Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 24 October 1878 — Page 1

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OLD.—N 0.102

And Many Points Report a Large Number of New .lV '". ••. Cases. •.*•«.

Refugees Warned not to Return Just yet to Their Homes.

Difebandmcjit of Several of the iieliet Associations Announced.

The Jnfected Districts f. ,r Cool Weather. I

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$ 3

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Gladdened by 3 if

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President

srav-v Notice has been given that no requisiHons will be issued after Saturday next. The ladies' Peabody' auxiliary association will contiue the distribution of supplies, clothing, etc.

Mrs. Mary Schoonberg, wife of Levy Schoonberg, superintendent of the Jew* ish widows and orphans' home, died Of yellow fever, having charge Of 104 children. She felt the weight of responsibility, performing her duty unceasingly, and truly caring for the healthy and nursing the tick. A man named Moore, from Illinois, suicided by morphine. Cause, fear of yellow fever.

Dr. Martin, of the United States monitor Canonicus, leaves to-morrow for Sterges plantation, Bayou Teche, in response to an application to the Howard association for a physician^ Applications for relief to the Y. M. Howard association, 144, cases, i-ijs JmII

c. A„ mostly

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YELLOW FEVER

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Not wit lis land inglhe Frostii the Death Rate is Still Large.

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llurici and Pbyiiciam bvlng Discharged, an Their Services are no Louder Koeded.

NEW ORLEANS.

New Orleans, October 2i.—The New Orleans central relief committe closed its labors to-day. Since organizing it has issuea 100,044, rations the silent relief committee returns sincere thanks to unknown friends, true silent missionaries in Philadelphia, Newport, and Boston for valua7 ble and timely aid. St. Matthew, chapter VI, verses 1-4. ^«,wr

MIDNIGHT REPORT.

New Orleans, October 21.—Applicalions for relief to the Y. M. A., 66 $ Howards, 300 mostly old cases not heretofore entered on the books. The

Peabody association, to-day^ issued 52, JOO rations. *. FT THE WKAT1IER. I

leather

New Orleans, Oct. 22.—The is clear, cool and windy. ter is 65.

The thermome-

r*'-"

EFFECTS OF THE DISK AS R. Deaths, 42 cases reported, 114 deaths, 3,775 total cases, 12,426.

total

New Orleans, Oct. 23.—The, weather is clear and cool ar.d windy. "ff? Deaths, 19 cases reported, 173 total deaths, 3,794 cases, 12,599. •f New Orleans, Oct 22.' I To generous friends, north, east, and wekt *. The Peabody subsistence association 6f

New Orleans returns to each and all their sincere thanks for the noble generosity exhibited in furnishing money and provisions- for our distressed. No further funds will be needed. (Signed) E. DALHONXW,

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MEMPHIS.

NOON REPORT.

Memphia, Oct 21.—"Weather growing warmer. From 6 o'clock la«t night until noon to-day 14 orders for interments are reported by undertakers. -s Tf

EVENING REPORT.

Memphis, Oc.t. 21.—The city haa been thronged with people,' to-day, many being refugees, wht returned, thinking alter the frosts that have fallen all danger is passed. The greater nutrber, however, were partita applying for relief, which, after the 25th inst., will cease to be extended to all able-bodied persons. The board of health has not officially an» nounced the city as being safe for absentees to return. To the Contrary, all are warned to remain away.

Eight deaths from yellow fever are Officially reported for the past twentyfour hours, ending at six o'clock to-night ten additional interments were made by the undertakers, of parties who died beyond the city limits. Eighteen physicians of the Howard medicine corps report twenty-three new cases seven in the city and sixteen in the suburbs.

EVIDENCES OF ABATEMENT.

R. W. Mitchell, medical director of the Howard association, to-night, partially disbanded his corps by relieving from duty 19 of the physicians from abroad, and all the local physicians on duty in the city. The Savannah, Ga., delega tionof doctors departs to-morrow, for home, via New York. An impromptu banquet at Piabody hotel was tendered by Dr. Mitchell to-night, to members of the medical corps who depart on the morrow.

THE WEATHER.

