Bloomington Courier, Volume 7, Number 51, Bloomington, Monroe County, 22 October 1881 — Page 2

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BUONIINGTQN COURIER.

H. 4. FELTU3, Publisher.

BIXKMINGTON,

INDIANA

HERE AND THERE.

is epidemic in Cincin-

SMAIJrFOX

PKESlOtNT Arthur weighs 215 pounds, Mrs. Garfielb's income is now about $20,000 a year. 5

is re-

A three-days snow stoxm

norted in the Austrian Alps. Gambetta and Bismarck' "talked matters over," a few days ago. It is stated that Leo Hartman, the Nihilist, has gone back to Europe.

A new Nihilist conspiracy to assassnate the Czar has been discovered. Another comet has been discovered, making the fifth during the present year. The name of Guitean street in Cleveland has been changed to A b rata street. It is said that twenty churches in New York use the revised New Testament. Through trains will be run o California on the Texas Icih railroad in January. . ' .., The radical Republican, Gambetta, will be the Premier of the new French Cabinet. . Francs is building seventeen - new iron-clad ships, and Edgland is budding ten. " I

Form days of mourning for ftretident Garfield has been ordered by the Couri of Portugal. m .. Thk damage by frost last week, with in ten miles of Boat mis estimated at 31,000,000. . Difthkria and typhoid fever are becoming alarmingly prevalent in Louisville, Ky. 4 Dr. J. G. Holland, the poet, physician and author, died, suddenly, Wednesday morning. -

There are about ten million bushels of corn in Chicago, being the largest amount ever known to be there. The new international live cent postage stamp will be adorned with the portrait of President Garfield. Vi A Yotrjco lady in Peru, Nebraska, has a head of hair sixty-eight inches Jtaott for which she has refused 1500 , , Thb Arkansas trainjrobbers, on pleas of guilty, were each sentenced to seventy year's terms of imprisonment ,;r A shooting gaIiIery at Cleveland has secured a rush of business by setting up an effigy of Guitean as a target.

Masonic Grand Iiodge -of Illi

nois, at its-recent meeeting,-appropriated, for the Michigan anfierers. Thb Banian newspapers are agitating the question of transferrin the

capital from St Petersburg, to Moscow.,

The Mexican Government has appointed a commission to negotiate a commercial treaty .with the United States. ' " ; The value of the; hay product in New York in 1879; was $60,267,240, being the largest product in any State inthe Union. It is in evidence in the Christiancy case that Mrs.C.bad refused twenty-five oners of marriage before she accepted the old Senator. T ? . .,, McDonald, who rode. Keene's Foxhall to victory at the Newraarket races in England, winning half a million for Keene.received $10,100 for Ins services. Several cities in this State have recently organized associations for the purpose of prompting the manufacturing interests of their respective com

munities.

000 "circus beauty," has sued the Louisville and Nashville Rail way Company, asking only $25,000 for the fracture of one of her priceless ankles in a recent accident at Bowliug Green, Ky. At the recent town elections in Connecticut the question of license or no licence in respect to the sale of liquors was submitted to a vote of the people. .Hie result is that seventy-three town ships voted for license and thirty-three

against

Hardy and McBride, telegraph operators in Colorado, quarreled over the wire. Hardy went to McBridVs office, to have tne -matter out, t is suprosed, and, Saturday morning, was found there shot dead, while -McBride was missing. Seventy-ivb thousand acres of land in Aroostook County, Me., whose State valuation has been $3 MO cents,

sold at auction in Bangor, ft few days ago, for 53,4-10 cents per acre. A lot of 5,000 acres in Somerset county sold at 54 cents per acre, the State valuation being 39 cents per acre. It is stated that the French railways

kill annually one in every 2,00,000

passengers and wound one In every 500,000; the English railways kill one in every 5.20.00 and wound one in every third of a million, while the Prussian railways kill one in every 21,500,000 and wonnA one In every 4,000,000 A tt&KTiiEMAN who recently rode through Ex-Senator Dorsey's cattle ranch in New Mexico, says of Hi nlt is forty by sixty mile in size and has on it twenty-eight thousand head of cattle and thirteen hundred horses. The income from this place can not be less than $75,000 for the present season. The President, under the operation of his new rule, can dispose of several hundred appointments per day. These appointments of postmasters etc. are decided by the heads of Departments and recommendend to the President who merely signs his name to the nomination, and they are ready to go to the Senate. The State Supreme Court recently rendered a decision that where a coun

ty, during tht war, offered a bounty

for volunteers In a certain regiment, and a person, acting on the induce

ment, enlisted and was subsequently assigned to another regiment, but credited 4 the country's quota, the person so enlisting was entitled to the

bounty. .

Commissioner Raum has decided

that the Internal Revenue Department

cannot properly sanction the sale of

compounds made of whiskey, water

and strychnia, and called "tonic bit

ters." He says it should be called '.'potaon.'f The fact that sanction for the sale of such compounds has been asked for should be a warning to imbibers to "look a little out" -v"

" The Grand Temperance Council oi this Sate mot at Indianapolis last week, being composed of about three hundred delegates representing the Various temperance organizations of the State. The following pktforui of principles upon which the temperance people of the State propose jo stand during the next political campaign, was unanimously adopted The toiAp'cVrtncfe People of tho Stnto ol ..ta'AnA Itt iSonvonllon assembled, recognlr.ufc tWriUn ami evil eansea to iuli virtual

and community by the use of Hvm ui'lnir, declare the 'followlH the sonso of this 'conVfcntiftni Ihtfct-rxb evil can be destroyed btnnrpei Vug With it, Intemperance vrU nhVaV vail until ; the cause thWoT Aas been destroyed, ifcen cfm tiVvWr ee kept sober or retraine'A dhl drinking while saloons are

4

4

A'" -League agitation is to be

lesiuned with increased fury and bit-

erness,4lWhatver is is wrong,;appears

to be the watchword of the leaders of

wus movement. y 4

xttk Balance or trade for twelve months ended September 31st. was

$251,531,612 In favor of this country,

whju ui ok pepiemoer, itwu. was

$ 107,079,544 in our &vor.

r iWTOHtg about the tomb of Gar

field are notified . the Cleveland

vmei 01 jroiice tt tbeywil be shot

asigni. ;ine Stewart grao-iotbicg

industry wont be encouraged there,

The movement in Ireland for using

oniy arncirs 01 Uin manufacture is

said to be very popnlar,and gives great promise of success in its object, which

is the amelioration of the condition o-

Irlah laborers. V

ins Jt-resiueut died in the anLiver-

sary of the battle of Chicamauga, a

soiitest in which he tendered glorious

fcrvfeeto bis ctentry. The coinci Jeiieevto say the least of it, is very

stiiung.and suggestive.

u.rAjjiTrji ana- rotz wayne are

enjoying a lively postoffice contest.

and the Eleventh and Thirteenth Rev

enue Districts- are stirred up by eager

aspirants for the position of Collector's

Moon and Wildman. a ' : -; Thb loss by the Michigan fires i

estimated at $2,340. 413, and included

the destruction of 1,147 dwelliugs,

rchool houses, 8 churches and 34 mills. The entire insurance upon property

lost was only $623 632.

