The Greencastle Democrat, Greencastle, Putnam County, 7 April 1894 — Page 2
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THE DEMOCRAT.
GREENCASTLE, i INDIANA.
The News Condensed. Important Intelligence From All Part*. CONGRESSIONAL. UcKulur S«*sNi«»uu On the S^8th resulutlous were introduced in the senate asking the secretary of war whether subordinate employes and laborers engaged by engineer officers have been employed or discharged for political reasons; directing the finance committee to prepare a bill for the repeal of all laws authorizing the secretary of the treasury to issue bonds oi other interest-bear Ing obligations without; specific authority, and one calling for information regarding changes made in the weight or fineness of silver coins of silver standard countries. A bill to provide for the free and unlimited coinage of silver was Introduced by Mr. Stewart, of Nevada.... In the house an attempt to diseuhS the two election cases of O'Neill vs. Joy and Englisn va. Hilborn showed the lack of a quorum. In the senate the pension appropriation bill was reported on the 29th and the house joint resolution appropriating flU.uOO additional to carry out the provisions of the Chinese exclusion act and the McGarrahan land claim bill were passed In the house the president’s message vetoing the Bland silver seigniorage bill was received. No business was transacted. The senate was not in session on the 30th ult... In the house Mr. H^ind gave notice that on April 3 he would move to pass the seigniorage bill over the veto. No business was transacted On the 31st ult the senate was not in session .... In the house bills were introduced for the free and unlimited coinage of silver dollars of 413Hi grains and for an additional district judge for*the Northern district of Illinois. The river and harbor bill was reported, and the remainder of the day was devoted to eulogies upon the life, character and public services of the late Representative O’Ntill, of Pennsylvania. In the senate on the 2d Senator Voorhees (dem., Ind.) opened the tariff debate and in bis speech denounced the protective system of tarifl taxation. The nominations of Thomas E Benedict, of New York, to be public printer, and James D. Yoemans, of Iowa, to be Interstate commerce commissioner, were received from the president In the house a fruitless attempt was made to secure a quorum in order to bring the U’Neill-Joy contested election case to a close.
DOMESTIC. The town of Sutherland, Neb., was totally destroyed by tire. The Cincinnati, Hamilton A Dayton railway and the Cincinnati, New Orleans & Texas Pacific railway have been consolidated. A revival reached such a stage in Bloomington, 111., that business houses and saloons closed during the day appointed for general prayer. Kextccky women were signing a petition asking congress to impeach Col. Breckinridge. Three families, comprising fourteen persons, were buried in a snowslide at Canyon Creek, Wash. Miss Sarah Billings and her sister Linda, aged 35 and 40 years respectively, took their own lives with poison at Winchester, O., because they were about to be separated by marriage. Jim Godsev, sentenced to five years at Terre Haute, Ind., for forgery, said his father had trained him in crime from childhood. At Antigo, Wis., William Nonnemacher pleaded guilty to murdering his w ife and three children and was given a life sentence. At Indianapolis seven members of a family were poisoned by eating sausage containing trichinm. Col. Breckinridge took the stand in his own defense in Washington and told of his intrigue with Madeline Pollard. Thomas Holloway, a populist farmer, while watching Coxey’s army in Columbiana, O., dropped dead from apoplexy. Howard S. Long, an installment goods agent at Springfield, O., met Miss Lydia Brown, of Urban a, for the first time, and in half an hour they were married. Receiver Faubot, of the Lima (O.) National bank, which closed two years ago. claims a shortage of S'JO.OOO for which he can get no explanation. Cherokee, la., has been selected as the location for a new insane asylum to accommodate 1,000 patients and cost Safe c*' ', v "v • 1 *009.G0?