culver-citizen-1897 - Antiquarian and Historical Society of Culver

Transcription

culver-citizen-1897 - Antiquarian and Historical Society of Culver
THE
CULVER
— c
/I
V O L . IV .
CIT Y
HERALD.
At Lake Maxenkuckee.
**/
—■
IN
C U L Y E B C IT Y , I X D I A X A . F R I D A Y , S E P T E M B E R IT, 1897
Porter & Co., are continnually
receiving their fall goods, and for
variety and quality they cannot be
m m u u u m m a u u m n n itta m m u u u n tfm u u im m
surpassed in Marshall county. H< v
I ing purchased before the advance ii.
ST 1 prices, they are enabled to give you
2 ^ I rare bargains in drv goods, boots
^ 2 [and shoes. I t is a well known fact
^2 i that they keep a full stock of general
W ill probably need a new suit nr a pair of pants for
merchandise, hence you can pur
school. I f money sari up is an object bring him here. It's
chase just what you want, with a
not alone the price but the many weeks of added service
mammoth stock to select from.
OULVElt /CADEMY.
V Scene of A ctivity f.*r the Past Three
Da vs.
N O . 11
A W ry Interesting Serm on.
Rev. Barber preached a very eloquent
sermon at the Reformed church, last Sun-
-p, ,*
,
.
day evening. He took his text from the
For the past three days the boys 119th Psalm, the 105th verse: -Thy word
have been rolling in on every train, is a I
amp unto my feet, and a light unto
and now over one hundred of these my path.” He remarked on the ex­
jolly, fine appearing young men are perience of David, and told how the bard
here ready to commence active stood always foremost with him. and just
school work. The buildings will so soon as he refrained from f o llo w in g the
he taxed to their utmost capacity word of the Lord; just so would he( David )
this year to accommodate the largely fall into error. The world in David’s
given you by a well made suit that counts. Our special,
The Ninth Annual Fair of the increased attendance. One com­ time was the same old vrorld it is to-day;
mendable feature in favor of the
Bremen Agricultural Society will b
there is not much difference, only, a change
school, is, that a great per cent, of of time and piacs, They had the same
held September 21st to 24th inclu­
sive. The management is putting the last year’s cadets have returned. trials, the same temptations as we have,
Although some of the instructors
forth eyery effort to make this one
a little different in form, but the same in
who
have
been
connected
with
the
Is guaranteed and we take pleasure in recommending it. ^
of *he. most successful exhibits in the
substance. David had temptations, also,
chool
the
past
two
cr
three
years
They are made in the following style—double scat and knee,
h tjry of the Association, andjud^—
he was not perfect by any means, and he
have
retired,
their
places
have
been
EEi taped seams, and guaranteed not to rip . Xeat pa terns and
iu^ irom the interest and inquiries
also fell, but he had one inalliable guide,
filled
bv
men
who
have
been
selec*
their efforts will be rewarded. E n ­
low prices. «
he never made a mistake. That guide
ted
with
care,
and
we
predict
that
tries for both speed and exhibits are
was the word of God. The speaker dwelt
every
depar
meut
will
be
as
ably
con
pouring in rapidly. Make your ap
on the importance of us taking this word
iE . . S o m e Speci al Val ues in O d d Pants . . 3
ducted
as
in
the
past.
It
is
gratify­
plication early to avoid the. rush.
for our guide, and then it would in reality
ing
to
us,
and
should
be
to
every
For any information write the Secre­
be a light unto our pathway, and a lamp
citizeu
in
this
community
to
note
the
tary at Bremen, Ind.
unto our feet. The speaker ma le a com­
steady progression of the school.
parison by showing how necessary, how
A wagon covered with canvas, ap
The fact that the school is crowded
peared upon our streets Tuesday this year, is prima facie evidence useful and needful was the light of the
evening, containing three men and a that auother auuex will have to be sun and moon, also the various artificial
woman. It was stationed in front erected iu the near future, and we lights made by man, and then asked if we
PLYMOUTH.
of the Morris Hotel, and two of the inderstaud plans and specifications realized the need of another light besides
gentlemen gave lengthy speeches, in for a building of much greater the natural one. He knew there was a
which they eulogized silver as dimensions than those now occupied, greater and better light revealed in the
f e
the only monetary system to adopt. are being drawn, aud work will word of God, and if we would be guided
They also were taking subscribers probably be comm Sliced upon the by that, it would not fail us.
He compared a man walking along a
for a periodical published by Har­ same in the “sweet by aud b y .”
vey, the author of “Coin’s Financial
The new buildiug will be one of bad piece of road on a very dark night to
CU LVER CITY LO C A LIZED
Choice fresh oysters by the can School” and other works upon the the finest strutures of the kind ever a man trying to get to Heaven without the
silver problem.
or dish at Avery’s Restaurant.
Gospel light in his soul. He said that
seen
in
the
United
States.
This
A n d P u t in G o o d F o r m
f o r t h * IS e iie r iT
the one would have as much show of get­
Most of the cottage people have
Grand-pa Garver was in town year there are boys from nearly every
o f t h e H e r a l d ’s N u m e r o u s R e a d e r s .
ting to Heaven as the other of getting
departed for their various homes.
Thursday. The venerable old gentle state in the Union.
through his journey with his neck safe.
man
is
in
very
good
health
consider
The lumber is being placed upon
Ice in great demand at presentStarke C o m ity Fair.
The speaker went on. and exhorted his
ing
that
he
is
nearly
up
to
the
cen
As a special reporter for T t i e fellow creatures to look more into the
Send laundry with Erza Koontz. the ground for J. H: Koontz’s resi tury mark. Notwithstanding he is
deuce.
blind, he is cheerful aud conteuted. I I h r p . l i j , we attended the county fair Word of the Lord, to study it, to seek ad­
Board by day or week at Avery’s
Mrs. Harry Eulitt and Mrs. Tip There will come a time when he will at Knox, and by way 0[ report of vice from it when in trouble or doubt as
Restaurant.
ton, of Rochester, are visiting Mrs. join the great majority, and his stal our stewartship we submit that as a to the right or wrong of any matter.
v.\
air it was hardly fair tor the
are Daniel Carr.
Though the evening was unbearably
wart
sons
who
will
be
left,
will
have
Several South Bend citizens
county and farmers generally as w irm, the Rev. gentleman completely held
the
happy
consolation
to
know
that
guests at the Arlington.
an agricultural exhibition, but very the attention of his audience.
We understand that Wm. Over
AJAX,
their
father
was
one
of
those
remark
fair for the few exhibitors, yet as a
Coffee! For choice bulk coffee man has sold his residence upon
H o m e C a t e c h i s m in P h i l a d e l p h i a .
able men who succeeded iu life, and Fair it was a dwarf. The races
Main street to a Peru lady.
go to Avery’s.
A good many hundreds
and even thouwas pre-emenently a self-made man would ha\e been eujoyable if the
.
Mr. Robert Yoll, who has been bar and although he leaves them well people could have seeu them, but s tnds of long suffering husbands can bear
Miss L Byrd and her brother
tender at Kreuzberger Park Saloon provided for, he will leave something
Walter are sjj mrning in Chicago.
the dust, the great, impenetrable sorrowful testimony to the fact that this is
the past season, returned to Logaus- better thau gold, he will leave tin m
cloud of Starke county pulverized the sort of catechism the wives of their
10 bars of Laundry Soap for 25c ! port Wednesday.
the knowledge that in all his deal­ sand was too much for the average bosoms subject them to every time they put
a; Averv’s Grovery.
N o t i c e - — Notice is hereby given, ings in.life, he was au honorable, eye.
The dust, heat aud sand-burs, j on their hats to go out. in the evening:
If you have any clothing to dye that the partnership heretofore ex- conscientious citizen.
“ Where are you going?”
•were au environment peculiar to
or clenued, leave them at the Ex- ! isting between Babcock & Wallace,
•‘Oh, I'm going out fora few minutes.,v
A botauist insists that many Am­ Starke county.
ehange Barber Shop, Culver, Ind.
-Where?’'’ '
1 La^ been disolved by mutual consent. erican weeds are good to eat. The
The usual number and character
“Oh. nowhere in particular.”
We understand that our fain j u s
B abcock & W allace.
tender young shoots of milkweed are of “ fakirs, ’ had full sway but the
-What for?”
furniture dealer, W. S Eisterday,
stringency
of
the
circulating
med­
said
to
be
as
delicate
as
asparagus,
Otto Stahl, Culver’s celebrated
“Oh, nothing.”
contemplates building au addition to
ium
with
the
average
citizeu
of
with
similar
valuable
properties.
young musician, left for Valparaiso
“Why do you go then?”
his residence.
Starke
county,
made
it
rather
“
poor
Pigweed
is
related
to
beets
and
Thursday, where he will spend 10
“ Well. I want to go: that’s why.”’
Why don’t it rain? Don’t all an­ weeks in'the. musical department of spinach. The nettle is well flavored, p ’.ckiu” for the siick interlopers,
“L>o you have to go?”
though somewhat coarse and stringy, there must be a departure from
swer at once. Since writing the t ie Valpo Normal.
“ I don’t know that I do.”
which argues that the donkey may ‘‘fakirism” and a return to first
above we haye had a fine shower—
“ Why do you £?o then?”
Call at Campbell’s, and examine be more of an epicure than is sup principles or the county Fairs will
thanks.
“Because.’"
his new samples of clothing. He posed. It is suggested that every be a thing of. the past. There were
“Because what?”
Have your clothes dyed and make can fit. you out with h dandy suit all weed has an honest yalue if it could several speedy animals and the time
‘‘Well, simply because ”
them as good as new. Leave them the way from $4 50, to $14 00. Give only be discovered. We are inclined was dovvu iu the tweenties. The
‘‘Goingto be gone long?”
at the Exchange Barber Shop, under him a call. Take your watch to him to believe this to be substantially crowd was small each day, —Friday
Culver City Drug Store.
and get it cleaned. It needs it.
beiug the “big day.” Thanks to the ■“No,”
correct-How long?”
officers for favors aud privileges.
T. Conzleman and family returned
Saturday, before Justice Morris
“I don’t know.”
Tne W hite Slave.
X . Y. Z
to St. Louis this week. We under­ the case of Charles Ulery'vs. Reuben
“Anybody going with you?”
While the citizens of Culver aud
stand that one the Professors of the Kaley for the sum of $30, will be
“No.”
Fam ine in Ireland.
Academy will occupy the Conzleman tried. The plaintiff will be repre­ vicinity are enjoying life, and are
“Well, its strange that you can’t be con­
The failure of the crops, espec­
cottage this winter.
sented bv V. P. Kirk, and the defen- eating three meals-per day, do they
tent to stay at home a few minutes. Don’t
dent by Thomas Medbourn of this ever stop to.think that there are 3,- ially the potato crop, means that a be gone long, will you?’’
We understand that Rev. -Howard
'place. Mr. Medourn is an old citi 000 miners in Vigo county, I rid., who. large section of the people of Ire­
“No.”
will be paster of theM . E . Church
zen and has been the local advisor are suffering-all the pangs of starva­ land will soon be on tbe verge of
“See that you don't.”
at this place for another year.
for individuals and communities .in tion, simply because' these white starvation. It is already reported
slaves are trying to better their con­ that the inhabitants of many places, This is onereason why so many marria­
The Methodist conference at Leb­ these parts, lo, these many years.
dition through forcing the coal bar iu Connaught are eating bread ges are a dead {Lit fizzle and failure.
anon last week selected Pymouth as
The K. O- T. M., will hold a pic­ ous to raise the price of mining coal which in ordinary times is regarded
Endurance.
the meeting place for the annual
nic Thursday Sept., 23rd, at Maxen- per ton. Talk about slavery iu the as a luxury and is not used except
“Jordon is a hard road to travel,”
conference iu 1898.
kuekee. The Culver Citv Band will South! Why, we have a system of when potatoes are unobtainable.
But its hardships v-e can endure,
White Rose Flour is the best on be there and furnish excellent music.
But for the trials before some Justices,
slavery in the United States to-day Agricultural experts have informa­
Not eveu patience has a cure;
the market. For sale at Avery’s There will be several prominent
S e lah .
far more oppressive aud dangerous tion to the effect that the present
speakers present, also vocal music in its methods than slavery in the harvest is the worst since’ 1879,
Grocery.
If Paul fought with beasts at Ephesus’
T’was after the manner of men,
Bradley & Mawhorter, the new and recitations. You are all invi­ South ever was. The fact that which was the most distressing re­ But
Were he in some Justice’s Court
ted
to
be
present
and
have
a
good
corded
duriug
the
present
genera­
slavery
existed
in
the
South,
evenphotographers, took some very fine
Could the ‘-beast” be subdued as then?
time.
Briug
your
baskets.
Seluh.
tually brought on a bloody war, and tion, aud the sufferings of the poor
views of a group, consisting of 20 of
during the next eight mouths threat­
If. “mar. wants but little here below,”
Culyer City’s young
sports, iu
Saturday evening, Sept. 18th, the the fact that bloated monopoly
And has patience to endure the strain,
en to almost equal the horror of tbe Let
crushes,
mangles
aud
wipes
out
every
Myer's grove last Sunday.
him ?o into some Justice’s Court.
ladies of the M. E. Church, of Rich­
famine
of
1840.
All
the
boards
of
vestige of hope that might ever have
Where the “spirits” furnish the brain,
Upon the evening of the 24th inst., land Center, will give au eutertain- existed in the hearts of the workmeu guardians are providing for a large
Selah.
K. P. Vinton,
a grand ball will be giveu at the ment for the benefit of the parson­
increase of poverty, necessitating
of
America,
will
vet,
if
some
regula
Colonade Hotel Hall, this city. age. Admission will be five and ten tions are not made cause a reyolu- doubling the rates in some districtsHoughton’s famous Orchestra will cents. This will give our young tiou more horrible than was ever But immediate steps must be taken p O R SALE:—A celebrated Purcheron-Norman stallion, seven years
furnish the music. You are cord­ people au opportunity to enjoy a chronicled in the world’s history,
by the government if the people are old. Imported iu 1801. Sure foal
*
mooulight drive. Why not?
ially invited.
We say the miners are right when to be saved.
getter. This horse is a dappled gray,
Avery the Photographer, hereby
The Culver City school com­ they endeavor to fight for those rights
aud weighs 1,500 pounds. He is a
John V. Astley & Son, of Plymouth, beauty. For farther particulars,
extends thanks to the citizens of menced Monday. There is every accorded by the constiution to every
Culver for the liberal patronage ac reason to believe that at no previous citizen iu this country, namely a fair have just received a mammoth stock call at this office. Horse was never
corded him the past four months, year has there been a more carefully remuneration for labor performed. of heating stoves, cook stoves etc. in this township.
9w4
and also says if anyone desires selected corps of teachers. The “The half has never yet beeu told” They will positively save you big
A seven room dwelling for sale,
pictures from any negatives in his adoption of a complete high school of the slaves of tbe coal mines, and money by calling on them and learn­
possession, they can procure the course, places our school upon equal liberty loviug citizen should contri­ ing prices. Consequently, why pay good celler, water aud shade trees,
same by addressing him at Constan­ footing with any other iu the country bute something to help along the double price elsewhere for au iuferior price reasonable. Call at my Law
article;
office.
V, P. K i r k .
cause.
tine, Mich.
of its kiud.
“8
3 YOUR BOY
1
“The Viking Suit,
J. C. Kuhn & Son,
uuutnmuuummuuuflmiuiuimrtuuummuiiu
(J
•
v
V
-•
,
'
F IG H T
CULVER CITY HERALD.
W IT H
D E P U T IE S .
OPPOSE A R M O R PLANT
CULVER CITY,
INDIANA,
F A T H E R 'S MAD DEED
CHICAGOAN HURLS A LIG H TED
L A M P A T HIS C H IL D R E N .
D aughter
B urned
S tarts W h e n
Abuses
H is
to
D eath — F ig h t
th e H e a d o f the F a m ily
W if e — Son
und a S tru g g le
In te rfe re s
F o llo w s .
S i . y e r ’s M a d
A ct.
Yedella Sayers. 22 years old. who w:u
burnt-d by the explosion of a lamp hurled
at her brother by her enraged lather dur­
ing a family quarrel in Chicago, is dead.
Before her death the girl made an antemortem statement, in which she exoner­
ated her father from all blame and said
it was an accident. Witnesses to the
statement were the mother and brother of
the dead girl. The lather, Charles Say­
ers, is locked up. Sayers is a plasterer
by trade, and is 47 years old. Returning
home long after the supper hoar he found
nothing had been saved for him. He
Hew into a rage and harshly upbraided his
wife. William, the 18-year-old son, went
to his mother's rescue. The father grew
more angry at this interference, and. it
was said, snatched from the table a large
kerosene lamp and hurled it full at his
Son’s face. Vedella. the daughter. leai>ed
to her brother’s rescue. The lamp missed
the boy’s face, but cut his head severely.