J- z.

tit . t : m :

f ABiflfliriOXI JiUTUHKK'S COKS, a

Philadelphia provision firm' of 121

years' standing, suspended the other

day. Their liabilities are estimated at

2,000,000, and Chicago speculations in grain are supposed to be the cause.

-rjtEjxjsirr AfexnvR nas oeen memorialized by the temperance people

of the United States praying that in

social entertainments and official act he will favor the temperance, cause,

and as-ist in the great -work- of' ri ual

prohibition.

The American residents in Imdon, England, propose to place 'a matble slab in memory of Pres!dent Garfield; in Westminister Abby, if the .Queen consents, and it is betieyed fcho will. This will be an honor never before coneided to an American ,

Jf iss Montague, the humbug-$l0.

feaVytbpen and strong is drink manufactured aria rfold as a leverage. ... l'ilem'peVnn'ce oannot be controlled-, fthmxlU not bo licensed,

ueviiare n

andmnst, m 'deslroyod. 'mere is out one

to hecomplisli this, and that is to pro

iilblt its manufacture and sale as n wver

age, "We therefore nnantittou favor of prolnbltio'r

We that the people of the State

ueMi a fundamental right to express thenv "selves upon all questions In any manner ft

fc'ctlnu' them, and as suuh have a right

'to be Heard ou VheiVestion of prohibition ;

and As reaohaDle men, whs desire that on.lj

Wntch is for t he beat interest of all, we here

'declare that -we will only. vote for. , such Vatt; dldatos for the n 3X110 iifitati . iv ).l openiy plodgo .UiemielVe tV ivdVa nn l vote fo

the submission of the resolution passed by

V,W6iasV legislature on that question. And where there is no candidate of that kind

nominated by either of the political parties, we here pledge ourselves to place such a

candidate before the people, and to work and vote for the same. Wo further declare that the denial of such right by any legislature Is tyrannical, and such a dlstiust of the people as should arousot no tears of any man

for the liberty ol his country. Therefore, us

temperance men who are willing to submi

to and abide by the decision of the voters o

our State, we here pledge our sacred bono

to stand by the forgoing declaration.

Resolved, That hereafter, If it is round that

tho machinery of parlies Is controlled by the

intoxlcattng-liuuor interest so as to trample

the rights, of freemen down, and rb. keep

from the people the sacred right of Voting

upnu the subject of amending the cous'titW-

tlou, then, appealing o the christian . ati'c

moral elements of our State fbr the justice

of our cause, we Will, in such case, organize

throughout the. State, independently, and

ft'gh t the contest out un til the r u in -shuokl'cs

are stricken fronv. our people.

THE NEWS.

The State Bureau of Statistics publishes -a table showing the number of horses, mules, cattle, sheep and hogs, in4he State in 1880 and 1881. There is an increase in the number of horses, cattle and sheep, and a decrease, in mules and hogs this year as compared with last. Marion county leads in the number of horses, haying 11,573 his year. Vanderburg has 2,829 mules , and leads in this. Allen has more cattle than any other county, 24,509. Rush has 37,495 hogs, more than any other, and Lagrange the largest number of sheep, 43,533. Fires in the past three months the Kew York Commercial Bulletin shows from its own flies to have consumed an aggregate of . 16,800,000 in July, $0,200,000 in August, and $9,800,00 in September; and from1 this account are omitted all fires causing a loss less than $20,000 each. September was the worst month on record, except those

months' in which the great fires of

Boston and Chicago occurred; forest fires in that month aggregated a loss of $4,000,000, and with $1,500,000 aUowed for the smaller fres not above enumerated the total is $11,300,000. The great cause of fires is carelessness.

When Preside n t uarneia was a

young Professor, he wrote these lines in a young girl's album: If the treasures of : ocean were laid at my feet, . And Its depths were aU 'robbed of Its coral .and pearl, ......

And the diamonds were brought from the

. mountain's retreat,.. And with themr were placed all the wealth ....... of the world STot silver, nor gold, nor the spoils of the seo, . , ... . Kor the garlands of fame that the world can bestow, But a purified heart that from sin Is made free, ". , . . . . I would ask for- thee, friend, on the jour- " : -"ney below. J, A. Garfield. Hiram, Jan. 8, 1857. A PhiIiAIeiphia dispatch gives what purports to be the true inwardness of the ainfernai-machine,,i plot which recently created so much - excitement in England . It is declared that the scheme was organized to cheat the British Government out of the rewards to be offered. Peter H. Foye,a saloonkeeper of Philadelphia, caused the -manufacture o the infernal machines and turned them over to O'Bonovan Rosa. Foye then began negotiations with the British Consul- at New York, and received $10,003 for information leading to the discovery made on the docks ot Liverpool. He some weeks ago fled from-the United States detectives at Philadelphia, and no one knows his whereabouts. In the opinion of the Journal of Education the" public schools in the prosperous west aie driving Mith dangerous speed. It adviHesthe schools, at once to begin the necessary work of slacking up the velocity, weeding out coureea of study, relieving the intensity of examination and ceasing to act pu the assumption that the average child can endure the strain of the Average hard-headed, adult1 pioneer. "The west is excited," says tincritic, " with the fond delusion that i t will outstrip the world in public school training, because it is bending ill prodigious energy that has made it great in industry, in war ancf in statesmanship to the production ol such a generation of youthful prodigie as no country has yet seen. But the project will break down from the simple reason that a child is a child, and can not bo shot into maturity by a course of study and a rnontlily, examinationi"

.... . 1

Thn lAfrli!: hftfwepn tbftTT

AraVjs on the road to Iviirwan

Home items

The Baltimore and Ohio railroad hss

ordered a cash dividend of 5 per cent.)

payable 1st prox.

Commissioner Dudley says that the

report o frauds in. the. Pension Bureau

are highly colored and sensational.