>» - • John Witt s residence at McKendree, W. Va., was burned and his eight little children and Miss Moliio Hettrick perished in the Dames. A COLD norther did millions of dollars of damage in Mississippi, Louisiana and Texas, killing almost everything green. Oliver Jackson (colored), one of the Grant murderers, while et\ route to Montgomery, Ala., was taken by masked men from twodepuLies and shot to death. A general strike of the 10,000 coke workers and miners of the Connellsville (Pa.) region was ordered. Gov. Tillman called on the militia to assist in enforcing the dispensary law In South Carolina. The California supreme court holds that the act of the lost legislature in removing the capital from Sacramento to San Jose was illegal. B. McManus, of Livingston, MuuL, shot and killed his wife and then cut bis own throat Domestic trouble wua the cause. Prof. John M. Ellis, of Oberlin college at Oberlin, O., died on a Santa Fe train as it entered Chicago from California. Theaters, cards and dancing have been tabooed as vices by the Epworth league of Michigan. Senator Voorjikks declined to allow the factory girls of New England to finance fct.'ir* mittee in opposition to the tariff bill. The exchanges at the leading clearing houses in the United Suites during the week ended on the 80th ult- aggregated 1741,401,766, against $885,001,034 the previous week. The decrease, compared with the corresponding week in 1808, was 29.2. Executions took place as follows: Israel Jolmson (colored) at Union (Springs, Ala, for the murder of Wash Roberts (colored) January 15 last; at Paris, Tex, E. U. Gonsales, for the murder of John Daniels, May 16, 1893; Manning Davis for the murder of John Roden December 26, 1891, and Jim Upkina for the murder September 6, 1893, of frls O-j ear-old step-^»ugliter t
Judge Dallas Died an opinion in the United States court at Philadelphia holding that Chinamen cannot be naturalized. In discussing the right of the south to secede the debating society at Maple Creek, Neb., broke all the furniture and several members were badly injured. One person was killed, fifteen injured, four of them probably fatally, and property worth $40,000 destroyed by the collapse of a water tower at Peoria, III. The Maryland legislature passed a bill making it obligatory on the courts of Maryland, under certain conditions, to send inebriates to gold cure institutes for treatment Judge Louis S. Lovell died at Stanton. Mich., aged 78. He was on the cir cuit bench in the eighth district for twenty-four years. Fritz Kloetzlkr, a shoemaker and a socialist murdered his wife and four children and then committed suicide at Dolgeville, N. Y. The acting secretary of war has formally decided that a deserter's release is in no sense a discharge from the army nor does it in any way remove the charge of desertion. Excitement was aroused by the find of a pronounced vein of silver near Virginia City, Wis. Five blocks in the central portion of Barr}-, I1L, were destroyed by tire, the loss being $200,000. Four persons were killed and three badly wounded in a fisrht near Dai lington, S. C., over the enforcement of the dispensary law. Gov. Tillman ordered troops to quell the disturbance. William U. Laiolaw was awarded damages in New York of $23,000 in his suit against Russell Sago, who used him as protection against a dynamiter. Nuggets of pure gold were washed from sand dug out of a well at La Vela, Col. South Carolina was almost in a state of anarchy, nearly all the troops having refused to obey Gov. Tillman in the dispensary war. He had placed the counties of Florence and Darlington under martial law. Miss Annie Van Dorn, of Passaic, N J. t has just discovered that she was married to the wrong man in 1892 w hile under the influence of drugged liquor. Four persons were injured in a collision between passenger trains ut Ander, son, Ind. Robbers secured $3,200 from the safe of the township treasurer at Frankfort, Mich. W. B. Brozell. a well-to-do farmer of Hurd county, (la., shot his wife and then shot himself fatally. Four men were burned to death and one fatally and two others seriously injured by a natural-gas explosion at Alexandria, Ind. Five tramps were thought to have perished in a fire which destroyed the Rock Island hay barns at Geneseo, 111. As employe of the American exchange national bank of New York conspired with an outsider and swindled the concern out of $33,000. Because a tag was pinned to his coat John Williams stabbed Walter Johnson to death at a revival meeting in Olive, O. Competition and a falling off in business caused the collapse of the brewing pool made up in September, 1892. Three men were burned to death in a summer cottage at Squantum B%acb, Mass. During a riot at a political meeting in Milwaukee half a dozen men were stabbed. The trouble was started by Polish laborers. Fire which started in a flourmill at Borden, Ind., burned six stores and eighteen residences, causing a loss of 8125.000. Four hundred drunken strikers terrorized the town oT East Liverpool, O., and non-union men were beaten and the police cowed. Four members of the Louisville (Ky.) city council were indicted for bribery and perjury. The regular monthly treasury statement for March shows that the total receipts were $24,842,797, against $34,115,809 for March, 1893. The disburselli. nts Wcc $31,187,520, against $81,633.482 for March, 1893, leaving a deficiency for the month of March of $6,294,703, and for the nine months of the present fiscal year of $55,432,027. The visible supply of grain in the United States on the 2d was: Wheat, 71,530,000 bushels; corn. 18,539,000 bushels; oats, 2,713,000 bushels; rye, 415,000 bushels: barley. 