Then it exploded. The burning oil was
thrown over the long hair and light dress
of the heroic sister. In an instant she
was enveloped in Hamo. Mrs. Sayers and
14-year-old Burt rushed to the young
woman’s rescue. Witli their bare hands
they beat out the tiamos, but it was too
late. Vedella was burned beyond recog­
nition. Mother and son were seriously
injured in their efforts to save her life.
H IS
S H IP
ROLLS
ON
W ATER.
K n a p p ’s M u c h - T a lk e d - O f R o l l e r B e a t
Is L a u n c h e d a t T oronto.
BY SNAKES.
Two L ittle K e n tu c k y Boys A re K ille d
by V e n o m o u s R a ttle rs .
C o a l C o m p a n y ’s E f f o r t a t E v i c t i o n a
C o m p le te F a ilu r e .
The efforts to evict the striking miners
of the Pittsburg and Chicago Coal Com­
pany at Orangeville, one and a half
miles from Gastonville, Pa., resulted in
a riot of no mean proportions and the
utter failure on the part of the company
to accomplish its object. When the news
spread that the evictions were to be at­
tempted the whole vicinity about Finleyville, Gastonville and Orangeville became
wildly excited. About 7 o’clock at night
twenty deputies from Washington, Pa.,
in the charge of Chief Deputy Joseph
IT. Wetherill. reached Finleyville, where
they were met by a large crowd of strikers
and their friends. Each deputy was armed
with a Winchester rifle and a revolver,
but in spite of tliis the strikers, headed
by 100 Polish women, closed in on them
and the deputies received rough treat­
ment. They were gradually forced back,
and finally retreated to Gastonville,
where they were followed by a crowd of
about 200 men and women. At Gaston­
ville the deputies took refuge in the office
of the company, where they were kept
all night. The building was bombarded
with stones and bricks and an occasional
shot was tired. At 7 o’clock in the morn­
ing the trouble of the night reached a cli­
max when the deputies sallied out from
their besieged quarters and started to
Orangeville. Each one carried his W in­
chester in his hands and his revolver was
exposed, but these had no terrors for the
besiegers. Headed by the women, the
strikers rushed on the deputies with
stones, clubs and piekhandles, and blows
fell thick and fast. One of the big women
wrested the rifle from a deputy’s hands
and struck him on the head with it, in­
flicting serious injury. Almost every man
in the posse was cut and bleeding and
several were seriously hurt. One had his
right hand almost severed by a sharp
stone. The officials of the company say
no further attempt will be made to evict
the miners for the present.
B IT T E N
NAVAL
OFFICERS
TH INK
CHEAPER TO BUY PLATE.
The
C o n g re s s io n a l
A g a i n s t B u i HI i n s :
C o m m itte e s
M ore
IT
A re
F irs t- C la s s
B a t t l e S h i p s —B e t t e r t o H a v e C r u i s e r s
—F a m in e C au se s a P a n ic
in Ir e la n d .
R e s u lt of R ecent In q u ir y .
From a high authority in the Navy De­
partment it is learned that the influence
of that branch of the Government will be
thrown against the proposition to estab­
lish a government plant for the manufac­
ture of armor plate for war vessels. The
special board appointed by the Secretary
of the Navy to inspect the Bethlehem,
Carnegie and Illinois Steel Company es­
tablishments, inquire into the cost of
armor and collect facts bearing upon the
desirability of having Government armor
plate works will not, it is understood,
make a definite recommendation, but it
will present such data that Secretary
Long may legitimately frame conclusions
adverse to the suggestion. The spirit of
both the House and Senate Committees
on Naval Affairs is against the construc­
tion of any more of the huge battle-ships
of the first class and lhat those now under
construction will probably be the last of
the kind ordered by Congress. W ar ships
have boon growing in size until the limit
appears to have been reached. The larg­
est vessels, by reason of their heavy
draught, are prevented from entering
many ports where it would be convenient
and desirable for them to go, and they
are so cumbersome and bulky fhat they
are constantly getting out of repair and
are rarely ready for action on demand.
Another reason is that experts m subma­
rine navigation have found that it will be
as easy to destroy a $5,000,000 war ship
as it would be to sink a wooden hulk.
OLD
CORN
IS
B iilN G
HELD.
N e b r a s k a F a r m e r s Said to H a v e a n
Im m e n s e A m o u n t of G ra in .
STRIKERSARESHOT
Willie, aged 7, aud Eddie, aged 0, sons
of Matthew Cox, a farmer living near
Mannsville, Taytor County, Ky., met ter­
rible deaths from rattlesnake bites. They Marching
Miners
B rutally
were playing hide and seek with some oth­
er children and Willie ran into tlie bushes
Slain by Deputies.
and failed to reappear at the proper time.
Presently Eddie heard cries from his lit­
tle brother and, hastening to his aid,
found, as he at first thought, that he had
become fastened in the hollow of an old O V ER A SCOPE K IL L E D
stump. In trying to pull the child from
the stump Eddie discovered that four big
rattlers were biting Willie time and
again. Badly frightened, but determined Dead and Dying Coa! D elvers
to rescue his brother, Eddie reached in for
Fall Like Ten Pins.
a better hold, and was himself bitt*u re­
peatedly. The cries of the two children
attracted some men and they were finally O u t s k i r t s o f t h e L i t t l e T o w n o f L a t i ­
rescued from their perilous position, but
m e r, in th e G r e a t P e n n s y lv a n ia C oal
not until they were past all aid. One died
in five minutes aud the other in ten. The
D is tric t,
the
Scene of
a B lo o d y
four snakes were killed, and it was found
S l a u g h t e r —S h o o t i n g H e l d t o H a v e
that the youngest child had jumped into
their nest in the hollow of the old stump.
B eeu W ith o u t P ro v o c a tio n a n d R e ­
T RAG ED Y
IN
M IS S IS S IP P I.
C o lo re d W o m a n * S u s p e c te d o f H a v i n g
o m a llp o x , Is M urdered.
At Columbus, Miss., a negro woman
named Ann Hughes, who had been under
guard and isolated, being suspected of
having contracted smallpox, escaped and
later attended a negro church and created
a panic among the congregation. She was
run cut of the church and nothing more
was heard of her until she was found
dead, with her skull crushed, in an open
field.
F a m in e
I h reatens.
Inquiries throughout Ireland fully cor­
roborate the alarming predictions of the
failure of the harvest and a consequent
impending famine. Cries of warning to
the Government are rising in a crescendo
scale from all parts of Ireland. From
Mullingar, one of the most prosperous
parts of the midlands, a correspondent tel­
egraphs: “The crops are now irretrieva­
bly destroyed. It will be impossible for
the farmers to make anything of their
cereals this year, as they are quickly rot­
ting. Prayers for fine weather are re­
cited*’ From County Wexford, noted as
one of tho richest in the country, the
tidings are: “The green crop may be doscribed as a gigantic failure in C o u n t y
Wexford this year. The greater part of
the potato crop is iit only for feeding cat­
tle.” From Fermanagh, in Ulster, a cor­
respondent telegraphs: “At a meeting
held here to ask for a reduction in rents,
the parish priest presiding, declared that
not since ‘black 1847* has the prospect for
farmers in this district been so bad. In
several places the potatoes have been a
failure. Hundreds of tons of hay have
been ruined by the heavy rains and
floods.” At a meeting of tho Board of
Guardians at Mitchellstown. County
Cork, the chairman said: “Tho potato
crop is generally a failure, while the otner
crops have been hopelessly injured by th*
unparalleled inclemency of the season.
We are on the verge of a great agricul­
tural crisis.” The Government has adopred no measure yet to cope with the threat­
ened famine.
v enge ful
C rie s
A r is e —T roops
A re
C a lle d O u t to P r e s e r v e O r le r.
Twenty-two strikers were killed, thir­
teen fatally injured and between sixty
and seventy more or iess injured near H a­
zleton, Pa., Friday, by deputy sheriffs un­
der command of Sheriff Martin, and, the
dispatches
say,
without
sufficient
a
provocation
to
warrant
even
clubbing.
The
entire
region
is
wildly excited over the affair, and
citizens of all classes are talking of what
they consider a terrible outrage. An in­
dignation meeting was held at night, and
Governor Hastings has been asked to or­
der an investigation, and in th*:*meantime
to place the command of the deputies in
other hands than those of Sheriff Martin.
The citizens also ask that the deputy sher­
iffs concerned in the affair be discharged
from ali authority and disarmed. They
say the local police force is quite com­
petent to take care of the strikers if any
disturbance occurs. Governor Hastings
called out the Third Brigade of the State
militia in order to prevent further blood­
shed.
Following their general custom, the
strikers assembled Friday morning and
marched to the Ilazle mines. The men
were at work there, but were for ceil to
quit. From there the march was taken
up to Latimer. The men walked without
any special organization, much as any
body of men would ti a verse a road. They
were elated by their success in driving
out the men at the Ilazle mines and their
feeling of jubilation, combined with their
antipathy for the operators, had some­
what aroused them. The road the men
traversed was tho public highway.
As they reached tho outskirts of the
mining village of Latimer the marchers
were met by a crowd of deputies, under
Sheriff Martin. They were the usual
kind of deputies, men and boys out of
work. The strikers were ordered t >halt.
Being on a public highway the strikers re­
fused. With little ceremony they kept
walking, muttering imprecations on the
men with rifles.
The inuch-talked-of Knapp roller boat
A member of the Nebraska Board of
was launched at Toronto, Ont., in the Agriculture, who has returned from an
presence of a great crowd of spectators. extended trip through the State, makes
S e p te m b e r O p tio n
G o e s to S o a r i n g
The vessel, which is cylindrical, is 110 this report as to the result of his trip,
U n d e r C a b l e * * d v ‘c.\
feet long and 25 feet in diameter. At and figures have ben prepared which show
Friday noon wheat was in good demand
each end are two 00-horse power engines. that there are 100,000,000 bushels of old
on the Chicago Board of Trade at the
Mr. Knapp, the designer, expects his boat, corn yet in the hands of the farmers of
start at about %c improvement over
by means of the principle of rolling over the State; 50,000,000 bushels of old corn
Thursday’s closing price for December
the water, instead of ploughing through in cribs in the State: 250,000,000 bushels
and le for September. For a supposedly
it, to shorten the time of a voyage across
defunct deal September went through the Atlantic to two days. The vessel cost of new corn safe from bad weather or
frost and assured to tho producer, what­
some surprising gyrations, and it gave $10,000.
ever may happen to the late corn; from
a good example of its galvanized style of
50,000,000 to 75,000,000 bushels of late
agility by jumping to $1 within a minute
P r a y U p o n “ T e n d e rfe e t,”
or two of the opening. December Iirst
The authorities of Alaska have awaken­ corn, which has boon injured to some ex­
went through a'little of its parallel bar ed to the serious nature of the situation tent by the late hot weather, much of
exercise, swinging itself around so swiftly at tho White Pass. They see in the con­ which, however, will be saved if rain
that it was difficult at times to see wheth­ tinuance of the camp at Skaguay, as now comes to tho State within a few days;
er it was head up or head down. That constituted, possibilities for crime and and 75,000,000 bushels of wheat, rye,
was merely the preliminary to its grand various other evils of great magnitude. oats, barley and flax. This makes a total
star performance of climbing up the backs Steps have been taken to break up the of 500,000,000 bushels of grain raised by
and o\er the heads of the boars, who camp by dispersing the lawless element the farmers of Nebraska this year, allow­
filing up their hands in attempts to stop that has gathered there from every State ing for,25.000,000 bushels of late corn
its reaching tho dollar mark. From OSV&c in the Union. Col. F. S. Chadbourne, to be saved out of the total acreage. It
to DSVie to begin with it rose to 08%c, State Harbor Commissioner of Califor­ is estimated further that of this crop
turned ;V,olin^ nim went 1,a<*k again to nia, who was a passenger on the steam­ there will bo consumed in Nebraska 150,DSi/sc. Then it dropped to 07%c and rose ship Queen, brought down advices to the 000,000 bushels, leaving 350,000,000 bush­
from that in a gradual way to 07*^0. above effect. Col. Chadbourne says Col­ els to be shipped out of the State during
* ir in g Is Begun.
W ild H o rs e s a N u is a n c e .
From the latter point to OO^e was the lector Ives and a force of deputy United tlie next twelve months. The profit to
Sudenly one of tiie special officers
Wild horses have become so much of
work of about twenty minutes, and those States marshals had determined to raid the railroads for moving this grain will
a nuisance in Northern Arizona that At­ raised his rifle and fired point blank at the
fluctuations were all within the Iirst iwo the town of Skaguay and clean out the be $ 10 ,000,000.
torney General Frazier has been asked miners. It was the signal for a fusillade.
hours of the session. Chicago received whisky smugglers aud saloon men and
P A N IC S K lZ h .8 ON I R E L A N D .
if they may not legally be slaughtered. The men and boys who were wearing the
2(50 cars, only twelve of them contract. rid the camp of the disorderly. element.
That vicinity has boon overrun by several steel badges of deputies fired volley after
Minneapolis and Duluth receipts were 400 Heretofore the authorities have been ut­
cars, against 1.143 the corresponding day terly unable to cope with the disorderly R e p o r t s T e l l o f R u i n e d C r o p s a n d I m ­ large bands, hundreds in number, un­ volley into the marchers. Several fell
dead at the Iirst volley. The horrified
p e n d ix?^ F a m i n e .
branded and unclaimed by anyone.
people in the camp. It was the refuge
of year before.
cries of the miners could not drown the
A dispatch from London says: “A panic
of the worst class of criminals, confidence
M a n d i n t r of the Club**.
B ic y c le s A r e P e rs o n a l P r o p e r ty .
steady “crack,” “crack” of the rifles. The
men and thugs on the coast. These, with is spreading throughout Ireland over the
Following is the standing ot* the clubs the whisky men, had combined to block terrible prospect of the apparently com­
Judge Ellsworth, of California, has miners stood terrified for a moment, the
of the National Baseball League:
the tiail, so as to keep the tenderfeet plete failure of the harvest. Reports from ruled that a bicycle is personal property leaden balls mowing down their com­
W. L.
W. L. there all winter and fleece them as long 110 parish priests from counties Clare. and exempt from execution if used by the rades. A few shots were tired back.
Baltimore ..80 X> Chicago....... 03 04 as there was a dollar left in the camp. Cork, Kerry, Limerick, Tipperary, An­ owner in his dailv business.
Then, yelling and crying, they broke rnd
B o sto n ....... N2 Mo Brooklyn .....">2 <53 Serious as is the situation at Skaguay trim, Armagh, Cavan, Derry, Donegal,
ran for the woods.
A t t e n d s a B i l l ! Vi-zh t .
New York. ..To 40 Philadelphia .ol 00 and White Pass, as portrayed by letters Down, Fermanagh, Monaghan and Ty­
The scatter of the marchers did not stop
Minister
Taylor
and
Gen.
Woodford
Cincinnati . .05 4S Pittsburg .. ..40 04 and by the men returned from the camp, rone, all tell the same piteous story of
the firing. As they fled in terror the dep­
Cleveland ...58 <»0 Louisville ...4m C>0 disconsolate and appalling as is the con­ ruined crops, impending destitution and and family attended a bull light at San uties spread out. each one seemingly pick­
Sebastian on invitation of the Duke ©f
Washington. 53 00 St. Louis.......27 80 dition of the trail over the mountain bar­ famine.”
ing his man. and shot tiie fleeing men.
Tetuan.
The strikers staggered and fell in every
rier between the (5,000 gold hunters and
M a s t e r B l a c k s m i t h s M eet.
The showing of the members of tho the paradise on the other side, the ac­
Had
T i v e d 31 o r e t h a n a C e n t u r y .
direction. Bodies of the killed lay here
The
annual
convention
of
the
National
Western League is summarized below:
Lazarus Greengard, the oldest Jew in and there on the road and in the ditches.
counts published from time to time seem
W. L.
W. L. to have but faintly portrayed the actual Railway Master Blacksmiths’ Associa­ the United States, died in St. Louis, aged Piteous cries in foreign tonga<»s came
Indianapolis .8*5 34 D etroit........ 07 50 state of affairs. Made desperate by their tion opened at the Leland Hotel in Chi­ 105 years.
__
from the injured, some of whom were
cago,
Tuesday
morning
with
an
attend­
Columbus ...70 J3 Minneapolis .42 80 failure to get over the trail and by the
vainly trying to crawl to shelter. Plead­
aiA ltK feT Q U O T A T IO N S.
