Semi-weekly Express, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 12 October 1897 — Page 8
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iT S ViUWV'SE
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WEYLER IS RECALLED
CAPTAIN GENERAL BLANCO HAS BEEN CHOSEN TO SUCCEED HIM.
The Deposed Commander Airs His Grievances Against the Members and PHflL of the Liberal Party.
SAGASTA'S REPLY IS A BITING ONE
WEYLER'S SERVICES "HAVE BEEN VALUED AS THEY DESERVE."
Question of Spain's Reply to Oar Government's Note Considered By the Cabinet.
1
E'!/'
Madrid, Oct. 8.—(Midnight)—The cabinet has decided upon the, Jmmediare recall of General Weyler from Cuba: A decree will be issued appointing Captain General H!anco Arenas, marquis of Pena-Plata* governor general of the island. The queen regent will sign the decree tomorrow. According to El Heraldo 20,000 reinforcements will accompany General Bianco to Cuba.
In the course of the cable message sent by General Weyler to Premier Sagasta placing his post in Cuba at the disposal of the government, he said: "If the functions with which they had intrusted me had been merely those of governor general of Cuba I should have hastened to resign. Btit the two-fold character of my mission and my duty as commander in chief in' "the face .of the enemy prevent my tendering a resignation. Nevertheless, although I can rely upon the absolute, unconditional support of the autonomist and constitutional parties as well as upon public opinion this would be insufficient without'the confidence of the government, now more than ever necessary to me, after the censure of which I have been made the object by the members and journals of the Liberal party and by public opinion in Uie United Stages, which latter is largely influenced by th former. This confidence would be necessary to enable me to put an end to the war which, has already been virtually concluded from our lines at Buraco to Cape Antonio."
Senor Sagasta replied: "I thank you for your explanation and value your frankness. I wish to assure you that the government recognizes your services and values them as they deserve, but it thinks a cnango of policy, in order to succeed, required that the authorities should be at one with the ministry. This has nothing to do with the confidence felt in you by the government, for the Liberals have always said that the responsibility for a government's "policy doc* not fall upon those who carry it out, but upon the government inspiring it. I shall communicate your communication to the government shortly."
General Blanco will be accompanied by General Arderine as vice governor of Cuba by General Gonzale Painals, as chief of staff, and Generals Pando, Bernal and Canelle.
AS TO SPAIN'S REPLY.
The Cuban Question 4h,e, Subject of 'Much Discussion at Cabinet Meeting.
Washington. Oct. S.—There was some discussion of the Cuban- questiop and the seal conference at the cabinet-, meeting today, but owing to the fact that both these matters are in a transitory qfjpiji^on no.definite action was decided u^nj
The president had Mffeffttf'secure a reply to his representatons to Span during tho present month, but it was stated at the meeting that the SJ]Rjii4 probably would cause delay in this matter. There was more or tess.'-speculation on the part of members *44/'°
what
would be the
temper and character of the reply, when it thould be received, and the opinion was gensral that, the new ministry would manifest desire to cultivate friendly relations with this country. The desire of the administration appeared to be to-itfCtt these advances If they are accompanied by a policy on the part of Spain towards Cuba that will hasten the ciosfr of the war iaiaccordance with Ameciean ideas. It is recognized that some ti»e will be necessary to demonstrate the policy of the Sagasta cabin'© and the president's advisers are understood generally to favor the policy of allowing a reasonable time before following up the first note delivered by Minister Woodford with another of more pressing character, as originally had been intended in gase the first note 6hould not bring a satisfactory reply.
It was stated after the meeting adjourned that it was not yet considered as absolutely settled that Great Britain would not participate in the seaL Conference.
The meeting also developed a confirmation of the report that the Union Pacific syndicate had agreed to increase its bid to the government to $50,000,000 and that the attorney general in view of this fact had decided not to appeal the case, but to allow it to proceed.
WAS H-E IN DISGRACE.
A Bright Japanese Diplomat Kills Himself in Honolulu.
