretary refused to discuss the relative merits of the two classes of armor. Tub Marquis de Mores was put on trial in Paris, on the 29th, on the charge of manslaughter in having killed-Capt. Meyer, of the French army, last June, by running him through the right lung with a sword in a duel fought by De Mores and Capt. Moyer, owing to Meyer’s resentment of De Mores’ insult to Hebrews. Anton Potzet., of New York, who was found on the street, on the 28th, and token to Bellevue hospital suffering from what was supposed to be symptoms of Asiatic cholera, was much better the next morning, and the physicians diagnosed the case as simply one of cholera morbus, On the 29th Home Secretary Asquith conveyed the condolence of the queen to the mourning women of Aberkenfig, Wales, who had lost husbands or sons

INDIANA STATE NEWS. Democratic judicial convention at Hobart nominated A. I). Bartholomew for circuit judge. Hon. T. J. Wood, canlidate, cried when the result was anjouneed. > ■ ' 'V.J- -- , John C. Williams, chief of tlio West Indianapolis tire department and promnent citizen, pleads guilty to stealing l quantity of brass belonging to the Indianapolis Forge Co. Claims he was Irunk. Jefferson county democrats have deeded not to put a ticket in the field, but will support the independent nominations. B, Leonard Rale, of Washington, [a., and Mias Jennie Wakefield, of Kokomo, were married an hour after they first met. At Seymour Thos. Callahan goes 20 fears for killing Dad Presnell. At Brazil Mrs. Jennie Morton died from a dog bite received 13 years ago. At Columbus John Mitchell, wealthy farmer, was robbed and beaten by highwaymen. James K. Pleasant’s produce warehouse at Vevay burned. Insurance 510,000; doesn’ t cover loss. P. H. McCormick sued P. H. Sweeney, s Jeffersonville ship builder, for $10,000 for calling him a thia£ The Iron Hall iodge at Haughville, a suburb of Indianapolis, will raise funds to prosecute Supreme Justice Somerby. The Indiana Natural Ga3 and Oil Go. fias its double pipe line completed from Kokomo to the suburbs of Chicago, and Expects to be supplying fuel to consumers of the World’s fair city by October 15. x \ Richabd Jackson, aged twenty-ohe, was instantly killed in a runaway the other night, south' of Lebanon. John Wacham, the man who was shot through the bowels in the riotoceurring at Mentons, a little place eight miles south of Bourbon, some days ago, is dead. i At Wabash Albert Tucker is held for the attempted assassination of James Sray, as he lay in bed. Mrs. Robert BaveRiDOE, of Cardonia, fell from a chair and broke her arm in two places. A two-year-old son of Jefferson McCauley, near Kokomo, was kicked to death by a cow. Representatives of the tribes of Red Men from different points in the state met at Columbus and arranged to hold a general celebration of all the tribes in Indiana in that city October 31. Moses McClure died pear Darlington, the other evening, at the advanced age of 97. He was the oldest active odd fellow in Indiana. A falling tree killed Lindley Saunders near Liberty. Indiana republicans will contest the legislative appointment made in 1891. ...The Vandalia railroad telegraph operatoiA, Jmve.jaeeu .granted a raise in salary. Wm. B. Gregor? died at Grantsburg from gun-shot wounds, received at the hands of Henry Smeltzer, whose sister he had slandered._ ’ Old Bob Chism, bora a slave as the property of Johu F. McFarland, has discovered his old master’s daughter in the poor house at Indianapolis, and is tenderly, caring for her. . V Charlie Smith, twenty years of age, living near Exchange, six miles west of Martinsville, was kicked in the head by a vicious horse, cl ashing the skull, and death resulted. A two-stosy frame building collapsed’ at Dunkirk, Jay county, the other afternoon. George Moore, a plasterer, was instantly killed, and three others injured. Improper bracing caused the accident ’

The otner morning' w. w»wr*wyf*a stand-pipe at Napance collapsed, fatally wounding Wm. Burns, the superintendent The stand-pipe was seventy feet high, and had just been Completed. L, D. Carpenter, a Seymour merchant, was drowned while bathing in Mackinaw, Mich. At Richmond, Lawrence Sughrue filed suit against the Pan-handle railroad Co. for $10,000 for breaking his leg. The inmates of two Anderson bagnios were poisoned with paris green, which was cooked with the potatoes. James Basket, a farmer near Chesterton, Porter connty, was trampled to death by a colt Josef Poland, of Brazil, lost his leg on account of getting it mashed by a fall of coal in the Watson mine. Mm E. M. Wilson, of ShelbvviUe, drank carbolic acid by mistake and he? throat was terribly burned, Ed Dietbich and Zach Rnssey, of Muncie, quarreled about a woman, and Russey shot Diet-rich in the leg. The courthouse j.t -Lebanon was burned, but all were records saved. John F. Langlkt, of Indianapolis, cut bis throat while lying in bed. Bia Four freights collided near Union City killing considerable stock. Miss Anna Moeller, of Muncie, dropped a lighted match in a gas stove, and it was blown to pieces, while she was severely burned. At Connersville, Alva Logan, was lodged and fed by Charles Druman, from whom he stole a gold watch and $23, besides $10 from a fellow boarder. He skipped. - Alfbed Wagoner, of Plainfield, owns a garden hose which he claims is 100 years old. David Lovett, president of the First national bank of Groensburg, is dead. Claba Shelby was drown in Eagle lake, at Wabash, while boat riding. A sebpent fourteen feet long is scaring boys who bathe in the Whitewater river, at Knightstown and Richmond. Thomas Johnson, aged 71, of Fair leld, near Connersville, once had black rair. It turned gray and now is tuning red. ' THE first prosecution under the act oi .he legislature of l«t», which decreet ;hat eight hours should constitute t lay’s labor, was held in Valparaiso s few days ago. O. H. Deming, a prom inent contractor, was found guilty of i violation and fined fifty cents. An ap peal will be taken to the circuit court and on its decision will be determiue<