St. Paul....... 77 48 Kansas City..38 01 terrible hardships that they have been ance of over 100 members. The associa­
ings to the deputies to cease tiring min­
Milwaukee ..75 50 Gr’d Rapids..35 Si' compelled to endure in the hopeless strug­ tion is organized for the purpose of dis­
gled with the cursings of the less injured.
cussing
and
disseminating
information
re­
Chicago—Cattle, common to prime, The injured in the woods crawled away
gle against odds of the pa^t weeks, the
31 a n frie d a n d B u r n e d .
specting
the
best
methods
of
applying
$3.00 to $5.75; hogs, shipping grades,
miners have become suspicious of one an­
The most disastrous railway wreck other and quarrels are of hourly occur­ iron and steel to railway and car con­ $3.00 to $4.50; sheep, fair to choice, $2.00 to safety. When the deputies has ex­
hausted tho magazines.of their rifles they
that has ever happened in Colorado oc­ rence. Every man’s hand is raised against struction.
to $4.50; wheat, No. 2 red, 00c to 07c; ceased firing and some turned their atten­
curred Friday morning, a mile and a half every other man. The lawless characters
corn, No. 2, 30c to 32c: oats, No. 2 . 10c tion to the wounded and carried many of
H is C o n s cie n c e H u r t H im .
west of Newcastle. A passenger trj.in are much in evidence and dissensions and
to 20c; rye, No. 2, 51c to 52c; butter,
The pension office has received a con­ choice creamery, 10 c to 18c; eggs, fresh, them to places where they could be more
collided with a stock train, wrecking both discords have broken out among the min­
trains. Shortly after the collision tire ors until such a thing as co-operation is science contribution of $350 from a pen­ 12c to 13c; new potatoes, 50c to 00c per comfortably treated. Tho deputies seem­
ed to be terror-stricken at the deadly ex­
broke cut iu the ruins. The mail, baggage impossible. Men have lost all sense of sioner in Pennsylvania, who states that bushel.
ecution of their guns.
and express cars, smoker, day coach ami reason, and a spirit of desperation and he obtained the money fraudulently. Pen­
Indianapolis—Cattle, shipping. $3.00 to
The people of Latimer rushed pell-mell
a tourist sleeper were burned. A number reckless obliviousness to consequences sion examiners in the field have neon re­ $5.50; hogs, choice light, $3.00 to 84,50;
of passengers who were not killed out­ pervades the camp. Thieving and crime instructed to give out no information to sheep, common to choice, $3.00 to $4.00; to tho scene, but the shrieks of the
right. but who were pinned in the wreck­ have increased to such a degree that the the press in regard to their work, leaving whear, No. 2, 05c to 07c; corn. No. 2 wounded drowned the cries of the sym­
pathizing and half-crazed inhabitants. As
age and could not be extricated. *>erisiied Executive Committee met and promul­ this duty to the central office.
white, 31c to 32c; oats, No. 2 wiiite, 21c soon as the news of the shooting re iciiod
in the flames. It is estimated lhat twenty- gated an order to the effect that the first
to 23e.
Hazleton there was consternation. W ith­
Supposed P a n d its C auch t.
five persons were killed outright.
man caught stealing would be hanged
St. Louis—Cattle, $3.00 to $5.50; hogs, in ten minutes the streets were blocked
The posse of men that started from $3.00
without
even
the
formality
of
a
trial
or
to $4.50; sheep, $3.00 to $4.00; with excited people. Trolley cars on the
M i s s o u r i ’s D r o u t h S e v e r e .
Trinidad, Colo., on the trail of the robbers
leave to say his prayers.
wheat, No. 2, 00c to $1.01; corn, No. 2 Latimer line were sent to the scene of
Late corn near St. Joseph, Mo., has
who held up the Gulf passenger train on
been seriously damaged by the prolonged
A paches on a W am page.
Twin Mountain early Saturday norning yellow, 20c to 30c; oats. No. 2 white, 10c the killing, and doctors and clergymen re­
sponded promptly.
drought and the crop will be much shorter
About 1,000 Apache Indians are off tho have taken into custody five men supposed to 20c; rye. No. 2 , 40c to 51c.
Cincinnati—Cattle,
$2.50
to
$5.50;
hogs,
Along the bank of the trolley road men
than expected. Early corn is saifl io be reservation and are scattered through tne to be the perpetrators of the holdup.
$3.00
to
$4.50;
sheep,
$2.50
to
£4.00;
lay in every position; some dead, others
out of danger, but many Helds of late Pinal and Superstition Mountains, in Ari­ They were captured near Springer, N. M.
wheat.
No.
2
,
05c
to
90c;
corn.
No.
2
dying. Three bodies, face downward, lay
corn will be good only for fodder. The. zona, killing deer and gathering wild
mis:cd,
31c
to
33c;
oats,
No.
2
mixed,
10c
along the incline, and three others were
hot, dry weather has also injured the fruits. None of them is provided with
R a in s B le a c h G r a in O u t W est.
t o 21c; rye, No. 2, 40c to 51c.
but a short distance away. On the other
fruit crop and pastures are burning up, passes and all are armed. They have
The Spokesman-Review has weather
Detroit—Cattle,
$2.50
to
$5.50;
hogs,
side of the road as many more bodies lay.
with stock water scarce. The drought is committed only minor depredations crop reports from all sections of Eastern
$3.00
to
$4.50;
sheep,
$2.50
to
$4.00;
The schoolhou.se was transformed info a
the most severe for many years.
around the ranches of tho region, but the Washington and Idaho. From nearly all
wheat.
No.
2
,
07c
to
08c;
corn,
No.
2
temporary hospital, and some of tlie
settlers are alarmed and are on guard.
points come reports of weeping skies and
W i l l a r r t <S: Co. A s s i t r n .
yellow,
31c
to
33c;
oats.
No.
2 white, 22c wounded were taken there. The colliery
sodden fields. Continued rains are ble tchto 24c; rye, 50c to 51c.
Janies It. Willard, Elmer Dwiggins and
S e ttle rs Y ie ld th e F ig h t .
ambulance was summoned to the place as
ing the grain and injuring wheat in the
Jay Dwiggins. who compose the firm of
Toledo—Wheat, Xo. 2 rod, 07c to 00c; soon as possible, and upon its arrival
The forest fires which have been burn­ shock.
corn, No. 2 mixed, 31c to 33c; oats, No. wounded men were loaded into the wagon.
J. R. Willard & Co., bankers and brokers, ing for two or three weeks in the Big
2 white, 10c to 20c: rye, No. 2. 40c to 51c; All along the hillside wounded were found
with offices in New York, Buffalo, Wash­ Horn country, Wyoming, continue una­
W h ile U n c le S a m L o o k s On.
ington, I). C.; Philadelphia and Montreal, bated and are spreading rapidly, fanned
Consul Monoghan, at Chemnitz, has in­ clover seed, $4.00 to $4.05.
on the roadside and in the fields. Many
Milwaukee—W heat. No. 2 spring, 05c others who had been carried to a distance
assigned to James L. Starbuck, with by a high gale. Already a tract about formed the State Department that Ger­
preferences for $20,000 to William 11. twenty miles square is reported burned many is steadily increasing her trade to 00c; corn, No. 3, 30c to 31c, oats. No, could not be found.
Ostorhout. It is estimated that their lia­ and millions of feet of timber ilestrovod. with Mexico,.and that for 1800 ii amount­ 2 white, 21c to 23c; rye, No. 1, 5Lc to 52c;
One of the strikers, in his dying state­
bilities will reach $1 ,000,000.
The settlers have fought the fire constant­ ed to more than in 1805, when it was barley, No. 2, 40c to 47c; pork, mess, ment said that* there were no weapons of
$8.50 to $0.00.
ly until forced to give up.
10,300,000 marks.
any kind among the marchers, for before
C a rn iv a l Is A b a n d o n e d .
Buffalo—Cattle, §,“>.00 to $5.50; hogs. leaving Harwood on the tramp across the
E a r ly S n o w fa ll in M o n ta n a .
Ou account of the Nashville exposition
$3.00 to $4.50, sheep. $3.00 to $4.75; mountain a meeting was held and resolu­
G r o v e r N o t So R ic h , A f t e r A ll.
the Commercial Association of Chicago
At Butte, Mont., snow fell for several
Former President Cleveland, who lives wheat, No. 2 red, 00c to $1.00; corn. No.
has abandoned the project of holding a hours Wednesday forenoon. The weather in Princeton, N. J., has made his return 2 yebow, 30c to 37c; oats, No. 2 white, tions passed forbidding any person to car­
ry weapons. This fact was verified by
carnival Chicago Day. Oct. 0.
was quite cold, though the snow melted to the assessors of $20,000 real estate and 24c to 20c.
not finding any weapons on those who
almost as fast as it fell.
New York—Cattle, $3.00 to $5.50; hogs. were killed or wounded. The dead wore
$130,000
of
personal
property.
E le c tr ic Cars in C o llis io n .
$3.50 to $4.75; sheep, $3.00 to $1.50; searched and no weapons were found on
T r a m p s C r e m a te T h e m se lv e s.
In San Francisco seven persons were
F r o m S tin g o f a ’S keeter.
wheat, No. 2 red, $1.04* to $1.00; corn,
Throe tramps confined in the jail of
injured in a collision of electric cars on
David Pearce, a well-known ranchman, No. 2. 30c to 38c; oats, No. 2 white, 24c them. Sheriff Martin in a detailed state­
ment of tho affair admits that he gave the
Conway, N. D„ set fire to the building near San Gabriel, Cal., is dying of poison
Mission street Thursday.
25c;
butter,
creamery,
12c
to
10 c; eggs, command to fire.
und perished iu the flames.
from the sting of a mosquito last week.
Western, 15c to 17c.
W H EAT
UP
To
ONE
DOLLAR.
•
A KM TO F IG H T F E V E R .
RIGID
ta w
Q U A R A N T I N E IN
ERN T O W N S .
W ill
SOUTH-
Bo E nforced w ith
le n c e
if
All P a s s ­
N eceesary-G uards W atch
ing: T r a i n s - D a n g e r t h a t
Guns
the
P e s ti­
M ay Spread.
P e ril in th e P la g u e ,
The breaking out of yellow fever at
Ocean Springs, Miss., New Orleans and
other places has caused a very widespread
alarm in the South. Practically every
city and town in Alabama has estab­
lished the most rigid quarantine against
Ocean Springs, New Orleans and other
yellcfw fever infected points, and most
places a shotgun quarantine is the order
of the day.
This is virtually true of Mobile, where
the officials publicly proclaimed that the
regulations would be enforced at the point
of guns. Trains from the South and
Southwest on all railroads passing
through any part of the State are boarded
by determined officers heavily armed, and
no one from anywhere near the infected
districts is permitted to leave the cars.
At a number of small towns guards line
tlie depot platforms as well as the trains.
Many Alabamians summering at Gull'
coast resorts are shut out entirely from
the rest of the world, as trains between
Mobile and New Orleans now run past all
stations without stopping. It is feared
that the delay of the health authorities in
proclaiming the disease yellow fever will
result disastrously, and it would be no
surprise should it break out at various
Southern points at any moment.
Consul Heenan at Odessa has made an
extensive report to the State Department
concerning the failure of the crops in Rus­
sia. In many districts it has been the
wettest season ever known, and grain has
been destroyed by both rain and hail.
Much of the grain was not worth the ex­
pense of binding. The wheat received at
Odessa is of a very inferior quality. The
report predicts that little wheat will be
exported from Russia during the season
of 1S97-S, as there is little available for
that purpose, the old stocks being, prac­
tically exhausted and the new crop little
more than sufficient for the home de­
mand.
The failure of the wheat crop in Aus­
tria-Hungary, Roumania and Bulgaria,
Consul Heenan continues, has brought
buyers from those countries into Russia,
and wheat which would ordinarily leave
Odessa by steamers is destined to go by
rail from the interior into the countries
named.
Secretary Wilson was at his desk in the
Agricultural Department in Washington
Tuesday for the first time for a month,
having just returned from his tour of the
trans-Mississippi States. lie went as far
west as Montana and Utah, giving espceial attention to the agricultural interests
of the States visited, with particular ref­
erence to irrigation, horse-raising and su­
gar-beet growing.
“I found the farmers in especially good
spirits wherever I went,” he said. "There
is no doubt that confidence is restored,
and that the country is justified in its an­
ticipation of better times. The people are
all busy in the West. Indeed, I do not
believe there is an idle man west of the
Mississippi who wants work.”
Mr. Wilson predicted a still further ad­
vance in the price of wheat, due to the
fact that there is not only a short crop
abroad, but also because of the fact that,
according to his observation, the crop will
not be so extensive in this country as has
generally been anticipated.
“With the improvement of the timet?,”
he said, “the average American is going
to have all the flour his family can con­
sume, even though he may have to pay a
little more for it. I believe that even
without the shortage in the foreign crops
the conditions in this country would have
Luetgert’s leading attorney, ex-Judge
Vincent, smiled and the prisoner visibly
winced wheu the sentence was heard in
which Attorney Vincent was termed
“greedy.” The letter went on to state
that Luetgert intended to release Attor­
ney Vincent, as he did not consider him
able to handle so important a case. In
another letter Luetgert wrote to tlie ef­
fect that on the first day of the trial
there was to be a great surprise for the
police and the State. An attorney of
world-wide fame was to be engaged, and
when “the dogs of police” saw who it
was they would quail with fear. This
as yet unknown lawyer, Luetgert con­
tinued, was to supersede Attorney Vin­
cent and then ihe case would be properly
conducted.
Attorney Vincent shook with silent
laughter several times during the above
and similar references. lie seemed to re­
gard the matter as a huge joke.
After the letters were all read the re­
cipient, Mrs. Christine Feldt, a middleaged widow, was called to the witness
chair for the purpose of finishing her tes­
timony for the State.
When Mrs. Feldt was called to the
stand her former lover, to whose case
she had done so much damage, refused
to glance in her direction. He twisted
uneasily in his chair, and then leaned
over to Attorney Vincent and a consulta­
tion was held. Meanwhile Assistant
State’s Attorney McEwen proceeded
with the direct examination, which dealt
largely with the financial relations be­
tween Luetgert and Mrs. Feldt. The
latter admitted having received funds
from Luetgert prior to his arrest, and
said that she had withdrawn the money
at his demand from a safety deposit vault
for his use. The sums she had with­
drawn at different times footed up $4,000,
the entire amount which she had received.
She asserted her ignorance of how this
money was used by the prisoner, but ad­
mitted that portions of it had been re­
tained by her on his order for the care of
his children. She also testified as to the
substance of the letters and asserted that
she had refused to lend Luetgert her own
money upon tlie requests which she had
received from him in the letters. She
testified to having received in all eight let­
ters from the big sausage manufacturer.
The prosecution regards -Airs. Feldt as
one of the most important witnesses, as
through her testimony they expect to es­
tablish the fact of Lnotgert’s motive m
the alleged murder of his wife.
The last witness called by the State on
Tuesday was Nicholas Faber. Faber was
employed as a fireman in the sausage fac­
tory .and said that he had seen Mrs.
Luetgert enter the factory about 11
o'clock on the night of the murder.
TWO T R A IN S COLLIDE. P E R IS H IN A AY RECK.
M A N Y K I L L E D A N D I N J U R E D IN
T H E CRASH.
TW ENTY-FIVE
MANGLED
AND
B U R N E D IN C O L O R A D O .
Fast Express aud
A w ful
S an ta
Fe
s io n N e a r
Road
M a il T ra in s on th e
Come
In to
C o lli­
E m p o r i a —F i r e C o n s u m e s
C oaches-Eryan
S an ta
in th e W re ck .
F e D is a s te r.
H earl* E n d
B etw een
C o llis io n
Passenger
T ra in s — Som e
and
V ic tim s
O ccurs
F re ig h t
Caught
in
D e b r ia a n d R o a s te d to D e ath ,
C o llid e d on a C urve.
One of the worst wrecks in the history
The most disastrous railway wreck
of the Santa Fe Railroad oceuived three that has ever happened in Colorado oc­
miles east of Emporia, Kan., Wednesday curred Friday morning a mile and a half
night. Nine or ton persons were killed west of Newcastle. A Denver and Rio
and many more were badly hurt. The Grande passenger train, west bound, col­
fast mail train going east and the Mexico lided with a Colorado Midland stock
and California express, west bound, col­ train going east, wrecking both engines
lided head on. The Mexico and California and several cars in both trains. Shortly
express was pulled by two locomotives, after the collision fire broke oat in the
and when they struck the engine draw­ ruins. The mail, baggage and express
ing the Sast mail the boilers of all three cars, smoker, day coach and sleeper were
engines exploded and tore a hole in the burned. A number of passengers who
ground so deep that the smoking car of were not killed outright but who were
the west-bound train went in on the pinned in the wreckage and could not be
three engines and two mail cars aud bal­ extricated perished in the liames. There
anced there, without turning over. The were about 200 passengers. It is esti­
passengers in the smoking car escaped mated that twenty-five persons were kill­
through the windows. The front end of ed and as many more bruised, scalded and
this car was enveloped in a volume of burned, of whom at least six are likely to
stifling smoke and steam, belching up die of their injuries.
from the wreck below, and the rear doo»r
The accident occurred at the worst pos­
was jammed tight in the wreck of the sible point. Two minutes later the en­
car behind.
gineers could have avoided tho wreck,
The wreck caught fire from ihe en­ as each could have seen the approach of
gines. The cars in the hole and the smok­ the other's train. The trains collided on a
ing car burned to ashes in no time. In curve or bend round a mountain, and
climbing out of the smoking car several there was no opportunity to avoid the
men fell through tlie rifts in the wreck wreck or even to slacken speed. The
below and it is not known whether they surviving trainmen say the trains were
escaped or were burned to death. The not running fast, but the fact seems to be
west-bound train carried seven or eight that both the passenger and freight were
M a y S p read th e P la g u e .
coaches, and its passengers included many going at full speed—about twenty miles
For three weeks past people from all
excursionists who had been to hear W. J. an hour for the passenger and the freight
over this and neighboring States have
Bryan speak at the county fair at Burling­ ten or twelve.
been leaving Ocean Springs in fright be­
ame. Mr. Bryan himself was on the
The Rio Grande Junction Road, on
cause, as they said, a peculiar epidemic
train, but was riding in the rear Pullman, which the wreck occurred, is a joint track
was prevailing at that place. Those who
400 feet from the cars which were wreck­ operated by the Denver and Rio Grande
thus got away before the yellow fever
ed. He says nothing but a heavy jolt and Colorado Midland companies. It is
commenced are now scattered far and
was experienced by the passengers iu his a single standard gauge track seventywide, and herein lies the greatest danger.
coach.
seven miles long, running from Newcastle
The Florida State Board of Health has
Mr. Bryan was one of the noblest men to Grand Junction, connecting the two
in the crowd of rescuers. He helped to roads with the Ilio Grande Western. The
carry out the dead and wounded and road is on the west bank of the Grand
gave the greatest attention to their care. River and nearly all the way are nigh
One poor fellow, who was badly maimed, bluffs on one side of the track and the
called to Mr. Bryan and said: ‘T went stream on the other, it being from fifteen
to hear you to-day; I am dying now and to twenty feet below the track.
want to shake your hand and say God
R e p o r te d Cause o f th e A c c id e n t.
bless you. If you possibly can, Mr.