Memphis, Oct*

Hi

22.—It

commenced

raining last night at 10 o'clock and continued without cessation until 5 this A, It is clear and cold. The thermometer is 56.

'UNDERTAKER REPORT.

Memphis, Oct. 23.—From 6 clock last night until noon to-day tuc undertak-, era report orders for eleven, interments

RETCBNIXG TO THE CITY.

The streets are thronged with return

ing refugees, and business is being gradually resumed. «#Sti

SENDING NURSES HOME.

The Howard association continue their work of sending to their homes the nurses from abroad.

ANOTHER FROST.'

Another heavy frost fell last night,

Among those who have died are Miss Del Roach, daughter of A. J. Roach James Roper, a well-known Main street grocer Miss Charlotte Thomas, F. H. Dowdy, James Dolan, engineer ot county jail S. B. Nicholson, Fritz Helman.

TUSCUMBIA, ALA.

5 new cases and one death are reported as having occurred yesterday, at TUBcumbia, Ala.

THE NURSES.

The Charleston, South Carolina, authorities have telegraphed that their nurses an return home without being subject to quarantine. *v

GOING HOMK.

Friday last, 4 new cases, one death Saturday, 3 new cases Sunday, 8 new cases. The cool weather of the last two days has neither checked the. spread nor modified the type of the disease^

CLLKFUV, LA.

Eighteen cases at Reilly's and Marstbn's, including Drs. Covert and Rutherford. Dr. Covert is dangerously ill. Dr. Saunders, the resident physician, reports two cases in Clinton to day. Total cases to date, 49 deaths, 9. Nurses trom New Oi leans and Baton Rvuge have arrived

Cairo, 111 Oct 22.—Two new cases and one death in the last twenty-four hours.

Mayor Winter requests the publication of the (?llowing^ ..'' L, •:?Cairo, 111., Oct. 23.

There is no relief committee here recognized by me or the board of health. All supplies to the sick and needy are furnished from this office.' [Signed] HENRY WINTER, ay or, and chairman board of health.

CHATTANOOGA

Deaths from yellow fever in last 24 hours, 4, and 14 new cases, 12 colored. Drs. Frair, Baxter, Knott and Blackford are improving rapidly. .,

BATON ROUGE.

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A delegation of physicians, who came from Cincinnati and Dayton, will leave for home, to-morrow.

NURSES LEAVING.

three days. ... •. BYRAM. D'Our secretary of relief committee, R. W. Hecomb, died last night, taken sick Tuesday. No new cases.

MORGAN CITY.

Total

Eleven new cases, four deaths. caies, 500 deaths, 86. PASS CHRISTI AN!

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Eleven new cases, one death. YAZOO CITY. Two new cases, no deaths. The cases are all doing well.

BAY ST. LOUIS JUT

Among the deaths is Col. W. B. Lust, vice-president of the relief committee. Though unaclimated he exposed himself fearlessly to relieve his suffering fellowcitizens. I know of no example of nobler devotion to the cause of humafiity. [Signed.] JAMIS9N, M. D.

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OSYKA. 1^

Have 222 cases in Oayka, and 25 in the country. To-day* 28 deaths in town 6 in the country. Three deaths and three cases in the past 24 hours.

PATTERSON VILLE, LA.'

E

New cases 28 no deaths. The weather is turning cold. In West Baton Rouge there has been 13 new cases and 3 deaths in the past two days. ....

LITTLE ROCK.

,FL

Weather clear and cool thermometer, 56 degrees. The*state fair has been postponed to November 18, on account of the yellow fever.

JACKSON. -v

New cases, 28 deaths, 3. Rain fell last night, followed by cold winds to*day. HANDSBORO. I

New cases daily. TANGIPOHOA. New cases, 2 deaths, 1.

BAY ST. LOUIS. 'J

Seven new cases no deaths.

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PASS CHRISTIAN.

Two new cases one death. MCCOMB CITY.

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Two new cases one death.* OSYKA. Theee new cases and one death. Three very low

GRAND JUNCTION", TENNW

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t)ne new case to-day. There is prospect of a black ffost to-night. We hope the fever will soon be over, for our money, meat, sugar, coffee and stimulants are nearly out.