636.000 bushels Moroni Duncan, a stockman, formerly owner of the Rock Springs (Wvo.) Review, perished in a blizzard which swept over that state. Holland English was taken from the jail at Bakersville, Va., by a mob and hanged. He was charged with killing his wife. In a boiler explosion near Tompklnsvllle, Ind., Alex Ritter, the owner of the mill, and two brothers named Fowler were killed instantly. Striking mill operatives at Paterson, N. J., attacked five working women, but a squad of police rescued the defenseless party. Champion Corbett says that Jackson will put up a defensive fight and will be beaten inside of twenty rounds. The decomposed body of Rev. M. Nolan, a traveling evangelist claiming Richmond, Va., as his home, was found riddled with bullets near Homer, Tenn. Bill Dalton, the famous outlaw, was fatally shot in a fight with officers in the Indian territory. ► •'ft.-y.-T.-.lvL.,-m.vf-.'T'T.-ku ac ville, Ind., was burned, and his three children perished in the Acmes. In a fight between inihnns and white settlers in the Cheyenne country west of El Reno two white men and five Indians were killed. Christopher Wilkie and Henry Wells, farmers living at Columbus, 111., killed themselves with poison. They made an agreement to take their own lives several weeks ago, owing to ill health. Four thousand painters and paperhangers in Chicago struck against a reduction of wages. The Howland Falls (Mo.) pulp mill, outbuildings, offices and one dwelling were burned, the loss being $160,000.
Walter Berdan started to ridea on bicycle from Denver, Cok, to Paterson, N. J. The distance is 2,500 miles and he will strive to make a long distance record. Notice of a cut in the wages of trainmen has been issued by the Wabash road, to take effect May 1.
PERSONAL AND POLITICAL. Charles G Baer, grand commander of the Knights Templars of Pennsylvania, died of spinal meningitis at Pittsburgh, aged 58 years. Gkokge Ticknor Curtis, the lawyer and writer on political economy and constitutional history, died in New York, aged 53 years. Leading women of Atlanta, Ga., met and organized a Woman’s (Suffrage association. Charles F. Crisp, speaker of the house, was appointed United States senator by Gov. Northen, of Georgia, to fill the vacancy caused by Senator Colquitt’s death. Mrs Jane G. Austin, the novelist, died in Boston, aged 55, after a lingering illness. Speaker Crisp has declined the seat in the senate made vacant by Senator Colquitt’s death. E. U. Rathuone, of Hamilton, O., was nominated for congress by the 'Vhird district republicans to fill the vacancy caused by the death of George W. Houk. Ex-Congrkshmax George L. Halsey died in Newark, N. J., of pneumonia after a brief illness. He was 67 years of age and a millionaire. In the Kansas municipal elections the issue was the fight of women against the saloons and in many instances the .former were beaten. In the municipal elections in Ohio and Michigan the republicans were successful in most of the cities and towns. , Patrick Walsh,, editor of the Augusta (Ga.) Chronicle, was appointed by Gov. Northen to fill the vacancy in the United States senate caused by the death of Senator Colquitt. FOREIGN. The remains of Huns von Bulow, tho distinguished pianist were cremated at Hamburg. Russia has passed a law against American insurance companies, forbidding the tontine system. Malays sacked the Spanish station at Lepanto and killed two officers and three women. Henry Lf. Caron, who was a British spy upon Irishmen in America, died in London. The 79th birthday of Prince Bismarck was celebrated throughout Ger-
many.
The German empire lost its oldest official in the person of Johann Muller, jailer at Wittlieh. near Treves, who died at the age of 103. President Bermudez, of Peru, died at Lima from an intestinal trouble. The sixteenlh constitutional congress of Mexico assembled in semi-an-nual session at Mexico City. Sknor Borgono has assumed the presidency of Peru, the first vice president declining the office. Numerous riots occurred among tho starving residents of Andalusia, Spain. Margaret Walbek, 53 years of age, was executed in Walton jail at Liverpool, England, for the murder of her husband last November. The Land Securities company of London, formed thirty years ago, failed for $10,000,000. Prof. Bbown-Sequard. the eminent physician and physiologist, known chiefly to the world at large as the discoverer of the so called ‘'elixir of life,’* died in Paris, aged 76 years.