San Francisco, Oct J5.—Thesteamer China arrived today from Hong Kong, via Honolulu, with the following Hawaiian advices under date of the 2d inst:
Honolulu—The steamer. China brought word that Councillor Akiyama, of the Japanese foreign office, attempted suicifls at Yokohama on September 20th. At last accounts he was in a critcal state. There were two severe wounds, one on the throat and the other in the abdomen. Akiyama arrived in this city on the cruiser Naniwa last ay to assist Minister Shimamura in handling the Japanese immigration matter. He proved to be a bright young man of considerable experience In diplomatic work and he made many friends during the three months he spent ia the islands. He was ordered home In July and the impression got abroad at the time that he failed to accomaUcfe xlut s«« t»Z Ue
eminent, and that he had gone in disgrace. Dr. Jarrard K. Smith, a brother of Attorney eceral Smith, was murdered at Koloa on the island of Kauia, on the night of Sep2 4 a a iv
Ravages of Djaenterv In Japan. San Francisco, Oct. 8.—The following Japanese advices were received tpday per. ateajm-A er China from Yokahama: During the eiftttmer over 47,000 cases of dysentery' and aboufr 9,300 deaths from the same cause -have been reported throughout the country urlng a typhoon, which caused much damage, September 9th, the Norwegian bark.'Alette, from Vancouver to Yokohama with a cargo of lumber, was caught at the entrance to the Tokio harbor and dashed on th?. rocks at Tateyama bay, and went to Rieces. Her captain, second mate, carpenter, steward and two sailors saved their lives, by jumping on the rocks but the first mate and -.nine-of .the crew were drowned. Ninety persoijswere killed, outright, 300 injured and thousands of houses and other buildings destroyed in the vicinity of Tokio by the typhoon.
Weyler Will Not Kestst Removal. Havana, Oct. 8.—General Weyler today gave an emphatic and absolute denial to the reports that he would resist removal from his command in Cuba and in certain contingenoies might espouse the carlisf
England Not Asked to Evacnate Egypt London, Oct. 9.—The Paris correspondent of the Times, referring this morning to the statement of the Figaro that the papers have agreed to collectively ask England to evacuate Egypt, says: "No power has been approached on the subject of Egypt for a long time. France tried to get Russia to support her, but only received Russia's earnest wish to do nothing with regard to Egypt beyond diplomatic negotiations."
Everybody Says So.
Cascarets Candy Cathartic, the most wonderful medical discovery of the age, pleasant and refreshing to the taste, act gently and positively on kidneys, liver and bowels, cleansing the entire system, dispel colds, cure headache, lever, habitual constipation and biliousness. Please buy and try a box of C. C. C. to-day 10,25, 50 cents. Sold and guaranteed 0 cure by all druggists.
JIB,. FARIS BACK HOME
AND BE HAS SOMETHING TO SAY ABOUT THE CLINTON POSTOFFICE.
The Chancre In the Office Will Take Place Next Week—As to Mr. Bonner's Deputy.
Congressman George W. Faris returned home from Washington yesterday and for a long^ipe. last night was closeted at the with William R. Bonner, the new postmaster of Clinton. 'Mr. Faris will renftiln in, Terre Haute until congress conveii£S)tjg.jDecember, when he will return to Washington to be gone all winter.
Mfo says he left his family nicely quartered in Washington. His children are in school and as everything is going nicely with them he felt he should come back to Terfe Haute.and transact some business, which is of a more or less pressing nature. Then.'he desires to be associated with the people of his district before congress convenes in order that he will be in absolute touch, with their views on a number of important questions to come up at the coming session.
The chief interest in this part of Mr. Faris' district centers in the Clinton postoffice, for which place "Billy" Bonner was named by the president early this week. The situation at Clinton is an altogether peculiar operand right now there is almost as much contention over the deputyship as there origlaally was over the postmaster's position. Statements have been made that Congress man Faris was going to appoint this and that mkn and that he was going to have Luty BiShop removed without ceremony. When seen at the Filbeck last night Mr. Faris said he had nothing further to do with the Clinton postoffice. "I never have," he added, "had anything to do with the appointment of deputy postmasters .in this district. "It has been stated but without any truth that-?!' Wefofcht my influence to bear in the bf my brother to a deputyship in the Terre Haute office. Such is not the case, as Mr.. Benjamin will bear me out. There hav^ been some very unpleasant things in connection with the Clinton office. liMd nSlyoMind made up as to this office, but at the very last moment a very much un-looked-for and much to be regretted thing happened, and it was necessary for a change to be made in the appointment there."
