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About The Sioux County journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1888-1899 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 15, 1892)
TEE SIOUX C3UJTT JOOMU. I. . SHI HOSTS. PToprleMtr HARE1SOK, XEKRASKA. A vax ia Nevada, Ma, is 86 yean Of age and has never seea a circus. U'ml Perhaps be is blind. alrr officers rode from Berlin to Vienna, a distance of il0 miles in about three days, riders sod steeds reaching their destination completely exhausted, two of the horses dyinj. The Indian service in this country is full of instances in which this "un paralleled feat" was eclipsed. Tn 1879 several couriers rode from Tbornburr's command, hemmed in with Indians, 170 miles in less than twenty-four hours. In 1573 Colonel Mackenzie rode out after the hostile, beat tBem in a sharp fight and re turned covering 145 miles in twenty- e:bt hours, in Jyi a captain ci IT is claimed mat wnue me musical ; ,be Eightn Cavalry rude eighty-four co-partnership existed oetween Gil-1 mles in ci(;ht ,i0Urs A car. bert, Sullivan, and Carte thev pocketed i rying ,j:pat,.tlN in yew Mexico, rode the neat little sum of 1450,000 apiece j 300 jn three concutive nirhts as the profits of their joint labors. j tQ Uie Apaches allj returned . , Tz, ,, , . 1 in the same time. Thee feat over A max in Cleveland, O.. will begin . . . ... the deserts of ew Mexico and An- a fifty-day fast shortly under the au- , Swedish girls begin, at an early age, to make and finish the personal aud house linen which they will re quire when they are married. spices of a medical college. Let the champion corn-husker and the thirty day quail eater now come forward and let us have the agony over as soon as possible. There are times when the world seems prone to withhold svmpatby, but now it will pause long enough to acknowledge freely that the Duchess Europe applauds when a light-weight ride covers 350 miles in three days over the sni'XHh roads of (Germany and Austria. The announcement that the liritisli Admiralty dues not propose to build anymore naval guns weighing over fifty tons marks a decided reform in him, and she even forfeits the price, i Some of the largest English Xew York papers have begun to confess that the Columbian parade there was a fizzle. One of them in the depths of its remorse explains that it is a good thing for the expo sition that it is to be in Chicago and not Gotham. These indications that Jfew York has a conscience will be noted by the country at large with pleasure. Jules Verse's fanciful story of the comet which struck the earth and carried away several persons, whose adventures and observations on their ride through space from the basis of the narative, seems less improbable with one of those mysterious inhab itants of space rushing toward m. Most of us would rather be excused from a ride on a comet i ships carry 110-ton gun, j nu!ist-rs have l,cvu generally of Marlborough In losing her husband j the methods of armament hitherto is out of luck. She had paid high for j prevailing on l:ritih ironclads. battle These found to be not. only comparatively inefiec. live on account of their slow rate of fire, but positively unsafe. The 07 ton guu, representing a hrger caiikr than any of the guns now in u-e id the An.ctican Navy, have neon gener ally accepted as to the best size ft r main batteries of the heaviest w;ir shin: but it is now evident th;il the experts in the scrvic-; of the AJuiir alty consider this gun too big ami un wicldy for efficient use. The .'Mot: gun which it is proposed to make th; standard in the liritisli Navy is pnic- tlcallv the equivalent of the 10-lnci. steel rifles, hurling "ion pound pro jectiks, wilh whieh the nionitr.r MianUnifiUioh is equipped. Four of these guns will form the heavier part of the battery of the armored cruiser Maine, now at the Iirooklyn Nav? Yard, and two of these, together with two 12-inch rifles, are to compose the armament of the Pacific const do fcnse'iijitlleship Monterey. It is bad business speaking ill ot dignitaries in Europe. The Prince of Monaco, who runs a highly reputable and largely patronized "casino" in the principality which bears his name or the name of which he bears has been accused by a French newspaper of keeping a gaming house To vindicate his out-' raged dignity he has brought a libel suit and will probably win it " The Brooklyn Eagle advocates tbo retention of old geographical names. This is proper. Nearly all the old names are associated with something of historical value, and should not be lightly set aside. Especially should names which were in this country before the white race be guarded against change. Tbe time will come when