SLAIN IN A RIOT.
Result of a Bitter Religious War in Kansas City.
Catholics aud Members of the American Protective Association Fight at the Poll*—Two Men Killed and Several Others Wounded.
AT TlffE POLLS.
LATER. In the L'nited States senate on the 8d Senator Allison opened the tariff debate for the republicans and he gave an outline of some of the main objections which will lie urged against the bill. A resolution directing the finance committee to prepare a bill for the repeal of all laws which give the secretary of the treasury authority to issue interestbearing bonds was presented. In the house the democrats seated John J. O’Neill as the representative from St. Louis in place of Charles F. Joy. An incendiary fire destroyed the business portion of Hartford, Kan., a town of 2,000 people. The public debt statement issued on the 3d showed that the debt increased $13,786,063 during the month of March. The cash balance in the treasury was $133,950,045. The total debt, less the cash balance in the treasury, amounts to $1,631,025,138. Thk iSauvoo Fruit company of SL Louis has been compelled to destroy over 400,000 fruit trees that have been injured by the weather and insects. Gov. Tillman, of South Carolina, issued a proclamation taking absolute control of the police forces of the towns in the state. At the city election in Spring Hill, Kan., women were elected to fill all of the municipal offices, including mayor, councilmen and police judges. The Connellsville (Pa.) coke region was convulsed by a labor war and from one end of the territory to the other rioting and disorder held full sway. Human life was in danger and the destruction of property was being carried on on every hand. '1 he six-story building of Tichnor & Jacobi at Rochester, N. Y.,was burned, the loss being 8300,000. Bitter animosities that have existed at Kansas City, Mo., between the Amerv*».:r FtsUxjivc asboeiatinu ».id .7ft Catholics culminated in a pitched battle at the polls in which two men were killed, two fatally injured and two others wounded. Troops were ordered to the Cheyenne country, where the Indians and cowboys were fighting. In the municipal elections throughout Illinois the republi •ans were successful in fifty-nine towns and tho democrats in sixteen. In Chicago tho republicans will have a majority of sixteen in the common council. In Wiscsnoin the republicans carried forty out of fifty-three towns and elected their entiie ticket in Milwaukee. In Minnesota fifteen out of twenty cities elected republican officials.
blood is shed. Kansas City, Ma, April 4.—The bitter animosities that have existed here between the American Protective association and the Catholics culminated Tuesday in a pitched battle in which two men were kiUed, two fatally injured and two others wounded, as follows: Killed—Con llroenahan, shot throuub the kidneys. Michael Callahan, shot through right
side.
Fatally Injured—Perry Fowler, shot through the hick; Jerry Pale, shot in the face. Seriously wrounded—Patrick Fleming, shot In the left shoulder; John McUovern, shot through right arm It cannot be definitely said which is responsible for the unfortunate affair, as the partisans of each loudly charged the other with being the full cause of all the trouble. More than 100 shots were exchanged between the combatants in less than that many seconds, and when the firing ceased the tften mimed were lying dead, dying or injured on the pavement The two antagonistic elmeuts were solidly divided in their choice of candidates for mayor. The strong and aggresive support that each side gave to its candidate during one of the hottest campaigns ever known in this city engendered a strong sentiment of bigotry. It was. therefore, in no amiable mood that the workers of the respective factions came together at the different polling places throughout the city, and that these workers came expecting trouble to occur before the day was over was apparent from the number of deadly weapons that were drawn when the first pistol shot was tired. This riot took place on tho Southwest boulevard in the Fifth ward, close to police station No. 3, and those who took part in it had been heated to the fighting temper by reports that had been hourly arriving at the station of brawls at other polling places. Only one hour before it was known that John Gooley, a stonemason, was shot in the back and forehead by William Henry Walker at a voting place at the corner of Fifth and Campbell streets and that the row was directly due to a fiery debate between the men regarding tho principles of the American Protective association to which Gooley was violently opposed. It is claimed that Michael Callahan fired the first shot He was a member of a gang of men working under the lead of James Prior, a politician antagonistic to the A. P. A., and in support of Frank Johnson, the labor and independent democratic candidate for mayor. Callahan was killed. Then the buttle began. Tho deputy constables at th • polling booth