Bloomington Courier, Volume 13, Number 32, Bloomington, Monroe County, 11 June 1887 — Page 3
norm week
A national convention of building 4-ades delegates mil be held in Chicago Job 20. r( The Union Labor party will hold a State delegate. convention in Columbus, a, July 4. " The Michigan vote on local option shows forty-seven counties in iavor and fortysix against. : Four thousand people shook hands with Senator Sherman at the Grand Pacific hotel, Chicago, Thursday night. Postmaster General Vilas says he dosen't belitive President Cleveland has . .any idea of making a western trip this fall. .. Austin H Brown, of Indianapolis,has been appointed chief of division in the register's office of the Treasury Depart-
ment.
"wiam x .i uereon, conviciea 01 com
plicity with Turner m the murder of
Jennie Bowinan, at Louisville, will be
hanged July 1.
-feiaitor O'Bnen and Evicted Tenant
Kilbride had a mag nincent reception at
the Academy of Music, New York,
Thursday night.
By a vote of twenty-seven to ten the
Methodist-ministers of Philadelphia de
cided to exclude reporters from their
Monday meeting. All of the druggists of Tiffin, O., were arrested, Wednesday, for violation of the Dow liquor law,- several of whom are church members. An earthquake passed over northern California and western Nevada Saturday but no one was hurt. Buildings were shaken badly in some places. Business men of Austin, Tex., offer the International Typographical union $10,000 and eighty acres of land toward establishing a home for indigent printers -there. It is reported that Rev. Dr. Beid, who left Manson, Calhoun county, Iowa, last winter, to become a missionary in Africa, has been killed and eaten by a tribe of cannibals. The trial of all the Haddock assasssination cases at Sioux City, Iowa, have been continued until the September term of court, against the strenuous -opposition - of the State. A violent rain storm passed over the country about Kansas City,Friday afternoon, flooding the railroads. Lewis Huckett and David Custer were killed by lightning." , Hon. John Sherman delivered a speech at Springfield, DL, Wednesday, to avast audience, in which he discussed the political issues from a Bepublican standi point at great length. J The Supreme court of Pennsylvania lias affirmed the judgment of the Philadelphia' common pleas courts to the effect that mortgages held by corporations cannot be taxed. ' Grand Master Workman Ppwderly nas declared the present strike in; the coke region of Pennsylvania to be illegal, but the leaders are not paying any
attention to the order. . .'
Governor Oglesby has signed the bill to prohibit book making and pool-selling, except within the inclosures of fair and race-track associations incorporated under the laws of the State. The long-continued fight in the United Brethern church over the question of instrumental music came up in- the general assembly Tuesday, and the use of such music was sustained by a vote of 22 to 58. Hainan Stames, a farmer living near Fayette ville, Ga,, had five sons who married in succession the five daughters of Mrs. Eliza Hamby, a neighbor. The old folks completed the list Saturday by marrying themselves. John i! Oliver, deposed by President Cleveland from the office of justice of ' the peace for the District of Columbia, refuses to give up the place, claiming that he can only be removed lor cause and then by the district Supreme court. A careful estimate of the total loss by the recent forest fires in Michigan is $7,000,000, including $2,500,000 caused by the destruction of the town of Lake Linden. Only eight lives are positively known to have been lost. Great destitution prevails throughout the burnt . 'district." ..... '..".. " A party of Mexican bandits, whose rendezvous was the Balso Cutoff, near Brownsvi'le, was raided Monday, by both American and Mexican forces. One was killed, several wounded, a number captured and and executed at once and two lodged in jail. One Mexican
soldier was Killed. ., t
The situation in the Choctaw Nation is beaming serious. Half-breeds are leaving the nation in large numbers and crossing into ArkansaB for safety. Many Indians are under arms. Warnings have been given to many families, ordering their instant departure from the Choctaw country. A battle between the full bloods and the half-breeds is imminent. r ..... John Boyd, a butcher of Bockford, Mich., last summer deliberately murdered W. B. Johnson, fie was convicted of murder and sentenced to prison for -life, leaving a wife and four children! the youngest but three days old. Annie Boyd, wife of the murderer, sued Chris Post, a saloon-keeper, for selling her husband liquor, claiming $20,000. A
elsewnere in the United States, $0,640,-
000; total, $10,802,200. Canada is $304,
000j making an aggregate of $11,106,200.
ai wo auu lo tmg me customary 10 per
cent, for fires not reported, we have
grand total of $12,216,800 as the fire
losses for May, 1S87.
Jme statistician of the agricul tural de
partment makes the following estimate of the average condition of croos in In
diana: "Winter wheat, 87; winter rye
91; winter barley, 87; meadows, mowing
ands, Go; spring pasture, 92; proportion
oi plowing wors aireaay aone, ou; pro
portion usually done at same time in an
average year, 71. As an unusual advance in spring plowing has been made,
the area to be planted will slightly exceed that planted last year."
A piece of pipe eight feet long, flattened at one end, filled with water, plugged at the other and heated red-hot. was
driven by the explosion of the steam
through the groin of Charley Phillips, a seventeen-year-old lad of Marseilles, 0. Tho boy did not faint or flinch, but with heroic endurance seized hold of the red-hot pipe, and by his own exertions withdrew it from the terrible wound it had made. The flesh in his hands was burned to a crisp clear to the bone. He cannot recover. It is reported that in order to satisfy some politicians and at the same time please his wife, who is fond of travel, President Cleveland has determined to make a trip through the west this fall, and if it is not too wide of t he precedents extend it to Alaska. Should it bedeemed inexpedient for him to take in that, Mrs. Cleveland will go while he and Colonel Lamont en joy,the Yellowstone.
The President will leave Washington
the latter part of August and spend
September and October on the trip, going as far as Portland, Ore. Several members of the Cabinet, notably Post
master General Vilas, who is the
persistent second-term boomer in
body, will accompany their chief.