Mr. Faris said that Mr. Bonner would have charge of affairs at Clinton as the postmaster should have full power in the selection of a deputy. As to the time of the new postmaster taking hold the congressman said Mr. Bonner's commission would be forwarded to him the coming week andhe would assume charge of the office immediately on the receipt of the proper credentials. This means that Postmaster Bishop will have to step down and out a few weeks before the expiration of his commission. Mr. Bishop's commission, it is said, expires early in November.
Mr. Faris says that Washington is very quiet at present though the president it very busy in the correspondence between this country and Spain. The situation, he said, had been very grave and was yet but that the selection of the new ministry in Spain had in a very great measure tended to bring matters to a more amiable understanding.
Death of Peter E. Stutlebaker. Alma, Mich., Oct. 9.—P. E. Studebaker of South Bend, Ind., died at the Sanitarium here of heart disease. His brother, Mr. J. M. Studebaker, left with the remains for South Bend this evening.
EMPLOYMENT OF CONVICTS.
Obstacles to Warden Harley's Marsh Land Plan. Charley Harley, warden of the state prison at Michigan City, still believes that the board of managers for the institution ought to lease several hundred acres of marsh land near the prison. The members of the board have been devoting some thought to the subject, and they are inclined to believe the plan is a good one, says the Indianapolis News. The obstacle in the way of carrying it out, they say, is the lack of money with which to prepare to put the land under cultivation. They point out that it would be-necessary to purchase a good deal of tiling, and farmS implements would have to be provided.
It will not be long until nearly all the convicts in the prison will be idle. The problem of providing something for them to do until the next legislature meets is worrying the board of managers and the board of state charities. No one has been able to suggest a plan by which the men may be kept at work, except the warden, who feels that the leasing of the land is the solution ef the question.
It looks now as if no one will oppose the repeal, or at least the radical amendment, of the anti-convict labor law by the next general assembly. Everybody that has made Inquiry into .the subject Is cpnvlnced thai the enactment of the law was one of the strious mistakes of the last general assembly. It seems to have escaped the notice of the legislature that the law was so constructed that it would be impossible to keep the convicts at
rfrrrW
work under It. It was rep-
-to
tfee members of the ge&eral afc?
'ffiM. TERRE HAUTE EXPRESS, TUESDAY MORNING. OCTOBER 12,1897
eembiy that under the act the convicts ^ero to be employed in making goods consigned by the other state institutions but no one raised the point that the men could not work unless they had tools and machinery to work with.
The state reformatory at Jeffersonvllle, was fortunate in letting some long time contracts just before the law.went into effect, and will not suffer greatly.
JUDGE HENRY MMED
THE PRESIDENT APPOINTS HIM COfc LECTOR FOB THIS DI8TRIBT.
Nominations Made a Short Time in Ail? ranee to Enable Appointees to Arrange*For Taking Office. r'
Special to the Indianapolis News. Washington, Oct.- 8.—Two internal reve
nue collectors,. embracing all the territory of the state of Indiana, were nominated
by the president today, viz: A. E. Nowlan of Lawrenceburg for the Sixth (Indianapo
lis) district, to succeed W. H, Bradken, and
D. W. Henry of Terre Haute for the Seventh (Terre Haute) district, to succeed Joshua Jump.
There were no surprises in these appointments. Nowlan's appointment was agreed upon as early as last March. It was unanimously apprbved by the delegation fn congress and by Chairman Gowdy. Judge Henry is a son-iirlaw of Colonel "Dick" Thompson. He after & very bitter personal fight. Seifj chief dep Princeton.
The xioj
Fairbanks''indorsed him. Hi.? be O. M. Tichenor of
ns were made earlie? than ftted. The four years' terma rt&Uitil, about November 1st,
had beejtt.4a'$ do not
and it waST exjfected the nominations would not be made until then. The understanding is that the nominations were made a few weeks in advance to enable the collectors to file their bonds and arrange for the transfer of the offic.es promptly on the expiration of the four years. To be precise, the term in the .Sixth? district expires October 31st, and in the Seventh November 6th.
