St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 23, Number 4, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 14 August 1897 — Page 7
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PERFECT SKIRT SUPPORTER. A PERFECT skirt and shirt waist supporter has at last been invented. Ever since shirt waists have been worn women have "been constantly annoyed by the waist slipping up and puffing in the back, and by the skirt band sagging and slipping from under the belt. Various contrivances have been devised to remedy these difficulties, but none were to be •depended upon under all circumstances. This new holder and supporter is a jewel in every respect, overcomes all difficulties, and relieves the strain from the belt, which last has ' been the cause of much discomfort, besides disfiguring the belt by bunches and Ineffective hooks. The new article
mi—i®!; i 7 SKlirr AND WAIST SUPPORTER.
Is composed of two parts, the foundn- I tion part being a square of nickeled i steel with a button in the center, and two hooks on the upper end, the arms •of which are about an inch long. The hooks on the upper an 1 lower ends are fastened to the center piece by eyelets. These arms swing easily, so as to adjust the hooks to the spread of the corsets. There are also two eyelets in the lower corners of the center piece, through which the corset string is ; passed, securing this part at the lower I end, while above the hooks fasten into \ the eyelets of the corset. This is fast- j ened so that the bottom comes just a j little above the waist line. The other part of this arrangement is made to • sew into the skirt band and loop over J the button-in the same manner as the hose supporters fasten, the shirt waist j and corset cover coming between the I two parts of the fastener and support er. These parts are thus so firmly fastened together that the skirt or waists cannot move up or down. Truths Told in a Few Word* 1 A child's respect for its parent is no' J secured by over-leniency any more than j by over-severity. A daughter should never seek nor l>e I allowed to “outdress” her mother, in every family the mother should be the | best-dressed member. The discarded finery of a daughter | should never constitute a moth, r's wardrobe. No one feels especially dignified in the presence of one whose old clothes she Is wearing, and a mother should at all times preserve her dignity before her children. The mother who । never loses her quwnliness will never lose her crown. Preventable misfortunes consist. ’ chiefly, of manifold things, little to do. but Immense things to have done. The man who earns one dollar and i spends two, and the man who earns | two and spends one. stands on either side of the hair-line between heedless- i ness and discretion, between ruin and safety. Parents generally receive that measure of filial respect they deserve not always, perhaps, but very generally. When a mother allows her daughter to appropriate her wraps, gloves, veils, or other articles of personal attire, she begins a policy of familiarity which, sooner or later breeds contempt, A respect for one's belongings engenders a respect for their possessor.—Ladies’ Home Journal. Beautiful Costume fcr a Pride. A beautiful wedding costume for a bride, veil and all, is described in the La'dies’ Home Journal by Isabel A. Mallon: “The gown is of white satin—that beautiful cream white that you admire so much—and it*is made with a full but plain skirt. The tulle veil, not worn over the fa I '*', is f:ist< iv 3 ’ > ,
tne high coiffure <th.- '..air must always be arranged high when a veil is worn) under a cluster of orange blossoms. The long, pointed sleevo, prettily full at the shoulders, are finished with frills j of real point lace, and a frill in bar- i mony flares out. at the back of the ' crush collar. The crush belt is laid in - soft folds, and does no: show its fastening, which is at the side. You will be wise in having no orange blossoms on your gown. They would have to be removed immediately after the wedding.”
Fool that Nourishes the Nerves. Any good wholesome diet will build i up the nerves. The food that nour- I ishes the end of the little finger nour- I ishes also the brain and the entire body. Each part is but a portion of a perfect whole, and we cannot select food to build especially one part of the human structure. Fatty foods are supposed to be benelidhil to the nerves, as they cushion them and counteract the Irritating conditions. Starchy foods, fatty meats and over-eating tend to the accumulation of fat.—Ladies’ Home Journal. Says They Can’t Dance, And now it is stated by the all-wise medical man so often quoted that persons who cycle a lot find it impossible to perform the graceful movements required by waltzing. The muscles that are brought into play by dancing are deadened by riding a wheel. The lightness of toe so necessary in a waltz be-
conics Impossible to the man or woman who is continually pedaling, as the one set action contracts the muscles, and the whirling, twirling motion of a dance can only be performed in a clumsy fashion. The joints should be free for dancing. After a spin on a bicycle they are st UY and clogged. The continual bending over the handles, too, makes the upright posture used in dancing painful. A cyclist who uses the wheel in moderation would be very little affected; it Is those persons who cycle from morning till night that are the sufferers. Tlon'ts for Lady Cyclists. Don't ride too fast if the sun is hot. Don’t get into crowded thoroughfares. Don’t ride In smart clothes on a dirty
bicycle. Don’t ride on a wet road without a / n> ti< J«ri in r<t, / Omi’t try to r!<l.» cleverly among nPC I of vehicles. Don't ride all over the road; keep In the middle. Don't wear tight clothing if you want to ride in comfort. Don't look to seo if people are admiring and have a collision. Don't start off at too quick a pave If ' you are going a long way. Don't get an idea that every male cyclist Is following you. Don't forget that you can ride farther by riding slowly than by scorching.