It is believed that the railroad war is

near an end, and that Vanderbilt can

terminate it at anar time.

Hanlan will row Boss for the cham

pionship of the world and $2,000, over

the Creve Cosur Lake course at St

Louis, Nov. 15.

The Garfield monument; at Lake

View Cemetery, Cleveland, is to cos

$200,000. of which Cleveland proposes

.to raise $50,000.

Henry Ward Beeoher on the subjec

Of the Thomas trial, said, Sunday, that the conference is 'trying to oust an

angel and to take in a devil,

The jury in the case of John Lamb

the prisoner charged with tho Jaflray

burzUrv. at which Ofllcer Bace AVas

Killed in Cnioago, brought In a verdic

of not guilty.

The Tammanv delegates wno were

refused admittance to the convention at Albany, New York, have issued an

address to the electors protesting

aeainBt that action.

i Furmer Dickens, a nephew of the great novelist, Charles Dickens, was

elected a deacon of the Method is

church, by the Rock River Conference

at sycamore in.

A party of twen ty-n ine Si oux Iudi

ans from the plains, passed through

Chicago Thursday, en route to Hamp ton College, Virginia, where they wil

be civilized and ed ueated. : ,

"uoaaian iuri, ex president aw Treasurer of the Woman's Educationa

Md Association, of Evanston, 111., is accused of fraud. He is alleged to be

sue-rt m his accounts 3,000. By the burning of Landenberger

mill at Philadelphia, Wednesday night, about twenty lives were lost. Criminal carelessness in providing fire-escapes is charged to the owners. Charges of prejudice and slander having been formulated by the liev.Thomas against the Rev. Mr. Parkhurst, were referred to a special committee, who, after a brief deliberation,-exonerated Mr. Parkhurst. A Boston committee has decided

that it is feasible to hold the next Inrr

ter national Exposition there, provided the sum of $ 5,000,000 is subscribed for the purpose. Beacon Park has been offered free for the site. At Wayne township, DuPage county, III., burglars robbed Mr. Fairbanks, a farmer, of about $5,000. Near GirarU, 111., thieves secured $8,000. in both cases the robbers bound the family securely before tthey commenced ito plunder. .Judge Jameson made a special charge to the (iraud Jury of Cook county. Ills., relative to grain gambling. He indicated. the law w ? . hiblts cornering grain and provisions and promised that if the Urand Jury would present the culprits the j ud iciary would be prepared to do their duty in the matter. . The President has expressed a desire that the Senate should remain in session until after. the close of the Y01 ktown Centennial celebration. He suggested a recess to allow the Senate t attend the celebration and do honor to the visitors from abroad w After the recess he proposes to make Cabinet nominations immediately after the centennial. Foreign. ' The British steamer Corsica foundered at sea off the Bombay coast? General Prendegast has been ap pointed Governor General of Cuba in the place of General Blanco. The Hungarian Government Commission has decided to continue the prohibition against American pork. Persia has applied to the Russian

..Government to send army officers to

remodel the Persian army on the Russian system. The-British Cabinet-will shortly decide on energetic measures to be adopted in Ireland for the suppression of the Laud League rule. " The Municipal Council of Berlin, has decided to lend the City Hall for a memorial service in honor of the late President Garfield. Moody and Saukey preached to a very large congregation at the Congregational Chapel in Newcastle-upon-iTy'no, England, Sunday. The midland eouutioH of Ireland are the arena of lawlessness. The Land League has full sway, and boycotting and Incendiarism are I he rule. Archbishop Croke, in replying to an

address from the Land League ii 1

in. advised the. enormous, assembly to

give the new land act a trial.

I A revolt has bVoknu out iu the re

Gently Conquered Kroumir country.

n Northern Tunis the insurgents, have

burned two inire railroad depots.

Tne sanitary offi cefs o f t he Prati co-

AlgeVian army complain bitterly of

the want of organization in the sauf

tary arrangements of the army 01 00-

cupatlun.

ecl-etary Fester said a few days afeo hat if Parnell attempt to obstruet he land bill ajter it is olie In opera-

,Uou, he woulu soon , be "kicking Ins

hisheeraiu Kilmainham' jail."

A Darieoling dispatch states that an

epidemic fever is raging at V.Jmrlteur,,

in the nrovintJe bt the Puniaub Cm

Northwestern India)., which is causing

a mortaity of from H) to 300 daily.

Parnell threatens that Gladstone5!

"brave word? shall be scattered as

qbatl before the united and advancing

determine tiou of. Irishmen ., to regain

ipieir lost. legislative independences"

JLr. ocnueman, u?e great arcnajojo-

gist hns tirhved at Constantinople b secure through the Gennan embassy

permission from the Porte jo continue his excavation at Hissarlikn tee an

cient Troy

and was

virtually a victory for the natives, as

the French, lacking water and pro

visions, had to retreat to Sura, There

were 5 000 on each side. A Paris correspondent says it is rumored that England and France have agreed on a j dnt policy of defense for their subjects in Egypt, and have for this purpose dispatched iron-dads to Alexandria. The Kings of Spain and Portugal have been fraternising and exchanging at banquets sentiments of mutual esteem. The result will be the closer

Union of interest of the two countries bntnot a federation. Under the auspices of the Land League a fearful increase of crime has been reported in Ireland. The agrarian outrages vary from murder and incendiarism to putting needles into potatoes to be fed to thti cattle of a boycotted farmer. The Land League are seeking to revenge themselves for the success of the land bill by preventing hunting, A party of Yahoos attacked the Curraghmore hounds with pitchforks, and have caused the oreak-up of the finest pack in Ireland. The Mexican government has started a scheme to encourage Italian colonisation, wnj'ch is on a very liberal basis. The contractor .will receive $75 per head for each emigrant over 12, and $40 for each child between 5 and 12. The government furnishes land, houses, implements, work, cow and mare for each family, and twenty-live cents a day for each peisou for one year. The colonists xare to repay same in one year. The English Cotton Spinners1 Asso 'elation intend to apply for legislation against cornering Gottan. Their Secretary, Mr. Oldham, has Writteh to theuuiced States Cob slii at Manchester, callmg his attenion to the fact that the spinners. pHy for thousands of tons of sand fraudulently nacked with the cotton. He suggests that the names of the planter and packer le placed inside of each bale. The British go verJim ent has commenced a vigorous line of action against the jtand League, the initial step being the arrest of Parnell and! his lodgement in Kiimainharo jail under the coercion act. The news of his arrest created intense excitement throughout Ireland, and the result may be a general u raising of the patriots. A mass meeting of Irish m London has been called for the 23d.