these names will be the only every-day reminders of our aborginal history. Suicides are not a cheerful topic, yet scientists make a study of them, the results of which may not be with out value. During the period of the civil war, In New England suicides decreased, and there was no increase during the panic years of 1873-74. In Massachusetts the suicidal tendency Increased from sixty-nine to nearly ninety-one to the million inhabitants during the period 1851-85. In the tabulated census in Massachusetts three times as many men as women commit suicide. The maximum tendency of suicide is in the age pe riod of seventv-eight years, and weak ens is the age is of less years. Wheh the appalling neglect of sanitary precautions that prevails in tbe greater part of Russia is consid ered it does not appear strange that tbe cholera has again broken out with some virulence in that empire Cholera is readily transmitted in the host loads of hides and other mer chandise parried on the waterways of interior Russia. The wonder is not that the cholera claimed so many victims in Russia, but that it did not claim many more. The wretched sanitary condition of Russia, there tore, and the admitted facts that cholera still exists there, with every thing favorable to its extension, makes it all the more necessary that eareful precautions be maintained In this country against the Introduction of the disease. Steamships bringing Russian immigrants should be vigi lantly watched and inspected and none permitted to land who may reasonably be suspected of infection, j The precautions taken by the Treas ury Department with proper co-ope ra tion on the part of the local health Petals, ought to be effective In pre venting ibe Introduction of disease through immigration. Omens in tbe United States cav alry aervioe are laughing at the won iMZA feat heralded from Germany, I) wfckA four light-weight crack :;v- No doubt-a groat deal of the scan dalous gossip about English people ol title which reaches this country . is specially manufactured for the Amer ican market, and no doubt many of the memliers of nobility whose names figure freely in the European corres pondence of American newspapers arc more or less maligned. The gossip could never find anything too bad to say about the late Duke of Marlbor ough when he was alive, but now that he is dead, it turns out that he did very manly, handsome thing by his American wife a thing which cer tainly no one would have judged him capable of doing who formed an opin ion of him based entirely on the sen sational newspaper reports. It seems that wlien he was suddenly carried ofl uy heart disease, the other day, he didn't leave his widow to flounder in financial difficulties, as her friends at one time predicted he would, when they heard that she was using het money liberally to improve Blenheim Castle, the Iwke's residence. It was discovered that he had left a life in surance policy for $1,000,000, to be paid to his widow in the event of his death, and reimburse her for the heavy outlay estimated at $700,000 which she has made; It is to be remembered, too, that he probably shortened his life by reason of his so licitude for her, as the attack of heart disease which carried him off came upon him just after be had returned to his apartment, after having spent an hour in waiting upon the Duchess, who bad been taken ill during the night. . " The Anelent Bctrotnal Ring. The ancients wore the betrothal ring as now on the next least finger of the left hand. Many reasons are assigned for this, as the erroneous idea that a rein or nerve went direct to tbe heart, and therefore the out ward sign of matrimony should be placed In connection with tbe seat ol life the left hand is a sign of inter! ority or subjection; the left hand Is less employed than the right, and the finger next least tbe best protected. At one time it was the custom to place tbe wedding ring on the right hand of the bride. Tbe Anglo-Saxon bridegroom' at the betrothal gave a wed or pledge, and a ring was placed on the maiden's right band where it remained till marriage, and was then transferred to tbe left. Mad Boat. A new type of steel steamship is to be introduced on. the Mississippi. It will be 230 feet long, forty feet beam, and have a freight capacity of 1550 ton. Tbe bull will have adjustable keels or centreboards; and a double set of engines and win screws will give a speed of sixteen knots an botfr. Abaoo I am a sclf-mado man, sir. I began life as a barefoot boy! Jinks Indeed! - Well, f wasn't bora with shoes on either. Paw hnoM Haaf4 la LaalavlUa. LonsvrLLE, Ky., Dec 10. Dennis McCarthy, Stephen Hit, Nelson Lewis and Grant Thomas were hanged at 7:55 yesterday morning. At 7:45 o'clock the four men entered the jail vard aud marched ud the steps of the scaffold. At 7.