The Syracuse Register, Volume 6, Number 46, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 26 September 1895 — Page 2

jSpaeusc fjkgisttv, SYRACUSE, i i INDIANA. N The New York post office Via* fonn<l at horizontal stamp which marks the date and hour of nrriral of letters, and U does it legibly. , ■ A FBKJtCB doctor has recommended rocking chairs for people with weak . stomachs, lie says that the Oscillation lias a good effect upon the •‘gastro-in-testinsl ~ ' ■ Japan is rapidly increasing her importations of American cotton and kerosene. Thus our petroleum is becoming ‘‘the light'of Asia/' and both Amer>ca and the orient are benefited. Tiikuk serins to lie something wrong Itt the decision of tbt*..court in tktMH of the. Brooklyn you tig man who kissed several girls against their will. It was the young man who was adjudged into he. ■ ' ■ A iitti i» of the South Pacific often ■grows t i lv 1) or in inches in clinmwter, and; I.MO to 2,0H0 feet in length. It has no - root, in the proper sense, the r u: - huicii.t Wing absorbed from the water- <- SfM r tii|u.lH'ginn : ng of this century no > r tlnirt fifty-two volcanic islands have riseuywit of the sea. Nineteen of them hare disappeared, being sub, tnrrp d; the.oih.cn* re mainland ten ure In .1 inhabited. I j:;i. S, U I'iMii;, who read a paper 1 .■' • •re the lit it ish a."; .. iation't lie other lie on eantiiltaU, says that all the rages of the Congo basin iu Africa practice <an .il a’iMii, and that while it is. prevented iri tank peftionv by' the vvii.‘. • \:.. ;r oy. in other parts of the basiu.it e "ii the increase. A.Chicacp paper-says -Jhat the Fort ftherid.an soldur who killed an escapiiuf.eoiiviet carrii I a “K rag-Jorge neon r i.ile, the. t» il lets of which always speed , v irful vehieit-y toward .thej •mart "• tine wo'uid Iw* led to sus] froth- titis that . the bullets of other ritle* v'.oji to get a glav, ..f -.•.1a on the ; w.ay.- ' ■’ - / " • ■ ■ tim !‘a ctire'u ss mail went to the cel- ,! r an 1 stuck : l>< 'candle in what he '1 ht '"as a keg of black sand. He n.t near, if • dri'nkir.g' wine until the din in-toil b-o.i Nearer it got t-r the buck t. 1 nearer and nearer, i tint;: (tic nir.re reached t-1-.- black -an- .. ' and, a- it tvn> noth in jr but 1 lack .sand, | nothing happt ned. i’ii mu 1A• AIl l v i*>, the great.tobacco 1 - man. - lirrdbf America and Is credited, e. kit .desires and di -igiis t« follow the j (- > : AN - . W.< kiorf At tor tv*s ; ' .end his days in England, Wealth j . Seeks to lean on aristocracy, and aris-j tvvraey,- especially that ‘of /'' the. imjw- . .ennkms kind, seeks to lean on wealth A . c>f the An . riean lend ;Tin pri; fish si comes from Alien town, ■ !**., whore, it j i >;«:d.. a. bolt of- lightning struck a ; fish pun i and- killed, bet ween" seventy- j tivi- a-io > t• ■ it, all of wliiv-h were front -IS to 2*.inches in length and j weighed tw > to four, pounds each.'! liiglitning will, sometimes, strike info , water; but those vere v«-ry largo trout. -• v ’ - . TIIK 'Mins icjinsett* state census ‘ allows that nearly all “ the towns have lost in population, while the cities have j gamed, this is a significant move- i nu n!. Boston gained 26 -per cent.- and I n tract i-*it ft* the ' last ten years. Idle largest gain was made by New Hod- j ford, 65 -per cent, -These gains are ! nearly all-in niannfactutring citics. 'The ! stale as a whole gained jx-r cent, Titrhi. is ttt old colored woman in Mad isou, I ia. /who is si devoted toller kinfolk' that she named her only daughter after them all Here is the mini'-’' Mat. ilia .5,110 Polly iKi/ty Ad.lme Auiciia Agnes Saloite ! . Kat<- Fisher Valentine Catherine Aleinontiiie Martin limbic roc Kiipeperson P. .1-- -.. a pat her Yarilia Jane Indiana Franc:* !/•-•;, M, . d-ui Ere. d< m Mary Middle brooks Williams lier nickname is Sis.' The American inventor has a’ habit «-f risii-.g promptly i> every occasion. When the ctll camt'for fenders for electric --set bin mind to-the task, and already more.than .one thousand devieci»oflhat> >rt have Wen produced. l’nfortanaufly, few if any of the fender, c-n • u ;•! t*> the popular do- > sire. Each works tvjell. under gccrlain conditions,' yet none Proves trustworthy under all circumstances. Hut the right .thing'will be discovered after a tune, for .Yankee inventive genius never gives tip/ ■ The Hawaiian government has become satisfied of its strength that it ■* h, a*.pardoned all the persons, who took • part tn the lat% abortive insarrectkvn. With the exception of a few of the - rillglt aders, e, ho will have to serve out their terms of imprlsomnenb Among i those who profit by this gracious act on the part of the Hawaiian authorities is tyueen l.tl, who has been kept in her house under Hole guard for some months, because at the time of the breaking out of the insurrection arms and ammunition and compromising docunierit* were found on her premises. - Tlir. record-breaking trip of a New York Central- train from New Y'ork city to HuiTuSo. ! ■ . Uubs in 4Uy minutes, or ssimetlffbg over *V3 miles an hour, is not much of a gain over the rate of sp*--M maintained by the Eng* , llsh train that ran August 23 from Don- ; don to Aberdeen, a distance of miles, in .415 minutea {tut It Is.’ 1 enough •*- regain the championship f-w hieh that speed wrested from w, an. 11 ' that is no small* matter in the eyes >• England. How old Stephenson wonh-. have stared if he could have stood Ih--alde the track and seen this flying train go whitsing past. j. ju .■ « 111 *' 1 TtiK uniou of three of the Central American republics—Salvador, Nicaragua and Honduras—under the name of •*the Greater Republic of Central America/' ami the possibility that Guatemala and Costa Rica will join the union, does not necessarily mean that peace amt prosperity will hereafter prevail for those nations Signed compacts bare but little weight with the people < of Central America, and the old game of revolution and insurrection is likely to be played again. The first adventurer wbo seeks the overthrow of the established government U Ukaly to ied plaoiy.tf WbSV*.