A DENIAL.

New York, Oct. 23.—Smith, M. Weed said to a Tribune reporter, last evening, that he sent some di patches frcm South Carolina, but there is not a word of truth in those the Tribune ascribes to him. Also, he never saw the canvassing board, or made any arrangements with them, or tried to bribe them in any way.

A FLOOD.

Paris, France, Oct. 23.—At Largentiere, on Monday night, the river Ligue rose -o metres in one hour, flooding a great pa of the town. Much property is destroyed. No loss of life reported.

BURNHAM.

The Brutal IVIurderer Cornered.

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MINOR POINTS. UNDERTAKERS REPORT.

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From six o'clock last evening until noon to-day, eleven orders for interments are reported by the undertakers.

THE DEATH LIST.

He cast «bout him for a safe position to take-one in which he could stretch his legs and avoid aomaging the embarrassing purity of the floor. Finally he settled upon a small print-covered sofa and balanced himself carefully upon its extreme edge and the backs of his heels, notwithstanding Janey's civil protestations., "Dunnot yo' moind th' floor," she said.

Yo' needn t. Set yo' down comfortable." W&'•Oh, I'm all right," answered Murdoch, with calm good cheer. "This is comfortable enough. What's that you were reading?"

Janey settled down upon her stool with a sigh at once significant of relief and a readiness to indulge ih friendly confidence. "It's a book I getten fro' th' Broxton Chapel Sunday Skoo.' It's th' Mem— m—o—i—r—s "Memoirs," responded Murdoch "Memovers of Mary Ann Gibbs."

Unfortunately her visiter was not thoreughly posted on the subject of the Broxton chadel literature. He cast about him mentally, but with small success. "I don't seem to have heard of it before," was the conclusion he arrived at. "Hannotye'? Wiell, it's a nice book, an' theer'b lots more loike it in th' skoo' libery—aw about Sunday Skoo' scholars as has consumption an' loike an' reads th' boible to foalk an' dees. They aw on 'em dee." "Oh,'! doubtfully, but still with respect "It's not very cheerful, is it?"

Janey shook her head with an expression of mature resignation. "Eh nol they're none on 'em Cheerfu -*but they're noice» to read. This here un now—she had th' asthma an' summat wrong wi' her legs, an' she knowed aw th' boible through aside o' th'hymnbook. an' she'd sing aw th' toime when she could breathe fur th' asthma, an' tell foak ae if they did

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TERBE HAUTE, IND:..—THURSDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1878.

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Quite alconimotion was created in our police circles, "Wednesday, by the report that the monster, Burnham, who so foully murdered Rosa Tritt, and then burned the farmhouse, a few miles west of here, *sswas secreted in a cornfield, just across the river.

The report is found to be true the villain has been known to be secreted in the neighborhood for several dajs past Last night he entered a school-house in a district west of here, and there found two men warming themselves by. the fire they had built.

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They knew him well, but were unarmed while the murderer carried a large re* volver and a huge bowie knife.

This morning he walked with them to

town

leaving them just west of the river, taking into the cornfield while the two men came in town and reported the news.

A large posse of police and citizens have suriounded the field to hunt him out.

A LANCASHIRE COTTAGES** The scene of Mrs. Burnett's new novel of "Haworth's" (Scribnerfor November) is laid in Lancashire. The hero, Murdoch, goes to visit his young friend,

Janey

Briarley, which gives the author an opportunity to show the interior of a Lancashire cottage.

I'He found the little kitchen sbining with the Saturday '-cleaning up." The flagged floor as glaringly spotless as pipeclay and sandstone could make it the brass oven-handles and tin pans in a condition to put an

:ntruder

out of counten­

ance the fire replenished, and Janey sitting on a stool on the hearth, enveloped in an apron of her mother's, and reading laboriously aloud. "Eh! dear me," she exclaimed. "It's yo'—an' I am na fit to be seen. I wor sittin' down to rest a bit. I've doin' thf cleanin' aw day, an' 1 wor real done furl" "Never mind that," said Murdoch, "That's all right enough."