One report as to the cause of the acci­
Bryan, get me a drink of water.” Mr. dent is to the effect that Conductor Bur­
Bryant went into the fast mail car, one bank of the Colorado Midland stock train
end of which was burning, and came out made a mistake of ten minutes in figur­
with a drink of water, which he gave to ing on the time when the Rio Grande pas­
the suffering passenger. He brought out senger train passed Newcastle, and that
C O S T S T E N MILLIONS.
cushions for others of the injured, and therefore he was chiefly responsible for
E x te n s iv e Coal s trik e P ro ve s E x p e n ­
was everywhere present to minister to the disaster. Engineer Ostrander of the
s iv e fo r th e M in e rs .
the wants of the injured.
stock train could either confirm or deny
COAST ALONG W H IC H YELLOW FEVER IS REPORTED.
It is thought that the miners’ strike will
The engineer of the west-bound train this report if he were alive.
soon end. It is understood that the na­
had received orders to meet the fast mail
Issued a proclamation excluding lrom ihe forced wheat to $1 a bushel. But,” he
The passengers in the day coach fared
tional officials of the miners’ union are at Emporia and was making up lost time.
State all persons and baggage from the added, “the Improved condition of the
the worst. Out of twenty-nine people in
willing
to
accept
the
operators’
offer
of
a
These two are the fastest trains on the that coach only six are now known to
yellow fever infected points in Louisiana farmer is due not alone to the enhanced
compromise at 04 cents, an advance of 11
and Mississippi, unless accompanied by a price in wheat. There has been a corre­
Santa Fe system and the east-bound train have escaped. As in all similar accidents,
cents, although the strikers wanted 09 must
beenrunvpug at a speed of the engine men were fifst to lose their
certificate that the person has not been sponding improvement in all farm prod­
cents. The battle has been a costly one
exposed to the disease within fifteen days ucts.”
for-’ miles a n r
; ' : west-bound ex­ lives. Eninds on the lever, went down
for the strikers, according to estimates press
slight curve with lihreman on the passenger, was -1
from the time of departure.
•
made by their own officials. The strikers and met the fast mail, p. *
L
U
E
T
G
E
R
T
’S
L
E
T
T
E
R
S
.
from the time of departure.
have lost in wages $10,500,000. it is cs- 200 feet. Of the seven or eigh1 u> ^ ltn n badly hurt that he died. Engineer Gor­
The salt water resorts between Mobile
ing up the train of the California exJPaks don of the passenger may live, although
tibia
ted
that
in
the
bituminous
coal
disand Now Orleans—Pascagoula, Scranton, M i s s i v e s W h i c h T e n d t o K s t a b l J s l i a tricts of» j.i_
___ _
Ww.liKlin
r P
p n nsv l_ country,
the mail, baggage and the express and he is badly injured and at first was
the
including
PennsylM u r d e r M o tiv e .
thought to be fatally hurt. He was thrown
Biloxi, Ocean Springs, Bay St. Louis,
fllismoking cars were destroyed. The coach
vaniu.
Ohio.
West
Virginia,
Indiana,
over a barb-wire fence by the force of the
When Luetgert, the alleged Chicago
Pass Christian, Waveland, the Southern
following the smoker was badly splin­
nois,
Iowa
and
other
States,
12,000
men
collision. Hines, the Midland fireman,
Methodist Association camp grounds and wife murderer, entered Judge luthJ.l s were idle. The average earnings of the tered.
was so badly hurt that the doctors who
all wav stations on the Mississippi sound courtroom Tuesday he smiled and nodded men is put at $1.40 a day. It will take
There were not more than a dozen pas­
examined him said he could not recover.
c o a s t — contain at this season tens of thou­ at the jury, but lie failed to extend the
two years of steady work for the strikers sengers on the fast mail, all in one coach, He was shockingly burned. James
sands of visitors from all sections of the sweep of his salutation to the crowd.
and while none of them was seriously in­
nan, the postal clerk, will not live. He
The first business taken up was the to recover whst they have lost.
South. Mobile now has representatives
jured their shaking up was terrible. Ev­
Although
the
strikers
are
by
far
the
by hundreds at Scranton, Biloxi, Ocean reading of translations of letters written heaviest losers, the operators claim that ery seat in the coach was torn from the was terribly scalded.
Two express messengers oil the ivio
Springs and the camp grounds. Iheso by the defendant to Mrs. Christine teldt. they, too, have lost, or rather will lose, floor and many floor planks came up with
people, since the fever panic began, have The reading of the fond missives sent by $1 ,000,000. Tho opeiators say that up to the seats. It is stated that the wreck Grande train saved their lives, but thenbeen wildly anxious to get to their homes. Luetgert to the widow occupied much date they have lost no money, because was caused by a miscarriage of orders escape was a thrilling one. The express
car of the wrecked passenger train was
time, several being very lengthy.
F e d e r a l A u t h o r it ie s A ct.
from the trainmaster. At Empona the
they
have
been
able
to
sell
at
fancy
pi
ices
While Assistant State's Attorney McThe general Government will render all
east-bound fast mail train received or- entur•elv consumed, with its contents.
immense
piles
of
slack
and
mine
refuse
assistance in its power to check the spread Ewen read the epistles the jury listened that is ordinarily worth nothing. But ders to pass the California express at
F A I L E D IN T H E A T T E M P T .
of yellow fever. This will be done mainly carefully. The reader was careful to the advance of 11 cents proposed will re­ Lang, seven miles east. Another order
eaeh
endearing
through the agency of the Marine Hos­ place due emphasis on fully emphasize sult in their filling a number of large was sent to Lang for the California ex­
P e ter M c N a lly , th e B o s to n S w im m e r,
pital Service. Dr. W alter W vman, tile word or phrase and to
press to take the siding there. But this
C o u ld n ’t Cross th e E n g lis h C h a n n e l.
head of the bureau, has returned to \
\ashorder was not delivered and the easr.Peter S. McNally, the Boston swim­
ington and assumed active charge in di­
bound train passed on. the trainmen ex­
recting the work in assisting the Sit ate
pecting to pass the fast mail at Emporia. mer who made an attempt to swim the
English channel, was in the water fifteen
officials of Mississippi in their efforts to
hours, in which time he covered thirtyconfine the disease to the locality where
TH E W HEAT STATES.
live miles. McNally suffered severely, the
it appears to have started. Dr. Wyman
swelling of his hands giving him great
G re a t N o rth w e s t C o m m o n w e a lth th a t
says that as yet he has no opinion to ex­
trouble, v ^ le from time to time he was
P r o d u c e a n E n o r m o u s Y ie ld ,
press whether the disease is really yellow
The wheat States are those of the seized with cramps in his legs, neck and
fever, although he admits it looks very
suspicious. The precautionary measures
Northwest, and first among them, in an arms, causing a drawn, haggard look
he has taken are b a s e d -entirely on the
ordinary year, with an average product about his face. At last he became uncon­
of 05,000,000 bushels, is Minnesota. Then scious and was forcibly dragged into a
declaration of the State Board of Health
comes North Dakota, adjacent, v 5th an boat three miles from shore. He quickly
of Louisiana in the Gelpi case, which
average product of 00,000,000, and South recovered from his exhaustion. In an mwas that the disease from which the oeiDakota with 30,000.000. The average -of
son had died was yellow fever. Dr. W y­
Kansas is about 25,000,000, and of Ne­
man says the situation at Ocean Springs
braska, 16,000,000. Those are the group
is entirely in the hands of the State Board
of wheat States, but they arc not the
of Health, while tho Marine Hospital Bu­
only ones, California producing in ordi­
reau is doing everything possible to assist.
nary years wheat to the amount of 40,Dr. Wyman has wired the physician in
OOOlcOO bushels, and Ohio having an av­
charge at Ocean Springs a copy of the
erage crop of 35,000,000. Wisconsin,
treasury regulations relating to the piewhich adjoins Minnesota, produces, rela­
vention of the spread of epidemic diseases
tively, very little wheat, but Michigan
from one £>tatc to another. Iheso regula­
h a s , when the farming conditions are
tions prescribe the manner of surveil­
good, a large yield. Oregon has been in­
lance to be established over railroad trains
creasing its wheat average considerably.
coming from the infected district and give
Among the wheat States of the East
rules for the isolation of infected passen­
Pennsylvania stands first, with an aver­
gers and the disinfection of their baggage.
age crop of 20,000,000 bushels, Maryland
The Marine Hospital Service has ample
following with 8,000,000, and New York
camp material on hand. The splendid out­
with 7,000,000. There is comparatively
fit which has been at Gainesville, Ga.,
little wheat raised in New England, and
lias been sent to the vicinity of Ocean
scarcely any in the Gulf States. Missouri
Springs, and if a camp of detention is
is a large wheat-growing State, exceeding
f o u n d necessary the outfit will be used as
either Indiana or Illinois, but Arkansas,
occasion may require. The bureau also
south of it, yields very little wheat.—Ex­
keeps portable apparatus at Savannah,
change. _____________________
Ga., intended for use in epidemics, it
PETF.n s. m ’n a l l y .
consists of machines for disinfecting and
SIX FIND W A T E R Y GRAVES.
fumigating purposes. They haye also
terview he said: “I discovered that the
..........
been sent to the vicinity of Ocean Springs.
channel
^ as really much longer than I
D is a s t r o u s E n d in s r o f a D e t r o it F ish thought, and found the currents to be all
in si P a r t y ’ s T r ip .
EUROPE NEEDS WHEAT.
Six men were drowned in Lake St. that Boyton, Webb and others told me.
Clair Wednesday. The victims of tlie 1 am of the opinion that it is impossible
A g e n t A tw e ll S e n d s a R e p o rt to th e
disaster were all from Detroit. A party for any cne to swim from Dover to Calais,
S tate D e p a rtm e n t.
of ten voung men started for a fishing as the currents would all be against him.
W . P. Atwell, commercial agent of tho
trip. When off Wind Mill point -hey be­ I shall make no more attempts this year.
United States at Kobaix, France, seids
Besides being the best swimmer in New
came hilarious, and two who had climb­
to the State Department a report on the
STRIKERS’ CAMP N EA R BE A RM IT ’S MINE.
ed to the masthead of the cat-rigged yacht England, if not in the country, McNally
short wheat crop in France. He says the
has a wonderful record as a life saver.
began
swaying
her
to
and
fro.
Ihey
crop in France and in fact in all Europe
contracts at a loss, and for this there is
His feats in this direction have won for
all
reference
to
the
fact
that
the
big
sau­
finally rocked her over, and, being heav­
has fallen much below the average, and
no
remedy
until
new
contracts
are
made.
him the highest recognition of the Mas­
sage manufacturer was anxious for the
ily ballasted, she sank like a shot. The sachusetts Humane Society and of the
that it is estimated that the United States
The
operators
say
there
is
but
1,000,000
and Canada will be called upon to export time to come when he would be free to tons yet to be shipped to the lakes under two on the masthead and two who were United States Government. Since lft 12
\hen
from 20,000,000 to 130,000,000 bushels wed the object of his affections. \
contract, but they are afraid thej will not sitting forward cast themselves loose, but McNally has probably saved more than
those
portions
of
the
letters
containing
more than they exported to Europe last
be able to get it out in time, because there the six who were sitting in the companion 100 lives; he cannot himself tell how
reference
to
Luetgert
s
trouble
in
en^ag
way near the helmsmen went down with
year. France will require about 00,000,will
be
a
shortage
of
cars
just
as
soon
a*
ing an attorney were read aloud it evi­
many.
her and were seen no more.
000 bushels to meet the deficiency in that
the
miners
resume
work.
dently embarassed the prisoner.
•country.
CULVER CITY HERALD.
(iK O IU iK X K A K P A SS. P n h lb b rr.
Entered at Culver Postoftice as Secondclass Matter.
ISSU ED E V E R Y
F R ID A Y .
SUBSC OPTION :
For One Year
$1.25
For Six onths
.70
For Three Months
. . .
.80
If paid promptly 111 advance a discount
of 25 cents will be tfiven on the year.
Obituary poetry 5 cents j>er line. Local
advertisements 5 cents per line. Disnlay
sidvertisinj^ rates made known on applica­
tion.
v.'iuds of thanks will be published at 25 eta
per inch*
We call your attention to the fact that our line of Dry Goods are far
superior in every way to any time previous. As to quality and prices,you
will be surprised at what we can show you in dress goods. In fact our
entire line of Dry Goods.
OUR SHOE STOCK is very complete. We will again place before the
people TH E CELE RATED CHINESE CALF SHOE, both in Ladies’ and
Children’s sizes. Every pair is warranted. Buy them and beconvincrd
E. B. VANSCHOIACK.
THE W ORLD OF SW EETS.
•«* -
• W*'*-■
»
,Y
The sugar cane was Introduced into
America soon after the discovery, aud
its cultivation rapidly spread over all
those parts of the New World adapted
N O M 4 N H IS O W N M A S T E R ,
to its growth.
E N G L I S H M E N W H O B U Y WIVES.
Un esB He Can Shave Himself*
Medical authorities declare that the
^ a ith fo l Helpmate-* Come Cheaply in
the Harb i,
glucose employed in the manufacture
South Africa.
of cheap candies is unhealthful, as a
“Any man can learn to ~*T.ve him­
Soane of tlie young Englishmen who
large consumption of it tends to pro­
self,” says a barber. “It onlj- requires
go to South Africa purcha**? African
duce diabetes.
inatkUma from the chiefs, and tills is re­ a little practice and proper utensils. In
The introduction of fap*y boxes for garded as actual marriage by the na­ the lirst place, a man wants two firstcandies was due to the demand on the tives, says a geutleniaii from Ca«po class razors, the best soap, a good
part of customers for holiday, birthday j Town, who Ls now in this country pur- ^ th e r brush and an A1 strop. It is
and festival presents, in neat and at­ chasing mining machinery. The price usually best to let a barber hone your
tractive packages.
of a wife in South Africa, either to a razors for you, as that is a separate
Candy-makers calculate that the ! native or foreigner,
six cattle. Ii trade all by itself, and requires consid­
price of their products should l>e put | & mteiake that the tribal women are erable time and skill, and with cart*
at double the cost of the material, J promiscuous in theur affection#. It Ls your razors won't need honing very
which will allow them a fair return for j really laughable to see those dusky often. If I were learning over again
rent, labor and Interest.
damsels, who liave become the mor- I ’d select for the first trial some time
Glucose may be manufactured by S t a t i c wives of h:umJ*«me. wetl-bred when 1 had an hour or so of leisure, if
necessary. I’d make up a good thick,
the action of sulphuric acid ou starch, youu*
uocompanytas their
liege lords to the train Wthen they are creamy lather, spread it over my face,
tlie acids being afterwards removed
VI
going to depart, carrying tlie l/ugguge j an(* then rub it well in. I used to take
by the action of powdered chalk or
/J
and running af-Usr the train when i t ? a l)0°k or paper and read wl^lle I alsome other form of lime.
s tarts off and keeping up with U. as far | ternately applied th* lather and rubbed
Sc
The fall in the price of sugar, caused ^ possible,
it well into the face. That’s the main
by improved processes of manufacture, j Ca,I>e Town tuts now about 05,000 peo- trouble with amateur shavers; they
anil the enormous increase In the , pie. mostly British, and there are 000,- don’t soften the beard up enough. I
amonnt of beet sugar are. no iloubt, ro- 000 !.u the caj>e colony. There are Quito read somewhere that Gambetta had an
sponsible for this increase.