-51 o'clock tbe cap i adjusted over McCarthy's bead and then quickiv over the others. AU stood firm. Mt'arthy yawned as the noose was adjusted and at 7i3 the drop itil liite struggled at the first. Grant Thomas arm drew up and the muscles in his hands moved convulsively. Lewis bung limp at 7:55, Lewis had not moved, aud to all appearances his neck had been broken by the drop. The struggles of the others grew less, and at V12 all were pronounced dead. Fol lowine are the crimes for which the four men were executed: Dennis Mc Carthy, while intoxicated, on the even ing of September 7, WJl, shotand killed his, wife. Ella X. McCarthy, at hi home on Portland avenue and Nine teenth street. In her murder he com muted a douole crime, for in a very short time the wile would have been the mother of a child. McCarthy con iessed that there was not the slightest provocation for the deed. Mephen Hit was sentenced to the scaffold for the murder of Albert Jiawman, early on Monday morning, September, 20, WM. .Sunday eveniu; Hue and liawman started out together -to have a uight of it" While playin a game of dice in a saloon they quar reled, and Hite plunged a knife into ISawman's stomach, almost killing him. Nelson Lewis, colored, was hanged for Hie murder nf George Dea, also colored Lewis and Dea. while at a dance near Middletown, Ky., on the night of Nov ember 2S, 1S91, quarreled. Lewis drew a pistol and shot and instantly kille ilea. Lewis claimed that the shootiii was done in self-defense. Grant Thomas, colored, was hange for the murder of Birdie Coleman, colored girl, IS years, old on the rnoru mi? of i ebruarv !. 1KI1. Ihomas was convicted on circumstantial evidence He was only 19 years old. ' Cttl Starving Id Mexico. beNVEK, Dea 10. A prominent cat tleman from Northwestern New Mex ico, says that drought has existed there for more than two years, afid that at of the streams are dried up. That the lowest estimate 75,000 to 100,UX head of cattle died from starvation and 'lack of water. The railroads are ship ping the cattle out by train loads.hu! moist of them will die as they are toe .weak to withstand shipping. Th winter losses are f romttt to 50 per cen and sheep in are almost as had a condi lion. A I-ittrluus Fire. Milwaukke, 'Wis., Dec. 10. At o'clock yesterday morning lire was dis covered in the Light Horse Kquadrot- arnioryon Ilroadway. The lire com ipany quickly arrived onthescene anc : esc ued from the roof of the burnint 'building Janitor William Miller, hi wife and little son and Jacob Fitz patrick. A rough estimate of the dam , axe to the building is placed at 120,000 nnd the loss on contents 815,000. Tht origin of the fire is unknown. Kanai City AU'wifj ly the Strike. Kansas City, Dec. 10. Despite al reports to the contrary the Hock Island in all the territory adja cent to Kansas City is completely tied up. Every operator at Kansas City st. Joseph, Topeka, Wichita and a! the more important points, bo far a: can be heard from, is out with the ex :.',pption of Lineenfelter at Topeka, whe ,- s the assistant superintendent ol ..elegraph for the western division and i young lady at Wichita. The Rock tsliind has no direct line into Kansas 'City. Trains from the north and east came in over the Burlington aud traflii o the west is handled over the Uuion Pacific as far as Topeka. Out of Kansas City the passenger trains went ill right yesterday, and they will con tinue to be handled by the 'Union Pacific and Burlington operators until liamsay orders them not to do so. The interests of the striking iterators at this point are in the nands of R. B. Jenkins, chief of the Order of Railway Telegraphers at Kansas City. Mr. Jenkins stated vesterday that from advices received by him covering all points in this territory he was able to state that not less than 85 per cent of all operators on iill lines of the Bock Island had left i heir keys. Men have been sent out east and west from Kansas City to see that the men do not weaken. No freight trains are being moved out of Kansas City and Jenkins savs that none will be, for the crews caiinot be found to move them taking orders irom "scab ' operators. Typhoid Fever In Maitco. ; San Lus Potosi, Mex., Dec. 10- ryphoid fever in its most malignant type is raging in ttls city and through out the state in tbe small towns, .Sev eral hundred deaths have occured In the last three weeks and the number of fatalities dallv from fever is from 20 io 50. The epidemic is attribute to the severe drouth which has prevailed for the last four years. Rebellion mt too iheetar Prtaou. St. Locis, Dec. I0.