For the past two or three days Judge Henry has expected that the nomination might be made any hour but he was agreeably surprised, to have the first information of his appointment come in the shape of a dispatch from Col. A. A. Matson, of Ala'-i bama, a particular friend of Mr. Henry's now in Washington.
The appointments announced in the above dispatch were known 'to be certain many wteks ago. It was authoritatively announced a few weeks after the presidential election that Mr. Nowlan was to have the appointment which he received today. He had served the party as member of the state committee, and for years had been an aotive Republican worker in the southeastern part of the state. He lives on a farm a few miles out from the city of Lawrenceburg. Recently he resigned as auditor of Dearborn county, in anticpiation of the appointment.
Soon after the election the name of A. S. Peacock, of Attica, was frequently mentioned in connection with the collectorship. Later Mr. Nicholas Filbeck of this city became an active candidate. It was after this that Mr. Henry made formal application for the office, although many understood that President 'McKinley had long before that time indicated his purpose to appoint Mr. Henry collector.
Mr. Nowlan will succeed William H. Bracken of Lawrenceburg, and Mr. Henry will succeed Joshua Jump of Terre Haute. Since Messrs. Bracken and Jump were appointed, all the employes 'under them including the chief deputies, have been placed under the protection of the civil service law.
ILLEGAL USE OF MAILS.
A Well Known Danville, 111., Citizen Had Something to Give Away. Special to the Express.
Danville, III* Oct. 7.—Postoffice Inspector M. G. Price of the Chicago division today arrested A. L. Van Buskirk, a well known and respectable Danville citizen, for the illegal use of the mails. It is charged that Van Buskirk, under the name of the Syndlcate Cycling Club, sent out circulars broad-, cast over the United States offering the recipients a high grade bicycle for $5. The cheap price was said to be for the purpose of introducing the bicycle inf new neighborhoods. Not a single bicycle was sent outi in return for the many $5 bills sent in. The box was rented by a man in Covington, Ind., believed to be Van Buskirk, under the fictitious name of J. T. Rogers. The Danville postoffice people were unable toi locate the Syndicate Cycle Co. and Price was sent for. Van Buskirk for a number of years has been principal of Van Buskirk's business college, a successful institution occupying the fourth floor of the First National Bank building. Van Bus* kirk was bound over to the federal grand jury in the sum of- {800 by United States Commissioner Young..
Wabash Stndenta Organize Mnaical Clnb. Special to the Express. Crawfordsville, Ind., Oct. 8,—Today the students of Wabash College met in the chapel and decided to perfect a musical organization aniopg themselves. The meeting wasf heart^ and Wabash is now assured of a glei 1:1 uo, ajiH1 perhaps an orchestra.
one
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WOMAN AM) HOME.
DIFFERING VIEWS OF A WOMAN WIDESPREAD FAME.
OF
Fervent Disciples—Girls and Their Mothers—America's First Woman Voter—The Ideal Coming Woman—A Girl's Marriageable Age—The Female Arm.
Ask a San Francisco •woman If she ever heard, of Mrs. Grannis, and the chances are that the answer will be, "Oh, yes, that New York woman who runs the Social Purity league!" A Denver woman would eay: "Yes I've, hiard of her. She's the fearless Apostlo of ^Buffrafee who has tried to register at tho^polls every year for a long time and BerVed as a watcher in one of the-toughest districts in New York." Inquire conoerning her of a clergyman, say, in New Orleans, and he would respond slowly: "Mrs. Grannis, Mrs. Grannis! Ah, perhaps yon mean Brother Grannis, who runs the Church anion up in New York!' The report here at home if you asked a society woman about this many sided person would be: "Doubtless you mean that everlasting, fussy, stuffy crank who travels around with an opera glass inspecting evening dresses at social functions and saying shocking things to reporters next day about those of us who wear dresses cut lower in front than she thinks they ought to be." Finally ask the ques-
tlon of some one of the hundreds of poor women who have been saved from starvation or degradation by this queer member of their sex, and likely enough you would •be surprised by hearing it said with fervor, "She's an angel!"