and the workers of all the political factions crowded together in a solid mass aoout 100 strong, and every otto of them seemed to be armed. For a minute or two the discharge of weapons sounded like a discharge of musketry by a regiment. Hundreds of citizens gathered nt every point of vantage to witness the battle, which, however, was of short duration. In less than five minutes from tho tsne the first shot was fired the police from station No. 3 appeared upon the scene and quieted the disturbance. With their approach the fighting political workers ceased hostilities and made a qjlick effort to hide their weapons. While the riot was in progress it is said that members of the American Protective association telephoned to | Armourdale and Argentine, strongholds of that order, for 1,000 men, and ! that the assurance was given that the ! men would shortly be on the way. Members of the A. P. A. in this city and Armourdale deny the truth of this story. Pryor's men are claiming that Callahan was an innocent victim. They assert that it was Jerry N. Pate, an A. P. A. man, who first shot, ana that was the shot that killed Callahan. Pate was serving as a constable, having been appointed especially by a Westport official to serve a warrant for the arrest of Jim Pryor, John Pryor, his son, and Bert Pryor for an alleged felonious assault upon a citizen earlier in the day. He and Callahan mot, hud wards, and either one or the other fired the snot that brought on the conflict. ON THE WARPATH. 8eveml K!lU‘<i In Itnttle with Indiana In Oklahoma. El Reno, O. T., April 4.—Further advices from the scene of the encounter between the band of depredating Cheyenne Indians and some cowboys who were herding cattle were brought here Tuesday by a courier who came 1 for military assistance. He reported [ that when he left the fight was yet in 1 progress and that then some eight or ! ten of the Indians and half that J many white men had been killed I or wounded. The settlers were | hastening to the aid of tho fighting cowboys and had surrounded 1 the band of Indians and were slowly 1 and surely picking them off. Two troops of cavalry left the fort for tho «■»- v! »• .*■' k about 7 miles they will not likely arrive before the battle is over.
Returns from the Kleetlous In Illinois,
Wisconsin and Elsewhere.
Chicago, April 4.—Tuesday’s aldei^ manic elections in this city resulted in a net gain of five members in the city council for the republicans. The majorities range from 4,000 to 10. The new council w.il stand: Republicans, 43; democrats, 25. The present council stands; Republicans, 88; democrats, 89. The republican west town ticket for assessor collector, supervisor and clerk, was badly beaten. In the south town the only republican elected was the nominee for assessor. The republicans elected their entire tickets in the north town, Lake View, Hyde Park and in Jefferson, while the democrats were successful in the town of Luke. The city voted in favor of the annexation of Evanston and Morgan Park by a large majority. But Morgan Park does not want to be a part of the city and voted two to one against annexation. The annexation proposition as tar as Morgan i’ark is concerned therefore falls through. Evanston did not vote on the question of annexation Tuesday, but will do so April 17. Chicago, April 4.—The election of an alderman in the First ward was fraught with scenes of bloodshed. Two candidates, bkakel and Coughlin, are in the field, the latter the regular democratic nominee, and the former an independent democrat The fight has been a close one. There were many fights at different precincts. Friends of both men were badly beaten and bruised by adherents of either. At tho corner of Clark and Van Btiren streets “Buff” Schwartz, a Skakelite, was shot and fatally wounded, and at the corner of Clark and Harrison, John Dee. a friend of Coughlin, received two bullets -ee.>'*• >>• in Hie hq'uls i'C a ln\
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the i caotiCan Owl,,, —„11y | /' and the entire republican city ticket are elected by pluralities which range from 4,000 to 6,000. The republicans will also have a majority in the com* mon council. Only five of the eighteen wards in the city were carried by the democrats. The new council will bq. composed of twenty-six r«v »■“ " ir ‘I fj