The Rambler. Mims London Riven. Miss Landon Rives is the favorite . chum and sister of the clever Amelie Rives. Her success in Washington both as a belle and lovable girl has been quite pronounced. She is unlike her sister, quiet and equable In manner, lovely of face and tigtire, and with //y X® / A I <1 / : fax&Ltoi. ;■ ■ i Ir I T W VI lift I • S", ■ MISS I A X I>ON HIVES kX P I'UMY. considerable artistic tenqx':aim nt. “l’atsey” is a dog of high decree and some tendency to tight when away from his doting mistress, The two are great friends, and make an interesting due in real life. A well known writer. ■ while visiting tn the Rives home In Virginia, speaks of the fondness for horses always exhibited by M ss Rives ■ She could draw in an exceedingly cho ; er way this animal, but was entirely > unable to sketch any other and most I of her friends own a design or two of I the horses she likes best. No Superstition. i “I cannot give you anything I” snapped the lady to the tramp. "You’re the thirteenth tramp that has called here to-day.” “Well, mum." said the tramp, after a little consideration, “you look a clever, sensible lady that don't believe in any nonsense; ami jist to show that there ain't any truth in that silly su- । persitition aDmt thirteen bein' an un- ; lucky numl er I ’ope you will give me I a trifle, mum." —Tit-Bits. - - la-
Sometimes the cans* of the sudden cry may be traeol from th • little cold 1 feet upward. The safety of the baby during the hot ‘ weather depends largely upon tlie i watch!uliii 'S of the ones who have ihe I precious charge in their keeping. It is easier to prevent sore month i than to cure it. When the baby has j finished eating wash his mouth thor- ! onghly with a little cold water and j borax. If the gums are inflamed over
i the coming teeth a pinch of bicarbonate > of soda may be added to the borax I water. Accustom the baby to a moderate light, but shade his eyes from a direct glare of full sunlight, whether he is asleep or awake. There are many faults of vision that may be avoided by a little care, and sometimes quite grave defects may be remedied without the aid of the oculist. At the first sign of hoarseness in the child’s voice a little warm olive oil should be rubbed on the throat and chest and a piece of thin flannel laid over to protect the clothing and to keep out the air. The little bootees that have been removed to give greater comfort and freedom to the restless feet must be replaced; and no matter how attractive the veranda seems in the sweet, briar scented air, when the early dews have fallen, the baby should go inside.
