Bloomington Telephone, Volume 7, Number 49, Bloomington, Monroe County, 19 April 1884 — Page 2

Bloomington Telephone , BLOOMINGTON, INDIANA. WALTER R BRABFOTE, - - PiiBXJSHm i

THE SEWS CONDENSED.

CONGRESSIONAL PROCEEDINGS The Senate took up the education bill for the final struggle on the Tib inafc, Mr, YoorUeea making the closing speech in its fa. or. Amendments by Mr. Hoar were azreed to, that the amount to be distributed shall be $7,uoO,ouO the nrstyear, $iO,r00,ooo the second, and 19,000,006 the third, then diminishing $2,000,tt)oyearly, .and thatsU children have an. enual opportunity for education.- An amendment by Mr. Sherman was carried, that the money shall be used only for common schools not sectarian in character. The bill was then passed. The House of Representatives passed a joint resolution gtrm? court reports and sets of the Revised Statutes to the Ctnemaatt Law Library. Resolutions were offered ealllnf? for Information regarding th threatened confiscation of the Amerron College tn Italy, and authorising the President to nil the vacancy in the International Prison Commission. Bills were introduced to incorporate the Cherokee and Arkansas River and the Montana and Idaho Railroad Companies. On suspension of the rule, a resolution was adopted making bills for the erection of public buildings a continuing special order tor April. A motion by Mr. Converse to suspend the rules and pass the bill restoring the duty of IxtfO on wool was debated for talf an hour by Meters. Mr Kin ley, Morrison, Hard, and Converse, and was defeated by 119 to 126. A resolution declaring it unwise to reduce the taxn whisky was adopted by 179 to 33. Congress had a dull and nnintoresting cession on the 8th test. The Senate passed bills to permit the bridging of the Rio Grande at Eagle Pass and Laredo, Texas. A bill was introduced for the deposit in the Treasury of the receipts of the money-order system, and the payment of Its expenses out of the appropriations. After some debate on the naval appropriation bill, Mr. Hale gave notice of an amendment to set aside $1,750,009 for the ereetioa of two factories for making guns from sixinch caliber to one hundred tons. The House of Representatives passed bills for the appointment of a commission to run "She boundary line between Indian Territory and Texas; declaring that the Supreme Court of each Territory shall consist of a Chief Justice and three associates; and providing that Governors of Territories must have been for two years residents thereof before their appointment. Is the Senate on April 9, the whole time was devoted to debate on the naval appropriation bill, during which Mr. Vest created something of a sensation by charging that the

Secretary of the Navy would allow his personal feelings and partisan bias to do tuimrs'in a public capacity that the liest InteraV of the country would not warrant. In the House a struggle arose as to which of the mauy pending special orders should obtain precedence in consideration. Mr. Dingley essayed to bring up the Shipping bill, but the effort was unsuccessful, the rrotion being defeatedyeas 76, nays 15& Mr. Reagan met with like fate, his motion to consider the Inter-State Commerce bill being voted down yeas 101, nays l'JO. The Speaker ruled that the unfinished business was on the Oregon Central Land-Grant bill. Mr. Stockalager, asked the House to consider the pnhUo building bills, and moved to go into committee of the whole fcr the consideration of such bills. The antagonists of these measures and the more prominent advocates of the Oregon Central bin united in opposition to the motion, but they were unsuccessful, and the House, by a vote of yeas 160, nays 61, went into committee of the whole, Mr. Wellborn in the chair. Bills for public buildings at Keokuk, Iowa, and Waco, Tex., were passed. A communication from the Secretary ol tbe Navy, urging an appropriation of $175,000 for a new revenue cruiser for the waters of Alaska was presented to the Senate on the 1 Ottwinst. A favorable report was made on the bill to authorize the bridging of the Mississippi at St. Louis. Bills were introduced to protect employes of railroads engaged in inter-State commerce, and to forfeit the land grant of the New Orleans and Yfcksbnrg road. After prolonged debate on the Naval Appropriation bill, the Senate adjourned to the 14th. In the House, Mr. Eaton reported a substitute for the Senate bill governing the election of President and Vice President. A joint resolution was introduced directing the Postmaster General to apply the most effective means to protect the mails on postal cars from lire. The House w?at into committee of the whole to consider hil ls for pubtte building Favorable reports were mads on measures for postomces at New Albany, Pittsburgh, Chattanooga, and Augusta, Me., but the House adjourned without taking action thereon. Xn Senate bill offering a rewtird of $25, 000 tm reselling or ascertaining the fate of the Grwry arctic expedition passed the House of Bepreeentstives on the llth lost. The House adopted a resolution declaring nhe charges m&de by Mr. KeitescatnrtH. V. Boynton not snstatr ed by evidence. A bin for the forfeiture of the Borthern Pacific land grant was reported. A message from the President was present, nrglnc the appropriation of $if,ooo,ooo for armaments for sea-coast fortifies ions. An even

ing session was held for the consideration of pension bills. The Senate was not in session.