'"^7. pip. mi.W

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na go an' do likewise,

they'd go to burnin* hell wheel th' fire is na quenched an* th' worms dyeth not." "It can't have been very pleasant for the friends," was her companion's comment. But there was nothing jocose about his manner. He was balancing himself seriously on the edge of the hard little sofa and regarding her with speculative interest

breath,

W. yTk a^T*

FISH AS BRAIN FOOD. From the SorrlstowB Herald. The theory obtains among many scien sU that fish as brain foods stands at the head of the list. This evidently is true, for we know a man who ea*s seven times a week, and his forehead commences to slope oft at the eye brows and he always signs his name "X." But perhaps he doesn't select the right kind of fish. There are many men of many minds and man fi«h of many kinds, therefore there must be a fish adopted to each particular mind.

Forinstrnce: For a schoolmaster we would prescribe whale and for his pupils blubber.

For the critic—Carp. For the soldier—Sword-fish and pike. For the office seeker—PlaUe. For a house painter—Grainer. For a shoemaker—Sole. For a carpenter—Saw-fish. For a smoker—Pipe-fish and whiff For idiots who cross the ocean in a small boat—Dorea.

For a blacksmith—Bellows-fish. For a poor artist—Da'b.' --i For a lean person—Chub. For a sculptor—Sculpin' of course. Fo# a limburger cheese manufacturer —Snfelt.

For" Vanderbilt's lawyers—Shark. For the basso singer of a minstrel trouper-Black bass.

For sea captain—Skipper. For persons who p&tronize lotteries— Gudgfons.

Fotdwarfs—Minnows'. For old topers—Suckers. Then there is the archer-fish (or archers, the drum-fish for drummers, the pilot-flsh for pilots, the skate for skaters, and thte hound-fish for hunters. The son who attempts to thrash his male parent should not be permitted to eat the "fatherlasher." If a diet ot either of the fishes does not increase the quantity of*'gray matter," a hole might be drilled in the skull and a fish called the "whiting" inserted.

WIRES DOWN. 4

A SEVERE STORM IN THC EAST LAST NIGHT. Cincinnati, Oct. 23.—A severe storm has prostrated all the New York wires. No report has been received from the east in consequence. Superintendent Merrihew, who is at Chambersburg, Penn., says: The storm and rain began about 11 9'clock last night, and easterly winds increased to a gale during the qight Towards morning the wind shifted to the northwest and now, at noon, is blowing hard. The rain has ceased. All our routes from Philadelphia, west, also Baltimore routes, are down. not one workin«-

AT PITTSBURG.

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"Where's your mother*?" He asked

"Hoo's gone to th' chapel," was the answer. "Theer's a mothers'meetin* in

the

vestry, an' hoo's gone theer an takken th' babby wi' her. Th' rest o' th' child»r is playin' out at th' front."

He glanced out of the door. "Those—4hose are not all yours?" he said thunderstruck. "Aye, thev ate they. Eh!" drawing a long

"but is na there a lot on em?

Theer's eleven an' I'ye nussed 'em nigh ivvery one.

TRAIN ROBBER KILLED. St Louis, October 23.—Dan Dement, one ot the gang of train robbers, who escaped when Mike Rourke was captured, a day or two ago, was overtaken^ last mVht by Detective Light, of the Kansas Pacific road, fifteen miles from Ellsworth, Kansas, and in the struggle which ensued, Light shot and killed the robber.^

Pitfttferg, Oct. 33.—The river is four inches arid rising. Th?, weather is cjoudy and. raining ftfidily^ 1» .i*afa111qu»»u»' THE/

KiANSAS

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PACIFIC RAIL-

ROAD.

IT$ CONNECTION WITH THE UNION PACIFIC SEVERED. St. Louis, Oct. 23.—Further information regarding the appointments, S. F. Smith, receiver of the Kansas, Pacific railroad, says: The appointment is claimed to be a victory for Jakes, the present superintendent of the road, as he is opposed to Jay Gould, and will result in the breaking up of the present combination and pooling with the Union Pacific. Ail general offices of the company are under order of the court, and are to be moved to the State of Kansas.

