Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 1 February 1883 — Page 1

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ESTABLISHED 1869.

PRINCE jnAPOLEON.

The author of the Bonapartist manifesto lately posted on the walls of the French capital, is the second son of, Jerome Bonaparte, brother of the great Napoleon. His mother, her husband's second wile, was the Princess Frederika -of Wurtemburg. The prince was born at Trieste September 9, 1822. His early 'life was passed in Vienna, Trieste, Flor-

u»ce,

and Roany varied with occasional

^residence in Switzerland, England and O'lSpain. Under the deposition of King !Louis Phillipe in'1848, he wentto France, *aud was elected a member of the Conslitoeut Assorablyby the voters of Corsica.

His first Parliamentary experience was as pleader of the extreme Republicans, rapid4ly -succeeded by -a moderate spirit in his political views. In 1849 he was made iminister plenipotentiary of France at *oourt of Madrid from which he was repealled, in a short time. After President

Xouis Napoleon had-succeeded in strang^_„lingthc republic and establishing the & .empire,:he made his cousin, a French jprince, with a -seat in the Senale awl Council of State, a '""recipient of tthtr Grand Cross -of the Jjegion ot Honor and a general of .division in the army. In this last-named ,capacity IIR saw -A'brief servicc in the ar wiih-Russia. commanding an infant. v$ry division of reserve at the battles ol ^Alrna and ilukermann. His marriage with the Princess Clotilde, daughter of *King .Victor Emmanuel, of Italy, took iplace January 80. 1859. The offspring 'are two sons and a daughter, of whom rthe eldest child, Napoleun Victor Jerome

Frederic^ born July 18, 1802, has inherited the. great expectations of the late iPriace Imperial. Prince Napoleon bad. a command in the war ot 1859, between iPrance and-'Italy on the one side, and Austria on ilie other. An attack which the made on the Orleans family, in a ^speech delivered in the Senate in 1861, wap resented by the Due d'Aumale, who challenged him. The prince, who is not eminent for his -courage, declined the duel. His appoint ment as president of the commissioners l'or the Universal Exhibition ot Paris of ,1667ymade in 1865, he resigned in con-v ^sequence of a disagreement with his coosin, the emperor. He visited the

United -States in 1861, and made numerons acquaintances-.with eminent leaders -on both sides in the great civil contest •then raging. When Napoleon III declared waragainst Piuseia, in the summer of 1870, Prince Napoleon desired a

(command,.but

was refused it, and sent to

,his fat her-in law, the king ot Italy, with -the view to secure his co-operation with France, in tho conflict. In this attempt he tailed. The collapse of the Empire |resuUed in bis residence in Brussels and other continental cities, after which he •settled in England. Upon his venturing •into (France a short time after the jbattle of ^Sedau, he was banished from its soil by a decree sof thetProvisional Government led by .Julesi-Favre and Gambetta. In 1875 he anade a publicideclaration of his adherence th the.republic, through the columns of «the Volunte Nationale. Of late years he iias resided in France very quietly, and this manifesto ofthe other day, created the igreatest«eurprisc on this account. That

IPrince"Napoleon could suppose that eith•er his personal ambition, or the interests 4f his-son, the recognised Bonapartist pretender,'could be served by the ridiculous -demonstration of the other day, is abundant jproolcthat he is.not the rjght kind of man to head a rewlntion.

•rthodox Oddities.

*Phe following is told of Saphir, a defoitmed Jew, who lined centuries ago in Germany: He was •rtveling ia a stage eoach in conapaning with two Jesuits, who made allusions to the personal appearance of Saphir, and were disposed to make fun ot him generally. He put up with it dor some time, but finally he ask ed: "Who arey«u two fallows, anyhow "We belong to the society of iesus." "Which society «of Jesu*»-his first or* his last?" "What do you mean?" "Well, hie first -society wete donkeys in in the masager, and his laaS were thieves on Mount Calvary. Now, I want to know to which of tkese socfties you .lielong." 4

Snrprise Party.

A party of the friends of Mr and Mrs. H. Hosier, who live two and a kalf miles southeast of the city, gave theaa a surprise Wednesday evenicg. The guests numbered between thirty and lorty and they brought along with them a number of nice presents and the wherewithal for an appetizing supper,.which was spread later in the evening and to which all did ample justice. It was the sixteenth anniversary of the wedding of Mr. and Mrs. Hosier, and with the assistance of their friends they celebrated it in a way which will not soon be forgotten.