75,000 British in Johannesburg, tiie : awfully tough beard, and thiit while
The brandy, or liqueur drops, ars metropolis of the Transvaal, which has ! the hither was softening it up enough
manufactured by mixing the liquor to a population of 125,000. The Jameson for his valet to shave him he used to
be used with the syrup. When the fiasco and Barney Bamako’s death take his exercise on the trapeze. The
drop dries the outside hardens and the lia ve had a depressing eff«-.t ujvjiu null­ beginner ought to keep this softening
ing stocks and development, bu»t tills process up quite a while. It makes the
brandy Is retained iu the interior.
is not true tirst trial much easier.
The female matinee fiend of Phila­ will a l l right up in time.
“The razor should be held almost flat
delphia etUl favors the ground nut that the gold or dkunoixl iiiIalls iire
riumjiiig
<n:t.
G
11
tin*
cu;Wra»ry
tlie
inaxagainst the face, with the edge Just
candy that her mother chewed over
thirty years ago. that form having re­ imuni development has nover been ap­ touching the face, and the back only
mained fashionable for half a century. proximated, and there are untold about the thickness of a lead pencil
miLikuks Ln tlie country yett.. (Jeeil
The candy-makers say that the most Rhodes has returned to Ikiluwayo, tiie away—an angle for the blade of about
iO degrees. ^T he flatter the blade is
profitable part of their trade is in fan­ capi-tol of IUnxlcsia. the gr^^t tcrrlu
cy candies, put up in ornamental box- named for h.!*n, and of which he is against the face, the less the danger of
a cut. Study the growth of the beard,
**• {{»e box frequently cutting morQ j virt ually KJag. He
a large body
so as always to shave with It.
“ It is better to learn to hold the
figure in the ? ? rChi'* V thaD th<f goods. |of “
d ^
iH t*e field all , 1*
Gnm drops are made
letting fall \
they are f « l ujuI paid a,bout razor in either hand, but It is possible
?, <2.50 aaaul
This is to place to get your Furniture, Chairs, Cupboards, Safes,
tiny by .i.«
the company, of which to go all over the face and only use
from a mechanical device large drops 1 °
of an already prepared syrup; the he In president. ami you may Imagine one hand, breaking in the other by de­ Writing Desks, Stands Tables, Bureaus, Bedsteads, Bed Springs, Mat­
drops are perm 1ted to fall upon starch tlie expense of llui* part of h's under­ grees. Another great point for the tresses, Couches, Sofas, Easels, Mirrors, Picture Frames and Mouldings,
where they dry without losing their taking alone. He Ls a wonderfully amateur is not to be very particular aud a fine line of Rockers for the old aud young.
____ l>ra.tn»y man, ar»d L» deveJaping his em­ the tirst time over, and then to lather
jjeouliar form.
Do not forget the place.
pire rapidly.
up again, and go over the face a second
time. A man can sliave himself a good
MAIN STREET.
CU LV ER CITY, IND.
O D D S A N D ENDS.
deal easier tluf second time over, and
A R e tu rn to the Prim itiT«.
Four miles of a spider’s thread would
From London comes the startling the places that troubled and were left
weigh only one grain.
i»ews that women of fashion are going ragged the lirst time over are easily
cleaned up the second time.
T h e film o r a soap bubble Is the 2.MX),-| to abandon their carriages and travel
“The great point for the learner,
000th or an inch in thickness.
i around on shopping errands and mornP R O P R IE T O R S OF
though, is long and careful lathering.
A man was arreted In X « v J « w y I
«■"» *»
tb« other dav for dlgglag bis own gmve.
'
ln England about the begin- A man should not consider himself his
1 e
! ning of the seventeenth century. One own master, unless he can shave him­
At the beginning of this century there j ^ ^ ^ coach builders in London is self. I consider it one of the accomwere only 5.000 Spanish-speaking peo- : ^usv Jn
manufacture of these olishuients.”
;
First Class Horses, B u g ­
pie in the United States; now there are mG(jef| Qf conveyance. The chairs will
650,000.
Y>e painted in all the colors used in the
Any person finding a large key
gies a nd Vehi cl es
of
The highest inhabited building in manufacture of ordinary vehicles.
will please leave the same at this
Europe is the Alpine Club house, on They will be upholstered in gay fabrics
every descripti on. - C a n
^
Mount Rosa—12,000 feet above the sea with painted and gilded moldings. Per o ffice.
haps the visit, a year ago, of his impe­
level.
table f r o m
5 0 to 7 5
rial
highness.
Li
Hung
Chang,
is
ac­
Farmers in Dougias County, Kan.,
are educating their horses to eat po­ countable for this resurrection of an
orses a n d
shelter a
obsolete
mode
of
conveyance,
since
this
tatoes, which they can feed at 11 cents,
scion of the land of flowers went no­
while corn stands for 17 cents.
n u m b e r of Buggies.
where
without
his
chair,
which
the
The Zend language is one of the most
ancient known to antiquarians or phil­ stalwart members of the New York po­
ologists. It is said to bear a close re­ lice force considered so degrading to
have tb carry.
semblance to the Welsh.
Never before have American tourists
CULVER, IND
BARN ONE BLOCK WEST OF DEPOT.
Lost:—
A
mall
Poland
China
pig.
doured into Europe as they are doing
this year. It Is probable that the in­ Fiuder will please leave word at
crease will not be far from 25 per cent, this office. The owner is a poor
over last year.
mau, and the return of tbe pig will
Much uneasiness is felt in Egypt at be a great favor.
the deficiency of the water supply,
which is causing loss to rice growers
Bradley & Mawborter, Photrand threatens the coming maize crop. pr *phers, have taken possession of
until you see our Solid Fact Bargains. We have opened the season
This season's Nile flood is a fortnight tbeir Gallery near Arerv’s Ke-t n with a stock of goods that beats the record for Beauty and Low
late.
n
a
rant, aud are now ready for busiuess
Prices We will close it with a big stock of and the best pleased lot
c cr Xan Cr
a;
Egg scissors have come. They ta*e
2
c
Cn
>— .
of customers you ever saw. Be fair with yourself and see our Fall
O
off the tbp of the breakfast soft-l>oiled
:r m
Public Sale.
Stock It presents an opportunity for economical buying that nobody
2 L
- 5
eggs with neatness and dispatch, mak­
can afford to miss.
SJ: 5
° ? § o
ing the rest of tiie edible easy of ac­ To whom it may concern:—
S
o
o
Ca
& S
On the 25th day of September,
cess with the small egg spoon.
c/2 a
Co
3
1897,
between
the
hours
of
ten
In Sweden the education of journal­
i
IT -•
CL >
-3
5 is crowded with the Newest of New Styles,
CL
ists is treated as a function of the State. o’clock a. m. and four o’clock p. m.,
3 “
< .r*
selected by Mr. Kloepfer in New York, with
1 ’nder this system the young journal­ the McCormick Harvesting Machine
o
ft
o
? er­ a: c:
Experienced care as to Quality.
ist gains a knowledge of the world by Co.. will offer for sale at public auc
<
-t
>
n
traveling at the expense of the tax­
-1 © as
ft
on. one bay mare, one black mare 3
2 O
W
&
payer.
S
i~
l j __
-—■
------- i Popular Styles Latest Novai d oue two horse wagon, the per­
o
Q
*
J®
H
5c
It is a common practice in China to sonal property of said company, ob
c T H E R l G r l T P L A C E TOGET 9 elties, Standard Grades and
5T — a: o
ft a
rool wines or any other liquors by wrap­ tained by a bill of sals from oue
$ T H E R IG H I G O O D S
$ Newest Attractions are all
zr
H
ping the bottle in a wet clotli and hang­ James Hoffman, and taken under a
c_
i— m
t h e r i g h t p r i c e s . ......_ I
w
ing it up in the sun; the water in the
e &
a:
writ
of
replevin
issued
from
Justice
o C CL o
cloth becomes converted into vapor and
Morris’ Court, and against one Han­
tli us cold is produced.
Staple 3 (i FpncJ DrO Goods, Dress Goods, Clogks,
A. COOK
5
DRUGS AND GROCERY STORE
Has opened a grocery near the
Indianapolis landing east side of the
lake where he will keep a first class
line of groceries and drugs.
W. S. EASTERDAY, *-
Furniture
Undertaking.
HAYES & SON,
^Livery, Feed and Sale Stable. &
Special Attention Paid to Traveling Men.
tiang on to Your Q O I . I . A R S
3
1*
fs
*
nah C. Hoffman. Said sale will
J. B. Bowell, of Plymouth, Frank take place iu the public street near
Lampsou aud .John Osboru, ul thi Nuss-baum & Mever store build
ci v w e n t to F i u s b v r ' Tueail».v to i n g in tb e to w n o f Culver, Marshall
iv it ness th e g re a t h orse r a c in g in county, Ind.
Dated this 14th day of Sept. 1897,
s a id
p lac e .
T hey
re p o rt a fine
Culver* Ind.
tim e.
McC otimvk H arvesting M aciijx- C o..
Send lauudrv with Erzu Koontz-by V. P. Kikk, A uy.
«
i
V. P. K IR K ’S
Carpets, Faocg Goods, Notions, Etc.
•
a t our Store only
Notary Public.
Law, Real Estate and Life As*
Kloepfer’s New York Sto»*e.
stiP>Ji?ce Office.
Oiiice v v cr B&ak.
Culver, hid,
PLYMOUTH, IN D.
J
C U R I O U S FACTS.
The Western Union Company uses
#ver a hundred million envelopes every
jear.
If a well could be dug^ to a depth of
forty-six miles, the air at the bottom
would be as dense as quicksilver.
According to the Journal of the
Knights of Labor, out of the 20,000.000
workers of America less than one-fifth
are in any form of organization.
Immense as is tlie value of gold taken
from the California mines since the
discovery of the precious metal there,
it could all be contained in a room
forty feet long, twenty feet wide and
fifteen feet high.
Uncle Sam's official account of the
rebellion is nearly finished. It will till
120 large volumes, and it has taken
nearly twenty years to prepare it. Its
total cost will be about two and onehalf million dollars.
The first of April and the first of
July in any year, and in leap year the
Iirst of January, fall on the same day
of the week. The iirst of September
And the first of December in any j^ear
fall on the same week day.
Of the entire number of English peer­
ages only five go back as far as the thir­
teenth century. Of the 538 temporal
peers 350 have beeu created during the
present century, 12 G during the past
century, and only sixty-two trace their
titles beyond the year 1700.
An English paper which has been
taking a ballot on the subject of favor­
ite names for boys and girls received
4,000 replies. A list of 31 boys’ and 33
girls’ names was submitted, aod the
voting showed Harold and Dorothy to
be the two most popular appellations.
It is reported that commercial oils
are to have another addition. In China
It is stated that a successful extraction
of t.ea-seed oil has been obtained. It is
said to be slightly pungent but edible,
end also of a consistency which makes
it a valuable lubricator for fine ma­
chinery.
The great wail ©f China was recent­
ly measured by Mr. Untliank, an Amer­
ican engineer engaged on the survey
for a Chinese railway. His measure­
ment gave the highest eighteen feet.
Every few hundred yards there is a
tower twenty-five feet high. The foun­
dation of the wall is of solid granite.
For 1,300 miles the wall goes over
plains and mountains, every foot of the
foundation being of solid granite, and
the rest of the structure solid mason­
ry. In some places the wall is teuilt
smooth up against the hank, or crosses
a precipice where there is a sheer de­
scent of 1,000 feet.
TO MAKE ROOM FOR FALL STOCK
P O R T E R
'I *
C O M P A N Y
Are Now Positively Offering GREAT REDUCTIONS IN PRICES on their
LA RG E ST OCK OF SH O E S
In Order to Close Them Out. This is no Idle Talk.
w i I I g i v e y o u el<
fo r th e n e x t
i
2
}3
$
t
us
i0
f>
ELL>0 CENTRAL!
M a m m a M u s t G o to S c h o o l,
“CR Y EN E”
PUTS BABY TO SLEEP.
IS NOT A SOOTflING
BU T IS
€
T H E ID E A L R E M ED Y FOR
©
KOSS
0
K V IN G
O N '" ^ T l > A T K I )
t
t
3
€
3
Where is kept constantly on hand, the choicest line $
c
of groceries in Marshall county. In Queensumrt ^
i3
he has a variety that will please the most fastid- ^
t
3
t
ious. In Tobaccos and Cigars, he keeps the very best
$
brands in
3
the market.
D
I3
#
I3
$
ic "Wa s
a crying baby.
^ KYtfit lets pd"p<? and n)(>”n)(i sleep,
absolutely harmless
©
Then in canned g'oods, $
:U €>
Sumner ” but he has a mammoth supply, and no ^
©
“ Cheap John" brands either, they are the super- |
fine or finer. Don't fa il to give me Mtredith's every £
0
time I ca ll
O I.'C Y
H IL D R S X .
r^
CONTAINS
NO
OPTIVATRS
POISONS
OR
DELETERIOUS
SUBSTANCES.
For sale at C U L V E R CITY D RU G STORE.
“ Great Walter Scott' and the shadow of “'Chas. Q
9
SYR UP
0
«
«
. . . Give us . . .
t
0
$
GOOD-BYE.
e
5 -DURING SEPTEMBER ONLY.- tt
t
Men’s
All Wool
Suits
Black
Blue or
Gray.
Extra Made
Perfect F it
All Styles
All Sizes,
Go To
John V. Astley 6- Son.
PLY A iO U i H , IND.
.. . F or . . .
“You son of a bi^cuit-eater” MY paint
is the best, I buy it of Astley & *Son.
Plymouth, and save 20 per cent on the
dollar.
Pumps,
Pipes, Points,
Oliver Plows,
Cook and
Heating
Stoves,
Paints, Oils,
etc.
You canot buy the same qual=
ity elsewhere at 50 per cent more.
This is a special drive and we
want you Union township folks
to see it.
i M .LA U ER & S 0 N The One-Price O utfitters. 4
P ly m o u th , Ind, f
'
....... -.......
The big hit made by us
precludes our mentioning auy detailed attraction.
13.
r because our line is one of the largest
D
U
in the city.
P , * A r because our clothijg fits and is tailored
t S U S y
properi v .
- C \ 7 because we are saving money for our
customers on men and boy’s clothing:.
All Hardware Cheaper T han Ever Before.
o ur
l_
In
uits.
N O . 1.
He Leads Them All.
Haterial all wool, made of Perfect
Stock, no Shoddy, colors perfect, at*$5.75.
Positively the Largest and most Select line of
F u r n i t u r e i n the c oun t y .
N O . 2 .
A handsome collection of fine Cheviots, Plaids and Overplaids, Nobby Styles, Perfect, in make and
Trimming. A usual $8.50 value. Many styles at $6.50 and lower.
our Line of q h i Id r e n ’s
C lo th in g
is n o w com plete.
Look a t our M a m m o th Line o f
H ats w h en in tow n .
Ball 6- Carabin.
Sewing Machines of every grade repaired and Sundries
furnished for the same.
PLYMOUTH, IND
B IC Y C LE R E P A IR IN G one of the great Specialties.
Undertaking
and Embalming
Tn taking the school census of North
Kingston, R. I., the enumerator, when
visiting a house to make a record of a are the leading features of this establishment.
birth, learned that the mother of the
Infant came within the school age lim­ night or day.
it, being but 15 years of age, and the
young mother’s name was enrolled
among those who, in accordance witb
the law. are required to attend sehcoJ
Calls promptly attended
P R IC E S AT ROCK BOTTOM.
2 ROSS * HOUSE'S
PLYMOUTH, IND.
DON’T M ISS TH E PLACE.
A. B. Wickizer.
ninety days in each year.
s iy s
0
H.J. MEREDITH S STORE. ?
3
3
B a rg a in
i
3
C U R IO U S C O N D E N S A T IO N S .
The average density of the popula­
tion in London is 3SfG00 per square
mile.
Mexico’s government has been asked
to rid the country districts of horse
thieves.
Queen
Vlctprla
rules
11,475,054
square miles of territory, and 37^,725,857 of population.
The butter trade is one of the most
important in Ireland, amounting to sev­
en million sterling a year.
When the queen ascended the throne
the population of Sheffield was consid­
erably under 100,000; it now numbers
333,000.
Factories at Pedregal, Mexico, a sub­
urb of Mexico City, are putting in
American machinery, and have planned
a feast for the operatives when the
plants are in working order.
Shortly after the Paris fire the Figaro
of that city opened a subscription list
for the benefit of the sufferers. This
subscription in a short time amounted
to the enormous sum of $222,800.
Four students of the Y. M. C. A.
training school in Springfield, Mass.,
certify that, as an experiment, they
boarded themselves for eight weeks at
an average cost of G cents a meal for
each person.
One hundred and eight French Cana­
dians, In twenty-two families, have left
Michigan for the Lake St. John region
of Canada, where the colonization de­
partment gives 100 acres of land to
each family.
The debt of New Hampshire is now
$1,667,767.45, having been reduced
$159,973.92 last year. The State’s reye'Bue last year was $0915,265.48. and it
cost only $536,291 to run the State
through the year.
The building of the railway up the
Jungfrau, which is intended to carry
the traveler to a level of 13,650 feet
above the sea, and give him a glimpse
of parts of Switzerland, Italy, France
und Germany, is already begun.