AGBICULTURAL NEWS THINGS PERTAINING TO THE FARM AND HOME. the Price of Huy I* Regulated by Its 1 Color, Not its Worth—Green Fodder Good for Stock Keep the Fence Corners Clean. Marketable Hoy. There may be markets that will take , the richest hay at a sufficient advance in price to repay the farmer tor lurnishing it, but 1 know of none, and am . sure that there are not many, it sells by color, and there is more danger of having some of the hay blackened and , dusty when the grass Is cut in lull bloom than when it is sufficiently mature to require only a short exposure to the weather in the swath, it is a big and risky job to cure a large amount of grass that is as full of sap as timothy In full bloom, and consumers in most local markets are not Imdineii to pnv for all tlie < xtin tnt«»r. risk and loss In'weight of the totld product due to early cutting. Dead ripe timothy Is not । wanted, of course, and its color con- । demns it. but there is a middle ground ! which should be taken. There may la* j glory in furnishing the market with | timothy cut when in full bloom, but I there is rarely any profit from the ex ’ tra effort and risk. In the long run ' just as attractive and a more protlta- | ble lot of hay may lie put upon the mar- ■ ket when the bloom Is shed. The feed- j Ing value Is less, but this Is doing unto I others as they would do unto us. which ' is the sliver rule of commercial trans- ■ actions. National Stockman. Grre .i Fod ler for Cowm, Farh fodder corn, when eaten by the j cous, will mak • a sat.sfwng feed, and ’ It will also lari ly lncr< se the quantity of milk. F -Ider fc d when half I grown or Immature is very p<wr fee<l, : ns It Is mostly water. The cows will ! consume a large amount of such fed- ' dcr, and git ea very sii all quantity of milk. Gh e to । , > ■. o four quarts of mil) feed. In tl •• i "in : :. wl < n tin y . are being milked; theu tmn to pasture : At n<»on give ea-h ■ a an armful "f ’ the f.uhh r. upland owr th.- pasture, ami ti e same quality of mil! feed made ; Info slop, and one armful of ’fodder; : after the mil! ft <! ai d b! r l« eaten turn out upon the night pasture. If the cow s l ave to 1 • k* pt In the slat ' yard, gm- t: em in .•••LD*m. n sn nil forkful of . • • t n»U • m-d Hom r hay. The tons i md b« ft m n :.U «h< t can cat (in such a rai-en. «m! cows Will am z. ; tl..- im. H<l b time gallons ~f milk | r d.iy nil through t! ■ siimim r. ai I:: m;;k wdl be ..! good favor and : - h In ermtm As UM as t. . t- d.b : ■t rn Is <ut off. ; th" groom! b> inn n tl •• row* should lx* ’ well worked up wz !i t, • cultivator, ami then run out with the one bor»e plow, making the furrow alsmt flv<« Inches tn d pth, nnd *.■«<.! f. dd- r corn Sou one large handful of b i > phosphate t" e\. ri tl e tof r w and about t«elw grains of corn to the foot. Cover the corn a» fast as St is son n. It wlll par t.k<vp tl . ""w In g. k! condition; If tlu v an- allowed to Dcome thin. It u 11 take a hngr quart ; of grain to get t. . in In ord« r I> r tl.v Winter. The An • rl< nr. Cleuring I vi-cc Corners. Nothing u.eie cb ari.' • ions »’ .• painstaking am! < a re! id s i:< r than to have t<me mrm : , bemm.-n lo ld* <>r along the t ab de j. } ,t -.tx.in weed', grass er shrubs. As a rule all the old time fem e corners were k. pt scrupulously el-an. A g d d al of valuable bay was imide from what ^:e scythe i«-tv m d .i; ar.d > m t! • re. But when the horse mower ami the s if. binding reaper came into t s.\ R ev« ry year became harder to find anybody who could be h:r>-d to clear out the fence corners. The result was that the | ax rather than the scythe was requlr- < ed, and the growth. Instead of being ; restricted to fence corners, encroached each year mure on the cultivated fields, i A Former’s Outfit. The better machinist a farnu r Is. the j more time and money will be saved. ? He should understand thoroughly ev- ; ery machine he uses, and be able to re- j pair all but the most serious breaks for i himself, and avoid being dependent upon paid service. It is wise forethought to keep on hand duplicates of such parts as are most liable to break, thus saving valuable time, espe* lal’y in the haying season. A well-equipped tool chest, with screws and nails of all kinds, should be a part of every farm--1.1 s outilt, 11 one of the boys shows a taste tor mechanics, give him a chance to develop it. He will lie a valuable man to have in the neighborhood .and will probably be able to turn many an honest penny by helping out his less skillful neighbors.--Massachu-setts Ploughman. To Ward Off Fi-nit Rot. 1A hen limit rot has attacked the peach crop, the best method is to reimr. e and burn all dried or mummified fruit from the trees, in winter, and spray early in spring with bluestone V ben the fruit buds begin fg swell spray with Bordeaux mixture and again just before the blossoms’open Repeat the spraying when the blossoms are falling, adding a little paris green to keep off the cureulio. Two weeks later, spray again. As the Bordeaux mixture coats the fruit with the lime mixture, use copper acetate a colorless solution, for the last two sprayings. In Delaware, a ten-fold in. crease of sound fruit has been obtained by this process, at a cost of about 12 cents per tree.—The Agriculturist. lItXKS by the Poiwid. If eggs were sold by- the pound it would revolutionize the breeds. As we have before shown, tbo lien ‘.hat lays the largest number of eggs may