SUING FOR

MILLIONS.

San Francisco, Oct. 23.—John Burke, of the $35,000,000 suit notoriety has commenced action in the nineteenth district Court of California to recover from J. C. Flood, J. W. Mackay, f- G. Fair and the Consolidated Virginia mining company $10,500,000, the value of the stock and dividends of the Consolidated Virginia received by the first three defendants in pavment of 70 feet of mineral, ground deeded by them to the company, at a figure-alleged in excess of its value. In the twelfth district courj the $35,000,• 000 suit has been dismissed as to the otfier defendants, except Flood, Mackay and Fair.

ST. LOUIS POLICE RESERVES. ON THXLLT WAY TO ATLANTA. Nashville, Oct 23.—Company K, of the St Louis police reserves, passed through here, this morning, for Atlanta, to compete for the $75 prize at the fair in that place.

They were received at the depot by the Porter Rifles, escorted to the Maxwell house, for breakfast, and thence to the Chattanooga depot Qpite a number of citizens are seeing them off.

INDIANS AND PRAIRIE FIRES. St. Louis, Oct 23.—Decatur and Edwards counties, in the Sappa Valley, Kansas, recently raided by the Cheyenne Indians, has been devastated by prairie fires, and nearly everything not destroyed by the Indians consumed. Several persons are said to have perished in the flames.

HEAVY STORM.

New York, Oct. 23.—The storm which broke over this city, this morning, originated in the Gulf of Mexico. The velocity of the wind was fifty miles an hour. The rain fell severe but not as heavy here as further south. The area covered by the storm is a narrow belt along the coast .... .-a '"-rr »"fir:

SECRETARY EVARTS. New York, Oct. 5 23.—Secretary Evarts, in response to an invitation from business men, will speak on the national issues, at Cobper*s Institute, to-morrow night. -l

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WASHINGTON. I H.

One of Ben Butler** Tletiaii Sues 4 1 M»as

BANK-NOTES FOR REDEMPTION. Washington, D. C., October 22.— Bank notes were received at the Treasury yesterday fo.- redemption aggregating $430,060, the largest amount of any day since the new order requiring banks sending notes for redemption to pay the charges went into effect. DEATH OF REAR-ADMIRAL PAULDING.

The Secretary of the Navy yesterday issued an order announcing the death of Rear-Admiral Hiram Paulding, in which he speaks of the life and service of the deceased, and directs that on the day after the receipt of the order the flags in the navy-yards and stations, and of all ships of war in commission, will be kept at half-mast from sunrise until sunset, and thirteen minute guns be fired at noon from all navy-yards. i.f

ONE OF BEN. BUTLER'S ICTIMS.

4

)Villiam O. Avery,' ex-chief clerk of the treasury department, who was con victed in St. Louis on account of ^his con nection with the whisky fraiuds,yesterday entered suit heie against Gen. Ben. Butler to recover, $500, which he alleges he paid Butler as a retainer to defend him when on trial at St. Louis. Avery claims that he agreed to pay Butler $2,000 to defend him, $500 of which he paid when he engaged him, the remaining to be paid after the conclusion of the trial. He claims that Butler did not assist him jn any way, and did not make his appearance during the trial, although he repeatedly sent for him, and that as a result he was convicted CAPITAL STOCK OF THE NATIONAL

BANKS.

Attorney-General Devent decides tha* in estimating the capital stock of the na tional banks,which is liable to ta^, there cannot be deducted therefrom the .3.^ bonds of the District of Columbia which they now own.

BEACONSFIELD'S SUCCESSOR. Lord Salisbury, urged on, like a second Macbeth, by the ambition of his wife, is determined to be Lord Beaconsfieid|s successor'as 'prime minister of Englana. Ladv Salisbury is the daughter of the late Baron Alderson, one of the judges OF' the court' of exchequer in England,,qeiebrated fio less for his classic graces ahd Rabelaisian wit than for his legal lore, ^til

and she has inherited many of the quali-

ties of her father. A few days after the death of the last marquis, the father of the present One, Lady Salisbury was met by a gentleman in the Albany .j(t'

door of the^ chambew vf- MR^ the editor of. the Saturday^ Revie: to which he was a contributor', having written some articles on the vanities and weaknesses of her own sex which excited much sensation. She was in deep mourning and in tears. M}\ Cook inquired if his visitor knew who the lady just leaving was, and, being answered in the negative, said :V,lThat is Lady Salisbury, and she is weeping and not to be consoled because her husband has become a marquis and has been elevated from the sphere of ambition, the house of commons, to the prim benches of the upper school."