David tow, the pilot of the Ohio Htver steamboat Scioto, which was sunk in a collision with the John Lcunas near West Cumberland, W. Va July i, 1883, was sentenced in the United States District Court at Parxersbnrg to two years imprisonment at bard labor and a fine of $500, he having been found guilty of manslaughter in connection with the accident, in which several lives were lost Keller, it was stated, was drunk on the occasion of the collision. The will of Mrs. Oswald Ottendorfer, of New York, covering property valued at $3,600,000, bequeaths $25,000 for distribution to employes of the Staatt-Zritung and scatters about $75,000 among charitable and educational institutions John DUlman, wifemurderer, was executed at Alston, Pa. Thk exposition of the Keely motor has been again postponed, as the "work of perfecting the graduation is not finished. . . . The Gloucester fishing schooner Nelson J McFariand and its crew of five men were lost in a recent gale. . . .N. B. Pierson and Thomas Vedder, brothers-in-law, of Suspension Bridge, N. Y., drove to Goat Island and quarreled. Vender shot Pierson through the need and then it is supposed committed suicide by jumping into the Niagara Bap ids. Maj. Thomas E. Moore, a leading member of the Salvation Army of America, was arrested in New York on the charge of grand larceny.

Dr. Salmon, the Veterinarian of the Department of Agriculture, who has spent some time in the portions of ganWi Iowa, and Illinois where ft was alleged, some time ago, the foot and mouth disease had proTailed, nas made a preliminary report to his chief, Br. Loring, in which he states that the cattle of the districts in question show no symptoms of contagious disease; that all the indications ot the prevalence of the foot-and-mouth disease are absent. He is of opinion that the cattle in these places, died of ergot and exposure. Br. Salmon is also of opinion that there has never been a case of foot-and-mouth disease in the United States. At the session of the Wyoming Stock Growers Association, at Cayenne, last week, it was reported no eaee of oontageous disease had occurred in Wyoming, Colorado, Nebraska, or Montana. Two distilling companies of Pekin, Illinois, bare brought suit for $6,000 each against the Western Export Association for damages by restraining their productive capacity in the interest of the pool A special grand jury, comrosed wholly of leading business men, has beon impaneled at Cincinnati to investigate the riot and the burning of the courthouse.... The Adjutant General of Ohio has placed under arrest Col. Mott and Liei t. Col. Phillips of the Fourth Regiment, for misconduct while on duty at the Cincinnati riots.... I a the Sharon divorce case at Sun Francisco, a temale witness undertook to draw a revolver on one of tfce counsel, and her son made a similar attempt. Judge Sulli van declined, to hear further testimony unless the policeman at the entrance to the courtroom would certify that ao one present was armed

It was learned in Cleveland that two young acions of wealthy families, named W. H. Hoard tn an and Gussie bisseH, were recently married in a suburban church. The young lady's mother offered to take her to Paris, when sho confessed the elopement. The Board of Trade at Minneapolis has petitioned the Postmaster General to change aH the mails as far east as New York and Boston so that they will certainly arrive in Minneapolis before 4 p. m., as it interferes with thoir dinner hour.... The Burlington, .Cedar Kapids & Northern Kail road Directors have increased their stock to $30,000,000. N. Fleetwood and wife, living four miles south of Oakland, Coles County, 111., were brutally murdered a few nights since. The assassins broke the old mnn s skull with some heavy instrument, and to make sure of their wort cut his throat. They then murdered his wife, set fire to the bed, and escaped without wakening the rest of the family, who were sleeping upstairs. No reason can be given for the murder. The old folks were inoffensive, honest country people. The tragedy produced the most intense excitement in the neighborhood.... The widow of Alexander C. Wingate was awarded $5,000 by the United States Court at Indianapolis against the Ohio and Mississippi Railroad for the death of her husband, who was shot on the cars of that road by a drunken passenger. The leading creditors of Brown, fionneli & Co., of Youngstown, Ohio, have matured plans to place that extensive iron works on its feet. The Chicago Tribunes special correspondent In the Idaho gold fields sums up the situation thus: "It is nonsense to write the camp down, as some are doing. It is criminal to write it up to boom it, as the Northern Pacific and a few subsidized papers are doing. The man does nov. live who can say of his own knowledge that the district is not the richest. goldVproducinji? region ever

discovered. On the other hand, no one can

pretend to know that the amount of gold to be taken out will be anything like adequate

to the excitement". ...The members of the Western whisky pool convened in Chicago,

and Induced the disgruntled distillers of

Pekin to withdraw their suits for damages.