f. at tacke'd her with ii Ityh tied k eroseu e 1

lamp, anu sue responu.eii wun a narrei stave, hitting Mrsu Hicks oyer thb head with it and iniiicting a dangerous wOund, Criaile Schueipljei: and Fred Stumper got into a row at fevausville, when Abe Smock, a hack driver, interfered.

atra. Schneipper let a savage dog loose I ' 111 - .11 lllll A .1 J. I 1 L

on 1 lie oomuaiaiiis, auti me resuip was Smock. ..hit olf the . greater part, of Schiieipher's nose, Schueiphor bit oft a ebuuiof Smock's chin. w,hile tho dog chawed his le9. All but the dog went toJalK v Charles W. Elru k, a wealthy German farmer, near Door pillage, 3ame to Laporte fthursnay for a load of lumber. Alter becoming intoxicated. h$ started for home. Some miles frqni town, he fell . frqni his .wagon, which

paf a?u over mm nrjaKing nis necu ana

crushing his nice. Mis team coming home alonej, caused, a search, when he was found in the rnad dead'., Major Wiliiam K Sullivan the Well known expert bookLk eer and accountant, fell it is supposed accidentally from the third story of the Central hotel at Madison, vt 2: o'clock Bunday morning, striking! the brick' piiverhent belowtJl and dislocaiiug bis neck. Astsstahce was.' protaptly rendered, but the un fortunate man died two hours later with out uttering a word. The celebrated Lipsley estate was

closed up in I ho Floyd circu it court on Saturday. The executors, J. J, Brown

anu buas u. x;ay, reporteu me gross amount, with the accumulations at

$399,010.22. Of this amount, all ex

cent about 5100,000, .passed into the

hands of the foreign board of the Presbyterian church, as provided in the will. The executors made the very moderate charge or" $5,000 for their services, and the "attorney's fees were $1,300. This was the largest estate ever probated in this court, ' l1he citizens of Hope and- neafr vicin

ity, a small town south ol Shelby ville,

aire iu a (ever of excitement over the mysterious disa)p?arauce of Armstead Lewis; one olf the m'dst inrluehtal and Wealthy men. of that community. Mr.

Lewis started on Monday toJahelby-

ville, having about his person .6,000 in checks, Before leaving hornet ne stated ,to his ijamily that he intended purchasing a farm east of the city,. When he arrived he nut his horse in the livtry stable, then ..went to the Jirm of Conrey & Duprez, furniture dealers, when he drew 8200 for lumber sold; After

this ho cashed cheeks at the First

tional bank amounting: to $4.60

stating to ttie cashier that he bought a farm near Hope. After this all trace of him disappeared, notwithstanding strenuous eilorts are being made to gain a clue of his whereabouts.

HE STATE, I Mayor Cole, of Kokomo, was a (elaulter to the city in the sum of 365, at the time he was killed. Howard cou nty has 100 school houses containing 125 recitation rooms, of the estimated value of $95,525. MrsT Nancy A., mother of Professoi H. Z. McLain, of Wabash College, dropped dead Saturday night of apo plexy. Columbus gumm on 3, of New Albany, aged twelve years, has stolen three horses and one mule in the past four month?, and is now in jail.

Charles J. Goodman, superintendent of the Madison water-works, while playfully wrestling with Mr. Alex Graves, was thrown, .breaking his leg. ,. .. William Wood, aa employe in Parsou's slaughter house, Hagerstown, was fatally injured on Saturday by lightning. His head and mce were badly cut and his clothes torn off. The forest, in Lawrence county abound with thousands of squirrelsmore than have been known for many years. They come from the southwest, and seem to be moving in a northeastly direc ion. Isaac Freese, a iarmer livinir near Logro, has had a drove of thirteen hogs stolen from him. The value. of the porkers is $300, and although a diligent search hss been made, there is not ;h ) slightest clue to the thieves. R. K. Purnell, ofConnersville, father of the boy bitten o few days since by a savage dog owned by Ephrain J. Smith has, through his attorneys, -Hurry & Michener, began a damage suit against Smith, demanding $2,000, Shep Crumpacker, of Laporte county, has reached home from France, with fifteen of the finest blooded horses ever brought to this cou airy. One two-year-old stallion weighs 1,750 pound a, and is said to be the largest colt that ever left France. A small boy was playing with a toy pistol at the toll-gate on the York town turnpike, in the western suburbs of IVfmirtirt Tvl'inn ill A ftV!ridlfft f"!Cnliiibil

The ball entered the left breast of His J sects.

Danger to New Orleans. New York Herald, The wayward Mississippi, aceordiug to New Orleans papers, is giving very strong evidence of its intention to desirt the Queen City of the South and seek a new outlet 1:0 the gulf Itseenis the Father of Waters is rapidly cuttiug another channel, and that the entire waters of the tted riVer JfAd. a large portion Of th'dse, of the Mississippi are now flowing thrbuh the Atcbatalaya: Unless tliev can wj Arrested it is notlm

probaole that &ew Orleans may be left

in me near miure siranueu on a snailcw stream. Observations at the mouth of the Red river gcj to show that where a bar existed a year ago tliere is now a depth of sixteen feet, running clear through to the Atch&talaya, seven or eight miles distant.. This is a most remarkable change in so shorta time,and if the iorces in operation, continue the menace to the commercial supremacy of New Orleans will become a subject for serious consideration. History records several natural changes and revolutions of this character in the Old World, but they have required centuries for their accomplishment. The great American river, however, is up with the age, and it is not impossible that it may do in a week or a month what the sluggish waters Of the other hemispheres have taken hundred of years to work out. - A Serious Warning to Our Farmers New York Sun. The following letter relates to a sub ject of extraordinary importance: "To the Editor or the Sun Sir: Please Inform me what the ineloaed itisecls are. The worms 1 founds u some old wheat, and the flies around t he side of the granary. They begin to fly about B o'clock iii the evening, and;i hen settle. down by the sides or the bin. Are they In any way connected? And will they do any harm to the wheat? - ' . uOld Hubscribeb."" We regret that the writer of the above omit ted. his Post Office adiress in his note, because it is quite important that our readers .should know from what part of the coun try noxious insects are received, that' -they may be on the lookout for the same species. The small, silky moths, of which our correspondent sends us specimens, are the parents of the worms found in the wheat ; and , furl hermo:rey they are among the most destructive insects known, being no e ther than the noted Angoumois grain meth (Gelechia cercaleita), so named because first discovered in the province oif Angoumois, France, about 150 years ago. This insect has' already caused the destruction of thousand? of bushels of corn, wheat, and other kinds of grain in this country, arid from present appearances it will soon make the keeping of grain over winter a very dim cult matter in th United States, because the moths deposit their eggs on the grain in the fall soon after it is harvested f and the worms work on it all through tne cold weather, ,as well as in the summer, when stored in bins and granaries. If the Government or the farmers of this country could arrest the progress of this insect by expending $5,003,000 at this time, it would be the bast investment ever made by our people. We have been watching the progress of the pest for the past ten yuars, and find that it has become pretty .well distributed over neaily all the graingrowing regions in both .the Northern and Southern States. As early as 1732 this same grain moth was so destruc