-John Woodford of the Simmons Hardware company, returned .from Cheater, I1L, yesterday1 where he was summoned by a request from the penitentiary authorities that; be come and bring all the haadcnlYs he had in stock. He took nlnty pairs I When he arrived there he found teventy-four of the convicts tied with ropes, borne of them were tied with their bands above their heads. Thev bad rebelled on account of sxtra work and there were no handcuff in tbe institution. Shut la s Mod Ho. . r Chicago. Dee 12.-mis a'-' Drtuklo "i Flint olef Their Wr Home I rum a raueral. St. Loris, Ma, Dec. J.-At 9 o'clock last night a riot occurred at .-eventh and Gratiot streets, between a funeral rv and a l..t of liverv stable em- ; -ii tin:) f.f ueaoons her storv in a quiet Dimes, lu u..in -- - - - . ,-cjtarn lli- from clubs and stones to Vazors and manner, and during a c"in'" revolvers, were used. The funeral of ! tion lasting over an hour did not .ar Mrs. Val Gardner. a courtesan of tC! , her story Clark avenue., took place yeawiuay -uu me u"- ..- - m.,ner. u p'.Mia to have been kid naped and shut up in a mad h;is?. told her story to the jury in Jud?e Kettelle t court Saturday. The plaintiff related ana iltiermnieu afternoon. The mourners ura.i. heavily ou the way back, ami detained the carriages about four li';irj longer than agreed. Ou reaching the city the Ar-,,. ,ir.,v rlirpyt to the stable, and Mid, -about 7 o'clock i.eorge um came to my house at No. 4W.i Vincennes avenue. When I opened the door he crowded in and went into the parlor. After asking for my Prank Witt, proprietor of the stable, j trt),.r he said: So you are not going refused to let the carriages taKe me : t0 try to love me any more, occupants home. At tl..s Thomas j mm I had tried to do so, but could not Wiseman, a white man who had taken i .ir,d WOuld give him back his presents, a colored woman named Mamie I. This enraged him and he started for Reynolds to the funeral, sprang from ; 1))e Then I drew my revolver. George his vehicle and tried to cut Witt's j ,hrew me the floor and in the scuffle throat with a razor. Sweet an employe I the reVolver went oft Then I heard a nf Witt's stretched Wiseman insensible oi, . an,i Albert Little came in They on the pavement by a blow frum a cart rcw me into a chair. They finally stake. Mamie came to Her lovers assistance with a revolver, hut in re turn had her skull fractured by Sweet's stake. The friends of Wiseman and Mamie, about fifty in all, came to their rescue, and the drivers sided with Witt and Sweet. A light ensued, Witt and his side were driven into the stable and compelled to barricade the doors to keep the assailants out The angry negroes and whites then bom barded the stable with bricks and ravins stones, doing considerable decided to take me to their house. 1 U-Uired them to wait till ray brother came home, hut they dragged me out of the house."' Witness said she was threatened with pneumonia and suffer- ine greatly at the time. She told about being dragtred through the streets to the Little house. No. t uL-b avenue. A' hen there the iv t,.ld Mrs. Little that Annette tried to shoot Ceorge. ' Why, I know what's the matter with you," said Mrs. Little. -You are as crazy as a loon damage and smashing in the door, but ; j(y lnother was crazy and I know all liefore thev could enter the stable a detachment of ten policemen arrived on the scene and drove them away Wiseman and the Reynolds women j were taken to the city hospital, the j latter in a dying condition. About a' dozen persons were more or les: : wounded and a number of rioters 1 arrested. ! about cray people.' rranK .Mtinson. the brother, came soon afterward and wanted to take his sister home but the Lirles would not allow him to do so. Finally a carriage was procured and Mrs. Little, (leorgs and Annetts's brather took her to Dr. Lewis' oilice. The hitter wrote a note to Dr. Ware, then the county physician, and the irirl was taken to the detention hospital. For two days and night-i she was con lined there, with straps on her wrists liiglry I'lrada i"llty. Davexi'out, la., Dec. It. George P. Bagley, the l00,000express robber, was itaken Into the district court yesterday ', and hands to her waiste. morning and formally witnnrew ins plea of "not guilty." The crime with iwhich he stands charged is larceny by embezzlement, and the maximum pui ishment that can be inflicted upon bin is five years in the penitentiary. Tin plea is looked upon here as a sensible move on the part of the prisoner, as tht evidence against him is absolutely con clusive, aud barring the success of tht insanity plea he could stand no chanc of acquittal. Judge Rothrock of the supremo court an old friend of tbe Bagley family, was ui the city yesterday in