H. B. Millers states that the Western Export Association is perfectly Folvc-nt; that after

May 1 production will be reduced to 20 per cent.

of the running capacity, and that the price

of whisky will be left at $1.15 per gallon By a vote of nine to five the Galesburg (III.)

City Council increased the saloon license fee from $600 to $1,300 and changed the closing

hour from 11 p. m. to 10 p. m.....Juau B. Patron, ex-Speaker of the New Mexican Leg

islature, was assassinated at Las Vegas by a

cowboy Heavy rains have fallen in California recently. The rivers are swollen ami there have been mjwy washouts.

THK SOUTH. Six negroes, of eleven in a boat, were drowned by the upsetting of their skiff while crossing the Mississippi River, near Vicksburg. Fbank James, the Missouri bandit, when arraigned at Huntsville, Ala., pleaded not guilty to the Mussel Shoals robbery, and his trial was set for April 16. Solomon Fbohav, an old and wealthy citizen of Louisville, who since October has become coo feeble to move about, has sued for divorce on the ground that his wife had confessed making several attempts to poison him, and had finally fletL L. B. Bedmoxd, the famous illicit distiller of South Carolina, is to bo returned to Columbia Prison from Auburn Penitentiary, where he is serving a term for killing revenue officers. Senator Butler secured the change by showing that the prisoner is a cripple, carrying seven bullets, and is dying by inches in a cold climate. The Pocahontas Va) mine was entered last week, and the remains of the victims ol' - the . explosion were removed. Some were headless trunks, others had toe arms and legs torn away, and all were unrecognisable, save by their wearing apparel or othefspecial marks. Death was believed to be instantaneous in all cases, . WASHINGTON John T. Cbamek, a clerk in the Treasury Department, was called into the corridor by a Washington grocer and badly pummeled, for writing insulting letters to a lady. Soon afterward Secretary Folgcr ordered Cramer's dismissal. .. .Gen. Adam Badeau, Consul General to Cuba, has resigned, politic aiThe municipal election in Cincinnati was one of the most quiet hold for years, and resulted in the election of the Democratic ticket by about 2,000 majority, in a very light vote. The Republicans elected their municipal ticket in Cleveland by about 2,000

majority. The Columbus and Toledo elections were carried by the Republicans, while SteubenviUe and Newark were captured by the Democrats. At Muskegon, Mich , the Derao-eratic-Workingmen's ticket was triumphant. The Democrats also carried .Jackson, Ypsilantt, Niles, Port Huron, Hillsdale, Charlotte, Adrian, and Benton Harbor, while the Republicans were successful at St. Joseph, Big Hapids, Battle Creek, East Saginaw, Saginaw City, Howland and Kalamazoo. At Lansing, the capital of Michigan, the Republicans elected the Mayor, while the Democrats elected the Clerk and Treasurer and gained four Alderman. The Democrats carried the day at the municipal elections in Keokuk and Dubuque, Ipwa. At a conference of Independent Republicans in New York City the prevailing sentiment was in favor of Edmunds and IJncoln. Blaine had friends, but it was urged that he could not carry New York State. The Independents will send a delegation to labor with the delegate s to the National Republican Convention. The Democratic State Convention of Pennsylvania appointed sixty Randall delegates to Chicago, but left them uninstructed. W. W. H. Davis, a county editor, was nominated tor Congressman-at-largc At the Republican Congressional Convention for the Albany District, after the election of a presiding officer, a mob made a rush for the platform and threw otf the Chairman and Secretary. A scene of wild disorder was followed by the appointment in the same room of rival delegations to Chicago J. G. Cannon has been renominated for Congress by the Republicans of the Fifteenth Illinois District The Republicans of the District of Columbia selected Postmaster Conger and Perry Carson as delegates to Chicago, and voted down a resoluton instructing them for Logan. It is thought in Washington on account of the intimate- relations between Tilden and Randall, thai; the failure of the Pennsylvania Democratic Convention to indorse the former is a sure indication that he will not be a candidate for the Presidency. . . . The New Hampshire Democratic State Convention for the election of delegates to the Chicago Convention will be held May 31. District conventions to select delegates to the National Republican Convention were beld in the various Congressional Districts of Indiana on the 10th inst. Following is a eummary of the preferences, so far as known: First District Gen. Sherman, 2; Second District Unknown, 2; Third District Unknown, 2; Fourth District Harrison, 2; Fifth District Harrison, 2; Sixth DistrictEdmunds, 1; Blaine. 1; Seventh DistrictHarrison, 2; Eighth District Blaine, 2; Ninth District Unknown, 2; Tenth District Blaine, 2; Eleventh District Harrison, 2; Twelfth District Unknown, 2; Thirteenth District Unknown, In the House of Representatives, at Washington, Mr. Hopkins, Chairman of the special Keifer-Boynton committee, reported that the charges preferred by ex-Speaker Keifer against Gen. Boynton, the Washington correspondent, had not been sustained. Gen. Keifer was present, hut mado no objection to the adoption o.K the report. It is understood that Mr. K elf or tried to induce the Republican leaders, particularly Hisco kand Reed, to oppose the adoption, but they refuged.