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811 five civics, a,i.i results were noticeable. Denver, Col., April 4.—Returns are coming in slowly on account of free scratching. Citizens’ or independent candidates are the favorites in the mountain towns and there appears scarcely a vestigeof either republicans, democrats or populists in the successful heads of tickeLs. At De Deque tho mayor made himself obnoxious and about fifteen women returned to the polls in the afternoon armed with horse whips for him but he decamped on learning of their approach. At Highlands \V. C. T. U. members canvassed candidates on their reputation as drinking men and snowed under everyone they opposed. Mrs. Carrie West, republican candidate for town clerk, was elected. Spring Hill, Kan., April 4.—At the election here women were elected to fill all the municipal offices, including mayor, councilman and police judges. BIG POOL IN STEEL. New Combine Formed with h C'upltnl of #14 ,’400,000. Cleveland, C., April 4.—Six of the leading steel casting companies of the country have formed a combination known as the American Steel Casting company, and have organized under the laws of New Jersey, with capital stock of $4,200,000. Tho new company has taken charge of the plants and the business of the following companies, all of which have ceased doing business on their own account and have become part of the new concern. They are: The Pittsburgh Steel Casting company of Pittsburgh; the Sharon Steel Casting company ot Sharon. Pa.; the Syracuse Steel Casting company of Syracuse, N. Y.; the Norristown Steel Casting company of Norristown, Pa.; the Stnmlard Steel Casting company of Chester. Fa ; vhb Soiiti Steel eotilpabj ot Ahiulioe. The new concern includes all tho steel foundries in the country except two, which are not regarded as competitors. J. K. Bole, of this city, has been elected president of the new organization. SOLDIERS’ HOMESTEAD RIGHTS. Favorable Report on Kyle'. Hill KxeuiptIng Them from Six Month,,' Residence. Washington, April 4.—I’fte senate committee on public lands has agreed to report favorably Senator Kyle's amendment to the sundry civil appropriation bill providing that any honorably discharged soldier of the late civil war, not now the owner of 160 acres of land, and who has nut availed himself of the privileges under the land laws of the United States, may acquire title to 100 acres of land by making application therefor in person nt any government land office and paying the minimum price of $1.25 per 'acre, 'i n<j"iTw , 'nb'w’requires a residence of six months on the part of the exsoldiers.
.Hr. $■’. $’. U <irnioll
Toronto, Ontario.
A Narrow Escape Took Poison by Mistake Bad Effects Entirely Eliminated by
Hood's Sarsaparilla. “C. I. Hood & Co., Lowell, Mass.:
“ Gentlemen—In April last, throurh the effects of a dose of strychnine taken In mistake for another drug, I was laid up In St. John, N. B., for ton days. After this I never seemed to regain my former health, and continually suffered from Indigestion and heart palpitation, for which I could get no relief. I though* I would try Hood's Sarsaparilla After taking one bottle, I felt a little better, so continued using the remedy until I had consumed six bottles. I found myself gaining strength Hood’s^Cures and flesh every day. and p.m now as healthy as I was before taking tho poison.” F. V. Waiimoi.l, representing the Seely Perfumes, 80 Melbourne Avenue, Toronto, Ontario i Hood's Pills cure liver Ills, constipation, undtee. biliousness, sick headache,Indigestion.
Frisndly .Regard
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ittle ones of
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children.
Scott A Bm-n- V Y. All rtniggiMA
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IXTllh'XA TTOXA l
DICTIOXARY
Entirety Krw.
Abreastc/the Timt A Grand Educator
fe
SuccesRor of the “luabriilged.” J? verybody should own this Dictionary. It answers all questions concerning the history, spelling, proji nunclation, and ’ meaning or words.
A Library in Itself. It also gives tho often de8lr©d information
concerning eminent persons; facta concerning tho countries, cities, towns, and natural features of the globe; particulars con-
schoolroom. The One Great Standard Authority, Hon. 1). J. Hrener. Justice of t . s. 8upi * The jniemaUon&l I Xctionary is I commend it to
Court, •Wi ttes : '*The Iniernational Dictionary is the perfection of dictionaries. I commend all oaOto one great standard authority.”
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Springfield, Mass, •Do not bny chenp photorapliie repnnU of ancient
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All diplomatic correspondence waa formerly conducted in Latin. Chinese soldiers get one dollnr a month and have to board themselves. Granite is the bedrock of the world, being tlie lowest on the earth’s crusL During Victoria's reign India has coined two million pounds in gold and two hundred and six million pounds in silver. Florida produces over fifty varieties of the orange. The annual crop is about two million two hundred aud fifty thousand boxes.
WASHINGTON PERSONALS. Justice Brewer, of tho United States supreme court, is in charge of the Bible class in the First Uongrega- | tional church of Washington. Yang Yu, tho Chinese minister at Washington, is cutting a very wide swath. His costume, carriage and mansion on'-hine tliose of any other diplomat. Justice Whitf, is one of the largest individual sugar planters in Louisiana. Last year over three million pounds of sugay were manufactured on his plan- ' tatioa.
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