Near Alachua, Fla., n man who had
Just put some tools into a chest at ap­
proach of a storm was struck by light­
ning and killed as he stood under an
oak tree, which was photographed per­
fectly in his body by the fluid.
'I'
ARGOS IN D
Only First-Class House in the City.
Rates Reasonable
Special rates given to Marshall county citizens, who come in numbers.
Hacks to and from all trams.
J . E. Bo well, Proprietor
In a very short time they found the
she was pretty, and she was fickle— about that trail,” said Jim , as the
man they were looking for.
l i e t us sing of the sheaves, when the and that tells the whole story. In two men rode on together.
“ Are you ready to tell where May
“ No, I wasn’t mistaken,” said Joe.
this case Joe was the first victim. He
summer is done,
A n d the garners are stored with the met May at one of the big camp meet­ “ I just lied— that was alL I did it is or to go after her?” B ill demanded.
“ N-no,” faltered Joe, with a dis­
ings that are common in that country for B ill’s sake. If May goes the way
gifts of tlie sun.
Shouting home from the fields, like in the fall of the year, and after that I sent her she’ll not get to Round trustful glance at the little group of
attendants.
he was very pronounced in his atten­ Timbers this m orning.”
the voice of the sea,
Again his brother sprang at him.
After they had ridden a few mo­
L e t us join with the reapers in glad tions to her for several months. Then
This time he threw him to the ground
his attentions ceased as suddenly and ments ii? silence Joe began again.
jubilee—
“ Jim , old fellow, for G od’s sake and held him there with his grasp
abruptly as they had begun. People
Harvest home !
noticed this, and they also noticed don’t let on that you’ve seen nor heard firm upon his throat.
“ D on’t Bill, old fellow, for God’s
F o r tlie smile of the sunshine, again that just about that tirns B ill began nothing this morning. I t ’ll be plenty
sake,” gasped Joe, as his brother
and again,
tough on Bill, anyway.”
going to see her.
somewhat relaxed the grip on his
3?or the dew on the garden, the show­
“ I shore won’t,” said Jim .
‘ ‘B ill took it up just where Joe laid
There was quite a crowd assembled throat, “ I didn’t mean to harm by it
ers on the plain,
in down,” remarked one cowboy to
honest I didn’t. I won’t do it no
F o r the year, with its hope and its another during one of the intervals in around the door of the little log school
house when these two men rode up. more. W hat are you going to do with
promise that ends,
a dance on one occasion.
Crowned with plenty and peace, let
“ Naw, that ain't it,” responded his Tlie groom was there, and so was the that rope, Bill? You’re not going to
thanksgiving ascend.
friend. “ I think Joe laid it down preacher; so also were the people. kill your poor, no-account brother,
The house was decorated within and are you, old boy?”
Harvest home !
just where B ill took it u p .”
W ithout a word B ill and his attend­
One day as the two brothers and without w ith flowers and leaves and
W e shall gather a harvest of glory we one or two others were engaged in other ornaments more or less appro­ ants continued wrapping the rope
know,
branding some of B ill’s yearlings the priate to the occasion. However, there around Joe. Then they stood him up
From the furrows of life where in pa­ subject was brought up.
was one ornament generally considered beside a tree and tied him to it so that
tience we sow.
“ Sure enough, Joe, whatever made necessary on wedding occasions which his club foot touched the ground,
B uried love in the field of the heart you quit goin’ to see that Conley gal was still missing— namely, the bride.
while the other, the strong one, was
never dies,
“ Seen anything of May lately?” doubled back m the coil of rope.
so suddent?” asked Jim Smith, one of
A n d it-s seed scattered here will be the helpers, in a jocular way.
“ Now, you ungrateful whelp,” said
asked Bill, stepping to the front as tho
sheaves in the skies.
“ I stopped so’s to give B ill a new comers rode up. There was just B ill, as he started to leave, “ I ’ll be
Harvest home !
back in thirty minutes to see if you’re
chance,” said Joe, with what was evi-' a trace of anxiety in his voice.
— Rev. Theron Brown, in The W atch­ dently a forced attempt at gayety.
“ Naw,” answered Joe promptly. readv to tell me.”
man.
“ D id n ’t he kiss your hand while
“ Shucks!” ejaculated his brother. His face looked perfectly unconcerned
“ You needn’t a stopped for that. If I as he spoke, but in a very few mo­ you was tying him ?” asked some one
ments a cloud began to rest upon it. as they walked away.
couldn’t beat you I ’d better q u it.”
“ Dogged if I know,” said B ill.
There was just the least bit of con­ I suspect, though, that instead of
temptuous emphasis on that word grieving over the lie he had told— as “ D id he?”
Hardly had they left when Jim
“ you,” and Joe noticed it. A slightly of course he should have been— he
Down in the southern part of Bay­ shamed, pained look came over his was merely wondering how he m ight Smith came up and at once began to
spare B ill the mortification which a untie the ropes.
lor County, Texas, you may still hear poor, thin face as he faltered
“ D on’t !” said Joe. “ B ill w ill be
o ld settlers make occasional references
“ W — well, I didn’t keer much for public discovery of the real facts in
to the Savages, or the Savage broth­ her, no way.
I was just a foolin’ regard to May might occasion. He back in a few minutes. Just unslip
was now sitting with one leg thrown this loop here. Thank you ! The
ers, as they sometimes call them. This from the first.”
•does not refer to the time when the
M y deliberate opinion is that this over the horn of^his saddle. Suddenly strain was on my right arm and it
In d ia n s were in the country, although statement was a lie. It is my opinion, his face lighted up with its old sickly h urt because it was sore. Jim , this ia
th at time is by no means so far dis- furthermore, that in this single, u n ­ smile, and in a voice that trembled a hard— but I guess I can stand it, for
ta n t as to be beyond the memory of grammatical, mispronounced, m utilat­ little in spite of the bravado he tried B ill’s sake. I ain’t h u rtin ’ so much
now, though, as I was. I t ’s mostly
liv in g man; nor does it im ply any­ ed lie there was a loftiness of thought to throw into it, he began:
“ Say, Bill, that was a lie I told you all a joke. B ill was ailers a powerful
th in g especially wild and ferocious and pnrity of purpose such as an
about the character of the men in angel in heaven m ight well aspire to. about May just now. I saw her not fellow to joke. I wisht you’d go tell
him when he comes back I say please
question. It merely goes back to the B ill did not take any such view of the half an hour ago. ”
“ You did, did you? W hen will she not to bring anybody else with h im .”
iirst half of the ’80s, when two broth­ matter, though, for he only looked up
At the appointed time B ill saddled
be here?”
ers of that name were among the and ret-orted angrily:
“ She won’t be here at a ll.”
his pony and rode off to where Joe
prom inent inhabitants of that sparsely
“ M y opinion of anybody that would
B ill’s face grew stern and white.
was.
settled district.
In some countries go foolin’ ’round a woman when he
“ W hy won’t she?” he demanded.
“ I ’ll take the hoss, so that if Joe’s
•events of that period would be con­ didn’t care nothing for her is that he
“ Because I directed her in the ready by now he can start out after
sidered comparatively modern, but in ain’t much of a m an.”
Western Texas they are ranked as
“ H e’s pretty small potatoes— he wrong road. Jim tried to tell her May and bring her back. I rather
strictly ancient history.
shore is,” put in Tom Jackson, the right and I w ouldn’t let him. A in ’t guess he’s ready by now, too. Maybe
we’ll get to eat a wedding dinner to­
It seems, from a careful survey of fourth man at the branding. Nobody that so, J im ? ”
J im nodded grimly.
W ith faces day yet— only a little late, of course.”
the facts in the case, that neither of Loticed the remark particularly at the
After some time had elapsed and
the brothers was really a bad man at time, but subsequent events caused that now began to grow drawn and
heart, notwithstanding the fact that a them to think a great deal about it anxious, the spectators glanced from neither brother had “ showed u p ,” as
one speaker to the other in turn. B ill’s the phrase goes in Texas, Jim Sm ith
^reat many jjeople who ought to know later on.
.are strongly inclined to think other­
“ I ’m surprised at you, Jo e ,” said face was fairly livid with rage, and walked to the place where he had left
his voice trembled with the awfulness Joe. There the poor fellow was, still
wise. It is certain that one of them Bill.
of repressed fury as he asked the next tied to the tree—but dead! The thirty
was as true a man as ever trod the soil
The ghost of a forced smile hovered
minutes’ strain had been too much for
question:
of Texas,/ or any
•/ other state for th at piteously on Joe’s lips for a moment,
“ W hat did you do it for?”
his crippled leg to bear and it had
matter. All who knew him agree that but
merely rubbed his forehead
The expectant silence that followed gradually given way, and this had al­
the final year of his life, at any rate, with
knot on his wrist in tlie nerv­
waa deathlike, but even then Joe’s lowed the poor fellow to choke to
was a year of such courage and self- ous Avay peculiar to
on such oc­
voice was hardly audible as he an­ death. Of course, Jim lost no time
casions, and said nothing.
Aside from one or two little inci­ swered with the same sickly smile in rousing the quasi wedding guests
and in telling the real facts about
hovering about his lips:
not much j r a ' f o hero'worship, ami dents like this— which are hardly4/
“ Because I uster court her myself May. If is n °t the first instance in
whenever they agree that a man of worth counting as excej^tions— B ill’s and you cut me out!”
the history °f the world when .a man
their acquaintance is above the aver­ courtship was an illustration of the
Before the words were fairly out of has had the tn ith told about |j-m too
age of mortality there is very likely to fact that, notwithstanding a certain his mouth B ill sprang at him with the
late to do him any good. ^ pursuing
=be some basis for tlie belief. Ju dging very eminent authority to t he contrary, fury of a w ild beast. W ith all the
party was out after B ill at once, but
merely from physical appearance one the course of true love does occasion­ foice of liis mighty arm he struck and
would have had little trouble in de­ ally run smooth— for a while. In this the blow descended upon the arm— all to no avail. Some say he commit­
ciding which of the two men would case it ran smooth down to the very the crippled, knotted arm— which Joe ted suicide shortly afterward in San
have been more likely to prove of he­ day set for the wedding. The cere­ had interposed to ward it off. Some Antonio; others, that he is still alive
roic mold. B ill, the younger, was a mony was to be performod at what was say it 1‘ell upon the very knot itself. in New Mexico; still others, that he
is to-day in the insane asylum at Ter­
m an of magnificent £>hysique, not u n ­ known as Plum Creek school house, He fell from his pony as if he had
d u ly large, but with muscles of such and early in the morning B ill went been shot, and lav for several mo- rell. I do not know what the truth
herculean strength as perfect health with a number of his friends to get ments on the turf where he had fallen. about it is. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Jack­
son still live in Cattle County, Texas.
and the free life of a Western cowboy ready for the festivities.
“
W
hich
way
did
you
send
her?”
J im Smith is the man who first told
are apt to impart.
He was light- j The ceremony was to take place at asked Bill, in the same awful tones he
me this story. Joe Savage is buried
'Complexioned, and is said to have pos- j 10 o’clock. Perhaps a half an hour had used before.
on the banks of Plum Creek, and on
Besseil a vigorous, manly countenance, before that time Joe and his friend,
“
I
won’t
te
ll,”
gasped
Joe.
his wooden headboard you can still
Snch as ought to have made him more Jim Smith, were riding through the
“
Then
get
up
off
that
ground.”
decipher the inscription: “ He Loved
-3t/*cessful in his love affairs than he timber which always abounds around
Joe
meekly
obeyed.
M utch.”— St. Louis Globe-Democrat,
retiiiy was. Joe, on the other hand, creek, bottoms in Texas, and were
“
Get
on
your,
pony—
I
see
it’s
got
was as much picture of weakness and much astonished when, at a sudden away from you. Then saddle up mine
deformity as his brother was of health bend in the trail, they came across yonder and go after May and bring
Earache.
the
supposed
prospective
bride.
She
find strength. He was not only a
her back at once, sir! Do you hear?”
Earache is such a common symptom,
was
on
horseback
and
unaccompanied.
peaked-faced, slender slip of a man,
Joe
meekly
took
the
huge
Texas
especially in children, that domestic
“ H ello!” exclaimed Joe in supprise.
b u t he was a cripple as well. When
saddle in his left hand and carried it remedies are often used until the
“ Are you lost?”
'he was 5 years old and Bill only
3,
a
!
t/
“ Yes,” answered May with a ner­ to where the pony stood grazing, tied disease demands the advice of a
cyclone had struck the log house in
vous laugli. “ I never was as glad to by a long rope to a tree. His right specialist. By that time, often great
the boys and their parents were
arm hung lim p by his side.
After harm has been done, and perhaps se­
see
anybody
in
my
life.
This
here
Jiving.
creek bottom timber’s so thick a wild some ineffectual efforts to throw the rious consequences have resulted.
The mother and father were killed,
Dr. F. W. Hinkel calls attention to
cat would mighty nigh get lost in it, saddle on with his left arm, he gave
but when the neighbors came to look
up the attempt.
the grave significance of earache, and
let alone a woman.”
through the ruins of the cabin they
“
I
can’t
get
the
thing
on,”
he
said.
the importance of early treatment.
“ I should think that you and B ill had
fo u n d Joe crouched on the bed with I
“ Use your right arm, sir!” called Earache in children may be the first
been to Plum b Creek school-house
his limbs spread out in such a manner |
his brother.
indication of an aj)proaching m enin­
often enough to know the wav by this
as to protect his baby brother.
A
“ I think you’ve broke his lame gitis.
time?”
heavy log had fallen across his right j
arm, B ill,” said Jim Smith.
An earache should not be passed
“
I
ain’t
a
going’
to
Plum
Crick,”
foot and right wrist, crushing them
“ I t ’s a lie!” shouted Joe, “ that over with a superficial examination,
both very badly, but Bill was still said May, with a foolish giggle.
a r m ’s as good as ever it was.”
but the child should be given hot foot
“
W
hat!
ain’t
you
goin’
to
get
marsleeping in absolute unconsciousness j
To prove the truth ot‘ this assertion, baths and put to bed. The bowels
.of the existence of any such disturb- ; ied?”
he made a mighty effort and managed should be freely acted on. Hot, dry
“
Yes.”
^
ing affairs as cyclones. As a result of
to lift his arm to his shoulder, though applications are better than moist
“
Well,
B
ill’s
at
the
school
house
his injuries at the time Joe was club- !
the wrist still dangled loosely from his ones. It is better not to instill solu­
now,
w
aitin’
for
ye.”
footed through the whole of liis life, |
elbow. Even then he could not re­ tions of laudanum, morphia, or co­
May
tossed
her
head
and
then
gig­
and his right forearm had a big knot ;
strain his face from wincing and his caine into the ear. Opiates, too, often
on it, and a crook that made his right ; gled again.
teeth from clinching with the pain. mask the pain and conceal the real
“
I
ain’t
a
waitin’
for
him
none,”
hand turn out when it should have I
Dropping the saddle, he turned ab­ trouble. Delays are dangerous, and
she
said.
“
I
m
ight
as
well
tell
you
turned in.
It is said that Joe was i
ruptly and limped off into the woods in case of approaching- rupture, the
now
as
any
time.
I
’m
goin’
to
be
proud of his deformities rather than •
without a word.
tympanum should be freely incised.
married
to
Tom
Jackson
this
morning
otherwise, presumably because th e y ;
Jim Smith afterward said that only No physician should ever hesitate to
had been incurred in the defence cf at Bound Timber. I ’ve lost my way his solemn promise to Joe kept him call in an aurist when in doubt.— New
his baby brother, and that B ill was, ! there, and I want you to tell me how |from telling the whole truth at this York Ledger.
for the most part, tenderly regardful j to go.”
juncture just as he knew it to be, and
of the brother who had sacrificed
A* the mention of Jackson’s name that he had to grit his teeth hard and
Cast Iron Dogs and Bogus Statues.
health and almost lite for him.
Joe’s face hardened for a moment. He say cuss words under his breath to do
Naturally enough, Bill was the more i was the man who had been so quick to it then. As to the rest of the crowd,
For us, in America, it would per­
prosperous of the two. Before he was ; take B ill’s part in the quarrel with it must be remembered that they knew haps have been better if the gardens
30 he owned a considerable “ bunch” j his brother. Then Joe began to rea­ nothing but Joe’s own statement about of Italy did not exist to enthrall the
of cattle, and leased quite a body of son with May as to her conduct, but a tlie matter, and that consequently they traveler with their sensuous charms,
land in the eastern part of Baylor very few moments sufficed to show all sympathized with Bill. After some for to them we owe the unhappy at­
county as a ranch. Joe was his line him the futility of the attempt. moments of condolence and consulta­ tempts at imitations which find ex­
rider, and in that capacity was enabled Promptly changing his plans he tion with the crowd, Bill, with some pression in the cheap substitutes for
to do a great deal of such work as did gave her a detailed account ofthe way four or five others, started out to find real magnificence— the zinc statutes,
n o t require any great amount of mere to R o u nd Timbers.
Joe.
the fountains in which the feeble
muscular
strength.