SEEKING KNOWLEDGE. A ^representative of (he German 1 Gathering Kointers In Naval i tlon In This Country, Coder I Spec ially Detailed Officer of the I States Navy. Philadelphia, Aug. SO.—Alex Dietrich, chief constructor of the i and privy councillor, to the German admiralty, is in Philadelphia making a study of the methods and produc construction at Cramp’s shipyard. Dietrich is on a mission from the German emperor to investigate and acquire knowledge of the latest designs, devices and applications of naval arch tec tore in this oity, Future vessels i the German navy may be modeled i the pattern, of the American cr and vessels of war. Lieut W. Schuetz has been detached from war ship Chicago to act as his official entertainer. Mr. Dietrich will remain in this try about two weeks, and- will the moist of the opportunities at his posal. Guided by Lieut has already visited the governm navy yards at Norfolk, inspected the Baltimore harbor, and under the direction of Mr. Buell made a tour of the Cramp chip-building industries. •> Yesterday they continual the inspection of the Cramp yards and paid particular attention to the cruisers New York and Columbia, and the battleships Massachusetts and Ind5““> Today Lieut Schuetz will | the German visitor to Bethleb. >Pa., ,■ where t he great plant of the BeV/ pent Iron Co. will be inspected and the making of United States guns in the ordnance department viewed. CARNEGIE’S EMPLOYES. Two Hotels for Their Accomodation to be Erected In Close Proxtinlty to the Homestead Works—Pinkerton Detectives on a Still Hunt for Those Winchester Hides. • :cs»z PiTTSKtrnGH, Pa.,Aug. 30.—Yesterday architects began prepirlog plans for , 33 two hotels of about 100 looms each to be erected just outside of the mill yard at Munhall station, for the use of single employes of the Carnegie Steel Co. The buildings will be fitted with all possible conveniences. An official of the company said to-day: . , “Our idea is to give our men a nice room, good food" and all conveniences possible fora small sum per week. They will be as comfortable as if they were ' at their homes.” 4$ ; A surprising number of Pinkerton men were in Homestead yesterday, and : there is much suppressed excitement over the proposed search for the guns of the captured Pinkertons. For sev-, eral weeks Pinkerton's best detectives have been endeavoring to locate the weapons, and now with the authority of search warrants they propose to compel tl»e possessors of the Winches- | ters to surrender them. Two months ago yesterday the great steel works shut down, and so far as the-iren aje concern^ Gjere is no perceptible weakening, normjn.e express any doubt of victory. The firm insist that, so far as they are concerned, the strike is over, and point to the mills as their evidence. -fiC

NOT SO FAST, SISTER. A Canadian rian for Toll Evasion Gets ». Cold Set-Hack from the Treasury Department. Washington, Aug. 80.—The Canadians, with a view of evading the twenty eent tolls to be imposed in accordance with the terms of the president’s proclamation on and after ! first of September next on afl wheat shipped through, the St. canal, are proposing to evade requirements of the proclamation , by shipping in Canadian bottoms from Duluth to Port Huron to be transshipped from that point by the Grand Trunk line through Canada. This matter being brought to the attention of the treasury department. Assistant Secretary Spalding has sent the following explicit telegram to the solicitor of the Grand Trunk Railroad co. How. E. W. Meddauoh, Dbtboit:—Neither Manitoba nor domestic wheat can be carried in Canadian bottoms from Dnlnth to Port Huron, as it. wonld be in violation of our coasting laws. Bat if carried in American bottoms it is not subject to t'lis toll. If carried through canal from Dnlnth to Sarnia for conenmpt in or export from Canada via Montreal, on other port, it wonld be. [Signed] O. L. Spalding. . 5 Acting Secretary. is not nption^BM >ran, ^ THE RED CROSS Organizing in Anstrla, Under Orders of . the Emperor, for Service In Combating Cholera Should It Invade the Empire. Vienna, Aug. 30.—Emperor Franz Joseph has ordered the Red Cross soe ciety to organize for the cholera service throughout Austria. Ten hospital barracks are to be erected in different parts of the empire, and most of these will be under the supervision of the Red Cross. The society will also undertake the transport service, or conveying patients from their homes to the hospitals. The war departments sending out. instructions to all commanders of garrisons in the larger cities to have thqjjv _— - „-■>...W. sanitary sei-vice in readiness to fight I the plague. In Galicia, especially, energetic action is urged. At all the Galician fortresses near the Russian bonder, cholera barracks are being prepared, and the disinfectants and medicines necessary to combat the disease have been distributed among the departments of war in this city. >v A Stoker Dies from Cholera. Amsterdam, Aug. 81.—A stoker of the steamer Urania, from Hambnrg, har. died in this city from cholera. ill Russian Jews Trying to Enter Bohemia. Reichenbebg, Aug. 80.—Three hundred Russian Hebrews attempted to cross the Bohemian frontier to take a train at Situa, yesterday, for Hamburg. The attempt was made near Kratzan. The emigrants refused- to answer the questions of the customs officials on the border as to their former place of residence, and when ordered back '' 200 of them made a rush to get 1 . reach of the guards. They were ^ taken, but fought the < to detain them. Mosummoned and the forced *--*■