President is determined that
journey shall be made entirely at his
personal expense. He does not intend to accept any favors, but will pay for
everything he gets in the way of trans
portation and personal service. The
trip will cost him not less than $3,500
for the sixty days over which it will ex
tend. He fears, however, that the
south will be jealous of the fact that a Democratic President has gone into the west instead of spending more of his
time in the Southern States.
most that The this
DAVITT'S REMARK ABLE TAIiK.
A Speech Which Is Certain to Do the Cause of Ireland Great Injury. Michael Davitt addressed another crowd in the Bodyke district Snndav.
w : . . V
TARIFF REDUCTION. The President and His, Advisers Trying Harmonize! the Democratic Factions.
A Washington dispatch to the Phila
delphia Times, Tuesdav,savs: "For some
repeauug ins exnonauon ro me people nays uiere nas been more or less into resist eviction. He advised them toj formal talk in administration circles on
resume possessions of their dwellings j the tariff question. From intimations
after being evicted, and in cases where i dropped in the headquarters it may be
Russia is said to he maneuvering large
bodies of troops in Afghan territory, and
it is thought English interference will
be necessary.
A terrible plague of locusts has visited
the central provinces of Spain. The insects are so thick that gangs of men
are required to clear the railway
lines. The crops have been fearfully ravaged. The evictions at Bodyke, Ireland, continue against the energetic efforts of the tenants, "who burn cayenne pepper, throw hot water, assault the bailiffs with stones and in other ways annoy the officers. -A number, of arrests have been made. Professor Stein, the political economist, has written a pamphlet that has attracted much attention, showing that by the completion of the Canadian Pacine railroad England is entirely inde
pendent of the Suez canal for the. trans
portation of troops. Mr. Gladstone's presence in Wales was made the occasion of a holiday, Saturday, which partook of a national chai
acter. Mr. Glanstone's declaration in in favor of the disestablishment of the Welsh church, are anxiously awaited, and may be depended upon to vastly increase the numerical strength of his following; . ..... Lawrence Donovan, who jumped off the Brooklyn bridge, and also off the suspension bridge at Niagara Falls, Saturday jumped from London bridge into the Thames. He refused to permit a collection to be taken up, saying the jump was merely in honor of the Queen's jubilee. He intends to jump at an early day off the Clifton suspension bridge at Bristol, the highest bridge in England. Services were held in the church of Notre Dame, Paris, Monday, over the victims of the Opera Comique fire. They were buried in the cemetery Pontile Orations were delivered oyer the graves by MM, Goblet and Berthelot, late premier and minister of public instruction, respectively. It is estimated
that more than 200,000 persons lined the
route of the procession from the
cathedral to the cemetery.
Renewing its attacks upon Mr. Glad
stone, theTimes Bays the ex-Premier has
gradually fallen from his high estate
until at last he is found to be associated
with the most unmitigated scoundrels on
the face of the earth men who are
banded together to work the nefarious
ends of Alexander Sullivan and Patrick
Egan. The Parnellities have cease do
take notice of the attacks of the Times,
and, to a great degree, the Tories are punning the same course. Realizing that
the passage of the coercion bill no longer
depends upon the weakening of the
Liberal strenjsth or the degradation of the Home rule members the Tories are
verdict was rendered Thursday giving i the woman $9,500. . .A Butler club was formed at Boston, Thursday. General Butler was sent for, and in a brief speech thanked the mem - bens for their expression of good will, and said he was with them socially.
He could not see any political field for
i them: He had no intention, he said, of
entering politics again, unless an emer
gency should demand it.
.... Sxobate Judge Lyrnan'Follettof Grand ; Rapids, Mich., has been missing for sev
eral days. Inquiry shows a large shortage in his accounts, nearly every estate
in the probate court suffering where the
funds passed through his hands. It ap
pears that Follett speculated heavily in . wheat in Chicago losing large amounts.
He was a prominent church man, and
has a wife and three children. ....
Aistrange disease, communicated by
contact, has cause! a great deal of havoc among horses in DeWitt county, 111. It
is believed to have been communicated from imported French stallions, and is
said-to foe common in i ranee, it was
first noticed in DeWitt county in 1885
Jfortv mares nave diea rrom it, ana
manv are now ill. Nine stallions are
under treatment..
- The general fire record for May is
hevy, being as follows: Indiana $394,
3Q& Illinois, $538,500; Ohio, 229i400;
revolting against the methods of warfare
adopted by the Times, and many even go
so far as to repudiate its utteiances.
The Public Delt.
The reduction in the public debt dur
ing May amounts to $8,888,997, and for
the eleven months of the current fiscal
year to $92,854,921. The national debt
less cash in the treasury .is $1,296,281.-
462. Tne net casn m tne treasury is
$23,951,962,or about $11,000,000 less than
on May 1. The gold coin and gold bullion
fund balance in the treasury is $186,-
667,773, or about five and one-half millions more than a month ago. The sil
ver fund balance has increased about
one million during the month, and amounts to $73,157,590. The Btore of
standard silver dollars was increased by
about three mimon aouars ana now
amounts to $209,052,5G7. Up to May 31
$6,621,276 in trade dollars had been re
deemed. . A Hero Shot.
Captain Jack Hussey, of Castle Gar
den, New York City, the savior of thir
ty-four persons from drowning, and the
proud possessor of a number of m edals
of honor from Congress, the Legislature
and other bodies, was fatally sho
through the body Thursday night by
Policeman C. Hannsm in front of his own house. Hussey said he knew no
reason for the policeman to shoot him
the houses had been burned by the agents, it was the duty of the men of Bodyke to rebuild them and furnish shelter for their families. He said that; he would next Sunday gather an assemblage of 30,000 or 40,000 men and lead them while they restored every house which had been demolished. He advocated a concerted movement for the care of the evicted families, and urged that funds be raised to extend the "Plan of Campaign." He predicted that within the next month a million pounds would be collected for the fund throughout the civilized world, owing to the barbarism
practiced at Bodyke.