A. Atkins, who has been connected with J. T. H. Miller's mercantile tailoring house for ten years will open up a ailoring asiabtyiiiment of hit own in the

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.•«..• ODD AND ENDS.

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The last Donations to the lief Fnnd. The GAZETTE has contf^ined nearly all the names of doners to the German reltef fund. Appended are a few additions

FIRST

SECOND W A Bis

Frank Wey Frel Boas HHeyroth

W Ham ilton Geo Kluk Esken GeoEsken Gottfried Schevt..,

Heidenreich

Gust Wein hart Wllhelm Bender

First Ward.. Second Ward.... Third Ward,.... Fourth W»rd Fifth Ward M.. Sixth Ward.....

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FIFRN WARD.

TOTAliS.

The whole collection in the city now figures up as follows, the Lutheran church collection, not counted in yesterday's GAZETTE, because it was kept inaseparate forra, being added in the grand total. Tnrtier Hall v.....I 180 00 Lutheran Church

806 It 36* 76 113 60 16S 25 103 60 83 00

..$1,260

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NOTES.

Ge Lutheran church fund is to be sent as a separate fund so that the collection outside of that1 is a little over $1,200 and is a creditable amo«nt for Terre Haute. The collection with the exception of a few large amounts, is made up of small donations from a large number of peo pie.

Mr. A. Her* yesterday, made the following collections in Paris: S Hamturger..^.. 10 00 8 Berlau

Rosenheim 00 ACohn 100

Mr. Nick Stein thinks of going 1o Bra zil to circulate a subsciiptien paper.

Railroad News.

ACCIDENT OR 1UR WABASH, ST. MUIS AND I'ACIKIC. WABASH, IKD^, -Jan. '27.—At eleven o'clock last jht a mile east of here the west bound express train on the Wabash, St. 'Louis Pacific line struck a broken rail, and the chair car and sleeper rolled down a forty loot embankment There were but eight passengefs in the two carsv": None were seriously injured, except the porter of tu» sleeping car* The wounded were brought here. The names art M. Knight, general freight agent of the Wabash .line, St. Louis C. E.Whitman, St.Louis A.W. Colton, Toledo Ai.fS'.'Gai], St. Louis. Thepor ter's name was not ascertained.

MIGFIT HAVE 3BEN SERIOUS. No. 37 freight train, on the I. & St. L. from the east, arrived in the city at about 12 o'clock this morning. Through fault in the switfch just east of Seventh street, the engine jumped the track dragging several-cars off. fi

This is just around an abrupt cutve in the road, and a train standing aiound the curve can not be seen from a distance of a few hundred'ieet up the track. This might have caused a serious accident, ana very nearly did so in this case. No. 5 passenger, which was an hour and a half late, an&running fast to make up time, arrivedon the scene, hardly more than a few seconds after the accident. Fortunately:, however, it was warned in time to stop within a hundred leet or more of the disabled train.

The carsstUlremaining on the track were detached from the ditched portion of the train, and ihauled off. by a switch engine. The passenger train then passed on to the depot.

THE (LEGISLATURE.

Uader

Tie ConstUirfiMal AmeadiMtats CwuideratiM. The whete tihae.of the Legislature yesterday, in both branches, was taken up with a discassion of the constitutional ameadments, and even then was not finished but was lett wer to be taken up Monday afternoon after their return from Evansville, for wLioh place they started this morning.. The majority and minority reports were Isetose both bodies and a general debate ensued,tevery member being anxious apparently to place himself on the record with a speech.

Orphan Hone .Brick.

In Mr. George E. Facrangton's office are specimen brick sent by parties who wish to furnish the Fed piessed brick for the new Orphan Home JBuilding. The Zanesville specimen is a beautiful brick, true as a die, and perfectly free from cracks, and is ot exactly the right shade of color. This cannot be said of the Evansville brick which is n«t of attractive color and is full of cracks .and minute holes.

Revival Services.

There is a revival in progress under the auspices of the United Bretheren denomination at the McPherson school house six miles east ot the city on the National road. Services are conducted by Bev. Miller, ot the Cloverland circuit. The meetings have been in progress for two weeks past the services have been largely attended. Twenty persons have already united with the church and the number of Interested meters ii cwwtantly increasing.

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RKNCH CRISIS.

The

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CAshman..