Epitome of the Week INTEBESTINQ NEW 3COM PI EATTON; FROM WASHINGTON. Ox the Ifith the visible supply of grain in the United .States wa&: Wheat, 38,038,000 busheiSt ilorn, 4,934,000 bushels; 3,481,003 bushels; rye, ■ , *A,boo bushels; barley, 486,003 ti*shels. ,In the seven days ended on th> */th there were 313 busiue"'? fniiiires in the United blab-* previous and -10 in the corresponding tium ib ISbE Exchanges at the leading elearinghonses in the United States during the week ended on the 20th aggregated 81.0*1. 461,against 580T,006,018 the previousweek. The increase, compared with the corresponding week in 1801. une'axi I —, THE EAST. The. New Y’ork republicans in convention at Saratoga made,the following nominations: Secretary of state. John I‘aliner. of Albany; comptroller, James E. Roberts. of Kfie! state treasurer, A. |t. folvin. of Warren; state engineer. •*, W. Adams, of Oneida; nttnrnev/general, F. E. Hancock, of Onondaga; judge of the court of appeals, Celori* U. Martin, of ltroome. The platform scores the democratic a<lniin istratiqn for failing to defend the riglits of American cit.iseas in- foreign countries? the turifT ruil the handling <.f the deficiency question by the last .democratie congress receive condemnation; a sound and stable currency, giving the }>eople a d liar's worth for a dollar, is indorsed; Gov. Mi rttni’s wise and {intriotic administration is praised; and his enndidaev for president foribally launched, and the enforcement of the. state Sunday liquor law ami the'preservation id the Sabbath are de, mauded. • Thk battleship Maine, seven -years' building at.the Brooklyn navy yard, was put into comrtiLssion, ■ ■A i Pittsburgh/ I’a-, John Moore, was -'::t to the workhouse for thirty days for lieating his wife. > Magistrate 1 Small tie let Mrs. Moure "fi-x the.punish- . merit. ; ; In ( fines and 18 hours Morton I'u\bury rode from Provide oe. lb 1., to Siiiv Fra:ie -cv* and back again I>UXl*ury N the first bicyclist to make the journey from coast togoastand return. In session at Atlantic Uity, N. .1.. the Sovereign Grand E<«dge of the Indehdcht'Order of Odd Follows adopted j ii»' amendment to the constitution ofi thc bnler providing 4hat no anloonbartepderi or professional ,er . shall W eligible to member-- ! f -bip. < ’ln*: death of John li Haskins, of >. vt >'• rk, who waR famoiiN in congress forty years ago, is-cnrred at the age of I 4 y ears. ■ ; ■ . on the Pennsylvania railroad a train of seven vestibuled cars ran from Jert'ilv. to Philadelphia in 98 min-J-Th©- distance is ,94. miles. ■ l'li! New Jersey republican* in state 'convention at Trenton nominated a /Adi ticket f headed .by e'\-State Senator JohnW. Griggs, of Paterson, for govj ernor, Tlie platform oppooes any aV j tempt to impose upon this country a deluised j>r depreciated eurrenev. and i drill is - ie? in-the wisdom -and lier.eti-j-cenee of a tax upon imports 'which will' 1 aiffi r»l' protection to American industry ahd a icon ate revenue WEST AND SOUTH. . The great show of the south; tbe (• tton States and International exposiI tion, was successfully opened at Allantn, Ga. After the parade and the ad-dr.-sM-v of welcome and congca’.ula- j : lion President Cleveland.-at Gray Ga- i j Wed, touched a button and flashed over ! i the wire the electric force which set i \ the p.nderous macliinnry of tlie ex{«>- : sit ion to /'motion. • v . ' The xm/omkj i its'all over the west on I the . ISth registered in the vicinity <1 f 100: In Chicago, there were three j deaths from heat. Ht sink** blocks at Indianapolis, Ind., | Wei burned, the total loss beiojf near- j l v S- A* * »■,«.< l. In session at Indianapolis, Ind.. the Patriotic Sons of America elected ■ Ja,mes Kilon. of fk-nver, t 01., as president. ' • Fl.AMKsnt Aldeit. Minn . burned fourteen stores, a church. a newspaper office and several other buildings. 1\ jumping from a carriage at' Ghat-tain---a. ‘Tcnn.. Gov Upham. <»f Wis. •> fell and ! rpke id' right leg. In Mi di gan the great strike of iron ore miners was declared off. An address has t*• en prepared by the national silver committee appointed by the convention which met at Memphis spine months ago w hich declares that a double standard is tn-ed-ed, that a i>sp.hlaF vote in 1 s>; would settle the question, and that the United States can act independently of European nations Fi.ames at Trautman'a station, 0., destroyed seven -acres of buildings,' the 1-•" taring 5-3P),O0O. Fire destroy«si the largr- sawmill of the Murphy EumlH-r c -mpany at Green Hay, Wis. , together with the train-j ways. Inritier ‘piles, dc., entailing a less i,f 1106.666 • X cfctoss' which swept over Poor county, W is . wrecked thirty buildings, farmers being the principal losers. Am asnmmer'sonting in the «-* ex-Prc'idcnt Harrison returned to his home In 1 ndtanapolla. Ova farm near Canton, 111, Min. Charity Wright died at the age of 106 . years. T