vlce^ - 1 ? be P erf orni!ng as much ser. Wlik-l ' ° ne 1 ‘ !lt lays fewer i'SK B . but bent " avei-i ~ ° KSs 1,1 a year, the eggs uet wT I ]^ ntO tlle pounil . Pi’odon , ' U d !’.° twelve pounds of eggs in oth ’ \ n ‘ ,l t us suppose that anoUer hen in the flock laid lU4 eggs, the averaging eight to the pound. In ttrst case the hen that produced 120 would be the most valuable, vet s^e has not performed as much s’erJee as the one which produced but eggs, as tlie eggs of the latter are « pound heavier, and, if eggs were sold by weight, she would give a larger profit on f ( . Wer ogg S . Selling eggs by "eight gives both the producer and the contumcr a fair sale and purchase, and farmers would begin to select the breeds that produced large eggs. They would then bo compelled to Improve tjielr flocks In order to secure the best itiirket prices for their eggs. Poultry W vper. j# Ventilation of Horse Stable*. aK t takes it good deal of cure to ke,*p Lie burse stable sweet and tit for iHalthy living during the summer sea > >i. Vn’.ess it Is quickly covered with ' Wrtb. gypsum or something equally I e^clent In absorbing odors, the decom I posing manure will not only waste am । motila, but It will be worse than wast : cd because it will injure the health and । espeehilly the eyesight of animals 1 Many a horse has gone blind Itevause i of the ammonia affecting his eyes In poorly ventilated and dark stables. This i Is tbo chief advantage of underground < stables in summer. They are cool, but It Is very bard to keep them well ven ‘ Hinted and without offensive smell Rut If the tindergrouml stable has. n« ■ it should, n cement floor, it may not b< i worse than the overground stable that | has a plank floor tilled with the urine I ami other secrethm/i that have soaked Into It. Blu- Grs.« Pn<iwrr. There Is no better pasture grass than the blm* grass, which In some parts of i the country D known as June grass. | Its roots run near the surface, and the | pasture is tlu-refore sweet ami g<snl so . soon n s the grass starts. In nddsum tm-r these shallow r»»l, have another I great advantage. Tlwy are U-m tit- d । by the light rain* w biHi only penetrate i one op two inch,-*, and with h will not ' reach down to the clovers, whose roots i run more deeply The clover roots strike d> « n Into the *ub' ■ I in time R. for l>«r ftllKh*. A r.-a . .y t r ; • .r l.i nad *ii it« r। f * ti i)*’* • w 100 of Mjt* t. ■ * », |f should <1 id* nt »»•,!*• Iwf?hr bn*!* U-giu to sw.il, and 111.’ f.u • gi oer can give It a test, ami as t;.e - lit w JI To K ill Ihe HornH y. The Is w .i y of light Ing - ’ •• t rouble■ some horn fly is |.y the application to the cattle of an emulsion of some kin 1 which will kill the Insects already there, am! k. • p others aw ay l i-h "il. mblespoonfu! of the acid to a pint of the oil has l>een added, makes a very cheap and effective application, Ker- < sene t-muls:. n ti'. d as a spray Is a!so good, being especially adapted t<> large herds. Ti.e emu!>i<-n Is made by adding a half pound of soap ‘.li'solved in ' a gallon of boiling water) to two gal- ' lons of k.-rosene. This emulsion, wliri; i thoroughly mixed and allowed to cool, i assumes the consisteucy of Habb* r j milk; wh< n used as a spray, it is di , luted with water in which tobacco i stems have been boiled. Fann News. Sweet I’otatoc*. Before the vim s start to run, cub. V’te the ground between the rows, «d. after a few days, throw a furrow -Athe plants on each s.de ut every row. ■Ake the boo and draw the earth up elWi to ^ ie vlues > an< ^ cut out all weeds. The after cultivation consists in stirring tlie ground between the rows with tlie cultivator set to run shallow, and of hoeing the ridges and preventing the vines from rooting at the joints. As soon as tlie vines commence to turn yellow the potatoes are ripe, and can lie dug and sent to market. It is more profitable to dig and sell direct from tin* field. AdvnntaiiCH of Well-Bred Stock. It is particularly in tlie time when s.ll farming is hast prosperous that those who have been caretui to secure only the best bred animals have tlie advantage. The first effect of a decline in prices is to make Hie scrub animal unsalable at any price. All through the period of depression the scrub stock farmers are changing from poor or inferior stock to that which is better. By the time they have all secured the best stock the times will have improved so as to make farming profitable again. It is really a case of cause and effect, though not often recognized as such. Soil for Radishes. To grow good radishes, one needs a sandy soil, thoroughly fertilized. It is practically- impossible to grow a line quality on a heavy sail. The roots grow very slowly, and they become tough, and, in many cases, wormy. A loamy soil will do very well, but a heavy clay is not suitable.