Leonard Welte Heinl— RGagg....,

Curtail

1 00 1 00 200 1 00

Bung

Down in the

.. Cabinet of

Daelerc-

RESIGNATION OF THE MINISTRY.

PARIS,

Jan. 28 —President Grevy has

accepted the resignation of the ministers. Falliers and Jules Fery are conferring with the President about his new ministry.

President Grevy remarked: "I am firmly resolved on a dissolution nobody can govern the country with the present Chamber of Deputies."

The London Times says: "The resignation of the French cabinet exhibits the catastrophe which threatens the political arrangements of the country, and renders a substitute more powerful than a ministry a matter of exceeding difficulty."

VQRMINO A NEW MINISTRY. ^L-II PARIS, Jtn. 29.—Jules Ferry deolined to undertake the ^prmation of the Cabinet. It has been decided, therefore, to revert to a combination ministry under the presidency of Falliers. All the late ministers except Duclerc, General Billot and Admiral Jaurigaberry will retain their pertfalalios. Terrard will be Minister of Foreign Affairs, De Moby, Minister of Marine ad interem and Thibaudin, Minister of War.

MEETING OF THE CABINET. At a meeting ot the Cabinet, Fallieres was appointed President of the Council and ad interim Minister of Foreign ASa S

There is renewed doulbt as to what ministers retain their posts under Fallieres.

The reconstructed ministry appeared iajh^chamber of Deputies to-day. The debate on the proscription bill has commenced.

THE DEBATE.

In the Chamber to-day, Fallieres explained the divergence of views which

hd to Ik. try TQssaagtiac and De la Motte proposed

tan

adjournment of the debate until after the appointment of a Minister of War, whbde department was especially conqerrieft. 'Fallieires replied that the bill was before tht Chamber. It was not a military, hut apolitical measurs. fThe Chamber decided to commence the debate forthwith. '-'4 *.

^«ERATV MURDER

.1 OR

A Wife Kills a Husband Whom She Couldn't 6et Along With. KEMAS, MICH., Jan. 29.—In Bath township, Clinton county, Friday night, David Clark, a farmer, was shot and instantly killed by his wife. «The parties have Uvea unhappily for some years, after coming to blows. The disagreement of Friday arose from the wife's determination to administer medicine other than that prescribed by the attending physician to one of her children. The ehildfe illness continued to grow worse until she was supposed to be dying. While Clark was endeavoring to restore her to conscienceness his wife#ot a revolver from an adjoining room and deliberately shot her husband through the back.

THE suit of Charles Eppinghousen against Mr. Patrick Shannon was set for trial .to-day at Brazil, Mr. Shannon being afraid lo have the case tried here among citiaens whom he sought to grievously wroqg in the matter of building a court house* But other business is ahead of this case on the docket, and so it is not likely to came up this term which ends this week. The next term of osnrt begins five weeks from next Monday, and it will then be at the head of the dooket and eancosne to a speedy trial.

Tin Death Record.

BOSTOK, Jan. 29.—Garfield Learned, senior member of the firm of Learned, Thompson & Co, publishers of the Shipping List of this city, died this morning at his home in West Newton, after a brief illness, aged 75. He was the father of Arn^s F. Learned, the New York agent of the New England Associated Press.

fefSSs Will Prevent It. NEW YORK, Jan. 29.—Chief ot Police Walling this afternoon issued orders to the force to prevent the starring match between Mace and Slade, set down lor

The Right Sound.

BALTIMORE, MD., Jan. 29.—Charles Foote (colored) was whipped with seven lashes in jail to-day for beating his wife

The fund for the aid of the flood sufferets in Germany, raised in Cincinnati, now amounts to $16,1M^2.

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TERRE HAUTE, IND.--THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 1,1883. $1.50 PER YEAR

"THOIAS,THI DOUBTER."

Lecture IM Ironing by George

n,

Alfred Townaend-

A Bemarkablo View of the Life of Thome Jefferson.

For awhile last night and up to within a few minutes of Die lecturer's appearance it looked as. though the audience would be exceedingly small. But the fact was that enfryone arrived there at about the same and the lower floor was quite well filled at 8 o'clock. Gath was introduced bp Bon. Bayless W. Banna who referred to him in terms of elo quent and fluent fnise. The lecturer stood behind a high red covered desk bearing a lamp at each end, and read from manuscript. He has a good voice which during tie two hours duration of his leetnre gave no evidence of weakness and while he has no other natural gifts as an orator he waa listened to with attention because of the interesting character of his subject matter.