Mr. Davitt accused himself of having
weakened the defense of the men of
Ireland of their rights and their hearths
by urging them to abstain from com
mitting acts of violence and to refrain from breaking the law, and said he was
heartily ashamed of himself for ever
having given such advice. He had
found that he was mistaken in suppos
ing that the submission of the people of
Ireland to gross injustice would win for
them the sympathies of Great Britain, and henceforth no word of cenRiirfl
would ever fall from his lips against
Irishmen who defend their homes at the
risk of life. "If the advice of John
Mitchel should be taken." he said.
. . " ' every Irish homestead would have
been made a fortress to defend the
rights of its occupants, and you sooner
would have made greater progress and won greater privileges than by following
the same advice of submission."
Davitt's speech is considered in Lon
don as most inopportune, not only to the Parnellites, Out to himself. It announces his revolt against the restraint of Mr, Pamelas parliamentary policy, and the disappearance of the strongest, if not the only, obstacle that stood in the way of a recurrence of another period of outrage in Ireland. These utterances of a man dear to the hearts of every Irishman are on everyone's lips, and are stirring the blood of Ireland as nothing else could. Mr, Davitt's whole speech coincides with the sentiments of tho people, who, under the circumstances of nereaang evictions and impending coercion, with its attendant indignitie3 and cruelties, are surcharged with rage and ripe for an outbreak, and the speaker's defiant challenge to arrest him for sedition will, if permitted to pass unnoticed, intensify his speech., and greatly intensify the danger of revolt. lcatli of Eac-Vico President Wheeler.. Ex-Vice President William A. Wheeler died at his home in Malone, New York:, Saturday morning at 10 o'clock. Mr. Wheeler had been slowly failing through the past five or six years, until last winter, when the progress of the disease became more rapid, and his physicians and friends began to fear the approach of the end. On the night of March S he was seized with chills, followed by a sinking spell, and Dr. Gay tbrought for hours that he would die. He afterward rallied, however, butnevor regained his former vigor and strength. Mental weakness gradually became apparent, and increased until, first, there were indications of insanity, and later of helplessness and unconsciousness.
"Mr. Wheeler was born at Malone,
Franklin county, New York, June JIO, 1819. He studied at the "University of Vermont, but did not graduate, and be
gan the practice of law in his native
place. He served in several minor offices, and was a member of the Legisl
ature in 1849-50 and in 1859-60, in the
alter place being chosen president pro
;em of the Senate. From 1851 to 1S65
he was cashier of the Malone bank and during the same time, far eleven years,
virtual manager of the Ogdensburg. &
ake Champlain railroad. In 1860 ?tlr.
Wneeler was elected to Congress, se r v-
ing one term. He was president of the
constitutional convention of 1867, and in
868 was re-elected to Congress; also in
70, '72 and 74. In 1875 he visited A ew
Orleans as chairman of a house commit
tee and prepared an adjustment of the
political troubles in Louisiana upon the
basis of what was known as the "Wheeler Compromise." In 1876 he
was elected vice-President on the ticket
with Mr. Hayes and after his term of
office expired, retired to private life,"
The Supreme Bench. A prominent official, entirely disinter
ested, who has talked with the President
in regard to the vacancy m the United
States Supreme Court, caused by the
death of Justice Woods, said to a repreentative of the Associated- Presss, Wednesday night, that while the Presi
dent has decided to give the place to the South, he is satisfied that there is noth
ing in the Constitution, the law, or the
precedents, which confines the selection
of the appointee to the States included
in the circuit to which the deceased jus
tice was assigned. The official explained
that while Congress fixed the boundar
ies of the judicial circuits, the court it
self makes the assignment of judges,and
it has frequently happened that a judge
appointed from one State is assigned to a
circuit in an entirely different section of
the county, and, also, that when a
vacancy has occurred in any particular
circuit, it has been frequently filled by
an appointment from a State altogether
outside ot its jurisuieuon.
A Monster Church to Be Built.
Miss Catherine A. Wolfe, by a clause
in her will, authorized her executors to
devote $1,000,000 toward a cathedral in
New York, to be called the Cathedral
of St. John the Divine. The cathedral
will cost $6,000,000 and will be one of the larcrest buildings in the world. The
trustees under the charter, of whom
Bisop Potter, Rev. Morgan Dix, Hamil
ton Fish, Wm. W. Astor and Cornelius
Yanderbilt are among the most prqm-
nent, will issue, in a few days a circular
letter asking for subscriptions to a fund
for the erection of the cathedral. The
edifice is not intended to be moi.opoli
ed bv anv one sect. It is to bo a monu
ment of Christianity, open to all, fchougl
it will be under the general direction o
the Protestant Epifieopal diocese. The
choir of the cathedral alone will be
larger than Trinity Church. The main
buikung ana cnapeis will occupy more than four times, the space covered by
St. Patricks's Cathedral, at present the
largest in this country.
announced tnat secretary raircniui is
seriously contemplating a movement,
with the approbation of the President
and his colleagues, looking to a concen
tration of the Democrats in the House
of Representatives and the Senate upon
a measure of tariff reduction. After
careful inquiry it has been ascertained
mat every member ot tne uamnet is
favorable to such a programme. After
the experiences; of tho past
two Congresses, the President
is convinced that but one course
remains open to tine Democratic party, and that is the formulation of a bill, in
consultation with such men as Randall, Carlisle and others representing the diverse positions of Democratic sentiment on the subject, for the purpose of bringing them together upon some common ground of agreement. The President has seen for some time that an issue will be made on the tariff, and has urged that it would be more sagacious to get to work at once and prepare a bill to be submitted to Congress as a measure of administration policy than to let the question contiune to play havoc as a firebrand in the ranks of tho party. It is proposed to make the bill an administrative question in the House and thus bring it before the people as a distinctive issue upon which the Democratic party will stand in the next campaign. Judging from the present situation of affairs
among the party leaders, it will take a
large amount of pressure to bring the
opposite views of Messrs. Carlisle and Randall together. It has been suggested
in Treasury circles that the Kentucky
whisky influence, the tobacco men, and
the protection Democrats can only
reach a basis of settlement by pooling
their differences and evolving some sort of a compromise. If this should fail a bill will be prepared at the Treasury,
supposed to strike between these con
flicting interests. Secretary Fairchild is very decided in his advocacy of reduction of revenue from customs. The necessity of some action of this kind, he
thinks, will make itself felt very soon.