leaf hww uiTtiii i ■imwwcti iw wnrrm—th mmwr maw* WEALTH OF RUSSIA’S RULER. Occupant of the M nscovite Throne the Richest of Europe’s Sovercicua. The EnqMM’or Paul, whose reign was certainly not one of the most brilliant, was, nevei thele.ss, one of the gi’eatest benefactors of tlie dynasty. He not only settled the order of succession on a permanent basis, but also endowed jlils posterity with tlie material means of maintaining their position. It Is claimed that no other n-igning family In Eure-ix» is so well provided for. Paul I. set aside a vast amount of landed property, muler the name of the imperia! appanages, for the sole l>eneHt of all grand dukes and grand duchesses not in the direct line of succession, while the sovereign and the heir, apparent, together witli their respective I’arnilDs, wero to lx* supported out of the funds of the Stale. Thes»> apiNnuigee of the Russian Imperia! family now cover the enormous total area in different wet ions of Russia of i 21,L00,000 aerva, an extent of land larger by 2,000,000 acres than the whole of Scotland. This total includes 15,i 000/XX) acres of wood and forest, producing yearly more than 5.000,000 rubles. The total annual revenue of the Imperial appnnag»-s now reaches 20,000,000 rubles, or more than £2,000,j DO, and, with no fewer than forty-six ' nieudxTS of the InqMwlal family to supixirt, the expenditure nt present amounts to a yearly average of over 5J* o.’MMi rubh*. In DPI It was over t>,tH 0,000 rublcti. I’he appanages are quite txqwirate and distinct from extensive private ; pro;* rty ami from the crown or State i domains. nduitnistv.rod by tlie minister -of ngricultu.ro, and tliey do not con- j tribute toward the annual ext-ihiiture of tlie Imperial court, amounting, as far as can 1*» ascertained, to tilxmt i £L(mmi.i me nor toward providing dowries for Imperial grand duchesses. Rei fore the emaneipathm of tlu' serfs tlie j oppanagi'S j*w«s«xs*i-d nv< r nh.ihii (x-as-anta. w ho pa'd annually Ln land ami Dill taxes for the Ixiu-flt of the im- : porlal family nearly ff.iw.iw rubhM, i n-xl during sixty eight years, up to t? dr lilx ratlon. nltogctlx r I v.i.oou.iumi j rv.bb *. or 112.5'"D‘Ud I he department «s»me the largest land«d proprietor, the largest agrlmlturallst an 1 the Largest vltm ; r.xhi-.>r in tl»e emj re. Its in- | dcsgrlal < nterpr --a -n timber, sugar. .- • :i .-I- d • . r pr. d■ ■ ■ !U. lly I 1 d i eh>;»mg oti a pr-qxirtlouateiy large I I * a!e. During a eewtiry of existence 1 I tt hxs fnmDlu'd Hh' (adlateral branch- j ^go' r r 2ral.<ruble*, ami. ax the a large r, s-rw ftrad employ dln Hu |>r r*( i t lons of Xtiio'r-*. to V .oh-nt ornD. sass the Main M.* ; s-itgor. It s.l d ’he lx 1 f founded I on the fact tl- it Hie Under ■> of forty of •;»o Uli:: -a in the wo. M have] Ido*! ill t! *♦ MaV, twelve Is- Ilg shot, | thr-s* ingulf.d ia tin r mine*, and tlie ri-st imams smhtliiy d_<apixsirtng. G - rg.. H. Fryer, of the Fryer HUI I m.ne, comn. tt.,! s-ai ide. Two years before his death he was wort. 1 a j mWLin, yet the aurhorltb-s bur;, d him. The d!-o-.er.-r of the Standard maud in Califoruia was k iit*l by an ava- | Lui- io-. Col. Storey wins kilh-1 by the I lad :ui.s; W 11. am Fairweather, of the Alder Gulch Itdw-s, came to his death through riotous living. The owner of Uie Homestake mine turned highwayman. He was shot dead. Jc-lm Hor-m-r, >f :1m- Horner mim-, finding hlm-'-•If pemUe'S. shot "Itoughnut BHl," “Did Eun-ka" and “Nim*mile Chirks” were killed in barroom rows, tm*l Moatatia I’liMimier. who found one of the richest mines in the woa’d, died on the gallows. "Dutch William,” the discoverer of gold In CariMu, British Columbia, aft»-r wliotn the famous William Creek was named, dksl a pauper, and Manjhall, tlie discovert t vs gold In California, was a pemsione. of tlie State some