Lord and Lady Salisbury have long feared and hated Lord Derby, as their probable competitor, although he is married to Lord Salisbury's stepmother, the late lordVsecond wife, and when Lord Derby recently left the government Salisbury showed himself not only vindictive and ungenerous but even wanton in his rude remarks. He wrote a circular which drew forth immense laudations until it was discovered that he had been secretly signing the Schouvaloff memorandum against its distinct declarations. He lost the confidence of honoiable men by this act which, while it professed to to be an acute device for winning a victory, is now seen to be only a mean fight resulting in defeat. While roaring as a lion, he was really running like a hare, and he fears that when Disraeli retires, and a new first minister is' to be chosen, the shade of this act will rise up against him, as it probably will. To allude to the secret memorandum before him is said to be like waving a red flag the. face of a Spanish bull. It is not forgotten that Lord Salisbury spoke of Lord Beaconefield, after deserting his administration on the reform question, with even greater bitterness and contempt than he spoke of Lord Derby. Notwithstanding their mu'.ual public endearments, they both dislike and distrust each other, and.

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SOCIALISM.

St. Louis Oct 23.—The socialists, of this citv, have a full city ticket in the field, made up of candidates on the other tickets, and endorsed by, them.

'•^R-

ii Whole N«*. fOO.

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Bank Notes Redeewsd Oeafli of Hear Admiral -sii'jF. \r.,-v

OVER THE OCEAN.

Fears Entertained 'fftatYtha Roumellan Commiftion Will Meet With Opposition by the

Rvesiai)si

K.„.utpu,t.,

,K-

Lord

and Lady Salisbury, especially the Utter are very distasteful to the queen, while Sir Stafford Norihcote, the "first favorite" now, is held- in universal respect and regard, and has the advantage of being in the commons, all of.which elements have got to be considered by those who would forecast the political future of .parties in England^

When men die of intemperate habits the announcement of the fate is graduated by the local paper to the amount of money left behind, as follows: 91,000 i« debt in debt. "died drank" oare with tke world.. ."deli*lam tremens"

In bank ."mania a potu" I in bank "occasional sprees" 11,000 in bank "ebronic alcoholism" $5,000 in bank "alcoholism" 110,000 in ban* "inebriety" $36,100 in bank "dissipated habits he was led into" 1:0,000 in bank "softening ot tke bra! a" |10u,000 in bank "apoplexy" $500,000

RACES POSTPONED. Baltomore, Oct., 23.—The races at Pimlico have been postponed to-day on account of the flooding of the track by the severe storm of wind and rain last night.

I/

Bessarabia Surrendered to the

THE AMBRR'S RIM»LY,.V

London, Oct.

21.—A

dispatch from

Simla gives the following as the sub* stance of the ameer's message to the viceroy: "You may do your worst the issue is in God's hands." The. anteerV message has been telegraphed to England, and a reply indicating the course of procedure is expected on Wednesday.

AUSTRO-HUNGARY.

London, Oct. 21.—A4) dispatch from Pesth announces that Herr Jissa, speaking at a club of the government party, said that as the governpaeht nevfcr' had any intention of sharing with' Russia in a partition of Turkey, or going* t». Mar to oppose it, it is clear that heocjfQrt^ £us-tro-Hungarv will not .Only hayje^ Russia for an enemy, but sohfe Other (loiters. He declared, also, that with fev&y "sympathy for the heroic bravesf of{t|e Turks, he could not defend their administration. The occupation ot Bosnia ah'd Herzegovinia was undertaken in oHler to 'destroy Sclavism, which was treating the monarchy, and to faciliate.'the regeneration of Turkey. A Vienna, dispatch stales the confidences of the majority ,'antt his success in the Hungarian ditt'ts certain.