The accumulation of surplus will now go on steadily, and will lead to formal
action on his part before the Cabinet as
soon as the first indications manifest
themselves in the monetary operations
of the people. The theory of reduction will be in placing raw materials, like
iron and wool, on the free list and re
duction of rates on certain manufac-
ures. There is an idea, notwithstand
ing the ruinous importations at present
rates, that certain manufactures of iron
and steel can stand a reduction. Mem
bers of the administration believe there
is a point at which modification of the
ariff can be made without detriment to
American industry."
Anti-Poverty and Editor O'Brien, The usual large crowd attended the
Anti-Poverty Society meeting in Now
York, Sunday night. Dr. McGlynn mildly denounced Editor O'Brien for his refusal to attend a mass meeting in
his honor Saturday night. "O'Brien,"
said Dr. McGlyun, "is a landlord at
leart, and the only difference between dm and Lansdowne is that O'Brien is
0 or 20 per cent, lower than Lansdowne.
When O'Brien found that he could not
ew Lansdowne to his figures, he went
about blackguarding him," The name of O'Brien was hissed. Editor O'Brien
states that his reason for refusing to at
tend Saturday night's meeting was that
he felt that it would jeopardize the
riendship of many American sympa
thizers with the Irish cause; that the
person elected to preside and present
he address of welcome was one whose
connection with the affair (meaning Mr. McMackin, who presided at the lecture
recently delivered by Mr. Tynan, known also as "No. 1," in connection with the
Fenian Brotherhood) would be used to
give color to .ue malignant misrepresentations of the London Times and
would involve the most calamitous re
sults for the Irish movement. Another
reason was that the resolution condemning private ownership in land was in di
rect contravention to the objects of the
rish National League, and would un
doubtedly entangle them in an American issue.
French Afluixi-, Thousands of persons gathered in the
streets ot Paris, Tuesday night, and set
up a series of concerted cries of "we want
Boulanger," "vive la Boulanger," etc. It required the militia to disperse them.
Boulanger has left Paris,being succeeded
as minister of war by M.Ferron,after sev
eral had declined. M. liouvier, the new
premier, read a statement to the depu
ties, Tuesday, as to the policy the gov
ernment would pursue. I he foreign
policy of the government will be firm,
but at the same time, prudent; re
trenchment in all of the departments of
the government will, so far as possible,
be vigorously carried forward; the
military bills introduced by the Minis
try of M. Goblet will be retained and
supported by the new government, and
unless tne government snail receive a
majority of the Republican votes on
the proposal to adopt its budget, which
will be in accord with the expression
manifested by tne majority in tne re
cent vote of the Chamber on M. Goblet's
budget, the ininistry will at once resign.
. Th( Fisheries Trouble.
A cablegram says the Canadian fish
eries question is regarded in London as practically settled, the public having
been given reason to believe that the
negotiations between the English and
American Governments are on the eve o
conclusion. The settlement, it is understood, will give to American and Can
adian fishermen equal rights in the dis
puted waters, and in return for the concessions made bv Canada the latter
is to receive substantial benefits in
other directions. TexftH Pawtimo.
The Texas & racinc express was
robbed by masked men at Benbrook near Fort Worth, Texas, Saturday even
ing. No effort was made to molest the passengers. The express company, it is
estimated, will lose from $5,000 to $10,
000. Three registered packages of mail
containing, it is claimed, but a few hun
dred dollars, were also secured by the
robbers.
Hall's Catarrli Ouro ie tlia marvol unite ago ivul has no equal 1 jr the euro ol Catarrh. i)o nQI Ulay
11 yvu Alt) UUUUIQU WiUi VtAlO uiouou.
MISSOURI MASONS AGITATED. Tho Enforcement ol' a Heso lution Agalugt Liquor-Selling Exciting Them. Cff mi n r ' . . .i m ' n
r$ Aiieiviatfoiuc iraternity ot Missouri is
greatly agitated "just now over the action of Bobert Gr. Hunt, tho grand master of the State, who has sent forth an edict to subordinate lodges to expel all ' Masons engaged in the saloon keeping and liquor-selling business. Tho Grand Lodge of J he State, in the session of 1882, adopted tho following resolution: "Kcsol ved, That the business of saloonkeening is hereby declared a Masonic oflense, and those engaged in it are liable to be dealt with for unmasonic conduct." Tho law remained a dead letter until the election of Robert G. Hunt, ot Warrensburg, Mo., hist October. He immediately took steps to enforce the law, and two weeks ago ordered the suspension of Masons engaged in liquor-dealing. Nearly one hundred of the most prominent members in St, Louis are liquor-dealers, and have been Masons for scores of year3. The great body of Masons throughout the Slate are of the opinion that the edict and resolution on which it is based are unmasonic, and they believe that, as decent liquor-
dealing is legal, the posecuted men ought to be upheld. "
TEN KOTCJI OF TALMAOE.
How the Groat Preacher Ada in Pulpit,
the
LOST IN A CilTCriONE.
The Steamer John Lawrence ami 73 j Pathengers Go Dowm in a Cyclone. Calcutta, June 6. It lias been prov
ed beyond doubt, by the picking up of the captain's chest, , that, the steamer
John Lawrence was lost in the recent cyclone off this coast. The steamer carried 730 passengeia, and it is believed the whole number were lost. The
largest part of the passengers were native ladies, who were going to Jug
gernaut festival. The catastrophe has cast a feeling of gloom over the Hindoo community here, and all the best families are in mourning for relatives or friends who were among the passengers. A Bad Man Shot. . Samuel G. Reed, scion of one of the best families in Alabama, deserted from the United States army at Fort Brown, Texas, seme time ago and going into Mexico k: lied and robbed a rich jeweler named Black. He and his companion
were arrested and condemned to death,
but escaped. Reed went to California
and Arizona, slew a coupl e of men there,
and Anally drifted back to San Antonio,
where he was arrested on a charge of
desertion and turned over to the military.