Mr. Towiwend mid, in introduction, that he had chosea Tor the subject of his lecture the name otdjhe apostle Thomas, who could not belpve until he had laid, his hands ou the wottbds of his risen Lord, because, like him, lie was led to lay his hands on the great £gures in the history of this country and become better acquainted with that* personality. When nineteen years of apu he entered newspaper life, and for iwenty years succeed* mg had been congested with the press and had been ablem visit the homes of nearly all the PMsldents. The only presidents who eefeeived unqualified praise from him were Wa&ingion and the Adamses. He fpecribed Washing-, ton's home as "only Jlfteen miles below Washington city wfltere the Potomac spreads its broad sfceet the bouse a modest two-story brick, now ninety-nine years old."

He said of Washington that no mora precocious soldier or diplomat or purer statesman ever lived. Like all 'great presidents he was a western man. Washington's career as a toldier against the Indians at the age of sixteen and the Seven Years War and all its historical

lions of one of Washington's shots on the Monongahela, were graphically depicted. When twenty seven year$ old the Father of his Country married a widow with f75,000 of her own and 'so as soldier, statesman, president, father, stepfather and widow's manager, had quite an eventful career. "Teh miles from the city.of Boston," said the lecturer, "where the gra .ite ridges rise out of the salt sea marsnes, lies the wooden-built village ol Quincy. Here two small wooden houses stand side by side, the largest ot which was the farm house of John Adams' father when John was born, and in one end ot the town stands the mansion be owned when president. Adams' csrcer as a school teacher, studying law after school hours, and his marriage to Abigail Smith described in detail. "His wife," s&id the speaker, ''was the only wise wife of all the presidents, the only president's wife whose son reared by herself to become his father's equal. In one of his letters to his wife Adams said: '1 rejoice that one of my children has not only motherwit, but his mother's wit.' Adams was considered the great lawyer and speaker in Congress at the age of thirty nice. He was characterized as 'the Atlas of independence,' and the founder of. the American navy. Franklin had worldly wisdom without wisdom, and Adams morals without worldly wisdom."'

What Gath has to say about Jefferson is the newest matter in his lecture. He is by no means an admirer of that great statesman. He said:

Honestly alarmed at the unproselytizing spirit of the republic, and like all men of suspected physical courage, averse to soldiers, he, the oldest member of the cabinet, nourished a violent dis -. like to Hamilton, who was but thirty-two years old,denounced the military society of the Cincinnati as a terrible aristocracv, and began to cover the land with his correspondence imputing even to Washington a lethargy about liberty. Many a man has been ruined bv going once to France and redeemed by returning to Fance once again. Jefferson never re-1 turned. The reign ot terror, the execution of men and women, the ferocity in liberty's name which touched the heart of human nature only made Jefferson more radical. He left the cabinet, and being no orator, indeed unable to make a speech or pxeside at a meeting, be resorted to that subtle, secret pen, and backed up aecrimonious editors who were out of patience with their plain times, and finally established an apparent issue between the people and the government, where inevitably the people would prevail.

He parted w&b Washington at the inauguration of John Adams in March, 1797, and till Washington's death, twentyseven months afterwards, though they lived in neighboring counties, not a visit, message nor letter ever passed between them that nan be found. In answer to a disclaiming letter, however, by Jefferson in 1795, Washington replied "As you have mentioned the subject yourself it would not be frank, candid or friendly to conceal that your conduct has been represented as dorogating from that opinion I had coneeived you entertained of me that to your particular friends and connections you have described and they havadenounced me as a ponoti under a dangerous Influence and that if I would listen to some other opinions all

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would be well. I was co believer in the infallibility of the politics or measures of any man living. I WM no party man my sell and the first wish of my heart was, if parties did exist reconcile them.

While I was using my utmost

exertions to establish a national character of our ow&, independent as far as our' obligations and practice would permit of every nation of the earth. 1 was accused of being the enemy of one nation and subject to the influence of another and every act of my administra. tion tortured to prove it. In such exaggerated and indecent terms as could scarcely be applied to a Negro, a notorious defaulter, or even to

A

COMMON WCKPOCEET."