month* and 26 days. A v n lynched a negro charged with criminally assaulting a white woman at Benton, La. ■ At Lincoln. Neb., the 11. T. Clarke w h -Ics tlc drug company made an assignment with liabilities of nearly FIQO.VOI • : . HiHMil. vtts attacked an express train on the Wisconsin Central road in a swamp near Waupaca, out failed to secure anv wooty. The train was ditched by. ties placed oR the track. Is fhiensro Benjamin H. Jones, paving teller, and Receiving Teller Joseph 11. Wilson, of the. National Bank of Illinois, were accused of taking 819,500 froui the concern. The supreme court of Indiana says the lending of public money by an official is-felony and lays the offender liable to imprisonment for twenty-one years. A man named Kane shot and killed William Goodloe, two Swope brothers, and two other men whose names.were not known in a quarrel over a game of cards at MeKinney, Ky. Ar Spartausburg. S. C., Robert Poole fcolored) was hanged for the murder of Will Long (colored) in 1889. Tint doors of the State bank at Republican City, Neb., were dosed, with liabilities of t*l.ooU

The United States g'oVfcrnment id • now in full possession of the Chickainanga and Chattanooga field. The park dedicated on the 19th to the .nation was consecrated with the blood of 35,000 heroes in 1863, It was conscf orated bV a battle which, for desperate fighting and carnage, has few if any - equals in the world's history. Peter Kemzxi„ a farmer residing > near Arapahfit l , Sifb., shot and killed his Hue and then blew out his own i brains. A trifling dispute was the ' cause. i In a hurdle race at Findlay, O.; L;l---1 lian Sha *er, an eque>frienne, of St. Louis and her companion, Edward • Kerns of Chicago, were fatally inr jured. 1 At her home in Fond du l.ac, Wis, > Mrs Elizaln-th Durr ant Blackb\*rn - celebrated her lboth birthday. i At Bald Mountain. S. D.. two inelies of snow fed on the 20th, tn Chicago and other portions of the west tlie heat was terrific. .Fißr. nearly wiped out the village of Tower Hill, 111. 1 In Bucyrus 0., N>ek Ilnincs was acting as a pallbearer at the funeral of a friend who had ilropped dead, when be ' bEvi fell dead of apoplexy. lIAVU) Van West and his wife, the former 76 years old -and tlie latt -r 72. died within a few hours of each other of old age at their home near Kainma- / zoo. Mich. The hew census gives lowa a population Os 2,035,003, against 1,911,894 live years ago. ■ i Flames at Oneida, Kan., destroyed j nearly the whole of the business por- | tion of the town. ORATORV nild music,'a parade of dis- ! tinguished visitors, and celebrated military orgahlsatidns and two receptions | ended the Chiekahiauga park dedieatiprt ! FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE. Mi N-i -' S e-ngrgss' convened in the Cit\ of Mexico, In his address .IVesi--1 dent Diaz said the country was iu a ■ prosperous condition. Tu: firm of Fox. (.1 inch A Co., corn merchants a‘ Gloucester, England, failed with liabilitieslll.oo3,ooo. At Invercargill, New Zealand, Miss Minnie Dean wa-* hanged for the murder of infants intrusted to her care. .She protested her Innocence up to the last, ■ . ■ 1 ! J Flames broke out on the steamer lona/from Edipburgh, so/ London, and - six of the pass, nfrers and the stew-; arde-s were burned t<i deathAt Kn theng, ( hina, s.-veil prisoners w en-i-xecuti'-i i-i tin- presence, of'.the Consuls ; Thev tverc among the party . that murdered the missionaries. Their , hrads were chopped off. It is said that two Englishmen, traveling in the Congo Free State were . murdered and eaten by natives, Five bandits who maue an attack on a mine at San Isidore for the purpose of rolibery were shot nt l’hchucha, Mexico. i RkreliS captured and sacked the town of Bnnev. on- the northern coast of Cuba, and had possession of the seaport un l fort. In the canal ut the entrance of Port Borcastegui, Cuba, the cruiser Barcastegni was w recked in a collision w-ith .the nierchaiit steamer Mortera and Admiral I’arejo and thirty-eight other - persons were drowned. / Is .Oaxaca. Mexico, and throughput | themountain regions, '».constant'kuc- • tension of.shock's of .earthquake had Tbeen felt during the'past erglit weeks. J . Fetes celebrating the twenty-fifth anhivjer.sary «f the entry of the Italian army- into Rome culminated in. the un- < veiling of a monument to Gen. tiaribaldb ; In the northwest part of China fifty ! thousandMohammertans w ere in active j rebellion. They were fighting to set ■ tip an independent government in ters i ritorv taken from Kan o and Thibet. ! Tin. government of hina lms with- ■ drawn its. opnewitior to the proposed investigation on the part of tlie United i Mates of the missionary riots j Near Chemnita, Germany, a milii tary train was wrecked and thirteen persons were killed and-sixty were in-, j jured. thirty seriously. ,\ Gejiman mission near Swatow, t hina. was looted by t>X) Chinese plunderers. LATER NEWS. T«i' - -tmd-u'.. ncy e.