tive in some parts of France, as to near

ly cause a famine among the people,

and it would not bo at all strah ge if

the same thing should soon occur in this country, as no effort is being made to check tho ravages of this and several other imported jKrain-dretrpying lu

be needn't; mind aboUt -sending on anothei' to take His ilace. This New York laiiib was thirteen years old. He said so at the depot ofa.hjo Urriftil, and half Rtt hour later he reiterated the statement at the house, and added i "And if you don't believe it then ball rile a liar! ..That's, the sort of ii sprlnggun am, ahd don't you forget it!" They don't forget . it. He, gave... them no cljanceto. He ate, with his fingers, wiped his. mouth oh his sleeve, and gave thh family to, understand before supper was over that he didn't corhe West to have his . hair combed or his

face-washed as a regular business. On lib first .'evening he slipped outt had

tn.tce ngiits and stole a dog, and when hunted up he was't abqufc to t.ake his beer in a salpon. The family expected to wrestle wit,h the, boy for a whUe anil they didn't.sit down Oh him until it became & painful necessity. Dutine his first, week, he .stole $5 in money, a

gom onam, a revolver and a pair of

ear-rings, and: he cot drunk twice.

.jSVlxen reasoned with and asked, to do bettei' ne took a fresh chew of plug tobcco and replied : tOn ! you folks are too soft! If a feller can'!' have a good time what's the use of being an orphan?" On Monday .of the. second week -he nold thoJaniily' dog to a Stranger for a quarter' 1 threw the saw and axe intor the alley, and when locked up in a closet he1 tore a Sunday coat to .pieces. It was thought best to have a policeman talk to him, and one was called in. He put.on his fiercest look and lectured the lamb for fifteen minutes, but as soon .ai he stopped for breath, tho young sinner reohed : uNow, see here, old . buttons, yen are wasting time! I know my little gait, I do, and if you think I've come to a

village like this to be bluffed by anybody, you've missed your train Etc was taken to Sunday school bv the hand He hadn't been there half an hour when he Was taken out by the collar. He sieenied anxious to punch the head of every gbod lit'ie boy with in half a mile of him, and lie told ;he beachbr of his class that when she could stuff Moses in the bdlr.ush'es down him h would fce lifter Bhe bleached out hei-

freckles. They gave him .a.Sttnttajr-

scuooi dook to nt bis case, but he fitted

It to a crack in the sidewalk on ills

way pome. Wlien moral suasion no til cct on, the .wicked youth tiU

guardian tried the rod. He was bigger

man me ooy, anq ne walloped him,

out m inree nours.v two of trie nuts were taken off his buggy and thrown

away. There was a second seance iu

the woodshed, and before dark a win

dow glass worth f8 was broken. That

orphan was faithfully and duly and

jpresasLeniiy jiwresueu wun, xle was

coaxed and -flattered. He was licked

and reasoned with. Ambition, grau

tude, fear and avarice were alike appealed to ih turn, but as he was. the first day so he was the last. A few

days ago he was told that he would be

sent to the:Reform School, if there was

any further trouble with him. That

night he stole $5 of the cook, a butcher

knife from the pantry, a pie from the sideboard and departed the house.leav-

ing on nls bed a note, reading as fol-

Fquares of Main street with Belgian blocks, and the wbo'e job Is not ye done. Dust and heat and no water, aided by the. blundering city officials, have made tins Main street imprnve-

mentah eyesore and an aftUeiion. The

Tounuries anu. worissnops iurniHn employment .for thousands. Their products, go all over the South. Mechanical arts ire fostered and .encouraged. There is activity in real estate, and numerous stores and residences have this year beenr erected. The city is extending itself westward with greal rapid I ty ttione.V is plenty an d the la porer is well paii. Yet the building called, the Qjty Hall ... would not be ac cepted by turfmen as good -n ough for a first-class silvery stable. The best municipal building is the poor house; a single., policeman constitutes the street-cjeaning bureau, who has no ot her work ing force than a shackeled ball-and-chain gang, and no other laborers are tp bfc seen on the beautiful

Capitol park than those , wearing the zebra-like uniform of the penitentiary convicts.

0? ABLE TALK.

19-

molher, Mrs. Green, gate keeper, and inflicted a wound from which she will likely die. Eddie Crigler,: living three miles from cJhelbyvillo, aged 13, has been sent to tho house ot refuge till he is of age for setting fire to a neighbor's barn, hoping during the excite inn it to steal a sum of money from a bookcase in the house. Hog thieves are nmneroiH about Connersville. Ei:ijah Hurts, a farmer living north of town, lost sixteen fat swine, aggregating about $300 worth a few nights since, and Jackson Roberts, of Everton, missed eight fruni hW drove about the same time. FivcC hundred and ten persons hace been convicted of misdemeanor by justices of the peao of Howard counly and the mayor of Kokomo during the jiast pear. Of this number 800 were h tho city. Intoxicating liquor was direct Iv ibe cause of 804 and iudirecib of 15tS of the offences. The school fund realized $G00 75 from tuv Mis Samuel Flitter, whnjkwpa bearding bouse on B mth Calhoun street, Fort Wayne, becmne involyeo in a violent quarrel with, Mrs fe.iry don Hicks, one of hefi boarders, who

llsmove all your erata, and have it

ground up or otherwise disposed of; then thoroughly fumigate your gran ary with sulphur, or sprinkle with carbolic acid diluted with water. Do not pu: any grain in the bins this season, but store it elsewhere, because every moth must either be destroyed by poisons or starved' out before the same building will ben safe depository for any kind of grain again. Furthermore,' your n eighbors rnus L do the same, or the moths will come from their barns, to yours. Unlil rigorous, measures are adopted r the -pread and ravages of such pests cannot be prevented. Laws must be enacted by the general Government for their suppression, and then enforced to he very letter. As soon ms European oouiiiriee find that we arc sending them infested grain, they will want no more of it at any price; and by that ihue our., f Armors will learn what it ousts to harbor their enemies.