Mr. Jefferson wrote the resolutions of 1798 secretly and sent them to Kentucky, the western offspring of Virginia, to be passed, and never avowed them during his lite though they were found among his papers. There the word nullify was first employed in our politics and revived by Calhoun thirty years later. The loose opinions about paying public debts which have disgraced so many new yonng American states, also began in Jefferron's

INCENDIARY SENTIMENTALITIES. Nine yeare after he retired from tne presidency he wrote to his bankrupt son-in-law "Each generation is a distinct nation, with aright by the will of its majority, to bind themselves, but none to bind succeeding generations more than tbe inhabitants of another country. At nineteen years from the date of a contract a majority of the contractors are dead, and their coutract with them. Is a new

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eneration bound to acknowledge the No, Jhe evil is the gift of God to the living as much as it had been to the deceased generation, aad tbe laws of nature impose no obligation on them to pay this debt."

He reached the presidency, and good luck attended him. Immediately Europe had along peace. He found Gallatin a financier who continued tbe solid work of Hamilton, and he bought Louisiana by an exercise of tbe very federal power he had decried. To him we owe the sentimentality in our nation which softens yet often weakens public opinion and justice. He was a passionate lover of libtrty and created the people, some say, but be weakened the state till it required three hundred thousand millions of dollars, a million lives and all our commerce to maintain the empire thai Washington won with the sword, and Jefferson fought with the purse. M*. Jefferson's sentiment included the emancipation of slaves, but he was too good a politician to pereist in it, ana he said: "Nothing is more dertainly written in tto-book

0!fate

than that these People

are to be frfe, not is ft less eiHati tbll they cannot live in the same government He was unable to set his own slaves free, and they were all fold but five for having ruined himself by discarding every day sense and by the recklessness of his sons-in-law.

Jefferson did not only produce a qhange of sex in bis country. The masculine features of Washington and John Adams faded from the God and there came instead the soft auburn hair, and light brown eyes, flexible limbs and feline tread, the sensuousness and intuitsons,. the tfarmth and waywardness of the lover and the woman.

Thomas Jefferson and Adams parted in anger in 1801 in 1812 they reopened friendly correspondence they died on the same day, the 4th of July, 1825, having both voted for President Monroe. The son of Adams was then President but he belonged to the party of Jefferson.

The home ot Madison was a large, but not extravagant residence on a tract of 1,100 acres, only about twenty-five milea from Monticello. Not a brick now stands where Madison was born. He was born rich, educated at Princeton College, and at the age of twenty-eiglit went to Congress. Mtraison had the most accomplished mind of all the presidency— Monroe the most barren. He bad a taste for theology, and was never fit for the executive office.

John Quincy Adams gained notoriety by his ideas of slavery and recognition ot negro republic.

The West came into power with Andrew Jackson, who secured bis wife after the manner ofthe Sabine's and was as rude and royal as Peter the Great. He made his entire cabinet resign in a day. Ha had killed bis man in a duel, and had been a negro trader, but never insincere. He had made the name of the republic a terror to bis enemies.

Martin Van Buren was the first president of our modern business civilization, and put the treasury department where it ought to be. He waa the first to consider literary men, and tbe introducer of the telegraph. He was tbe most worldly wise lawyer ever in the White House, ana was the most elegant gentleman of his day.

Harrison, Gath said, was a self-import-ant, third-rate man, who died before his term expired.

Polk was no leader or politician, but his physical administration v/as brilliant. He was buried in his own front yard at Nashville.

Taylor was spoken of as the Whig president, and the agitation of tbe slave question commenced under him.

Fillmore was a brilliant lawyer of Yankee stock, and very anxious for reelection. He merely divided and extinguished his party.

Cautious and grave, James Buchanan framed his purposes carefully, and closed his career childless and without a wife. His epitaph should be, "He was the most successful failure of bis time."

The lecture' on Presidents efosed with Buchanan. Gath said he had seen Lincoln aad Garfield in their coffins but the lecture did not treat of their lives or public careers.

He then returned in serio-comic verse to describe a trip up Salt River to commune with those great but unhappy spirits, the defeated Presidential candidates. Among tbcee

he named Calhoun, Clay,

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Webster, Douglass, Seymour, and Greeley Ot Webirter he said ne

Mwaa

a little too

human to he truly grand." To broken*' hearted Greeley he paid the most splendid tribute of all.