Everything
“ Say!” interrupted Jim Smith, who
“ Get that rope off your saddle there stream seems glad to hide itself in the
worked smoothly with them until had listened in profound astonish­ and bring it along,” said he to one of cast iron basins, the stags and ferocious
May Conley came to live with a mar­ ment . to the whole conversation, them.
mastiffs in bronzed iron, the century
ried brother of hers who lived only a “ you’re mistaken about— ”
“ You ain’t goin’ to string him up, ! plants in cheap vases, the bogus
lew miles from the Savage ranch. She
“ No, I ain’t,” retorted Joe. “ The are vou, B ill?” was the rather anxious statues, ugly pavilions, and summer
was not a highly educated girl, by trail’s been changed lately. That’ s reply.
houses which seem a necessary adjunct
any means, and it is doubtful if she all right, May. Come on J im .”
“ No; just w&nt to skter him a little. to our private gardens and public
:vas more than fairly intelligent, but
“ I still think you were mistaken Come on.”
parks.— Architectural Review.
In Autumn.
The Lie Joe Told.
€/
I N D I A N A INCIDENTS.
RECORD
French
by
OF EVENTS
P A S T W EEK.
OF
THE
L ic k R e p o rt O w n e rs A la r m e d
F a ilu re
of
W a t e r —G o l d
Found
N e a r J e f f e r s o n v i l l e —P e d a g o g u e w i t h
a P i s t o l —G e n e r a l S t a t e N e w s .
M ay R u in
S p rin g s .
French Lick is threatened with serious
loss because of the failure of its cele­
brated springs. Dr. William Ritter not
long ago completed a well some distance
away and soon thereafter the spring
known as Pluto began failing, followed by
one known as Prosperine also giving out.
Whether the failure is due to the boring
of the Ritter well or to defective casing
is a matter of conjecture. Property val­
ued at $1 ,000,000 is vitally interested, as
tho failure of tho springs means a loss of
health seekers.
T eache r Uses a G u n .
Prof. Harrison L. Staley, principal of
the Westphalia school, is in jail at Vin­
cennes charged with an attempt to murder
Mrs. Maude Wilcox, wife of William M.
Wilcox, of Sonborn. Staley visited the
Wilcox home, he says, by invitation of
Mrs. Wilcox. Mr. Wilcox was at home
and Staley was ordered to leave the prom­
ises. He became enraged, drew a revol­
ver on Mrs. Wilcox and it is charged at­
tempt ed to shoot her. Justice Jones bound
Staley over to court and on his failing to
give bond he was placed in jail. Staley
was assistant principal of tiie Sanborn
schools last year. Mrs. Wilcox is a great
church worker, a musician and a society
favorite.
G o ld N u g g e ts in
H o o s ie rd o m .
Richard Mackison, an old prospector,
exhibited at Hcnryville a gold nugget the
size of a walnut, which he said he found
on “the Knobs.” Several nuggets have
recently been found, and some excitement
is being created.
A l l O v e r tlie S ta te .
The Indiana distillery at Terre Haute
will resume operations.
Mrs. Ellen Easton’s residence at Salem
was destroyed by fire.
Mrs. John W. Akers, of Paxton, drop­
ped dead of heart disease.
Tho residence of Stephen McCray, west
of Wilkinson, was burned.
Frequent small burglaries have oc­
curred at Vincennes recently.
Willis Steele, at Brushy Fork, shot
Robert Steele, his cousin, during a tight,
causing death.
Finkbiner & Duenweg, wholesale and
retail hardware dealers of Terre Haute,
made an assignment.
Rev. John R.
^
eeived fatal
Mi ler of ^a p a n e e rofrom t A r'«‘ mternal injuries by tailing
* the roof of his barn.
Albert Blocher, living near Notting­
ham. accidentally shot himself while out
hunting. lie died instantly.
At Brooklyn George* Dyke was serious­
ly if not fatally injured and two others
badly hurt by a falling derrick.
Edward Bock, giving his residence as
Grand Rapids, Midi., was arrested at
I.a Porte, charged with passing counter­
feit money.
J. C. Adams, of Indianapolis, has en­
tered into an agrement with Martinsville
to erect a pressed brick plant there with
40,000 capacity.
A movement is on foot in Henry County
to celebrate tho seventy-fifth anniversary
of the organization of the county into a
civil government.
Dexter Aldrich, of Terre Haute, has
brought suit against the Chicago and
Eastern Illinois Road for $10,000 dam­
ages for blacklisting.
At Duff Ed Stuttsman and William
Soloman became involved in a quarrel
and Soloman shot Stutsman through the
abdomen, killing him instantly.
The Indiana conference of the African
Methodist Episcopal Church at Terre
Haute selected Marion as the place for
tho holding the conferences next year.
The horseless carriage owned by a
firm in Kokomo is making a remarkable
record in the Eastern States. Last w?ek
the Kokomo motocycle won iirst honors
in a contest in Boston over a large field.
The convicts in the State prison at
Michigan City may be put to raising po­
tatoes and cabbages. Warden Harley,
who met with the Board of Managers,
proposes that the State lease from Chi­
cago men 1,000 acres of swamp land near
the prison, on which shall be cultivated
potatoes, cabbages, celery and other veg­
etables in quantity sufficient to supply
all the State benevolent and penal insti­
tutions. Under the new anti-contract la­
bor law the 900 convicts will be idle, and
the warden believes the land would afford
profitable employment.
Brigandage prevails in a portion of
Spice Valley Township, Lawrence Coun­
ty, and Jugbo Martin of the Circuit Court
has called upon the Grand Jury for a rigid
investigation and an unsparing enforce*
ment of the law. Robberies are reported
to be frequently committed in daylight,
the victims fearing to prosecute because
their property will be laid low with the
torch. Cat tie are slaughtered openly in
the fields, and the carcasses carted away
for food or the market, and it is alleged
that incendiarism is so rife that insur­
ance companies will no longer carry risks
in that section.
The will of tlie late George Harwood,
a wealthy farmer of Clear Springs Town­
ship. has been admitted to prjbate and a
number of its provisions are very unique.
The will bequeathed to his hired man,
Frane, the use of sixty acres of fine land,
on which Harwood resided and in consid­
eration of which Frane is to provide for a
steer and black horse which he owned
and which have been inhabitants of the
place for some time. Harwood’s last de­
sire before passing away was that the
burial services be omitted, he be placed
in an ordinary cheap coflin and hauled to
the grave in a lumber wagon.
A BRAVE DETECTIVE.
Worrl comes from all quarters that the
neatest and most satisfactory dye for col- j
oring tlie beard a brown or black is Buck­ O f f i c e r H . C. B r o w n I s a T e r r o r t o
ingham's Dye for the Whiskers.
B o rd e r O u tla w s .
Twelve years in Chicago as a detec­
The men that marry most frequently
tive and regular patrolman admirably
for money are the ministers.
fitted Officer H. C. Brown, now sta­
rise’s Cure for Consumption has boon
tioned iu Denver,
a godsend to me.—Wm. B. McClellan,
for active work
Chester, Fla., Sept. IT, 1805.
among the outlaws
Night-keys, as a rule, have the hard­
of Colorado and
est work to do in tho morning.
X ew
M e x i c o.
Thanks
to
Mr.
M r s . W i n s l o w ’s S o o t h in g S y b u p for C h ild re n
te e th in g ; soitens the *ruins, reduces in fla m m a tio n ,
Brown's zeal in
allays p a in , cures w in d eolic. 25 cents a bottle.
1 tracing criminals,
H / A
he was compelled
AN OPEN LETTER
1
1
to
depart
from
southern Colorado,
Prom Miss Sachner, o f Columbus,
and there is a
O., to Ailing' Women.
i i . c. k b o w x .
$1,000 prize await­
ing the first man who will bring his
To all women who are ill:—I t af­ head to the New Mexico White Gaps.
fords me great pleasure to tell you of In April of last year, Brown. Deputy
the benefit I have derived from tak­ Sheriff W illiam Green and W illiam
ing Lydia E. Pinkham ’s Vegetable Kelley were called upon to arrest cat­
Compound. I can hardly find words to tle thieves who were carrying on ex­
express my gratitude for the boon tensive threats in tho San Isidoro coun­
given to suffering women in that ex­ try, not far from Las Animas, in south­
cellent remedy. Before taking the ern Colorado. Both Green and Kelley
Compound
were killed and their murderers are
I was thin,
reported to have received the .$1,000
sallow,and
sums promised for their dead bodies.
nervous. I
Mr. Brown was wise enough to leave
was trou­
the country. He is persistent in his
bled w ith
declarations that the White Caps were
leucorbehind the opposition to the law. The
rhoea, and
valiant survivor of these various frays
my men­
is now traveling one of the most des­
strual pe­
perate districts in Denver.
riods were
very irreg­
C u r r e n t C o n d e n s atio n s.
W ild pigeons, once so abundant in
ular. I
Connecticut, have been almost un­
tried three phy­
sicians and gradually grew worse. known of late, owing to persistent
About a year ago I was advised by a shooting and snaring.
friend to try Mrs. Pinkham ’s Sanative
Tatooing is the craze of London just
Wash and Vegetable Compound, which now, and one member of parliament
I did. After using three bottles of has had his whole family marked to as­
the Vegetable Compound and one pack­ sist in identification in case of an acci­
age of Sanative Wash, I am now enjoy­ dent
ing better health than I ever did, and
Lilies of the valley in France are
attribute the same to your wonderful
remedies. I cannot find words to ex­ called “virgins’ tears,” and are said to
press what a Godsend they have been have sprung up on the road between
Calvary and Jerusalem during the
to me.
Whenever I begin to feel nervous and night follow ing the crucifixion.
ill, I know I have a neve--failing phy­
Octroi duty was charged at Lille on
sician at hand. It wouid afford me the water brought from Lourdes by re­
pleasure to know that my words had turning pilgrims. The officials classed
directed some suffering sister to health it as mineral water, but their decision
and strength through those most ex­ has been appealed from.
cellent remedies.—Miss M a y S a c h n e k ,
Austria has put a stop to poolrooms;
E. Rich St., Columbus, O.
bookmaking is to be allowed only on
the race courses. The reason for the
action is the shameless way in which
agencies have been swindling the pub­
lic.
Extended tests made with the pine
trees oi* the south prove that the timber
bled for turpentine is in no way infe­
rior to the unbled. By this means $2,000,000 is added to the value of the tur­
pentine orchards.
On these dates round-trip
Cheshire cheese threatens to become
J tickets,good for 21 days, will
I
j bo sold by all Burlington
( a thing of the past. For four years the
I Route agents and by those
J price has been steadily falling and is
J of many eastern railroads at p iu s $ 2 OO $ now half what it was in 1891. Dealers
)
--------’ * | toll the farmers that the change is like­
) The undersigned will send you free on appli- *
I cation a handsome illustrated pam phlet t ly to be permanent and advise them to
I describing Nebraska, w ith a largo sectional < turn to butter ana king.
I m ap of the State.
The Government has completed the
A Dry. Healthy Climate.
purchase of the third section of four
j A Soil Unsurpassed for Richness. J miles of the right of way for the Hen­
> easy to cultivate, and yielding t nepin canal near Rock Island, and af­
ter the trees and building have been
> all varieties of crops.
cleared from the land will let out the
That is what Nebraska offers to the homei seeker. Ask your nearest ticket agent about j work of construction. On the first two
th e
Chea~
nu
U
Q
T ?notic
*j
p rates,
or write *•/•»
to P.
S. Eustis,
sections on the east end of the canal
i iT«nL*iiu Passenger Agent, 0. B. & Q. It. R., *
j Chicago, 111.
J the excavations and lock foundations
are nearly completed, the only work
lilFffrx*'
'fvOanr#
..J'SgylSyvCV<fS
ws&W
being that of the construction of the
E fa)
rjBgBSBB
locks and bridges.
Thirty thousand elk are wintering in
the Jackson's Ilole country of Wyoi ming, according to the estimate of the
T
game warden, who says that in oue
I herd which he saw there were 15,000
&
|of them, stretching over a distance of
six miles. The sight, he said, surpassed
anything he had ever seen and utterly
amazed him. The elks’ trail over tho
snow was like flint ice, he said, so hard
The Best
had the snow been packed down. The
Saddle C oat.
animals are seen by thousands any
Keeps both rider a n d saddle per­
morning, moving along the Snake river
fectly dry in the hardest storms.
Substitutes will disappoint. A sk for
from the Great Swamp to the GrosiBo 7 Fish B rand Pommel Slicker—
Yentre hills, and at night the wails of
it is entirely new. If r.ot for sale in
yo u r tow n, write for catalogue to
the calves straying from their mothers
A. J. T O W E R . Boston, M ass.
may be heard.
CHEftP EXCURSIONS TO
!
! September7,21. Octobers, 19!
H1LJF
j
J
at
%
“ I can
sincerely say that I
owe ray life to Ayer’s
Sarsaparilla. For sever,
year 3 I
s u lle ^ d , w ith
that
t e r r i b l e scourgc
Scr oful a, i:i niy shoulder'
and my arm. Every means
of cure was tried without sue-1
cess. I had a good physician
who tried in every way to help
me. I was told to take Ayer’s
Sarsaparilla. I immediately be­
gan its use and after taking seven
bottles of this remedy the scrofula
was entirely cured.” —Mrs. J.A .G e x ­
i t , K, Fort FairlieU , Me., Ju n . 2G, 1S9G.
WEIGHTY W0B03
FOR
Ayer’s Sarsaparilla.
F e m i n i n e S h a rp n e s s .
The author of “A Letter to Posterity”
tells the following story of Mrs. Ashley,
a beautiful Southern woman, who was
afterward the wife of the Hon. J. J.
Crittenden. She was a belle in society,
and was dowered with unusual tact
and charm.
‘•Always give men brevet rank,’* said
she to a young girl who had just come
out. “I f they are colonels, call them
general. I f they are captains, call them
colonel. They will forgive you.”
But she could say sharp things when
occasion demanded. A certain lady
who had always been envious of her.
once bought from her a French toilette,
which Mrs. Ashley, who was going into
mourning, could not wear. But the pur­
chaser, after having worn the slippers,
brought them back w ith the remark:
“They are too big. I could swim in
them.”
Mrs. Ashley took them, anu answered
quietly:
“My dear, I am a larger woman than
you are in every respect.”—Youth’s
Companion.
M e re B u n d le s o f N e rv e s .
Some peevish, querulous people seem mere
bundles of nerves. The least sound agitates
their sensoriums and ruffles their tempers.
No doubt they are born so. B u t m ay not their
nervousness be am eliorated, if not entirely
relieved? U nquestionably, and w ith Hoste tte r’s Stom ach B itters. By c u ltiv a tin g
th e ir digestion, and in su rin g more com plete
assim ilatio n of the food w ith this ad m irable
corrective, they w ill experience a speedy
and very perceptible gain in nerve quitude.
D yspepsia, biliousness, constipation and rheu­
m atism yield to the B itters.
H o rse a n d B o ar.
A desperate fight between a horse and
a boar, which resulted in the death of
both animals, is reported from the coun­
ty line eighteen miles north of Warsaw,
Ind. The animals were on the farm of
Arthur Munson and got together in a
field, when the combat began. At the
end of twenty minutes the horse was
torn and bleeding, bad wounds being
inflicted by the tusks of the angry hog,
which was also in a dying condition, its
head and legs being broken by the tre­
mendous kicks administered by the
horse. The animals survived the light
only a short time.
A C e rta in ty .
“Do you think the chainless bicycle
will come next year?”
“Undoubtedly, unless the manufac­
turers can think of some other change
to make in their wheels that will show
at a glance whether a person is riding
the latest style or not.”—Cleveland
Leader.
Thousands Tell
H O M E SEEKERS*
EXCURSIONS
Of marvellous cures of scrofula, hip dis­
ease, sores, humors, ulcers, dyspepsia,
rheumatism, catarrh and other diseases,
by Hood's Sarsaparilla. This great medi­
cine has done a world of good by making
pure blood, restoring appetite and di­
gestion, giving rosy cheeks, and clear,
healthy complexions to old and younjr.
k fa
H o o d ’s nsXi.
A T O N E F A R E P L U S $2 F O R T H g
ROUND TRIP T O SPECIFIED
P O I N T S IN
Is the best—in fact, the One True Blood Purifier.
Sold by all druggists. $1, six for $5.
H o a H ’
JIU U U
c
D illc
t^IIlb
ar* purely vegetible, reliable, beneficial. 25c.
Railway’s
Ready
Relief.
H is life­
long friend.
I t is the only
PAIN REM ­
E D Y th a t in ­
stantly stops
th e
most
excruciating
nins, allays
nflammation,
and
c u r e s con­
gestion.
In te rn a lly
r teaspoon­
fu l in water w ill in a few m inutes cure Cramps,
Spasms, Sour Stomach, H eartburn, Sick H ead­
ache, Diarrhoea, Sum m er Com plaint, Dysen­
tery, Colic, Flatulency and all internal pains.
There is n o t a remedial agent in the w orld th a t
w ill cure fever and ague and all other
malarious, bilious and other fevers <aid<*d by
R A D W A Y ’S PILLS), so quickly as RAD W A Y ’S H E A D Y R E L IE F .