Wednesday the court was convened to
ry him on the charge of desertion. On . i i 1 V . 1 ,1 a
nis way to trial no mauo a utjopoiawi
effort to oscape and the detail in charge fired upon him killing him.
: Iowa Saloons MustCto. All of the hotel-keepers in Covmcil
Bluffs have been suminond to show
why injunctions should not be granted
against shein. All tne ow ners of property
where enjoined saloons are still running
ure being arrested and placed under bonds of $700 each to appear in the
district court for contempt, beveral
saloon-keepers are closing up. The
petitions for injunctions include all
saloons, wholesale houses and ferewene3 of the city. The general feeling among
them is that they must go.
Blown to l'ieceB by Dynamite, Eight men were instantly killed and
six Dadly injureu eaiuruay auernoon by a premature explosion of dynamite at tho Cambria iron company's stone quarries, near Altoona, Pa. Some of the injured will die. Two of the in
ured are Italians; all others are Ameri
cans. Tne killed ana wounaeu were m
the act. of drilling a hole when the ex
plosion occurred.
Mr. Arthur Shurtleff, Parker, Dakota,
writes: St. Jacoos uu win cure oue
him? not advertised. It cured a wart on
my linger which I had for years." Price fifty cents.
Tombstone has a curiew ordinance
which requires every one unaer eign-
ieen years ot age to go noane ai tno ring
ing of a bell at 8:30 p. m.
At Terre Haute, Chai upaign County,
Ohio, Mr. Charles F. Powell was post
master, and he writes: ,4I have a fine lot
of Polish chickens. I gave the bt. Jacobs
Oil on a pill of bread for the cioup, itcured them. The next morning I could
not tell which of the chickens naa oeen
sick
The more a person tnists God the less
need has he of ministers.
team-A pair of wet
A spanking
nurses.
Hot. Indianapolis News. Talmage is so interesting a public character that he is going to add a wing to his tabernacle in order to seat a thousand more of those who, at every Sunday service, desire to see and hear him. So let me make a new portrait of him as he now preaches, He opens his mouth very wide, and speaks with great force. He accents the close of each phrase with a strong downward inflection, which makes his hymn reading ex tremel y monotonous. He reads every hymn straight through, and repeats the first two lines emphatically. His scripture reading is characterized by the same hard emphasis at the end of every phrase, but it is
varied by running comments to such an extent that one who was unfamiliar with the passages would be at a loss to know where the Bible stopped and the preacher began. This tendency to obscurity is strengthened by the fact that the doctor keeps his eyes on the book whether he is reading the text gr making his comment. He moves about little while reading or praying, but in hie preaching his gestureis and attitudes frequently suggest the theatre. When he is not
wringing an impassionea perioci to a close,he generally puts his right hand in the bosom of his coat and holds Ins left behind him. When in this attitude the fingers of his left hand are in constant motion. As he comes toward a climax he brings both hands forward and raises them and swings his arms and stamps with his feet while his voice risis to a shout. He does not talk very rapidly, and he makes effective, abrupt pauses between Ms words. One of his most dramatic sentences in the sermon during which I watched him was a description of a ship iii battle. He told of the way successive shots had torn the bulwarks away, knocked over a mast, carried away the wheel, ruined the steerinc: gear, and riddled the boat from stem to stern. The climax of the sentence was brought out in the word "corpses" repeated twice with a shudder of his body and tones. As he had been enumerating the various parts of ships and describing the damage done, he had moved about the plat form,pointing here and there; when he came to the close, telling of the deck strewn with corpses, he put his left foot in advance of the right, extending both arms downward, clenched his fists and shut his eyes and his Jaws, hissing the final word between his teeth. He retained the attitude thus formed for several seconds before drawing back to proceed with a new thought. He resorts continually to the actor's device of pointing to imagin ary objects, as if the audience could see the feature of the picture formed in his own mind. In all his gestures and movements he is awkward as can be and the spectator is irresistibly reminded of the caricatures of Talmage in the comic papers. One is also reminded of Henry Irving in tho way Dr. Talmage uses his left leg. When approachinga climax he
puts his; left foot somewhat forward, pats the flooi? with it, bends his knee while retaining his weight on tho right leg,and
he winds up by giving the book- a vigor
ous stamp. The final sentence m his
sermon was a religious exhortation. It
called noon the veterans to follow the
...... 'l . flagship of God, whose commander,
Jesus Christ, was in the shrouds beckon
ing on to that haven where all the faithful would joia in the grand hosanna.
He worked up to the last word in the
way just described,, holding his hands in the air; raising them a little at a time until they were as far above his head as he could reach. The word khosanna"
was repeated in this attitude with great
deliberation and force, the preacher
keeping his eyes almost "dosed and fixed
on the ceil ing, and remain i ng thus, pos
ed for a full half minute after uttering
the final word. He then, tu rned and
went to the stand where he found his
hymn-book and glasses, and proceeded to read the closing hymn. His sermons are frequently interrupted by applause. STIUJ u h business.
Iiaclies of t tie White House
have found that their sometimes excessive duties produce a low, weak, tired and tremulous state of the system, and
hat iron restores richness and color to
the blood, cahsaya OarK a natural
ealthiul tone to the digestive organs,
and phosphorus mildlv stimulates the
brain all comumeu m J-r narier ajtuu
Tonic. ;
When punishing a child never strike
it above the belt.
Hnne on. hope ever." How many
delicate ladies there are who, while they attend to their daily duties, , do so with aching heads, a sense of fullness, pain
in the back ana depressed spirits, wno
are "only keeping about, as the pnrase it. Some day they "go into a decline,"
and leave their children motherless. lo such we would say, "Cheer up." Timely
use of Dr. Pierce's favorite Prescription" corrects all female irregularities,
weaknesses, and kindred arlections easi
ly, pleasantly and quickly.
VJSJS MAK.KJSTS. Indian AroLis,June 7, 1887
Wheat No. 2, Med ..oSJrJ Corn, NO. 2, wuu
No. 3, Med...l 10. z xeiio.a - To. 2, Red ...85 Cats, No. 2, WMt8.30 Wagon wheat, S3 Rye 62 IJVE STOCK.
c. atti.e K tra ehoico steer s .4. 15a4 ; 40
Good to choice steers 4.wa4.