THE GENERAL ASSEMBLY*

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The Senate Deelaree the Amendments Hot Legally Pending

THE CONSTITUTIONAL AMENDMENTS. The constitutional amendments, that have been such a prominent costitutent of Indiana politics for two years past, wera finally disposed of by the State Senate yesterday, and if they are again revived' it must be as new and original proposi. tions. The debate, which began last' Wednesday, and has. been carried on cantinously since, on the legsl status of the amendments was coneluded yesterday. Senator Ristine spoke briefly in support* of the position that the amendment* were pending, and was followed by Senator Marvin (Democrat) in a similar strain. Senator McClure fallowed on the opposite side, and Senator Henry made a lengthy argument. After Senator Mcintosh bad briefly stated his position, Senator Bell concluded the debate by twohouis' speech, which he had carefully prepared, and delivered with considerable force. He discussed both the legal and political aspects of the ease. As will be remembered, the Senate has been considering this question as a committee of the whole and the propositioai to recommend the adoption ofthe majority report (declaring the amendments not legally pending) was carried by a rising^ vote, the chairman (Mr. Henry) ruling that ayote by yeas and nays was not in order. The committee then arose and reported progress, and upon the motion* to concur in the report of the committee,.' the following was the vote:

Yeas—Senators Bell,Benz, Bischowsky/ Brown, Compton, Davidson, Duncan^ Faulkner, Fle'cher, Hill, Hilligass^ Howard, Hutchinson, Johnson, ot Dear-. born: Johnson, of. Tippccanoc May^i McClure, McCulloch, Null, Rahm, ftich-r, ardson, Smith,of Jay Van Vorhis, Voyle8 and Youche.—25.

Nays—Senators Adkinson, Bandy* Campbell, Ernest, Fleming, Foolke, Graham, Henry, Hoover, Keiser, Locfcridge* Lindley, Macartney, Magee^ Marvin,:: Mclatuaht sQ|rerstrt£t, Ristine, Sayi*,. 8mnfi, of Delaware Spann, Yancey^,'i 23.

Absent—Senator Hostetter. PairedSenator Willard. From an examination of the vote iu will be seen that of the Democrats, 8en-c ators Magee, Marvin, McInioehr Hopver and Ernest voted with the Republicans* on the question, and ofthe latter,

IMPORTANT CAPTIHE.

How Three Toting Men Got Intof" Trouble Over a 8ealskin Sneqne

Late Saturday night Chief of Police* Vand ever and Policeman Cain, with the. assistance of Julia Kiley, arrested Harry, Charles and Frank Harrington. The.,* former was arrested at Mike Gainey's* I saloon on .Chestnut street and the other two at their residence at 510 Lafavette street. Friday afternoon a sealskin satque was stolen from T. W. Stewart's* residence on north Sixth street. Saturday night Chief Yandever found it ate second hand store where it had been sold for a small sum by old Mrs. Riley, mother of the somewhat noted Riley girls. Tbe old woman, her daughter Julia and son Ed. were arieeted.

Julia Riley said the sacque was left ajtV their house by a young man and offered to go with the officers and identify him. In order to do this she disguised herselt as a boy and in company ritn Policcman Cain made a tour of the various saloons of the city until finally they came across, him at Gainey's. Harry is about 25. He was arrested not long ago on a chtrgo of stealing a saddle, giving his name thu|: time as Sexton. fs

The saddle remained in police hea J-: quarters until this morning, when A. Z." Foster identified it as being the one stolen from his stable two months ago.

The mother ot the boys at first denied that she was their mother. Iler house was searched by tbe police yesterday on a search warrant, but nothing criminat- '. ing any of them was discovered. She came to police headquarters this morning after a permit to see her boys, who are now confiaed in jail,but this was refused by Chief Vandever. The youngest of the boys is only 15. The Riley's were released. ,.

CARDS are out for the nuptials March 15th of Mr. Sigmund Uffenheimer and Hiss Charlotte Monnberger.

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Van Vorhis, Bischosky .and Youche voted with tbe Democrats. The vore wast "clinched" by a motion to reconsider/ which was laip on the tBble on motion of' Senator Bell.

The discussion of the amendments*^ continued in the House yesterday, and will probably be concluded today. Those who spoke yesterday were Messrs. Williams, of Knox Shively*, Pricey Wilson, of Kosciusko Gibson, Sterrittand Antrim.

At tbe request of the Studebakers and* the Oliver Chilled plowworks of South Bend the committee on elections was ap-' pointed to investigate the alleged bulldozing, of their employes in the latt election.

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