The ex-Speaker baa now determined to appeal to his constituents for a double vindication. He wants them to re-elect him to Congress and send him as a delegate to the Katioiial Republican Convention. . . .The Missouri delegation to the Chicago Republican Convention is said to stand 11 for Blaine, 0 for Arthur, 7 for Logan, rnd 5 for Edmunds. TUB WEEK'S FIRE RECORD. The week's record of fires, where a loss of $10,000 and upward was involved, is shown in the annexed tabulated summary: IjOHHPS. Kcranton, Iowa, business property (J0.0JQ Aurora, nd. Freiburg's distillery l(),o:KJ Bt. Louis Mo., wire rope factory 50,000 Snreveport, La,, cotton mill 80,000 Philadelphia, woolen mill lOw East Fajdnaw, Mich., furniture factory.. 15,000 Bert&mont, Mich., saw-mill 20,000 Hampton, Iowa, grain elevator 15,000 West Point, Ga., cotton warehouses )50,60) Parsons, Kai., flouring mill lo,o!M New York, apartment house 2'O,OO0 Philadelphia, malt house 0ty0Q Mobcrly. Mn., railway warehouses ao,WHJ Chatham, Va., business property 15,j01 Pensaeoia, Fla., bank and ntores 33,000 Boston, warehouse and contents H0,000 Marseilles, HI., C ark's paper mill 60,000 Port Deposit, Md stores 35,000 St. Louis, Mo., business property 75,000 Montreal , tea warehouse 30,000 Athens, Texas business bloetc 80,000 EvansviUe. Ind., small stores 10,000 Muncie, Ind., barn and live stock lo,ooo Waverly, N. Y., railway shops 20,000 Churchill, Md carriage factory l,ooo

Hubbardton, Mich., teu business houses. 30,000 Huntsville, Tex., a square of stores 30t0fW) Hampton, Va,, thirty buildings . 125,uf.0 Athol, Mass., Cook's block 25,000 Montreal, iron foundry Co, MM) ( orsicana, Tex., wholesale grocery store . 60,000 Van Alstyne, Tex., live stores 25,000 Penpacola, Kla., hotel, depot, etc 65,000 Augusta, Ark., business property .... 15,0 0 Winnipeg. Manitoba, planing mills 20,000 Detroit, J)aWy Times ottice 20,000 Laucsville, Minn., stores 10,000 Knowlcsville, N. Y.. business property. . . 16,000 GENBRAX.

After a spirited debate the Canadian House passed 6 measure restricting Chinese immigration to the Dominion. . . .Prof. Cyrus Northmp, of Yale College, has nccepied tho Presidency of the Minnesota State University J. B. A. B&IQT7E, an extensive contractor for water-works in the Canadian towns, has been compelled to suspend, with liabilities of $r5,000 The Calumet and Heel a Mining Company has for the first time in seventeen yenrs passed its dividend, causing its stock to drop in the Boston market from 235 to 200 The steamer Grecian landed at Boston 380 i m in igr an ts who were assisted from Galway by tho Tuke fund to the extend of from $5 to $40 per family. Nearly all have started westward. Most of them had been evicted from Irish estates. . . .The complications arising from the collapse of the Garden City Warehouse Company were increased by the arrest; of H. J. Dike ou a capias secured by the First National Bank of Chicago. J. T. Pierce, City Marshal of Mitchell, Dakota, was murdered by a saloon-keeper whom he attempted to arrest. . . .Burglars, obtained money packages containing 81,00(1 in the Adams Express office at Allegheny City. They were frightened off by the watchman when about to blow open the safe. . , .F. . Bates has been held to bail in Chicago in the amount of $4,800 for swindling sixteen Italian laborers, whom he brought from Marshall, Mich., on pretense of employment on a railway at New Orleans. . . . Two thieves drove boldly up an alley in Wheeling, at 4 o'clock in the morning, placed a ladder nt a second-story window of a dry goods store and carried off $10,000 worth ofl velvets and silks while a clerk lay asleep beneath them. . . .In front of Bunker Hill Monument, in Boston, in the duytlme, Mary A. Buggies was held up by a thief while his partner ran off with her shopping-bag. Thomas Scott, a well-known thief, lying in jftil at Jackson, Mich., made to the Mayer and nine leading citizens surprising statements in regard to the Crouch murders. The Piosecutiug Attorney then offered him $5,000 in cash, a pardon from the Governor, and a ticket to Liverpool if he would divulge the name of the murderer. His refusal to do so stamps him as a liar..,, James Me Henry, the Knglish railway magnate, was arrested by a Federal marshal on board a steamship about to leave New York, on account of a judgment obtained years ago by the Krle Road. Bather than be delayed, he turned over to President Jewett bonds and stocks aggregating 81,00,000, with a written promise to pay the remainder. All the stores in the City of Mexico and throughout the republic were closed on the Tth of April as a protest against President Gonzales' efforts to collect the stamp tax. A revolution was regarded us imminent should the demand be pressed. It was thought that a compromise might be effected if the merchants would consent to pay a license fe& of $10t in lieu of the lax, one-half payable :n advance. Soldiers were under arms at the barracks, and inflammatory placards had been issued The Gould and Wabash Itailroad systems have ordered a 10 per cent, reduction in the wages of employes and officers who receive 8100 per .month and over. Postha6teb General Gkesham has made arrangements by which a fast-mag train on the Central Pacific Bond will here. after be run west from Ogden, Utah, making the time to San Francisco in thirty-nine hours. The mail time between New York and San Francisco is thereby reduced twenty