Kxtra fthoiee heifers 4.00a4.25
Good to choice heifers ,...3.60ai.OO
Good to choice eotvs s.e&a4.uo Hogs Heavy packing and shipping 4 80a4.92
Light and imxea pacKing.., .iwa-i.fu Pigs and heavy roughs t 8,7oa4.40 Sheep--Extra choice 3.50a3.75 Good to choice 3.25aa.50 Spring lambs...... . . .-. 4.(Oa5.O0 EGGS, BDTTEK, "POULTRY. Eggs...... 10 I Poultry , hens per !rx.7c Bu ttei , creamery. . ....22c r Roosters. .,8c " fan'jycoiintrv....9alCc j Turkeys ..8o " choice country.. 8a 9c 1 Coring :hickos...l2al5c MWCEU.AKISOUS. Wooi-fine merino, tub w ashed...,. 30aS5c ' do unwashed-, met! 24a2oe
" vers- coan e i ftuc
Hav,choicc timot'fty..950 liran 12.00 Flour, patent.. ,.4. 70al.U5 Kxira faucy...4.a0a4.50
l -.near cured bams Ualc
Jaeon clear sides SsY feathers prime goose35c i lover seed 8.76
Timothy seed 1.90
ChteiH'o
Wheal (July) SC' I .fork .....23.58 Com " 39V2 lrd 6.55 Oats " S$KUW 7.20
LIVKS1.CK,
Oatii Hecves 4 .00a-i . 70
JIogs Pigs 3.70a4.S5
" -Light 1.50a4.HO " Rough pack' t.Glhu.SO Mixed packingifcshipiiur .4.80a5.10
Other Markotrt.
Wheat, ssrjtf; tom, 39MJ clover seed,
rri -Jieeves4.uoai.7U Jfows .2.10a3. tockers....2.75at;.0p
Sheep., .3.00al.40
Toledo 4.35. -
IJi ladelphJii -Wheat: 96 com 47. HiiUimore-Wheat, 9t; coru, 47; oats 86a39; butter, western. I6ai7&
How FaBt We Pie. It lias been computed that the &e&th rate of the globe is 67 a minute, 07,790 a day and 35,639,835 a year; and the birth rate 70 a minute, 100,000 a day and 36,792,000 a year. ' Three Effects. The thousands of rema rkable cures which have ... been accomplished by Hood's Sarsaparilla are due simply to three effects which this great medicine has upon those who take it: Fiist. It purines the blood. Seoond. It strengthens the system. Third. It gives healthy action to the digestive organs. With these three effects no disease can long retain its hold. It is forced to leave the system, giving place to health and strength, through the potent influence of Hood's Sarsaparilla. Sold by all druggists. Try it.
An c Id-time Shakespeare.
play Bill William
Prickty Ash Bitters is an unfailing cure for all diseases originating in biliary derangements caused by the malaria of miasmatic countries. K'o. other
medicine now on sale will so effectually
remove the disturbing elements, and at the same time tone up, the whole system, It is sure and safe in its action. A man who does business on a large scale a coal dealer.
The quality of tho blood depouds much upon good or ba l dhrostion and AHt.imllation; to mafco the blood rich in lift and strongt u-giving conatitnonts, n Dr. .(. H. McLean's Strmigtheuiug Cordial and Blooi. Purifier: it will nourish the properties of the blood from which theolomen ao! vitality itrodrnwn S1.00 ; jer bottle.
Sick Heaiar.be, and a eensatiou of oppression aud illness in the he-id. are very common! F produced
by in ligostiou: morbid despondency, trritabhlity
and over sensitiveness of the norvos may, in a majority of cages, be traced to the saino cautie. Dr. - J. H. UcLeao's Liver and. Kidney Balm and Fillets will loaitttely enre. . AH diseases of lower bowel, including pile , tumors, radically cured. Book of particulars, 10 cents in stamps. Woild's Dispensary Medical Associa
tion, 0(53 Main St? Buffalo, N. Y.
Generosity is the overflow of heart's cream. Chronic nasal ca tarrh positively cured
by Ir. Sage's Remedy.
exceedingly trying
The posit ion of a judge is aa
one.
res ions
of the
The dank, and decaying vegetation ot
newh clear od of timber, exposed to the rays
sun. -b aunt to breed miliaria. Dr. J. H. McLean's
GhiUl and Fover (Jure, by mild and gectle action
wul xaaicaiiy cure, so cents a bottle.
dispatch killing a man on the cable
A ct .Me
railroad.
Life will inquire new tost, cheerfulness retnrn, it you willim pet yon r livtr and kidneys ?o the perform nee oi their innctions. Dr. J. H. McLean's Liver and Kidney Balm will stimulate thorn to healthful action. 11.00 pr bottle. "t
There are many accidents and dlBoascto which affect Stock and cause serious inconvonlenoe and loss to thi farmer in his work, which may be quickly remedied by i he use of Dr. J. H. McLoans Volcanic Oil L nimeat. Always let a good resolution have its way. The most delicate constitution can safely use Dr, J. H . McLean's Tar Wine Lung Balm; it is a sure remedy for coughs, loss of voice, and all throat and ung disease. ; If you am suffering with weak or inflamed eyes; or granulatin z eyelids, yo a can be quickly cured by using Br. J. H. McLean's Strengthening Bye Salve. 25 cer ts a box. Worth wlnu'ng a jask pot.