SCHOUVALOFF.

London, Oct 2i.-^At%patchMjrfthe sudden journey of Counjt Scbouvalon to Lividia is considered of.t|ie' highest moment. It is believed well, infQr/ned quarters that he persists in, his,determination to retire if Prince Gortscjiakqff remains in office.

THE HUNGARIAN WHEAT TRADE.

Vienna, Oct

21.—ThfeNew

Free Press

complains that the treele in Hungarian wheat is almost at a stlnd still, partly in consequence of American* underselling the Hungarian markefh.

PREDICTIONS.'

A

Constantinople, October

22.—Fears

are expressed in diplomatic circles in eastern Koumelia that the commission will encounter great obstacles from. the Russians, if the port* and Bulgarian in habitants. in Russia, is ifpolvintafaw ed to mair tbe present

:i

her toops

insists on assuming Jnancial administration, subject only to*, supervision of the commission, aud the Bulgarians continue

ekact

ABANDONED.

The intended withdrawal of the British fleet from the yftHnity of GaUipoli has been abandoned in conseqence of tlie recent movements of the Russians.

SUMLEMDERED.

Bessarabia was surrendered Russians on Monday.

150

IfBtldMM

came

... "overwork" (of the elbow)

12,000,000 bank ."nervous chill" iM- —{Graphic. I: sx

itrong.

to the

RAILROAD CONVENTIONS, AT COLUMBUS, OHIO. Columbus, O. Oct 23.—The third annual convention of Railroad Train, Station Baggagemens, Mutual Aid and Beneflt Association, of United States and Canada, assembled here, to-day. About 26 delegates are in attendance, representing

members, the report of the treas­

urer shows the receipts tor the year to ha*e been

$329.00

and disbursements

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AT CINCINNATI.

Cincinnati, Oct. 34.—The National Narrow Guage railway convention met in adjourned session, this morning., The attendance was^fair, and will be largely increased dnring the day. No business was transacted this morning, except the reading of the minutes of the July convention, and the delivery of tbe -opening address, by Col. E. Hurlbert, of Bedford, Ind., upon "The Narrow Guage apd its Mission."

SOME REFLECTIONS. "Comin' down Delewah street, di« rnomin', wid my mahket basket," said Uncle Jasper, "I see de rich folks remov~ in' de wiah fly screens from deve windahs, an' dis reflection 'pressed itself on my mind: Everything 'spires to keep down de po' man. Rich people, who kin 'lord to feed flies, don't do it Dey shets 'em out Flies has to be fed. What's de kahnseqUence Dis dat a' no* man, who. isn't got 'nuff to feed hnseif an' fam'ly^hea to board 'em. Bad off as I is —whitewashin' hex bin uncommon slow —l'se been a feedin' a hull passel o' flies myself all summer."

«r a DHeimy «f Nair

Exists, or It thehairls crsjr, dry or/harsh the natural jronthfnl eolor can be restored by ostaf ."Losdos Hair Color Restoier," lh» most delightful article ever introduced to the American people tor iacreaaing ita restoring its

growth, restoring its natural eolor, and at the sameUssea lovolr hair dressing and beautlfler. It is totally different trom all others not sticky or gummy, and free from all impure ingredients that render many other articles obnoxious: in fact it Is exquisitely perfumed and so cheaply and etegant ly prepared as to make It Blasting hair dress ***. FBOMINENT CITIZEN, Wilson. N.O, writes: Some sen years agmy wife's hair eommeneed falling and is very thin and turned gray but after using "London Hair Color Bestorer" the scalp

Uasea lovol)

be­

healthy, the hslr stopped falling, and eolor was restored,and Is now growing beau'°iiek your druggist for London Hair Color Restorer. rriceTficentsa bottle. Six

bot-

jotfor the U.S., *3# North ladelphia. HADU by Bunlln jt Artn-

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CATHOLIC FAIR.

New York, Oct 2^—The great fair, in the new Roman Catholic cathedral, opened auspiciously l&s: night

peoole attended.

20,000

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