four houi-s. The Governor General of Canada will visit Manitoba this summer, and make a brief stop at Chicago H. C. Atkins, Assistant General S uperintendent of the St. Paul Road.

fell in the street at La Crosse, from a stroks of paralyuis.

A man calling himself Dr. Coss recently wrote from Chicago to Sir John A, Macdonald that he could unveil a plot ma

tured in the United States to destroy tho

Canadian Parliament buildings with dynamite. Cosh was invited to visit Ottawa, where

he is said to have given satisfactory evidence

to sustain his charges.

Col. Aguero, the Cuban leader who

erossed from Key West, made his way toward the interior and was joined by numerous factions. The governmenthas called upon Spain

for more troops, and has re-established the censorship over dispatches.

A coal operator well known through

out the United States, when interviewed in

Chicago, fitated his belief that anthracite will sell at from 25 to 50 cents per ton less this

summer than last, as the pool has but little strength. Soft coal is lower, and the produc

tion is increasing.,.. The Mexican Govern

ment secured peace with the mercantile

class by agreeing that only goods actually sold shall be stamped.

Charles Keade; the popular English

novelist, died in Lon Ion the other day, aged

70 years. For some months ho had been iu

delicate health. Other deaths among notables

during the week were: M. Jean Baptists Dumas, a French litterateur and statesman ; Dr. James G. Itnmsey, physician and author, of Nashville, Tenn.:

Ex-Congreesman Chatles IX Hodges, of larrollton. 111.: Harrison Gray Otis, a distin

guished citizen of lioston; ox-Lieut. Gov. Jabex Fitch, of Ohio' Emanuel Gerbel, German poet: Jem Ward, the old-time Knulish

pugilist; Rev. Tho m us A. Cheek, a noted Iowa

colored minister; Henry Hitchcock, of Gulesburg? 111., a prominent railroad man; James Lake, of Hock ford, 111., who was Quarter

master under Gen. Kosecrans; Gustav Kichter, famous Germ an painter; William Procter, the well-known soap manufacturer, and Alf

Burnett, a noted humorist, both of Cincin

nati; ex-Btate Treusurcr John M. Milliken.

of Ohio.

OKKlGN. Sib Evelyk Baking, the British

Agent in Cairo, has oecn requested by his

Government to tn' to restore peace between

Nubar Pae.ba and Gilford Lloyd. Tho latter official will bo made to act in subordination

to tho Egyptian Premier in the future. Nu

bar is disposed to be bo Ub tied at this. English

officials at Cairo, however, do no; seem disposed to trust to the Armenian's word The police of Moscow have captured one of the assassins of Col. Sudeikin, the father of the spy system in Russia. One-half of Mandalay, the capital of the Kingdom of Burmah, a city of 90,000 people, has been burned. -Gen. Gordeu hat been ordered to withdraw from Khartoum as soon as possible. James Egan was arrested in Bir-

; mingham, England, on the charge of being a dynamite conspirator and having explosives

in his houRo. Another dynamiter named

Daly was arrested at Birkenhead, '.tnree explosive bombs were found in his possession.