-iuniittee cf the New York ehambey of wm-iwroe usa.ia a pdl of the u*xt house of reprswentaive' on the money question and records 6* meiab-ri for free silver, 2 l.i> opposed to free silver and 52 whoso yiews are net known. In a fire at the library of the Ggtv graphiei! s<«.-*.ety at Cran-leti, Wis., ?,obo bodks ivere burned. Wii- iam smith icolore .1), who oil Septt inlx'r' l.’ murdered Tony Podone, a banana pe.l tier, was taken from ofliat Hamm >.id. La., by a mob anil lynched. TtSf. two sons of Frank Newman ;vp Is':-.,*d. in a snoy-'tor in, ar Rawlins Wyo. X R-do nr Br« s,: n. Otto Sehweiger, Oscar Hulh‘r. Willie Klliott and George Engel, all young: boys, were drowned in the lake at Chicago while bathing. At Pit ts'.urgh, Pa . JiivpVi Lassivic, Henry Turner -and Ucorga Tafe were burned to death by expl -ding liicnxine. Tmirtv acres ofi| lumber yards nt Fqnd du Lts, YVis., /owned by Moore A Galloway, were burned over; the lus» being $300,003. Five members of the family of Z. Normandin lost their lives in a landfclidc at SL Luce, t'anarla. Akrait six :nmths -<f stiff.-ring, trials and danger Lio-.tL Peary and his com pan ions Arctic- travA-ls were rose cued by the sicainxr Kit-.- an 1. landed at St- John.-,. N. F, The Roskforl (111.) Cabinet company's fae: -ry was burned, the loss being SR The profits cf tfce government bond syndicate were '■distributed by/ checks is,su -d by M irgan and Belmont, of New York. They amounted to nearly 84, 003,033. - CitAtu.ks srEWAHT, a member of the Forty-ninth. Congress, died at Houston, Tex., aged 59 years. Mi K. Stinson, a SL Louis printer, shot and killed Miss Aria Moore at Oskxloosa, la-, and then killed hiin>elf. A love affair was the cause. Di king the week ended on the 21st eleven persons and 253 horses died from the heat in Chicago •Severe snowstorms- occurred in Utah. Wyoming, Colorado aud South Dakota. * Tue percentages of the baseball clubs in the National league for the week ended on the 31st were: Baltimore, .659; Cleveland, .048; Philadelphia, .616; Chicago, .555; Boston, ,5a2; Brooklyn, .536; Pittsburgh, 314; New .516; Cincinnati, .500; Washington, Sim fiV Louis .800; LooisrUl*. ,36a.

DEDICATED; Cefenaonie? Held at the National Military Park. Formal Opening Announced by the Salute of Forty-Four Gun*—Gen. Gordon Is Eloquent—Grand Military and Civic Parade. Chattaxooga, Tenn., Sept. 21. — After an interval of thirty-two years the blue and the gray Thursday again met around the.crescent of Snodgrass hill on the bftttlefifld of Chicksmahge; but not as then amid the tnists and leaden hail /which marked those dreadful days of 1963, making the conflict the disastrous in its casualties to those concerned which history knows. Under one flag a reunited host, devoted to the advancement and prosperity of one common countrj-, the veteran foemen of a third of a century ago, met Thursday to dedicate as a national park the ground made sacred by the blood of heroes who fought at their side. Salute of Eorty-Ebnr Guns. Promptly at noon a salute of fortyfour gunman non need the beginning of the execution of the programme so long arranged and looked forwahl to. Music by the band of the Fourteenth regiment In camp on the field followed and at subsequent intervals it also was heard with delight. Tlie addresses of Senator and Gen.John M. Palmer, of Illinois, and of Senator and Geh. John B. Gordon, of Georgia, were preceded by tlie singing of “America” by the audience Ond followed by “Auld Lang Syne.” Gen. J. S. Fullerton, chairman of the hatioual park commission, and as such Secretary Lament's reMpsentativo Charged with the duty oro directing the dedicatory exercises, was introduced by Vice President Stevenson, L ■ c V . A p monpmf.nt dedicated to second MINNEtRDTA Regiment. who presided in the absence of the secretary of war. l’rayer was offered by Rts Rev. Bishop Gailor/of Tennessee. -The first address was that of Gen. Palmer; Gen. rainier’* AdUress. Gen. John M. Palmer, the venerable senator from Illinois, who thirtytwo years ago Thursday risked his life on tlie battlefield, made the first dedicatory address. When he came fr award his voice was husky and had a. tremulousfioiuql. never in all his’ life, unless, perhaps, when he was directing his men at Chickamauga, did he speak more earnestly, lie became grandly eloquent ;is he advanced in his address, and his eloquence was, fully appreciated and ut frequent intervals he was applauded with a vigor that showed, the audience were in touch with him. — Gen. Gor.loli’* AdUress. Gea. Gordon, of .Georgia, opened his address by cboting tEe, illustrious i harics Sumner's proposal in tho Uulted St;tes sen te to strike from the battle ftsigs of the union all mementoes of the civil war. He eulogized the broad and cath'o’ic spirit of patriot Ism w hich inspired that proposttioa. though