For a woman whose faise is 60 widespread and many colored Mrs. Grannis ptersonally is remarkably little known. She appears rarely in publioand generally can be found working away over a flat topped desk in the rear parlor of her home at 33 East Twenty-second street. The writor has called there probably 50 times at all hours of morning and afternoon and has never yet been ushered in without finding Mrs. Grannis at her desk.
It would be interesting to get a composite photograph of the pictures of her which those who have heard so much of this woman but have never seen her have conjured up in their minds' eyes. Presumably it would be large and commanding, somewhat grim visaged, with an eye so piercing that it would cause a fashionably undraped bosom to quiver with pain. The figure probably would be clad in impossible reform raiment of some particularly ugly pattern, and the whole outfit would be provided with a stern voice in which justice and mercy would be nicely balanced. The only ornament perhaps would be two large, stiff, iron gray curls bobbing in front of the ears.
The difference between this picture and the original would measure quite accurately the popular misunderstanding of Mrs. Grannis. She is a little bit of a timid woman, who tips the scales at 121 pounds and who confesses that she is more afraid of a strange man than anything else on earth. She believes sho could face a mouse if the creature did not confront her too suddenly. "Grim" is the last word in the unabridged dictionary that any one who had looked upon Mrs. Grannis would apply to her features. "Prim" would be almost as bad. Her face is delicate and refined, and she looks at a visitor through Tier gold rimmed glasses with an expression that says almost as plainly as if in words: "Now, I'm going to tell you just exactly what I think, although it will be sure to get me into some kind of trouble. JBut I'll say it even if I am a little frightened." And then she says it, and if the visitor happens to be an unsympathetic reporter whd^ puts everything down and gets it printed
next
morning there is trou
ble sure enough. There is nothing peculiar about Mrs. Grannis' garments except she does not 'bother herself much about fashions. She admits a weakness for silk underclothing and silk stockings and cherishes a belief that the most expensive of plain dress goods are cheapest in the end. One ought -to wear silk stookings nine months in the year," she says, "andcashmere is good for the other three months." She has done her best to persuade her 6ex to worry along without garters, bustles and earrings, and of course she does not wear any of these things herself.—New York Pross.
Girls and Their Mothers.
The cry of the day is the independence of girls, and it is worth while to inquire from whenoe this springs. Is it thie outsome of a rebellious and independent spirit, or has it been engendpr&^.ani? fostered by home iDfluencel^^JJnt&e,. caso of society mothers, handsome amF popular, whose daughters' good loofca- are" not backed up by large- marriage portions, the suitors do not realize ttr&% mothers' ambitious ideas. Girls
so
6itniited soon find the
home an unhappy one and the position almost intolerable. The worldly mother, disappointed and sore at her daughters still being on her bands, daily and hourly reproaches them with their nonsuccess in life and not only grudges them every pleasure, but almost every comfort. What wonder is it that, tormented and driven to bay, they should seek some outlet from £his unlovely existence and take up any occupation and follow any lino that will lead to emancipation from this state of thraldom?
This is, alas! not a solitary instance, but one of thousands. The world knows nothing of it, the mothers are commiserated with, and the girls are styled fin de siecle. Then there are mothers so fond of society, admiration and attention that they will not relinquish to their daughters any portion of these things, while they divert the attention of
young
men—would
tx) suitors—from their daughters to themselves. Added to this, not a few mothers are decidcdly jealous of their daughters' youth and prettiness and are selfish enough to discourage them from marrying while young, not wishing to own to married daughters.
Side by side with stlch mothers as the foregoing are women who are too self indulgent and indifferent to concern themselves with the lives of their daughters. 16 is less trouble to let them go here and there, to make what friends they like, to accept all invitations that come in their way—in fact, to look after themselves rather than exert any wholesome control over their actions and pursue their own selfish ends and aims and are thankful if their daughters wttl relieve tb«n from the responsibility of parental authority. London Queen.