Pricc 50 cents per bottle.
Sold by Druggists.
R A D W A Y <& C O ., N e w "York.
—V IA —
BIG FOUR ROUTE”
SEPT . 5-7 AND 20-21,
A labam a, Arizona, A rkansas,.
C olorado, F lo rid a, G eorgia,
Indian T e rrito ry , Iowa, Kansas,,
K en tu ck y, Louisiana, IV! in n e so ta
M is s is s ip p i,M issouri, N e b ra s k a
N ew M exico, N orth and S o u t h
Dakota, N orth and S o u th C a r ­
olina, O klahom a, Tennessee,
Texas, U ta h , V irginia, W is c o n ­
sin and W yo m in g .
For tickets and full Information caU on a n y
ticket agent of the Big Four Rout?, or address
E. 0. McCORMICK.
Passenger Traffic Mgr.
WARREN J. L Y f ' C H ,
Ass. Gen. Pass. & Tkt. AgL
C IN C IN N A T I, O H IO .
f
CURE YO U R SELF!
C U K ES''^
Use Bi£ G for u n n a tu r a l
in 1 to 5
discharges, in fla m m a tio n * *
Guaranteed
y ir r ita tio n s or u lc e r a tio n *
not to itricture.
of m u c o u s m e m b r a n e
[Prevents eont*g»°n.
P ainless, a n d not
ItheEvaks Chemical Go. £<-ut or poisonoua.
S o ld b y D r a g ^ is t a ,
CINCINNATI,*)
or sent in p la in w rappw r,
U. S. A,
by express, prepaid, fos
$1.00, or 3 bottles, $2.75.
C ir c u la r sent on reqtaftBl^
CUBES WHERE ALL ELSE FAILS.
Best Cough Syrup. Tastes Good. Use
in time. Sold by druggists.
m PEI W
EEK
c a n be
m a d e vror]
intr f o r h *.
Parties preferred who can pivc wfcolo tim e to the busi­
ness. Spare hours, though, m ay be profitably em ployed.
Good openings for tow n aud city work as well as c o u n try
districts. J. E. G if f o r d , 11th & Main Sts., R ic h m o n d .
S12 to
Get Your Pension
DOUBLE
QU ICK £
-^ENDYOUR NAME ONA POSTAL <«*RD
(\ND WE WILL SEND YOU OUR 136
ILLUSTRATED CATALOGUE FRE E
•
Write Capt. 0’FA22ELL, Pension Agsnt.Waskingtta, S.ft.
v/mbter RepeatingArms Co
180W inchester a v s ,
New Haven. Goh s .
E l
f i r T n ! P U nuickly. Send for book‘•inventionsWanb L I K I U H U te a .” E d g ar Tate & co.,245 B ’w a y .K Y .
GET
THE
H . B. W I L L S O N
G E N U IN E
W l
A R T IC L E !
B reak fast
Allen's Foot-Ease, a powder for the
feet. It cures painful, swollen, smart­
ing feet, and instantly takes tlie sting
out of corns and bunions. It’s the
greatest comfort discovery of the age.
Allen’s Foot-Ease makes tight-fitting
or new’ shoes feel easy. It is a certain
cure for sweating, callous and hot,
tired, aching feet. Try it to-day. Sold
by all druggists and shoe stores. By
mail for 25 cents, in stamps. Trial
package F R E E . Address, Allen S.
Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y.
C O ..
s Hj s swivi B ^ in^
ton,i-,-c 5-iiochargetu’
obtained.
0 *p a £C b o o k pat®
fj 11
W a lte r B aker
S h a k e I n t o Y o u r Shoes
4
& Co.’s
COCOA
Pure, Delicious, Nutritious.
Costs Less th an O N E C E N T a cup.
Be sure that the package bears our Trade-Mark,
i
Walter Baker & Co. Limited,
m
Dorchester, Mass.
(Established i7so.)
Trad a-Mark.
A S te a d y Jo b .
“For mercy's sake, Baxter, where
have you been until this time of
night?”
“Thass all ri\ m’ dear. Been organiziii ’nother Klondike comp’ny—makes
fo-fourth one to-day.”—Cleveland Plain
Dealer.
S A P O L lO
IS LIKE A GOOD TEMPER,
ls a C la s s o f P e o p l e
Who are injured by tho use of coffee.
Recently there has been placed in all
the grocery stores a new preparation
called GRAIX-O, made of pure grains,
that takes the place of coffee. The most
delicate stomach receives it without dis­
tress, and but few can tell it from cof­
fee. It does not cost over one-fourth as
much. Children may drink it with great
benefit. 15c. and 25c. per package.
Try it. Ask for GRAIN-O.
SHEDS A BRIGHTNESS
EVERYWHERE.”
T he re
T urned
“IT
Down.
Sister—I heard that poor Miss H aw ­
kins has gone into a decline. Is it so?”
Brother—Yes, she has; I got some of
the decline last night.—Up-tjo-Da-te.
H a l l ’s C a t a r r h C u r e .
Is taken internally.
Price 7;> cents.
l>esirable.
“It's perfectly disgraceful!” she ex­
claimed.
“W hat’s the matter?” inquired her
husband.
“Here's a description of a woman
who gets up in public and declares her­
self an anarchist.”
“Well,” was -the rejoinder, “maybe
it's all for the best. I believe I ’d like to
see women crowd the males out of the
anarchist business. When they threw
bombs they wouldn’t be so likely to hit
anybody.”—Washington Star.
A i^ a p s e o f M e m o r y .
“W hat’s this you have asked me to
carve, Mrs. Slimmeal?”
“That a spring chicken, Mr. Boardman.”
“Why, so it is, so it is. How strange
I didn’t recognize such an old acquaint­
ance.”
Whereupon the other boarders re­
freshed themselves with a smile at the
landlady’s expense.—Exchange.
A K ind
K e c o m m o n d a t io n ,
Weakleigli—My trouble has reached
that condition where I am obliged to
have a specialist. Can you recommenu
Dr. Cutter?
Flint—Certainly.
Weakleigh—W hat is his specialty?
Flint — Autopsies. — Richmond Dis­
patch.
I know a lady who was troubled with what her doctors termed
intestinal indigestion. Her last doctor had her pursue the Salisbury
treatment, which consists of eating only beef and bread dried in the
oven and drinking all the hot water she could. I have seen her in the
office where she is employed walk along with a glass filled with water
steaming hot. The Salisbury treatment did give her some relief and
she persisted in it for three months. It was then that she was induced
to try Ripans Tabules, and now she finds that there are many eatables
(chicken for instance) which she was not allowed to eat at first which,
she can now eat without distress. She says Ripans Tabules seem tocounteract the acidity of her stomach. Their effect upon her has been
wonderful and the relief she gets is as much as she ever experienced
with the Salisbury treatment, and she can now choose from a more:
liberal bill of fare.
(120 tabules) CA.n b
COMPA2T5T, NO. 10 fcpniCO Street, New Y ork -or a single carton (ten tabules ) w ill be beat for five cents.
P
ENSIGNS, P A T E N T S , CLAIMS.
J O H N W . M O R R I S , WASHINGTON. D.G.
Late Principal Examiner TJ. S. Pension Bureau.
3 yis. in last war, lo adjudicating claims, atty. «iac*
C. N. U.
So. S 8 -07
VyiiEN WRITING TO ADVERTISERS PLEASE SAY
yon saw the advertiscnent in this paper.
F O R SALE:— Two first class lum- j
her wagons. These wagons are!
“ Do I enchov life?’’ remarked a
German the other day to his friend. new, wide tire aud manufactured out'
‘ Ncin— not. I don’t lif like a dog. of the very best materia!. They w ill!
Tere is my dog Fritz. Yen he gets be soid cheap for cash, or will tal e '
oop iu der morgen he eats his preak— a good cow toward payment and j
fast. A fte r he is troo he lies him well secured notes. For farther j
down uud scLLep. Yen he vakes particulars call at Hay’s Livery ;
9w2
him oop lie blays some uud haf his Stable.
dinner. After dinner he goes to
call in it der odder do's uud blays
some more. Yen he gets home he
has his sooper, und aftc-r sooper he
f o is to bed und schleeps. De next
nn r^en yen he vakes oop he does de
same ting all ofer already. Uud veu
H A RN ESS GOODS
he dies he is troo- Dot is all. He
A large stock to select from. Heavy
is dead- Hain’t it? Und do I haf
and light Harness, Nets. Harness
so goot a dime as mine dog Fritz?
O il, Axle Grease, Truuks, Satchels,
Dusters?, Brushes, etc.
Yeu I get oop L vork. After din
ner I go und vork—vork some more.
Live and Let Live, is my principles.
Und after sooper I vork. Ven I
Thanking you for your liberal pat­
vakes oop in de next morgen I do de
ronage and desiring a continuance o!
same
same ting ofer yoost like yesterday .
ftAYDLN REA, Prop.
Und ven I ti^, is dot all? No! I got
to go to hell yet.”
Not as G o o d as w is D o g .
Many bargains waiting for you at
Vanschoiack’s.
V
a n s c h o ia c k .
*
N:
OUR H O T T O
G A N D Y ’ S. *
Livery Feed and Sale Siabe
See the low prices on dry goods
aud shoes at Yanschoiack’s.
«.
x
P O R S A L E . — A very desirable property on
west shore Lake Maxenkuckee. H and­
some large residence and bam. Good water
and wind mill. .Just the thing for those de­
siring to keep boarders, or for those desir­
ing a summer home at the lake. Terms
very reasonable, in fact vfdl be sold at a
sacrifice. Enquire at this otlice. or address
7tf
J. H. Z e c h ik i . , Culver, Ind,
First class Horses, Xeir Buggies
and Vehicles o f a ll kinds.
A co m m o d a tin g
T ra v e lin g M en
O n e of the G r e a t
S p e c ia lt ie s .
It, is always gratifying to receive
testimonials for Chamberlain’s Colic. H O U S E S HQAT? D E I) B Y
D A Y O il W E E K .
Cholera and Diarrnoea Remedy, and
when the endorsement is from a
Terms Reasonable.
physician it is especially so.
There
is d o more satisfactory or effective Barn uear Postoflice.
remedy than Chamberlain’s Colic. CULVER CITY, = INDIANA.
Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy,v
writes Dr. R . E. Robey, physician
and pharmacist, of Olney, Mo., and
as be has used the Remedy in his
own family and sold it in his drug
store for six years he should certainlv know. Sold at Culver Citv
Drug Store.
U N D ER C IT H E R C IT Y D R C G STORE
For
S a le .
A 5x7 View Camera, o double Plato Agent for S t. Joe Steam Dye W orks
Holders, carrying case, folding tripod and
C U IV E R , I N D I A N A
all complete, good as new and will sell
vorv cheap. For particulars enquire nJ. D. Avery's Photograph Gallery, Culver.
J. K. INAWKORTJER
Ind., one block west of depot. Jf you
want a good bargain, call at once.
•TINNER.*
Koc Sale.
Lot No. 1. Vanchoiack’s sub-divi­
Al! kinds of Roofirg and
sion— east i-ideof the lake. Call at
ing promptly attended to.
mv law office oyer bank.
V. P.
K
ir k .
A R e m a r k a b l e Cure o f Chronic Di ar ­
rhoea.
In 1802, when j
served my
country as a private in Company A,
167th Pennsylvania Volunteers. 1
contracted chronic diarrhoea. It
has given me a great deal of (rouble
ever since* I have tried a dozen
different medicines and
several
prominent doctors without any per­
manent relief.
Not long ago a
friend sent me a sample bottle of
Camberlain’s Colic, Cholera and
Diarrhoea Remedy, and after that 1
bought and took a 50 cent bottle:
and now I can say that I am entire
lv cured- 1 cannot be thankful
enough to you for this great Remedy,
and recommend it to all suffering
veterans. If in doubt write me.
Yours gratefully, H e n r y S t e i n b r r g e r , Allentown, Pa.
Sold at Culver
City Drug store*
One Cf Two Ways.
* The bladder was created for one purpose,
n a m e l y , a receptacle for the urine, and as
such it is not liable to any form of disease
except by one of two ways. The first way
is from imperfect action of the kidneys.
The s e c o n d way is from careless local treatmens of other diseases.
C H I E F C U rS K .
Unhealthy urine from unhealthy kidneys
is tht>< chief cause of bladder troubles. So
the womb, like the bladder, was created for
one purpose, and if not doctored too much
is not liable to weakness or disease, except
in rare cases. It is situated back of and
very close to-the bladder, therefore any pain,
disease or inconvenience maifested m the
kidneys, back, biadder or urinary passage is
often, by mistake, attributed to female
weakness or w o m b trouble of some. The
error is easily made <md may be as easily
avoided. To find out correctly, set your
urine aside for twenty-four hours; a sedi
merit or settling indicates kidney or bladder
trouble. Tho mild and the extraordinary
ellect of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp.Root, tlie
great kidney, and bladder remedy is soon
realized. If you need a medicine you should
have the best. All druggists titty cents- and
one dollar. You may have a sample bottle
and pamphlets, both sent free by m ail. Men
tion the C c lv e k C i t y R e k a l o and send
your address to Dr. Kilmer & Co.. Bingham­
ton, X. Y. The proprietors of this paper
guarantee the genuineness of this oiier.
D raym an. .
Cleaning and Repairing Gaso
line Stores a Specialty.
Terms Reasonable.
CULVER, CITY
V A N D A L I A
VV. H. SWIGERT,! FI RE
LINE!
Get insured before you have a fire. Notice the fiue list of Insurance
Good delivered to any part of the Companies represented right here iu Culver City:
citv and around the Lake.
O H IO FARM ERS,
I GERMAN F IR E OF INDIANA
Prompt and quick service is our INDIANA U N D ERW RIT ERS,
C IT IZEN S OF EV A N SV ILLE,
motto, aud charges reasonable.
PA C IFIC .
j G IR A R D ,
Liard and Soft COAL at rockMUTUAL L IF E OF NEW YORK.
bottom prices for CASH (strictly).
Give me a call.
TIHE TABLE.
In effect June 20. 1807. trains will leave
Culver City, Ind.. as follows:
F o r th e Xort-li*
I ) A X G . W A L T E R , Culver, Ind.
CU LVER CITY, INDIANA
No. (j. Ex. Sun. for St. Joseph. 1133. a. m
2. Ex. Sun. for St. Joseph,
0:43 p. in
“ 14. Ex. Sun. tor St Joseph,
7:J4 a: m
•• 16. Sunday only.torSt .Joseph, 8.02 a. in
No o has through parlor car Indianapolis
to South Bend via Colfax.
No. 2 has through sleeper St. Louis to
Mackinaw.
For th e S o u th .
No. 5, Ex. Sun. for Terre Haute, 5:45 a. in.
3. Ex. Sun. for Terre Haute. 1 :2<> p. m.
16, Ex.Sun. lor Logansport. 7 :5G p.m ..
No. 15 has through parlor car to South
Bend to Indianapolis via Colfax.
No. •> has through sleeper Mackinaw to
st. Lo is.
2:-^, For complete Time Card, giving
all trains and stations, and for full informa­
tion as to rates, throuh cars, etc., address
J. Shugrue, a exit. Culver, Ind., or PI A.
Ford, general passenger agent, St. Louis, Mo.
Sawed Felloes and Square Timber
T R A D E MARKS,
D E S IG N S ,
C O P Y R S C H T S &C.
Anyone Fendin'? n sketch and description may
quickly ascertain, free, whether an invention ia
probably patentable. Com m unications etrictly
confidential. Oldest agency for securing patents
in Am erica. W e have a W ashington office.
A n d Dealer in
Pine L u m b e r ,
Lath
and S h i n g l e s
Sash, Doors, Windows and Blinds.
Patents taken through Munn <Js Co. receive
special notice in the
SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN
b eautifully illustrated, Inrtrest circulation of
any scientific journal, weekly, terms $3.00 a year;
£1.50 six m onths. Specimen copies and H a n d
B o o k o n P a t e n t s seut free. Address
M UN N , & C O .,
301 Iiioadway, New Y o rk .
J. H. C A S T L E i Y I A N
[^reuzberger’s Park
(Lake Maxinkuckee.)
CULVER C IT Y .
Grain, Goal,
-
INDIANA
Salt and
* Live and Let Live is fty Motto. *
Br a ndi es,
Cordials,
Highest Prices Paid for all Kinds
of Grain.
C U L V E R , IN D .
T h e Marmont
Exchange : Bank,
CULVER
CITY,
Rhine and oselle Wines, .
French Clarets.
. Port and Sherry.
Ales and Beers,
Mineral Water,
A fine stock of Domestic and Key West
Cigars.
IN D .
W .W .O B O R N .............................. President.
G. M. )Bv)RN. . . . — .......... Vice President.
JO H N O B O R N ................. -....... -..Ca shier
General Banking Business Transacted
peciaj attention given to collections Your
Business solicited
A . R El A ,
Physician and Surgeon
O .
Office on Main Street, north of Bank,
CULVER
CI TY,
I nd .