he said Mr. Sumner re-soaed as a c’.asslca! student rather th. n a practical statesman Mr. Suniner, he said, was not the only statesman who then believed that the preservation of war memories was the perpetuation' of war passions lie was not the ' only one who tailed to appreciate the mighty changes which were to be wrought in time or the hallowing effects of great trials and sfoprovs upon the tempers of a people; or the elevating, ennobling and unifying pow er of our Christian civilization and free inR’.itntious. All ehristendom vyas amazed that the rest of the struggle found the iron of loth *rnue. oh ! the-people of both sections favorable for the decrees of battle and ail for the Cberl.shed'consiituticn of their fathers. Then Gen. Goraou asked: "Is this fraternity to last ? Is this unity to endure? If yes.' then liberty shall ltvtT If -no.’ ; theu the republic Is doomed, for In the womb of our country's future arc mighty problems, imbued with life and power and danger, to solve which will cat! into requisition all the statesmanship, all the manhood and loyalty to law of ail the sections. The patriotic American who loves his country and it* freedom and who fails to discern i'.i-se coming dangers aod the urgency for united eSort to mees the n is not a states-* man. and the statesman if 1 may so ch.*aacterizc him. who re iltzing these dangers, sad would s-.iii, for personal or party ends, aiiehate the section- or classes,' Is btit half a patriot. Perish. then., foreTer, perish from American minds and heart* *ll distrust, ait class and ps-rty and sectional bigotry and alienation bat live, long live, forever . live. *a the last hope of the republic, mutual trust. ccnSdShce, TVMT’ v(haU^-=> \A . u . OATIGfsALMiUiARY * 6512 Atre'* brotherhood and unity between their children, who are tho heir* of the immortal honor*. Forever live the spirits which animated the American copgi»*s and government la making possible this inspiring hour, and may the spirit of thl* hour abide in tho hearts of our descendants through all generations.” Gee. Gordon closed an impassioned and eloquent peroration as follows: “Every uniform worn by the brave, whether iu color was blue or gray, every sheet of Same from the ranks and rifle* of b<»tb; every cannon that shook t’hlckamaugVs hill* or thundered around the heights of Gettysburg, every uhiizlag shell that tore through the wilderness at ChaaoeUorsviUe or Shiloh: mu touet-rwi ft* tt*t tooted i» • >. a- .

victory, or went down In defeat on any tlold; every patriotic song or prayer -wafted, he|yenwarcl from the north or the south;, every loving and tender ministration at the dying l soldier's side: every agonizing throb in woman's heart or burning tear on devoted woman's Cheek—all were contributions to the upbuilding of a loftier American manhood for > the future defense of American freedom. And now, by the authority es the American congress and the executive department of the government; In the ■ presence of these survivors of the great struggle: in the midst of this historic woodland, whose leaves were reddened with heroic blood and whose giant oaks still bear upon ibelr shivered trunks * the visible track of shot and shell; by these i flowing fountains, whose crystal waters sym* 5 boiizc the purity bf jmrptke which conv?fi' , a us in the presence of all witnesses, ahd In the name of this great republic and Its ped--5 pie, we set apart, as the American Mceca. and S consecrate for all time, this immortal battlo * ground, made forever glorious by American valor." Kcunlon Os Blue and Gray. 1 Gel. Granville M. Lodge, -president of the Society of the Army of the Ten--1 tiessee; presided over the reunion d# 1 the survivors of the army of that name * who served in either the union or con- ' federate ranks, which closed the pro* ‘ ceedings of the first day of the dedica* 1 tion of the Chicltanip.uga and Chattanooga National park. It wns a held at night in the large tent in the city, " Addresses were made by Gen. O. O. ' Howard, Gen. Joseph Wheeler, of 1 Alabama; Gen. Willard Warner, of Chattanooga, and others, Michigan MtinhnientA Dedicated. Prior to the .official eSercises in the 1 morning’ the Michigan monuments were dedicated with brief and simple . '! ceremonies. The Michigan legislature ;■ appropriated $20,000 for the erection of monumenls to the eleven commands ' that participated in the battle of ,ChiclG [ aiitauga, when (>OO brave Michigan men were left dead on the field,and hundreds ‘ . more were wounded and taken pris--1 oners. The monuments are of granite 1 and bronze, that of the Xintli infantry being a statue of Gen. John C, Parkhurst, 6 feet in height and standing on a base rising 0 feet. In addition to the clevep monuments, thirteen markers have : bcea erected to locate the snlnordinate positions occupied by the different commands during the great engagement.. . Closing