America'* Fbit Woman Vote* Anna Gardner of Nantucket, Mass., writes:
An interesting item of history was sent me by our former highly esteemed pastor, Rev. Cyrus A. Roys,.wbo now occupies aitariaa palp^t at "Cfxbrlflgfe.
rl\CL
Heir
ors*
The item was found in an appendix to a historical address as follows: ''Among the good women, not a few, who have joined their names and fortunes to the Taft family (in Oxbridge), mention should be made of the wife of Josiah, the son of David. The days of her widowhood were times of serious trouble for the colonies.
husband died ih 1756. The
French and Indian war was at hand, the .Revolution not far distant. A requisition was made on the town of Uxbfidge for a certain sum of money for colonial purposes. A meeting of the legal voters was held to see if the money should be granted. The estate of Josiah Taft paid tho largest tax in Uxbridge, and his son, Bazaleel, was a minor, but
With
a strong sense of
justice that there should be 'no taxation without representation', the citizens decided that the widow of Josiah Taft should vote upon the question. She did so, and her vote was the one that decided in the affirmative that .tho money should be paid."
Mr. Roys shows his b«nt in favor of justice to women by adding to the above quotation tho following remark: '•It is a very interesting bit of history, and one of
the
curious things about it is
that the account sees the personality of the woman 6unk in that of her husband. She was the widow of Josiah, who was the son of David, etc. Wouldn't it strike our ears as very ridiculous if any one should say of a man that he was the widower of Mary, who was the daughter of Eunice, etc?" .1
Mrs. Taft must have
been
thefir^.wom
an in this country to cast a municipal bal•iBOljgOq -.»•
The Ideal Coming Woman. Miss Heloise Hersey, #hoseaeaittflal reputation is quite established Iflj'ffllWteal literature, said attheLytii? Woxqaitfsclub: "The educated girl is one Who has developed all her powers and bas them under perfect control one who is equal
to
of college training or her
character may be molded by circumstances. "Any eduoatlon that brings discontent with humble home life, in some isolated condition made necessary by circumstances, has failed of its purposes. The coming woman has not yet come, but she will be a woman of judicious compromises, using the worcl in its higher sense. Life is a series of compromises. A, machine is a compromise -between force and friction. The New Testament, she said, is a compromise between divine perfection and the limitations of mortal infirmities. The coming woman will. know how to compromise between the demands of home and society and her mental and physical possibilities." Miss Hersey's coming woman, her ideal woman, is beheld by the eye of faith as at peace with herself and her envi on of in in it a a a presence, a radiating'center of beneficent influence.' vn -a ai rrt W
BIG WA'TER MAIN BURSTS. f'noo agffiiu Fashionable District of NewailForlc iWaS
Flooded With Wate'r.vf iv »ui illrrl
New York, Oct. jJO.—A large Croton water main buret early this morning at the corner of Madison avenue and Forty-eighth street, the heart' of the fashionable district, and wrought such havoc with property both near and remote/that not even a partial calculation can be made of the financial damage at present. For blocks around scarcely a building escaped injury by reason of the volumes of
water
streets,
which poured into the
cellars and basements. The loss will
reach far into the thousands. The damage by water extends as far west as Sixth avenue and as far east as First avenue. The sewers were choked by the great rush of water, and then the flood rose in the streets. The big water main was probably cracked by a blast which was fired in a sewer excavation late Saturday afternoon. Then in the night when the strain on the pipe was greatest, it gave way and the floode followed.
The breaking of a four-foot pipe was announced by a rumbling noiae which awakened the people in the immediate vicinity. Looking out of their windows they saw a great geyser in the middle of the avenue shooting a vast volume of water into the air, a column so high that it reached almost to the top of the electric light pole on the corner.
For five hours this column shot into the air, before it was shut off at its source and in that time 10,000,000 gallons of water had run down the avenue and side streets on either hand. The most serious damage was done to the building of the railroad branch of the Y. M. C. A. and to the Knickerbocker Athletic Club house. The club officers place the loss at $15,000. Almost without exception the houses in the vicinity of the break were so flooded that they have been damaged from $500 to $2,000. The residence of J. Hooker Hammerslee, William Eustace, J. Talbot and the club house of the Delta Phi were among those most damaged-.