A New York 'Orturj." One of the little Lambs picked up in be Htreets rf New rork by Whifelaw IU id and sent West to find a home yft.B adopted by a mmily about .two months ago, and eiva this is published Mr, Iteid has received a big postal card unnouncilig that his dear lamb has fmneWestto fight Indjinns a,nd ihat

lows; "This town arV no place fur a N. Y ork orf un . I'm goin) out on the planes to fite tnjuns. It will be yuse-

less to foller me, fur I daii'it be took

nil via io

,. Too AwiViily Uttei. bblrdlt i"re6 Pres.

... "Well," said a Dead wood, man , who

had just been mtroduced toaBrookivu

gii-1, and who had been asked by her, if

iney nau many or inose mveiy ironciersmen out his way "well, mum, we hnvp riiVf. ftmnvt nf 'aiyi in nv rianXz nt

woods'.", ..... ...

"And do they wear fringed legs and

hunt those dear, sweet buffalo?" asked

the giri.

"The stage drivers, wear fringe and

sich, and when a buffalar shines out

some one n pooty apt to hook on."

"How supreme ! And those gorgeous

Indians in their picturesque wigwams of wampum, with their biending combinations of war-paint, do you oiten see them?" , "Oh! once in awhile we get a hack at a buck, but mostly they are on the reservations," replied tbe Dead wood man, sUring. "The ydoes comes in occasionally, but we don't track with them." , "The sweet things! And you have such sunsets out in your mountain fastnesses, and such loves of highwaymen 1 Do you ever sec those delightful highwaymen?", "Not often, mum. Tney get in the brush; and as for sunsets, we get em pretty regular in fair weather." : ."Isn't it just too awfully too?" exclaimed the giil, clasping her hands and rolling her eyes. , "Yes uium,". stammered the D?adwood man, "sometimes it's pretty darn too; leastwise it was the day that Cobbles Duffy came into town on the land slide." "An avalanche! Do you mean an avalanche? Oh I Can there, be anything more cry tally utter than an avalanobe!J., "It was' pooty, tooty utter," hazarded the Dead wood man, dropping into his companion's style of expression. "The cobbler had a a he had a cry staliy shaft up the side of the butte.and one day he was was tooing around4up there, and things slipped out from under him." "Ob! how radiant! How iridescent!",., ,.,..; . ' Yes mum, fl,nd he began to radiate towards town at the rate of one thou-? sand miles and three furlongs a minute. We see him a a uttering down tbe side of the mountain,' ripping up trees and rocks, -and tooing along, and his iridescent wife flapped out of her shack and began to raise a row." ,;Poor Lily," moaned the girl; "did she stop the glorious avalaiache?" . ... . "No, mum, not quite. Duffy fetched up. against his 'shack all standing and began to howl like a blizzard, 'cause he thought he'd lost bis mine. But when they tipped the landslide on one end there was the mine underneath just as he had left it. So he could work it right under his winder. That was ooty considerable, too,, eh!1-and the teadwood man never winked. "How sublime! How crystalline!" "But I was going to- say we never had a sunset since," , "So star like," murmured the girl. "Yes, mostly like a star. You see the landslide stands tnere to this day .on end, and they donc dare to turn it over for fear of filling in' the town, so we don't get any sun after 11: in the morning." "A perennial twilight ! So fearfully, terribly, awfully utter.'? "Yes," ram mured the Deadwoodman," it is about a utterras you can get 'tin." . . And she sat and gazed upon him. wrapped in ad intra tiou. while he fell into a rcvei i , and wondered ut Brooklyn hospitality in not providing "sand boxes" for strangers.

e

The Prido of Virginians. CorrespoudoueO'Of N. Y. Herald. 1 . : . 1 n llichmon d there Is a curious com. pound of the metropolitan and the provincial a charming blending' of alert proqressiveness and unfailing forgyism. The city is the pride of all true Virginians and the commercial bopt of the Common wealth. Yet the rural majority in the Legislature, with tin approval of most ot the borny 'handed constitueuci?, never fails to give its whack when it is possible to do sn. r ii the the center of six railroads and the home of the racist powerful railroad syndicate in the Houth, whoso line extend Irorri the Potomac nearly to the Mississippi, and yet there is Pot a passenger depot lit to shelter good cat tie. People have such courage and vigor thai before the bricks left in the debris by the great evacuation fire had cooled they were at work cleaning them and preparing to re-build. In a year or two they had a handsomer cil Jmn ever before These fame energetic

folks baye been live months paving ffy.e

. Ori&H of the Beefsteak. The legeiid of the origin ...of beefsteak

is as follows: "Lucius Plaucus, a Roman senator, was ordered by Emperor

Trajan to act as one of the menial

sacrincers to Japiter. He resisted, but was dragged to the altar. There the

fragments of the victim were placed

upon the fire, and the unfortunate sen ator was compelled to turn them.. Tn

the process of roasting one of the

neces fell off the fire, but was caught

v Plaucus. .which. burning bis ringers,

he thrust .them into his mouth. In that

moment he made the discovery that

the taste of a slice of meat thus carbona

ted was Infinitely far beyond all the

conventional styles of .Roman cookery as a palatable triumph! Pluucus conceived, too, at the moment an experi

ment by which to preserve his own dignity and he at once evinced his

eontehiptfor the Smperor byosteusi-

bly serving him while scorning the service he was compelled to perform, and converting the proceedings into one of festivity. He swallowed every morsel, deldded Trajan, defrauded Jupiter, and invented the beefsteak. A discovery of such importance did net long remain a secret; beefeteaK formed

the prominent feature. The priests

adopted it, and the King of Olympus

no longer depended on Rome for the

delights of the culinary art." The

sirloin of beef owes its:name, it is said, to Charles II,. who, dining one day on

the loin of beef, and being particularly

pleased with it, asked the name of it.

On being told he said : "For its merit

I will knight it, and henceforth it shall

be called fcsir Loin." In a ballad of

"The New Kir John Barleycorn;" the

circumstance is thus mentioned : Our second Cbarles, of fan foCGle, w On his loin of beef did dine ; V He Held his sword placed o'er the meatArise though famed Sir oin,? A terrible Disease,

A Kansas City special of October 5th

saysi The most horrifying reports

oomc.fromjl'latte coUuty, tmsHtte,and

tne vicin uy 01 irarKviiie una tvaiaron

and intervening couhtryj regarding a

scourge which, it is reported, has re

cently broken out there. At first it

was thought, to be smallpox, but U

developing symntoms of even a more

aggravated character .of this disease.