Exett-i*t*s. Gitattaxqoga, Tenn,,- Sept, 23 -* Chattanooga put on Hs best holiday, attire Friday. The scene of the celebration was transferred from Chickainauga’s battlefield to the city. The morning was devoted to the parade through Chattanooga’s streets, and proved to be the most brilliant and at* tractive event up to that time. The procession formed on Market street, the principal business thoroughfare of tlie city, and was characteristic ol the occasion. First came a platoon of police and then the United States troops, foot and artillery, in camp at CiiH'knranuga park, under command of ‘Col. .Po’and. These numbered, all told, about 1,200 men. There were battalions from the Sixth, Fourteenth and Twenty-third infantry and Mattery F Fourth artillery. The rear.of the column was tinder Command of Capt. F. 11. Phillips. The visiting governors, and their stalls, together with the Various state park Commission's carriages, followed Gen. Fullerton and staff. Gen. J. S. Fullerton, president of the park commission, was grand marshal. On the reviewing .stand were •Lieut: Gen. Schofield and Vice President Stevenson, the reviewing officers and a large body of the distinguished S visitors and prominent citizens. The procession disbanded shortly after ? passing the reviewing stand and the [ battery proceeded to Orchard Knob, on I the summit of which was fired the j union salute of forty-four guns at noon. At that, hour began the exercise in the tent intended to commemorate, in connection with the‘dedication, the battle of Chattanooga proper. ' Vice President Stevenson presided. The proceedings were opened with prayer by Rev. Samuel J. Nicolls, 1). i 1).. of St. Louis. Hen. George 13. j Ochs, Chattanooga's eloquent exccui tivc, was introduced to welcome the visitors to the mountain city. Senator Hate's Speerh. Gen W. B- It te. a .senator from Tennessee, was the first speaker. Bis address presented the southern view of the c uses lr;;din£ to the war He expressed bis pleasure that the lap;e of mote than thirty year' had mitisated • the passions, allayed the‘excitement and disposed the minds of all Surviving contestant* of these great battles to look back at the past with those moderated convictions which are due to .v contest In which each party held principles and convictions io justify the tontentipn. .The senator gave t detailed history of the bs , r Cnickamauga and'tho events prcced-. ‘ing and following It. as vie wed from his Stand-.' pomt He oeprecated any renewal ot the strugrle. saving: • The blood and carnage of ISBI-5 should not ■ be' repeated. -No thoughtful man. however, is I free from grave apprehensions when he sees the u.ly signs onto op here and there and j l»an,T ominously over the destinies of our : country We even now see the faint yet vivid ? Cashes and hear the thunder in the distance, ; and pray that the storm may pass harmless. • We. who did the• hghting m our interstate struggle, know what w»r means, and should help overt the danger. “But should danger come. I believe the conservative south may yet prove to b* the rod that wil 1 conduct the fiery bolt harmle*sly to 1 the earth, and when liberty take* her flight— If -he ever should, from this country—her last ! resting place will be in our Coustliutionloving, cons'-itutlon-dcfe nding south." He closed as follows: • Wc of the south; love our comrades with CO levs devotion; we see in them no less courage honor, manliness and patriotism than you recogn,xe in us fellow-soldier,. To the men of the south, their cause was not less holy, nor less sac red. not iess rightful than you esteem that for wh:ch your armies fought; - ' Gen. Kate was followed by? Gen. Charlie* It. Grosvenor. a representative in coiigross from Ohio. if 1 At the meeting in the tent in the afternoon the visiting governors were ! called upon for remarks, and Govs. Morton, of New York; and Matj thews, of Indiana, and Woodbury, of Vermont, responded. Morton Somlnatril for President. Gov. Morton, of New York, was formally put in nomination for the presidency by Senator Edmund O'Connor at a serenade tendered him Thursday night by all the New Yorkers present in Chattanooga at the residence of F. C. Montague,'With whom he dined, i ioslug Scene. ■ Friday night’s meeting of the survivors of the Army of Virginia and that portion of the Army of the Potomac that fonght at Chattanooga brought to a close the programme arranged by the national commission in connection with the dedication of the Chickamauga and Chattanooga military park. The meeting was held in the" tent and was presided OTer by Gen. E. C. Walthall, senator-elect from Mississippi, who fonght against Hooker iii , the clouds on Lookout mountain. Addresses were made by Col. Lewis R. Stegman, of New - Yok> Gov. Oates, of 1 Alabama, and Gen. J. A. W illiamson, t of lowa. The German mission near Swatow, 1 China, wgs looted by 600 Chin*** pitta i torero.