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Always sincerely Jouts,
T. A. SLOCUM, M.C., 183 Pearl St., New York. Whan writing tha Doctor. ple am meatfcm this paper.
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HITE LEAD is like great many other articles
offered for sale some good, some badf (See list of the brands which are genuine, or good^. They are made hy thp «o|d ^itch" pro-
every
emergency, even to the treatment necessary in cases of sudden accident. She must be tactful and gracious, although in educating girls it should be remembered that it is easier to polish strength than to strengthen polish." Miss Hersey went on to say that this perfectly educated girl may be the
result
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1
TEN THOUSAND DOLLARS.
Big Haul Made by' Biifglars—Three Suspect* Arrested. New York, Oct. 10.—The home of Franclf H. Scott, president of the Century Magazine Co., in Orange, N. J., was entered bl bur« giars on Friday arid afticiee of wearing ap« parel end household goods amounting to $10,« 000 in value were carried off. The police o( this city have arrested three persons in con-* nection with the crime and have recovered most of the property.- One of them is woman, Mary Rogers,,4,lias "Chicago May,"* and when one of tho" detectives broke ItitC her room,-two revolvers Were lying on th bed. Shetried to pass them to the men bu was overpowered before she could cause bloodshed.
One of th® mflft is Cyrus Hyland, the re« puted husband of "CJJlicjjgo May." He is Westerner, and was arrested here last winter at the request ofthe Chicago police, bul was discharged., The third person is Georga Bennett, alias "Th'6 New York Kid," th& associate of two Criminals who are now in the Indiana state" prison for robbing tha house of General Harrison, soon after tha ex-president's last marriage. The prisoners were remanded in a police court today, and will be arraigned there tomorrow.
Through the,New Sewer Awheel. This morning one of tie most novel rides ever taken by a wheelman will be indulged in by the "City Hall Pljrers," at the heaa of which organization of scorchers is Ed Duddleston. Thec wheelmen of this brigade are going to ride their bikes thr-ugh the new Htilman street sewer. The sewer
!s
seven feet high and a wheelman can easily ride through. The start will be made, from the cits hall about 9*30.
TRY ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE,'
powder to be shaken into the sho&k At this season your feet feel swollen ana hot, and get tired easily. If you have smart*' ine feet or tight shoes, try Allen's Foot Ease It cools the feet and makes walking easy. Cures and prevents swollen ana sweating feet, blisters and caliius spots. Relieves corns and bunions of "1 pain and gives rest and comfort. Try it today. Tr al package FREE. Address, Allen S. Olmstead. Le Roy, N. Y.
Reunion of'the l23tl Illinois* Special to the Express. Casey, 111-, Oct! 7.—A large attendanca greeted the members of the One Hundred and Twenty-third Regiment Illinois Volunteer Infantry in their twenty-ninth annual reunion at this place today. Upwards of ninety old vets were in attendance. Airfjng the speakers in attendance were the Revs. Lindsey, Deverick and Hancock, Dr. P. P. Thornburg and £CQOt Cooper. The next annual meeting will be held at Greenup.
Try Gralno! Try tiratno!
Ask your grocer today to show you a package of GRAIN-0, the new food driak that takes the place of coffee. The childrea may drink it without injuty as well as th« adult All who try it, like it. GRAIN-0 has that rich seal brown of Mocha or Java, but is made from pure grains, and the most delicate stomach receives it without distress. One-quarter the priee of coffee, 15c and 25c per package. Sold by all grocers. ......
BEST WORK. LOWEST PRICES. ESTIMATES FURNISHED.
J,
c.
S.
GFROERER
PRINTER.
'-GROUND FLOOR.
3310UTH FIFTH.
WEAVER,
ESTABLISHED 1890.
SPECIALTIES All diseases of the eye, ear, nose and throat, nervous and chronic diseases. Spectacles and eye glasses scientifically fitted to suit any case.
Satisfaction Guaranteed.
Dr. "Weaver has treated these diseases exclusively for eighteen years and has studied them in the large hospitals of our large cities. New York and Chicago. He has certificates to vouch tor same. All medicines furnished.
Offic hours:— 9 a. m. to 12 m. 3 p. m. to 5 p. m. 1 p. m. to 8 p. m.
124 South Fifth Street,
TERRE HAUTE, IND.
TAX NOTICE!
Monday,
is the last November penalty.
JO scat
bv (taurine *old only by
November ist day for paying taxes .without^
W. T. SANFORD, Treasurer of Vigo County.