ADDITIONAL HEWS. Washington telegram : "Virginia politicians are in a flurry of excitement c-vei the report that Senator Riddleberger and John O. Wise and Benjamin S. Hooper, Headjustet Congressmen, paid a visit to Mr. Blaine and remained closeted with him for a considerable length of time. This is interpreted to mean that Mahone is making terms with Bioine, believing him to be the strong est candidate The straight-out Virginia Republicans, or Wickhani-Dezendort party, will have, it is said, one-half of the delegation, and, as their votes will be cast for Blaine, Mahone now proposes to give him the rest if he can secure for himself the recognition that such an otf er should be worth." ....Gen. Denver, in whose honor Denver, Col., was named, and who was ut one time Governor of Kansas, is the latest person mentioned as a Democratic Presidential can didate. He has a literary bureau at work for him. Eight prisoners confined in the jail at Gainesville, Green County, Ark., escapee by overpowering the jailer. A posse of ch izeus started in pursuit. One of the prisoners, a burglar, was killed, and three were secured alter they had been severely wounded. The jailer was dangerously wounded by his assailants. A commttee of stockholders of the wrecked Pacific National Bank ot Boston has forwarded to Washington a series of lourteen charges against Comptroller Knox, supported by evidence, and threatens to institute criminal proceedings. Knox says he will not resign until these charges are thoroughly investigated. Isews comes from the Idaho gold regions of the discovery of quartz leads on Eagle Creek, said to be as rich in paying ore as the Leodville carbonate. The first discovery was made by a boy. The prospectors are greatly elated, and anticipate a splendid harvest. Many claims have been already bought by capitalists. One vein is from si to ten feet in width, and assays 20 per ton. The snow is fast disappearing, and tho prospectors will soon be able to enter fully on the work of mining The train-load of corn contributed by the people of Butler County, Kansas, to the Ohio River sufferers was sold at auction in Cincinnati at from two to three cents per bushel above market rates, realizing 7,100. .... Victor W. Clough, of Geneseo, ill., made 100 miles on roller-skates in live minutes less than ten hours. When he left the track the musclesof his legs were swollen and numb. . . . Theodore A, Hurd, of Leavenworth, has been appointed AsEociate Justice of th Supreme Court of Kansas, to succeed D. J. Bxewer, who was called to the Federal Bench. . . . An unsuccessful attempt to break jail at Milwaukee by fifteen prisoners, w.is prevented by tho jailer's w.fe, who, hearing the disturbance, notified the police. Jailer Walsh received severe injuries. The London Observer, the organ of the clubs, says that if the American law can not reach the dynamiters it ought to be altered so that it may. It urges the British Government to make a demand in this direction, and says that Americans should be hold to the doctrine urged by them at the time of the Alabama claims that it is 'the duty of every government to have 6uch municipal law as M-itt prevent injury to citizens of friendly states. " There are serious strikes in various parts of Germany. Jn Saxony most of the stonecutters, masons, and glassworkertt have

Struck. There is general disiatisf action among the carpenters also. The spread of the strike movement seriously alarms the capitalist classes throughout ttie empire.... Mr. Kenny, a ParueUi;e member of Parliament, in a speech to his coustituants at Ennis, Ireland, quoted with approval Biggar's description ot larl IS pence r as a drunken housebreaker A letter from Japan states that tbe army is to ae increased to 100,000, and that the new conscription laws require three years service of all male citizeus between 17 and 40 years of age.... Edward M. Smith, of New York, United States Consul at Mannheim, Germany, died recently of 'ipoplexy in an English railway car According to advices from Hue, theAnnamItes state thatHoang Ho has been evacuated Ghishin, banker, of Charicroi and Antwerp, Belgium, has failed. Liabilities, &3,000,000..,.A new Itusslan loan of $7,500,D00 will be devoted to the construction of railways Marquis Tseng has been summoned co Pekin. It is expected he will return to England. In the House of Representatives, on ths 12th, favorable reports were mads on bills to permit fruit-growers to manufacture brandy without the payment of tax, granting lettercarriers a month's leave of absence each yiar, and for the acceptance of the Illinois and Michigan Canal. Eulogies on the late Representative Herndon of Alabama, were delivered by nine members. The Senate was not in session.