A BIG PROFIT. Members of the Bond Syndicate Divide Nearly 34,000,000. Result of the Recent Transaction with the Government—No Further Reason for the Organization's Fxlsteuco, It Dissolve*. New York, Sept. 23.—The profits,©! the government bond syndicate were distributed Saturday by checks issued by Morgan and Belmont. The amounts sent oiit represented an allowance of per Cent for interest on advances made from February to June, being at the rate of 4 per cent, a year and 4.9 per cent, for profits. The distribution constituted a final settlement with the subscribers who tinder wrote the bonds. These subscribers were bound to furnish gold for the American subscriptioh of 533,300,000, receiving bonds ■ therefor, and to furnish the syndicate on demand an equal amount of gold in exchange' for greenbacks. These pledges entitled thetq to a full share in the profits of the undertaking. The faee value of the borids was 502,31.’>,000, which was increased to abort* $05,000,000 by the syndicate's price to the government of 104 ■ i . It was arranged that the principals in the government contract <y I\ Morgan Jc Go. and An-, gust Kelmorit A Co., of New York, and J. S, Morgan A Co., of (.onion —should V of 1 per cent, for placing and managing the loan. - The syndicate offered' the bonds to the public at IT-*ad autanee of T\ per cerTt. oil the purchase price, making a profit t»i the syndicate, on the face value, of 54,3G5,y57. Deducting the commission of % Os T per cent, allowed for management, S3tf'.'.3*«2, left £3.'373,0.’5 for distribution. This was to be divided equally between Europe and the United Mates, making a profit to each of 51,1*10,512. News of the settlement attracted much interest in the: financial district. The, security market responded to it with a rushing adVahce in priees. It was regarded by* investors as a signal that all possible danger to the treasury reserve had passed andrhatreason can no longer exist for continuing the formality of associated protection. Messrs. Lazard Fre res, when asked what the prospects were for gold.shipments this week, replied: ; "'Unless something unforeseen should intervene, there will probably I t* no further gold shipments for some time toeome." i INTERNATIONAL CONTESTS. American Athletes Curry. OT the Honors at Manhattan Field, N. V. Mamiatt.iJr Firm, N. Y., Sept- ,23.— -The greatest event i;l the history of live athletic world commenced Saturday afternoon at Manhattan field, when the teams representing tiie prem er athletic clubs of the two greatest nations of the world met in. friendly battle for.supremacy. The results of the contests were as follows: , Echi hundred and eighty yard, run. won by Kilpatrick, N. Y. A. C.. Horan second. Lyons third, roil by S Varda. Tune. 1:51 2-5 beating the world's record by one c ond. One hundre t yards das i. woa hy II .1 Wafers. X djA. t" ,by half a yard. Charles A, Bradley. Loa doa. second. J V. Crurn. X. Y. A. C... third Time, 9 4-5 seconds: equaling the world's record * Kuan ing high jj;np. woo. by M. F. Sweeney, ,X. Y. AC. C> fort: ii i ;.n tll Williams. London AC, anl S A W. il I'.Ut/zU X. Y. AC, tied for .second place at 5 feat 1J Inches. ■ Bar placed at 6 feet \ Inches, amt Sweeney broke the worlds record cl • irlng the bar 'a Inches above his previous record. Doe mile run won by T l* IV .ne.T.'X. Y A. C.; George W. Orton. N Y. A G. second: T E. buy tens. l,ondon A. C. droppW exhausted on last lap. Tunc. 4:IS l-A World s record is 4: 15—4. . ■ ■ * Two hundred and twenty yards won by R J. Wefers, X. Y A J. V. Cruin X Y A C, second; Gilbert Jordan. London A. C’., third A It. Downer broke down at 50 yards. Time, ;i 3 5. beating world’s record bv 1-5 second' Three-mile run wot by It l‘. Connell X. Y A. C. . with E J VVilklas, Lon'loa A. C . second. Conned winninr by ue .rly luO yards Time. 16:3*3 1-5 Kilpatrick. X. Y A C., dropped out at the iuile-and <juartcr, and Horan, London A. C. at the two miles. Members of the X. Y. A. C alsoywor. the following events,, which. with the above, cbmprlsed the entire p opramme. Patting, 16pound shot,- throwin ; 16-pound hammer, running broad jump. ISO yards hurdle race and 140 yards run. HEAVY GALE IN WISCONSIN. Trees anti BoildSngs Blown. Down and Telegraphic Service Interrupted, Madison, Wist.. Sept. 23.—The extreme hot weather of the last week Was followed Sunday by a, heavy wind and rainstorm that covered the whole county. At places the wind did touch damage. At the village of Dane.2o miles north of this city, the windstorm took the form of a .cyclone and' did great damage, • uprooting trees and blowing down buildings. The storm damaged the telegraph wires through this portion of the state, making communication with, northern points almost impossible. ”• It cannot be learned whether any lives were lost or not. FATAL SMASH UP. Two Tramps Killed and a Judge Injured : Scar Joliet, 111. Joliet, 111., Sept. 23.—A heavily loaded freight train on the Chicago & Alton road, going at a terrific rate, parted in the middle when near Drummond, (i miles south of this city. Saturday morning. When the Iront end slowed up the other half crashed into it, piling up eight avrecke.l cars. Two tramps were buried in the ruins and were dead when taken out. Judge Burk, of this city, had a leg broken, his back hurt and wa- otherwise terribly bruised. He ' was taken to the hospital. Sunk by a Torpedo. Philadelphia. Sept. 23.'—An entirely different explanation of the sinking of the Spanish cruiser liareastegui and the loss of forty-six lives in the harbor of Havana last Wednesday night is made by letters received in this city by a distinguished member of the Cuban revolutionary party. According to the news telegraphed from Havana the catastrophe was due UFa collision between the cruiser and the merchant staamer Mortera. It is now stated as an absolute fact that the Barcastegui was sunk by a floating torpedo launched by an adventurous party of Cabans. Want* a Quadruple Divorce. Tolaga, .0. T., Sept. 23.—Yellow Bonnet, a Cheyehne Indian of some note, has applied for a blanket divorce from his four wires. Yellow Bonnet recently embraced the Christian religion and cannot live a polygamous life, and his wives have refdseid to become Christianized. - p- ; - • — ■ — Reception to Miss Willard. London, Sept 21. —A larewell reception was tendered to Miss Frances Willard prior to her return to America at the Metropolitan tabernacle by the British Women’* Temperance association. a- •