time before his death. Things to Remember About Sleeping. Sunlight is good for everything but . feathers. The best number of jx-rsons Ito each bed Is -one. Away* with heavy | hangings, eirlior above or B i-ov tlie - b<xl. Beware of a dusty, mu.sy carpet । better sweetness and a bsrc floor. Do not fail to provide some means for ventilation during tlie night Keep the head cool while sleeping, but not by a drft of cold air falling upon it. If a , folding bed roust be used, contrive some way to keep it aired and wliolesonie. Ijet the pillow be high enough to bring the head in a natural ixvitfon no more or h ss. lion lying t lin tlie pillow should be large < uough . to bring the head up in line with the spinal column. Thoroughly air ihe sleeping room every day; air the beds and bedding as often as possibD. A dark, out-of-dhe-way, unwliolesome corner is no more fitted for a slcepingroom than for a parior. A feather l-ed whicli has done service for a generation or two is lrtrdly a desirable tirnf upon which to sleep.—Good Housekeeping. llnw He Explained It. Ilunkins —See here, doctor, you told mv wife she couldn't run her sewing machine, didn't you? Dr. rilgurlick—Yes. Hunkins—And yet you said she might ride the bicycle. Dr. Pilgaclick—Yes. Hunkins—Well. I’d like to know how you reason it out. Dr. Pllgariick—l don't reason it out at all. There isn’t any room for reason In your wife’s case.—Cleveland Leader. A man should not be called stingy because he refuses to be held up and robbed by a ticket selling fiend; he should be called sensible.
I--WWW llwatMWIlIM W »>»TII nW I IIM BSSI INDIANA INCIDENTS. RECORD OF EVENTS OF THE PAST WEEK. Broz 1 Younx Man Charged with In' tention to Blow Vp a Brick Kiln — Valparaiso Farmer Meets a Cordial Welcome in Chicago from Sharpers. Planned an Explosion. Guy Talc, a prominent young man of Bi i fil. was arrested Friday, charged with placing seven sticks of dynamite under a brick kiln, arranging them so that when a tire was started in tlie kiln the dynamil.- would explode, demolishing tlie plant. Tate and John Veen own the brick yard and it is claimed that some disagreement between the two men caused Tate to commit the crime. The dynamite was found just in time to prevent a disastrous explosion, as arrangements were being made to start fire in the kijlk—- • - vi t raise, walked right into the aruvs cn -rnm- — Johnson nt the I nion depot in Chicago wlpmi the train from his town arrived. Johnson dresses like a clergyman, and as < row had .SLNOO in his possession Johtismi tidd him how glad he was to see him. He also stated he was an agent for the Civic Federation, and that his duty was to look after farmers who came to the city. Crow explained that he knew a thing or two, and that he hail planted his y < I"sv to tile sole of his shoe. Being told that that was the very place the r dds-’s srat'ehed first, he accepted the suggesti<ni <>f giving the money to his prote< bn. who also invited him to go to the . s "m- of tin- terrific explosion. Detectives i Giblxms am] Lavin w.-itehed the transfer <>f the money ami then arr-stisl Crow's nen friend, who is said to lie one of the most i lcver eontidem-e men in the country. 'I In- money was recovered and turned over to Crow. AH Over the State. At Vnljcitais... the body of Charles Kimmell was found on the Baltimore and < >hi" tracks < nt to pieces. Henry Swisher, a pioneer resident of Kokomo, died from injuries received eight । yea l * ago tn- being buried in a gravel pit. Rev. .1. \\ . Buettner of Columbia City, p i'tornf Z 'ids L-itheran Chnrvh, preacii'•d hi* farm el) sermon, having accepted a all t<> tli" pastorate of the First Ger- । u I.mln ran Church of Muskegon, Mi. b. I.din Hat< het plowed up an old pot coni t .i: ng Sl.'Mh) in g<dd coin on his farm. ■ . • .ir >. h.o.m r. Brown County. It is I tlo"ight b. have been buried by his father. Vi'i.i uas known t<> have large amounts of •gobl. Il u .ev Briggs, aged 15. climbed a teleio i,. pole ill South Bend and touched a 1 live wire and was instantly killed. In falling Ins clothing caught on an iron step I ling from the pole, and his body j ' u:ig suspended in the air until taken V 1 M hiirm .re ant! Sherman 1 i.' v.ie arrested at South Bond, .I, ig«d with raising paper money. The :• • v re m.