THE MARKET, NEW YOIUC llEEVES $ 7,00 ?3 7.75 (lOfJH 6.0J M 6.75 L'Youis Western 3.00 5.W tYUKAT No. 2 Chicago 922.$ No. 'iilcci 97 i .W :'OHNXo. '2 55 ilh .07 Oats White 89 & .i'JJs ouk Meas 1C.50 vtl7.'Ki I,Ak (J8&t9 .00 CHICAGO. Ukeves Choice t" Prime Stcera. flii ; G."5 ran to Gcod 5.50 ..(! fi.uo Couuuon to Medium.. . . fi.oO . 7 J :lO(;s 5.'25 (1.0) r'l.ouK Faucv White Winter Kx 5.;o ($.1.75 (iood to Choice Soring... 4.r. vc 6,'i'i Wheat No. . Sprim: 7 & .si No. -2 Winter 78 .70 "'OKN No. 2 4 .VJ UTS No. l il3 .'j6 ItYK No. ... '5 tft ,5(S OAKLEY N.I. '2 t-5 .t7 HUT! EC Choice Creamery S7 ft .29 Erne D iit y 24 .27 Potatoes Pcachblows :;j (' . aft .-; is Fresh ift .! Pork aicKfl ?ni'J.fio liARD. , .OS (l ,08 J Si MILWAUKEE. Wheat No. V b. & .m Cons No. 2 63 .&5 Oats-No. 2 Hi .aft HAIiLEY No. 2 C: ( i . 5 POKK MesM J'UO ltU0 Laud a.00 uo ST. LOUIS Wpeat No. a Red i.Oli i.07J COKN Mixed 4ii t .43 Oats No. 2. M .:iG fVE ?? ..r6 I'okk Mess lC.no tat.7ft t,AE - oy ta .wis CINCINNATI. Wheat No. 2 Bed 1.01 1.02ft COKN M (01 .M Oats -Mixed Mn v$ ,:iG Pork Mesa 16.2ft ("1 V75 LAlil) US tit ,0Sft TOLEDO. WirKAT-No. 2 Red 90 .02 Cons No. 2 ail ,r,5 Oats No. 2 .37 .ss DKTUOIT. Fmrn B.ftO (it Wheat No l While t tf .'; roitN -Mixed -;9 ?J .51 Oats No. 2 Waite :w si .;; Pome Mess. 10.5) 20.0 J INDIANAPOLIS. Wheat No. 2 lied w col 1.00 CoiiX Mived , .47 itf .4l Oats Mixed n) ,;n KAST LIBERTY. Cattle Ret 4.75 r0 k.75 Fair 4.25 (ft. z.m Common 4 0) c'i 4.5 Hons r..ro ii. ;ft Sheet, 3.75 i ft. 23

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Dr. E. C. West's Nerve and Brain Treatment, a guaranteed specific frr Hysteria, Dizziness, Convulsion' Fits, Nervous Neuralgia, Headache, Nervous Prostration cansed by the use of alcohol or tobacco, Wakefulness, Mental Depression, Softening of the Bruin resulting in Insanity and lead ing to misery, decay and death, Premature Old age, Barrenness, Loss of Power in either sex, Involuntarp Losses and Spermatorrhoea caused by over-exertion, of the brain, self-abuse or over-indulgence. Each box contains one month's treatment. One dollar a box, or she boxes for five dollars; sent by mail prepaid on receipt of price. We guarantee six boxes to cure any case. With each order received by us for six boxes, accompanied with five dollars, we will send ,he purchaser onr written guarantee to refund the money if the treatment does not effect a cure. Guarantees issued only by H. LINDLEY. Bloomington, Ind.

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Mishawaxa, Ind, Deo. 1, 1882, Dr. I'ewgieixy: Dear Kr Overwork baa done for me what r, does for mnuy. Desiring to benefit sufferIngwomen, X add my testimony to the value of Zaft-Puora. For Ave year I suffered greatly with Prolapsus, being obliged to use a supporter during all those painful, weary years; but, thanks to your medicine, I wear it no more. I laid it off after using one and a naif botijps. I am not well, but I work all the time, tlad am better than I ever expected to be. You may use my letter, and if any one wishes to write me for more information, give them my full address. Miss C. O. DR. PBCOIS" VILLB' 1U- APfU Dear J8ir:i am more than pleased with the effect of your Zoa-Fliora in our daughter's case. X am surprised to see how she bas improved. fine 1b gaining in weight and color, nud I think feels better than she ever did; her nerves are sfready.-and the distress in her chest la entirely gone. I firmly believe that Zoa-Phoraisalithathas saved her life. I