The Angelic Husband. There aro husbands who are pretty. There aro husbands who are witty, ifhere are husband 3 who in public are as stntl* Ing as the morn: There are husbands who are healthy, 'there are famous ones and wealthy. But the real angelic husband, well, he’s yet been born. Some for strength of love are noted. Who are really so devoted. That whene'er their wives are absent they are • lonesome and forlorn: And while now and then you'll find ono. Who's a really good and kind ono. Tet the real angelic husband, oh, he's never yet been born. So the woman who Is mated To the man xvho tnay be rated 4 As ‘ pretty fair” should cherish him forever and U day. For the real angelic creature, Perfect, quite, in every feature. Be has never been discovered, and he won't be, to they say. —T. H. Aldrich, tn X. Y. Weekly. After the Rain. P When It was rainin', . , Complainin'—complainin': •* What do they mean in the sky?” that It s turnin’, An' weather is burtfla’! “Terribly .fusty an' dry!" , Ain’t any pleasin' Cs people! When freeztn*. We’ro growlin' an 1 howlin’ for heat! Then, when we're fryln'. . It's sorrow an' sighin' An'wtshin'for winter >lll’sleet! —Frank L. Stanton, In Atlanta Constitution «=& " Sympathy. The hreeze Is abroad with the daisies, Like a playmaje that never tires, And they Butter In pale pulsations. They are stirred as by dim desires. Do th.’7 dream of the poor wan children In'the slums of the stifling town*. Who would love so to romp through their blossoms J And ti wreathe them in holiday crowns? —Edgar Fawcett. In Youth’s Companion. Atlanta and the Sonlh. The Chicago and Eastern Illinois It. R. will during the timeof the Exposition at Atlanta fck'lit. IN to Ugx-,81, tv.‘s. offer exceptionally fine sorvice between Chicago- and tli" South., A low rata ticket will bo Sold, und through cars run to all southern point*. This is 5> miies the shortest route to Atlanta, Chattanooga and the South, t For gnide to Atlanta and the Exposition address! C. W. Humphrey, Northwestern Passenger Agent. St.'Paul. Minn., or City Ticket Office. 2ik> Clark St,. Chicago. Ghar'c .1 L. S toco, General Passenger Age ut, Chicago. Motts Recent. — Jack —“Ah! You are n .true daughter of Eve.’’ Jess ‘'lndeed I am not. Wo go hack only -to . WilUani thq' Conqueror.' ’—Puck.

— — 1 Peculiar 1--In combination, proportion and process. Hood's SanShpariila possesses peculiar curative powers ttfiktßuvu. to. any other* , preparation. This is why It lias a record cf cures unequalled in the history- at medicine. It acts directly, upon tTTo bloou ond by making it pure, rich and healthy ii cures disease and give* good health. Hood’s Sarsaparilla Is the only true blood purifier prominently In the public eye to-day. II; six for 33. Hood’s Pills The Greatest Medical Discovery of the Age. KENNEDY’S MEDICAL DISCOVERY. COHIID KEStiEDY, cl RCXBUHY, MASS., Has discovered in one of cur common pasture weeds a remedy tk-at cures every" kind of Humor, from the worst Scrofula down to a common Pimple. . ' He has tried it in over eleven lwindrcd ca : es, and nfver failed except in two cases (both thunder humor.) Henasnow In nis possession over two hundred certificates of irs value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for book. A benefit is always experienced from tne first bottle, and a perfect cure is warranted when the right quantity is taken. ; When the lungs are affected it causes Shooting pains, like needies passing through them; the same with the Liver or Bowels. This is caused by the ducts being stopped, and always disappeatsMn a week alter taking it. Head the label. If the stomach is foul or bilious it will cause squeamish feelings at first. _ No change of diet ever necessary, bat the best you can get, and enough of it. Dose, one"tablespoonful in water at beutime. Sold by all Druggists. ■ c J!° Hr CATARRH CREAMBALM. Apply * partida cf the a® a n.lrr, .nrve J, into I lie C C,';H Ht,‘r 3 ni.«tri!». -\iW r » ,n r if ‘PtS me"M'ow -tnjntr :>re«Ui TLAr fEVtf} thn>ivh U»q lk-o. t -e tbreetlm'--*^»y.aft« r per.!* preferred.anu beELY'S CREAM BALM Opens oni tli^ Ka-««I pM«ace*. .Vlv<-' pain *nJ luit*nmiatl.'n. ” * HEAD SfTSrt.ii.dSmem ,Tk- Halm I* prlekly aUrorb-d relief cl once. Fnce 30 ceiiti at or VI.Y BROTHERS. 56 Warren Stre«t, l»€W York* WORLD S LARSEST WHEAT MARKET. Eureka. S V., claims to Ns tlie largest primary wheat } marxec in the world. Theiown is the terminus of tho Hi; waukeo railroad. In the center of r* trreat wpeat* rrowinjr resrion, and lhereare thirty end elevators there. It U exported that d>»out S.OOr.tw bushel* of wheat will be handled there this seaiion.— [Chicago Trifcune.J •..Choice locations for boslnent or re*Menee xniiy b« in Fnrfka su’d other tor.ns In Jtskota, lowa, mw«Oßfi and Ifi«*onßin. For napw, prlre*, *tr.. apply to LANP DEPAKTMFTT. tliirapo. Milwankee X St. Padi Railway, MIUVAI HEK. WlS,_ The Great k!dnev » « BLADDER CURE * O AtDrwrdatm SOcJtfl* jlfll w 9 A Advice & Pamphlet free. Dr. Kilmer & Co., Bine’oamtor.. N. Y. The New South •roifh asd fcrU’.a and SELLS FOK LITTLE FAYETTE COUNTY, nm to »h* place to «tc*r tar. Hoadred* of ccrtti.va futaez* are prospering her# bow. Write 4.4.800X5, ttatoe hMMrt(fie, Ccutp.TtU,