Mr,. Thtetkeld, a farmer living near

and reported that, although the disease

bad been raging live days, eleven

deaths bad occurred and thirty persons

were sick. Of these. only one man had

sipwn symptoms of recovery and he was not yet out of danger The d;sease

had broken out between Parks ville and

Waldroni two , stations on the Oounci

Bluffs Road, the latter only niue miles

from this place. It was brought there

by. a tramp laborer, wno went from

Kansas City seeking work aud was

taken sick and died. This was ten

days ago. He.said all who attended the funeral of the first patient had

been stricken. The bodies were cov

ered with the most honible sores, and

fairly rot and fester before deatn ensues. Mr. Threlkeld is reported to have said that a person who had died with the disease can not be lifted into

the coffin. The flesh mils from the

bones, and the bones themselves crura

Die and break when .handled. Many of the citizens think it is the old black

smallpox, a verv virulent form of the

disease, in which the body i3 covered

with black eruptions, and few who are

taken survive. Others who have seen

It think it is nothing more nor less

than the terrible black Isoourge which

devastated the countries of the East in

the fourteenth (tujg A Dangerous Prima Donna.

Speak inr of a foreign prima donna of many years ago, the . London , Music il World says: ,., Mine. Mau pin's adventures are innumerable and ol all kinds. Like the celebrahjd Chevalier d'Eon, shi was noted, successively or simultaneously, for tho most contrary tastes and habits; she dressed herself just as . the fit took her,' or, according to oircumst;auces, now as airan and now as a woman; and being Of a, quarrelsome and vindictive nature, often had resource to the sword,. Her comrade; Dumenil, of the opera, having on evening of fended her, she dressed in male attire and waited for him, after the performance, in the Place des Victoirts, wheie she knew he must pass. Without revealing her identity, she. insulted and endeavored to make him fight.. As he m anifested' no' desire 1:0 gratify her wish, sbe gave him a sound thrashing, and, after taking bis watch and snuffbox, left it im stretched oh the: ground. The next day in , the green room, he took it into hi head to describe his adventures, with several gross violationsof the fac'fs.' He asserted he had been attacked by: three ruffians, against whom he had valiintiy defended himself, though without being able to pre vent theru from robbing- him. . "It i i a lie," said M me. Mau pin, after listening to him. "You are nothing but a eur an 1 a coward; You were attacked by me alone,- ani the proof is that there is your watch and nufl-box;" and with these words she flung the articles in his face; Thevenard, We are told, was nearly being treated by her in the same manner, and was obliged to apologize. On another occasion, when, dressed a a man, she was at a ball given at the Palais Royal by Monsieur,; the1 kingV brother, she annoyed a jlady by unbecoming remarks; Three of the lady H friends took up her cause, and Mine. Maupin, on being challenged left the ptace: wit hout hesitation, and, sword in hand, killed all three opponents. Shi they quietly returned to the ball, disclosed her identity to Monsieur, anu begged him to obtaiu a pardon for her, which ho did. '-l i. v L The end! of this extraordinary woman was no Ikss strattge thaii her, me, Sht sent for her husbaud who-had remain ediu the provinces, and lived with

him most irreproachably several years She died in 1707, a pattern of virtue, :ured ' th iefiv-thviVA. vwrfrs' n uif:' ' fm

Tlie geographical congress in Venice passed a resolution in favor oif tnU prompt execution of the canal through the Isthmus of porinth, An Italian resident of Neuiliy on tbe ileine, jwho has just died, leaves 200,0d0 r ancs to the 8axon c ity of Eiejeben j riecause ifr was the birthplace of Martin Luther. - : - y 5 Thievish collectors df aiitojnrahl have cut over a hUnnred : slgSatufeS. , out of the correspondence of nerap Anthony Wayne in the State Normal! school of Penneylvaniii The weight of a casli of wat6r phlifeti out the teeth of the "Map with thg A Iron Jaw,' ? while he was per forming at the Indiana State fair, and .fell oh fall, breast, crushing him to deatn ; ' A search througti A 1 argb . nnmbef of reports of Gar field memorial servi i n various cities reveals only one prayeffor Guiteau, and that was uttered by a

colored clergyman in Jbouisvuie. Thp Hivem who raised teiffhteen cans

of nitrp glycerine from underforty-ilve v-t

feet of water and six or, mua, at ?vra J -nineff, seriously said good-bye-to iheif .

families every : time they .went dowiu 1 3 ;4

The Bel gian idea of Sundays is a fesli

val . On that day they crown to the

seaside to bathe, phnic and go to the'

nlace of amusement: On one recent

Sunday T.oOO; excursionists arrived in

Ostend. 14 :' .-..,.....,. . ,

A London nanersavs. as to the term

vomerine: "We are greatly indebted

to our American cousins for supplying us with terms which express in one., -4 ,

word the meaning of half a dozen

A weeping widower fell in toia -

wife's grave during a funeral at liecfce- h

tur, 111., and as he climbedout hm ff: -M

language was so shockingly proraue 'm-t

tnat tne cifcrgyman teieiiwinpwwi iw

reprove him.

A poem on the death ;of GaTfield By

aged' thiirty

months;

years

3frant New,Houser 1 . N, Y. Tribune. Amon g the rare and beautiful thing with wh leh Gen eral G ran t's u e w house .n this c l y is to be titled, is a sideboard of magnificent Ouyx, presented to him by Me xi 30. SI lor 1 1 v aft ei t he Gen 01 al bccaui o Presh I e 11 1,; Mex i co gave hi ra a beautiful, soryi jo of silver. Thib the General transferred to Ids wife as the President could not except such a gift, rhe silver, which has never yet been used, is now to ba u iniokefii. Mr,

Grant is occupied at present in furnish?

ing 11 er new heme, yolonel and Mi Predritlk Grant, will, it U, reporteu live wiiji their father and mother. Mr. and Mrs. Sari oris will shortly arrivtfra this cpy Aith their three children, " Wlpenil the inter here,

ft ...

8 ;

1

Si-

'4r 7" f .

fit-'.

t ft

S"rJI

- .

1

HI

the Harvard cs poejt4WLttii - He Is dead, our Preside.nt, he rests in ftn -

He whom any one ohm wouiaglaoly, nav ;. . f.