The Life of the flesh Es the blood, thereof;' pure blood moans healthy functional activity and this bears with it the certainty of quick restoration from sickness or accident. Or. J It. McLean's Strengtheoing Cordial and Blood Purifier gives pure rich blood, vitalizes and strengthens the wbblobody l.O0 per bottlo. " What is Going oh. in Society.' Rooohons.i Eye. Bob Bloores dog baa returned and was wagging his tail among his old friends 1 o-day. -
si
yarsdDdnlla
i
This successful medicine is a caref uBy-preparcd extract of the best remodlos ot iha vegetable kiugdora known to medical scienooes Alteratives Blood purifiers, "Diuretics, and, Tbaios, such aa Siirsaparina, YeUow Dock. BtUllngla, DandeUon, Juniper Berries, Mandrake, Wild Cherry Bark aiid other selected roots, barks and herbs. A ra ediclne, Uke onytliing else, can be tolrly judged only by its results. Wo point with satisfaction to tho glorious record Hood's Sarsaparilla has en tared for Itself upon the hearts of thousands of people who have personally or Indirectly been raUevci of terrible suffering which all other rsmedies failed to reach. Sold by all druggists, gl six for J5. Made only by C L HOOD & CO Jipothf icories LowiiU, Mass. , . . IOO Does One Dollar
in i ii mnifir i itot i
The Only "Way to Win Pmlilic qonfi-
dence,and Ultimately, Prosperity.
The Mercbunt.
Those store-keepers best; ;prosper in the long run who go forvard in a
straig ht legitimate way in th& every-day
performance. of their duties,, who allow it to be understood from the start, by the public, that they do business to
make money; that they are not engaged in a work of pure and disinterested phi
lanthropy for the benefi t of the public,
but are gelling goods with tho intention
and expectation of making a reasonable
profi t. People do not take a ny further
stock in the announcement, "Selling be
low cost." Any man of sense knows
thati to store-keeper can make a regular practice of selling goods below actual
cost without ultimate DanKruptcy. me
store-keeper who advertises tfood goods at reasonahle prices invariably wins the public confidence, and retains it so long as he deals honestly and squarely with his patrons. We are opposed to all "snide" principles in store-keepingj they do not pay. They are soon found out by the public, and give a merchant a bad reputation. If a customer has a grievance, if he feels that he has been imposed u pon, he invariably makes his injury appear in the
public eyes about five times as bad as it really is; but the dealer who keeps meritorious and pure goods, and sells them for prices proportionate to their real value, makes friends, wins the public confidence, and ultimately prospers in his business affairs. Texas liiquor Law New York Evening Post. ... Whether Texas votes prohibition into
the Constitution, next August, or not and the anti-party appears to be really alarmed lestthe amendmeEt may carrythe State is going to h&vo a law which will largely prohibit the ale of liquor afhtr tho 4th of July. On that dav an act goes into operation which forbids the use of a screen or any other device to obstruct the view into a saloon, and prohibits pool tables or my other tablen uatd for games of chance in such places. Sales are forbidden to minors, stndents and habitual drunkards and to any person whose wife, moth eir, daughter Or sis tor gives notice to the dealer through the sheriff or other peace officer not to seH to such person. A bond of $5,00( that he will strictly comply with tho
law must be furnished by every aeaier. This is about as severe a law as could bj f rimed and stop shorl; of prohibition. :
O1- nai
IT IS A PUREO' VEGETASie FREFARWiON
CURES
Mi DISEASES QFTHE!
1 1 vl V ss.
K5DNEYS
5EHMA-MANDRKE-BUCHU
AND OTHER EaUAUyEFnCIEMT REUHBES.
It has Mood tho Tost of Yoars.
is. Curing all Diseases of toe
BLOOD, UvEK, BXOW-
AGH. KIDHEYS.BO W -
EIS, Ac. It Purifies tho Blood, Invigorate? and Cleanses th e System.
BOWELS
sap?
Si! BY. liiALtDRUGGISTS
DYSPEPSIA.CONSTl rATlON, JATJNDICS, S1CKHEADACHE.BIL-
IOVS C0M3?LAITSf&C
disappear u t once under its beneficial influenceIt is pirely a Medicine asvHs cathartic proper -tios forhidn its use as a heverage. It Is pleasant to tno taste, and as easily taiea by . child
ren ac adulss.
PRIGKlY AS H BlTTfcRSCO Sole Ffopriotow, Sx.LCi8 ar.d KiKkis Cin
C112 T? 17 By return mail. Full IeBortp V JDuIji JVtloa Moody's New Tailor System
of bresu Cntthig. MOODY & (X).. Cincinnati, O
v pe Sat isiled Parry.? Newcastle Crescent.
There is one fact that offers ohBol tioh'. If we are not in the gas belt, we are in the corn belt, and are, nqfc avai ricious enouirh to want the-earth.
well to be content.
-f-
3k
Ifnnn nnj & htr Cmxartr
Wlton aho traa Child, h criAd for CmIow When she hectu6-Ml6i, ahe cinng to Ctori!
5
Tbe tnonnrvli ttt ill-cams Welsh rabbit. -' ; Take one of Dr. J. H. McLean's Little Livor and
K idny Pii !ot t night before rou go. to .bed an4 1 "
4 5
'A -
job wili hofiurpriB'fl now, Luoyaut and visorona
Only 25 cents a rial.
von will foul the next day.
Beet, easiest to u so and cheapest. -I'lso' or Catarrh. By druggists. fiOc.
Hemedy
Coughs and colds conio nn Invited, lut ion cam 'julckly got rid of thoae, with a fe doses of I,?tl.
11. Mc Loan's Tar Wino Lunc Balm. a
Abstinfii'o mahe tho heart grow tonor..
ii
a
imuuin rvuvnix KurcuBwii w
Innrmiues peculiar to tfeeir wax
r wfio auOTer fWtas-
mm-m BEST TONIC
" "... ..
This medicine combines Iron with pore rare bis tonics, and is invaluable for Disesaes peculiT U Wnmcn and all who lead sedentary Uvea. It IJb"c riches and Purifies tho Bloods ftimnlex the Appetite Strenth(iDi the Musclea nad -Nerves in fact, thoroughly invigorates : -. Clours the complexion, and makes the skin smocaa, ; It does not blacken the teeth, cause headache, or -v., produce couatipation nil ether Iron medicine do. : Mas, Nancy Wright, Indianapolis, Ind.. asm : I have used Brown's Iron Bitters for neuraigu. of the stomach with greater, benefit than any other . medicine I have nsecL" ' Miu?. JosEPniNEGrflsON,Morton,fnd.,says: "Insed 'y : B rawn's Iron Bitters for female weakness, and it bap d.iuo me more good than any medicine I ever use-i."