-ide by D. puty Sheriff John I' . It n instructions from Detective : M of the Fnited States secret ser- ' . !!<>th nu n claim Jackson, Mi< h., as their home, l liey are charged with raising bills tn S 5 ami Slit and passing I them it Detroit. Mi< h., and Toledo, O. I In > will le talu-n to Indianapolis fur a In । ring W. D. I’agc, the r.ewly upi»>iuted postj m i'll r of 1 'ort Wat ne. is editor and publ:*lb i <il the Daily News. He founded • He New s a quarter of a eeutftry ago as ua I md< > udeiit paper, ami has conducted it as -mh ever sime. although he has al«,ps been an ardent Republican ami supporter <>f high protection. He has been m tive in politic', but lias never aspired to oitice. President McKinley sent his nomination to tin- Seriate the day of adjournment. but as it was not acted upon it was n try to make the recess appointment. The attorneys of Rev. William F. Hinshaw, who is serving a life sentence for w ife murder in prison, made an examination of tlie criminal court rerords at Indianapolis to see whether Noah Raney and John Whitney, who have exonerated the minister by an alleged confession, were under restraint when the murder of Mrs. Thurza Hinshaw was committed. They found that Baney and Whitney were under bond to appear in court, but wore not restrained of their liberty and could have committed the crime. The attorneys were much gratified at the dis1 ivc inmates of the Jeffersonville penitentiary were given their liberty by the pardon board, as follows: Ben Holton, sent from Jeffersonville to » rve twentyone v. ars for murder; I red .Miller, North Veriion. t<n ii'- murder; Forest B. Newport, Wayne (’onnty, assault and battery, six years; George Neehan, DeKalb County, grand larceny, five years; George Sizemore, Grant County, assault and battery, two years. James C. Lavell. whom the people of Indiana wanted to get paroled, has withdrawn his application for clemency, as his term expires in forty days. Lavell is the prisoner implicated in the burning of the M'ashington court house. Toughs persisted in disturbing revival services conducted by Rev. John Wi.lsicin at El som. By advice of some of his congregation, the preacher took two pistols with him to resist a rumored attempt to force him the church. 'When the disturbance began. Ilie prem her fired, but missed his aim, and instead of hitting the touahs one bullet passed through the )>odv of little Mamie Stamliford. The child was" sleeping on its mother's lap when the fatal bullet stiuek it. When Mr. \\ alstein found he had shot the child, he iumped through a window and made his escape. Jann s Standiford. the child's father, says the preacher can return if he wishes, and he w ill not prosecute him. It was a; Stamliford’' advice that Walstein took the pistols to church with him. Charley Lesser, a Kouts boy, while playing with matches in a saloon, lighted one and placed ir in the bunghole of a w hisky barrel. The barrel exploded, badly injuring the boy and blowing out the front of the building. Albert and Clara Franks, of Toledo, were found in a Lake Shore stock car at Butler, by a conductor, beating their way to Klondyke. The woman had on men’s •lotbing and was good-looking. They mid a large sum of money, but were beating their way to save it to buy their outfit for the gold fit Ids. which they expected to reach early in the spring