Little Lucy felland hurt her fcnfee;

badly, which ber ro other when snfe

went to bed in the darsr, men u oana-:

age. soon- ine uiue one w

calling "Mama," said she, "this u

age is not on m tne ngnt place. i, reu down a little Irigher upV M n - In the German town of;Herxei there were such hordes of mfce that 9 ; .

reward of a fourwi 01 a cent ton eyery

one killed was!oflerel by inemnnicapai authorities. Under this stimolouf oroof has been furnished- within" ST

short time of the death of over 340,000; .

An exhibition of the sewingMone by t? v

me pu pita wwo itjuiuiwm Jt'"?';.

Rostnn was eiven recentlv, ana was

8ali?fHctory ia the highest degree. The; plan followed was that of giving a les

son of one hour twice a week in the

three lower grades, and once a week lu

the three higher grades.

There was perhaps never a more ex-j' traordinary suicide than that of police '

employee in tne Prussian village of

Hohemolsen, who a few weeks aj thrift inHh nail into hlS foi

head with a curtail red. The stlrttepr1 hnd dimeultv. with the exertion of

tneir wholejstrengthjingefctingthe hW.

out. ' - - 7 -

A bitter qusrrel in the jfoman U&Qx-: olic Church of the Holy ; TrtpMy; Chicago, is followed by a graver accu- ;

sition tnan is usuauy maae m sucu ar- . fairs that of murder. Pastor ;Mieicufy 8zuy was found dead in his room,: and Assistant Pastor Mafek is under;arres t ; j on a seemingly ui just suspicion1 of 1 having killed himi; , : ': On some of the Southern railroads, l s , y$ uegrces are still excluded from parlor J cars. A fashionably dressed mulatto v woman aud her child insisted on 00- ?

cupyiug seats for which she had brougtf 5 m v, tickets at Nashville, upon which the i.x'Sg superintendent hitched on an extra car vi. and transferred to it those passepgfra -$ it

WOO uisn&eu w nuo ju uicviua, - &

oenator luu uiuitxuw b ucw uwuj p; Washington has, Iske the White House r a large porte eochere, or covered entrance, so tliat visitors arriving ln carriages can enter without being exposed to the sun and rain It is a little . -remarkable that no New Yorfcmillion . o !ta oi n i cwii TTermah' Thorn, has.

si. I.!. LSI. Kjn 4kta "i iftJ

cnousnr, it wurHwHuu 4 , l$ m m

The forest fires which lately devasta F n - ' ted eastern Michigan were not without? ; compensation. While they destroyed . ; 1 1 B

humnn lives an! ' rnucil . vaiuaoie .a s , w.

propertv, tney ais swep ciean -m brush and scrub growth thodsatids Of

acres of good soil, Which would other vs wise have remained a wilderness, but v which is now ready for immediate. v 1

.cultivation - : LV. 4-

The little German city of Kllngettbergi din lower Frauconia, not only im poses no municipal tax, but evertr " voter receives an an uiial dividend from w

the city treasury 01 a sum rugiim ?

from 122.60 to f 23 rhe city recently celebrated the Sedan anniversary by : giving every citizen fifty cents, wiU ftfty cents extra to every soldier ot the war with France -p.4X-:.r.t:. ' ,A pair of s'eers snk in the muck of fj & ric nneticut swaciD. and a yoke of

oxen-were set to pull them out by

chain around the horns ,. One :yftWA$ drawn 10 a firm footing, but the horns rt of the other were pulled from his head.The a (rent of an, ant i-cruel ty society is r prosecu ti ng; the1 m in who made the '-f attampt to pave iihe steers, on '- the k i

gronnd.-iliat. the. &umaM,iMom9v.- 5f -

m -

1

, ..X Wv'l.i

'0: 1

bave been to shoot them.:

Over $20,000,000 w now lying in the theXIuited States Treasusy waiting for the holders of pait due and cal?edt . . i i it Af amannf

OOUUS lO 0SK' IW V- nmamxMWMmwt.-j

about $10,Ot!0.0(K) i3 for matured bonds, ..Wi

i

nir wnicn imeresii ccaem i vwiuuo -

dates from January 1, 1857 to July 1, 1 si The ot her S10.0u0.0b0 is for called

bonds on which interest will -ceased October 21: but which with interiet to October 21, will, be aid now on

as 1 .

presentation...

m

"3 - " ' - 4 , ti. 'i

Mrs. Stoic kamp'e surprise Party o s ,

Clncinnatt1meidC: 1 " A rather peculiar in Hen t happened 1

on Fountain square awjui aai pu. .1 loop i.irhi hi whir-rl 1 he nonndation was -

suddenly aui sveiy iwjrewiu

Agnes Steinksmp. whose house ..W j 1 Bm

Vof S Piirk Hcrt eiv iau iieeu io iub iax&

ater wun ner-uuBuauu jiiiu iw uiiwit

SAUkk fttiH htar bnwhand te il to

orarily $ op rated, and she was to meet p V r?

Him on tne lispianaue, near me iquu? ;wr tail.; Prbmpay to the anointmem , . she sealed herself du the stone ster ,W near the fountain with her two chlld? tf? if if ren bi le her. It igan to rain aUgh -4..

i,r Qnil iha uritTftftt cAtnhroaU or tne . !T-

KniRiiadP sitnned un to her and toldf'

her she had tetter seek j

she replied that nee nusuanu wouiu . s alone in a lew lninnts and theMhey f e Jf would take a ear home The officer 59

left her, and in a lew niuu.es lwfr back, saw quite a crowd had collected I hrtt hr 4iincruo to themho foil lid 1

f It a., ti.'

rhft N litr.iA bnhv had been bom. As

was natural under the circumstance s, there wasolnnteers ready to do all in their power, and the little etrajirer

was well i aKen care . - until a hack arrived ami ihe-mother ;

... t.irmr tn tot ijiiictnuauv:

Hospital; They arnveu at iimi umi; ii the mother and the new

youngster in good condition, an i PP 41 -S or medic! care wis at ouoe -adun&WV

t -

tered About an hour afU rwaMj 4 M phone mrssiige caiwe froui the 'intra i?

tin 'u a "

M 8vvfnkiHUp is nereana wniun

of his wife iiudnwo cniidren; ,.J4 ; ;, It was iw werr il : vGo to the hotvpit "

il and von jvitl ti .dWrs. wtctoKump

d.ud.tbiw t-1 I iteu.-

Vie, k 1

t 'Ml--

The A'Xei can H'(soui of iransorting trunks btvioilH ftoces and rail-?

?f v ' - . - Jr- 'iii

lleiiin.

is

At-

i: ; -r . - v" l