au. willing you should use my letter, for I am not afraid to tell what a "wonderful cure your medicine la. Yours respectfully, T Mks. Sarah Randolph. N. B. This was a case of suppression From Mrs. John Spider, No. 28 Wilt St, Fort Wayne. Ind. I have suffered for sixteen years with spasmodic pain in my head and general nervous debility. Recently 1 bad a severe attack of pain In my head, caused by weakness and nervous exhaustion. I thought I should die. My husband said we would test Zoa-Phor thoroughly. He gave it to me according to directions fisr severe cawes, and in less than two hours I had complete relief. advise all ladies who suffer from nervous or sick headache, or any form of female weakness, to use zoa-Phora. There is no mecUciae to comp,re with it May 15, 1882, Our Pamphlet on DIstsei of Women and Children Sent gratis. Every woman above 15 years Of age, especially Mothers should read it. Address Ii. A CO Sold by Druggists. Kalamazoo, Mich. All letters marked private are read by Dr. Pkxqeia only Sold only by H. Lindley and J. M. Faris. Piles are frequently preceded by a sense of weight in the back, loins' and lower part of the abdomen, causing the patient to suppose he has some affection of the kidneys or noigh ing organs. At times, symptoms of indigestion are present, as flatulfirey, uneasiness of the stomach, etc, A moisture, like perspiration, producing a very disagreeable itching;, particularly at night after getting warm in bed, is a very common attendant". Blind Bleeding and Itching Piles yield at once to the application of Dr. Bosanko's Pile Remedy, which directly upoutbe parts affected,' absorbiug the Tumor?, allaying the intense itching and effecting a permanent cure, where all other remedies have failed. Do not delav until the drain on the system produce? permanent disability, but try it and be cuied. Price, 50 cents. Sent prepaid on receipt of price. Address. The Dr. Bosanko Medicine Co., Piqiift, Ohio. Sold by Hieam Lindley, WANT OF FAITH. If II. Lindley' s, the Druggist, does not succeed it is not for the want of faith. He ba tuch faith in Dr. Bosanko' s Cough and Lung Syrup as a remedy for Coughs, Colds, Consumption, and Lung affections, that he will give a bottle free to each and every one who is need of a medicine of this kind. CAUSE OF FAILURE. Want of confidence accounts for half of the business failures of to-dav II. Lindley s, the Druggistf is not liable to fail for the want of confidence in Dr. Roeanko's Cough and Lung Syrup, for he gives away a bottle free to all who are suffering with Coughs, Colds, Asthma, Consumption and all adections of the Thront and Lungs.

FREE!

RELIABLE SELF-CURE.

A fAvorUo DrosCTlnttoii of one of th

moot noted tttid iicce$t'ul pm'Oialists in the TT. 8. (now retired tor tliurof Artot Debility, lint Manhood, Vetknemt And feay. bent tu platu tcttkii e vclopeyVee. Druggists can fllUU Addrets DR. WARD & CO.. Muisiana. Mo.

G2&

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mm Indian VEGETABLE PILLS Secure Healthy action to the Li vet

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Piutlj Vegiutle; S griping. Priot 25 All Braatitfc

BLOOMINGTON, IND College Year begins September 6th. Tuition Free. Both sexes admitted on equal conditions. For catalogue and other information Address, W. W. Spangle it, Lkmusl Moss, Secretary, President.

R. W. MLEKS,

J. H LOUDN

JiOUDEN MIERS, Aiiomes at Law, LOOMINGTON, INDIANA,

Office over Rational Bank.

W. P. Rogers, .Tos. E. Hkklct. Rogers & Henley ATTORN1E8 AT LAIff. Bloomington, - - Im. Collections and settlement ot estates are made specialties. Office North east side, of Square, in Mayor building. nv5tf. W. Friedly, Harmon H. Friedly. FRIEDLY & FRIEDLY, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Offiec over the Bee Hive" Store. Bloomington, Indiana Henry L Bates, BOOT AND SHOE MAKER Bloomington, . Ind. JEsf Special attention given to soleing and patching. C. R. W or rail, Attorney at Law & NOTARY J?CTJ3MO. Bloomington, ----- Jkd. Office: West Side - over McCallas ORCHARD HOUSE

S. M. ORCHARD,

Proprietor

The traveling public willfind fifrstclass accommodations, a splendid Sample room, and a Good table. Opposite depot. Board furnished by the day or week t28

NATIONAL HOUSE Eas t of the Square. LEROY SANDERS, Proprietor. BLOOMINGTON, IND. This Hotel has just been remodeled, and is convenient in every respect, 'Rates reasonable. 6-1 C, Vanzandt, Un dert akers DEALERS IN Metallic Burial Caskets, and Cades Coffins, &c. Hearse and Carriages furnished to order,

Shop on College Avenue, north

md W O. Fee's liuiiuing. ulS Bloomington , Indiana. RESIDENT UENTST

DrJ. W. GRAIN

Office over McCada Ca's' Store oomington, Ind. All work War anted. 17ft

W. J .Allen.

DEALER IN

HARDWARE, Stoves, Tinware, Doors, Sash, Agri cultural Implements. Agent for Buckeye Binders, Reapers, and Mowers. Also manufacturer of Van Slykes Patent Evaporator. South Side the Square. BLOOMINGTON, IND. THE BEST AND CHEAPEST WATCH REPARING GO TO J OHN J?. SMITH. I This work is madeaspecialt by him and much care is taken that all work is satisfactory done.