Alias Isjl Wzluams, Evan rule. Ind., aays: "It avf nned Brown's Iron Bittere fur fematd weakness uw gonoral debUity with moot satisfactory reealte," ,.
HftnuinA Tim above Trade M ark and crossed rdli
on wrapper. Take no other. Made only by
BROWN CHEMICAL CCN, BALTIMORE. M
is
1 ONLY IR0B v ' : -
eafll WUT rurify tbe BLOOD reg
ITinUrVfi nnA f
IALTH an
OK of YOUTH. DyerDBia.Y?Bnl
.of Appet its. J ndigestionLaA of. - -
Btmngtn antt liraa reeling so
soiuteiy ctiroa: oonee, mus
cles ana nerves receive new.
tore.' r Duvens iaojoiwi
and ennijrioa Brain mweft
r it wii.Qaaj-a' Buffering from complaints peea 3 i&nilQ lt:ir(o tltri IX Will iSlidll
'. : i . . -1 kV 't lir-mmnlr nn
-rt.'. s,TMf corn, iilVHSUCiwu , iicii.vj'v
Vlt attempts at counterfoitinK only ndd to tfP :
'arity. Do not exnoriment-jTOt Qiuginat. ah m- Tw UADTCD'C 1 llPR PILLS
f lWr I'lluHnntlnn 1 n tli ul.lint and SI OK
iHe.idsche. Samplo Doso and JDrcani-Bcok etiA .m riwniDt r f two cental r, poatagti :
f HF 5ft BARTER S0iCIN?C0v ST. LOUIS,
ILL'S
iNsiimsLipmM
aft well m;
Thn NAatp.RL Mf-mt Attnactlvo
Oroamentai JHuna asaae Go and sco thorn or eend tor clrcuUrg U tfas SIDNEY PLANING MILL Co. Local Agonts Wanted.
. CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH
PENNYROYAL
The Original and Only Genuine; ; Cafe and always" ReUaWo..-' Bewarof trorthlera Imita itona, Indies, &k your lrttitll for "chlctscworV EnaUfth" and tiUce no ottier, or inclose 4o. (stunns) to ns for nartusulans in letter by return malL. llaaui
PAPKR. CH1CHKUTEK. CHEMICAL CO.,
old by lrnKKlt every wbercAk-for ter's EnjrUsn" Pennyroyal Plile. Take
Pqu.ii, 1'hllu.l.. FSU
AHt ror "i'falchefcv
n ifcea
A Tne oldest medicine tn the vrnld is probaMy I
I" . Dr. Isaao Thomt3Bonr8
Uelebrated EVE WATEI
This article Is a carefully prepared Physic! in1! pre?: s&rlption, and has been In consUnt use nearly a pen f-a v
R
J
and notwlihtndlng the many other prei arat toas
t hnv.hin infrodno.ad Into the ni&ritet. tne sate
i hin Art.trie la constant lv IncreaslDjr. If tie dtreje
aons are ft-Uowedtt wtU never fan, -We p
parJcttlssfj
SONS COw TROT, WL.
nvlte the aaontlon of nhyBlclansta Jtoniertje.
JOHK U rHOMPSOST,
W ACH I N ER Y, BOLTS, ETC. IBrj3LAKAPOIiIS Bolt and Machine Works. Heavy and Ugh t machinery made to ordet . Brida. oof and trnss bolts aseecialty. O. B. OXiSBN, rorietnr Tndiannnnlis. Ind-.. .
iv4 CUaCS WHEEE ALL ELSE FAILS.
TJseinUma. Sold by oruggista.
isiri5
SAVE Your
, Fruit evap' ration Bimplified. The rnly romroon souse fmit dryer; Gih.iI Agent UJilfd- me t Citulars frre. Write at once. JT. M. sIBll 416 g. Mgidrilnn St. IndiamaiwsHa In TT T TifTTltf" .should wear c Saspeusarf A JjJJ JUJSJJl Bandage forco.mfot. Sliktl
lent by ns ail. Address O. W. avEiL A BMK,;
8t. PpUauelPhla. 1'a. uircriars ix
sent by
9 N. 8th
-M 4
24 7
When wrltluz to Adve)rHBore rears to; t onfer a favor lv vaentjouing tote paper.;
SO
FKRK. Lines noi under the harae'sf-io ;Wrtta
- --- . ;
taiid with the above uomei.vir'i.'atut trriirto -.nndViU ko;p you dry JJnajg0; .,11 -
This represents a healthy uie.
hrougoout its various scenes.
mtsmiha life as thevei
Who use the Smith's BUe l
Smith' BILE BEANW V32WSg ?aY?
dlictlFancL. promptly en
Tiley conui oi a.vcgeiaww
neya
has no e
i aril In medical science
and sJynepMa
Skin
combination that
They euro Conatlpa-
a "Snat all l forms of fvei cnllla SindfeTer, eall ntonee, I ana Bright' diaoaae. Send 4 cento postage for a sanW . .. truth rr ivbat wo sav. Prl
;,,ri ..fa-n. dd: -w;i5: osk k an.
The original VtiOt
panel sUe, of th-s pTcturel
sent on receipt, cmsa m stamps. Address. St. UllMlft
CQh PitOPBIETOBa.
25 cent per
Sold hy dragflMi
flaaMjMMHauejaaBBHHn -.
for Infants and Children.
"C as tori la ia so vrell adaptod to chlldwin that I Castortit cun Col! Ctenpw nvnmmN ItMmnwiw tAMViuMMintinn I BOUT BtOmaCh, DjAOTKTia, KTUOtaUO,
known to me." H. A, Ajucaxa, M.D.,
Ulflo. Oxford ,,BiwklyalH.T.
KUls Worruj, givea ftieH sfta P
f
4t b 'I P S1J
PMISHHHIHHRHHHMHPHBBflBaVHaMHH