cousultatioi with his attorneys and may have coun seled the move. On yesterday afternoor train from Chicago arrived Colone John Byrne, special agent, and M. T Jones, assistant general manager ol the United States Express company charged with pushing the prosecutioi 'of the case, but their presence was not needed, as they arrived a couple o: ,hours after the plea of guilty was en tered. Bagley will uot be sentences 'till next week. Kobbed by Gambli-rt. Sioux Cn v, la., Dec. 9. C. II 'Smith, a ranchman near Not Spring; '. D, was robbed by Sioux City and Covington gamblers in a game luai iiiightof 82,330. He came here anc ;at in several games with sports wh inveigled him acro-s the river to Cov ington where he was steered into i poker game, which was modest at. firs! i but culminated in a a jack pot which ;the ranchman opened with three kius He filled with a pair and staid till Ik had 1,770 in the pot. Trie gentlemai. across the board bad four of a kind Smith complained to the Sioux Citj authorities who could do nothing for him. He says that he will accept u losses as the price of experience. Killed in a Boiler Kxploelon. Rapid City, S. D., Dec. 9.-TIk citizens of Blackhawk in Mead county, a small lumbering town nine miles north of here, were shocked by a terrific explosion yesterday morning. The boiler in J. C. Wilcoxen's saw mill exploded, throwing lumber in all directions. Engineer Ben Richardson, and two other employes named Stewart and Hart were in the debris. After oemg aug out it was found that Richardson was dead. It is thought prooame mat Stewart and Hart mav recover though badly crused by failing iugs aim lumoer. me accident was caused by low water in the boiler nod ueiective machinery. Itnlib'il Hrfore Mnx Men. ('iinwoo, Dec. 12. Karly Saturd.iv morning as a West Madison street ' owl" car passed the corner of Paulina street, one of the passengers called attention to a scene on the sidewalk inder the glaring electric light stood a well dressed man with his neatly gloved bands pointing skyward, and with hif iraze riveted on two rough looking fellows One was busy securing tbe contents of the victim's pockets, while the other stood guard. The approach of the car had not even the effect of acclerating the movements of the robbers They were still at work when the car passed out of sight. Although the car was crowded, some thirty men being on board, it was not stopped and no attempt was made to look intc the affair. A policeman was on tht car asleep. A French Creole'. Contention. Denvek, Colo.. Dec. 9 William r Sawers. a French Creole, who Is under arrest here for burglary confessed yes- rauj " au a nana in the mur der of Chief of Police Hennesey in iXew, Orleans, which was followed by the iinchingofa number of Italian. and led to diplomatic difficulties with iimy. sawers ,uu he roomed with four members of the snniotw v- Orleans. He was nrHHent nt th of the meeting when plans of revenire Wfm ma. a .l.T ...... . . "H" it i,,b finer oi po ice. He heard their oaths anrl Wn V. creu. He went with the members on the night of the murder and was with them when than . -"vj men mc lawn SQolS. Cnleagu K iblier. In ht.lMlltt. 8t. Lous, Dec. 9. A irannf r,.u bers from Chicago ha7e been fin eat ing with the utmost boldness in thi. city, as they recently did in Chicago but the police went to work with such good results that the band appears to o uiuneu up. viver rortv nrra.t. t crooks have taken place and a Chicago detective has recognized them as the gang which has been iinir. and robbing people n davWt --- - -niuou xur iua gang. Inrreaeor S g'ir. Washington, Dec. 12. Returns re seived by Mr. Mason, commissioner ol internal revenue, show that the beet sugar factories have closed up for tlif season. Tnere are but six factories that make beet sugar and these show an increase production this year over last year of more than 100 per cent, it isestimnted at the treasury depart ment that the production of cane sugar this year will reach 3'.Kl,0tK),XJO pounds, an increase of 20,000,000 pounds over hist year. To pay the bounty it will take according to the best estimates. $9,775,XXJ. This is a considerable in rrense over the amount estimated by the commissioner ef internal revenue, which was only 88 100,0 jO. lnvf!HtlK"(liig the Cae. I'Aitis, Dec. 12.- I ha Panama canal nvestigation Committee examined n inner WDonunereuer. lie stated that ie received commissions of ovei 2,OtXJ,000 1 runes for arranging the lottery issue. He also received 1,000, 00 francs for joining a guarantee syndicate. He refused to explain how ne employed the money received. A letter from lionaparte Wyse wa re ceived and read, declaring that he was in no wise mixed in the scandal. He was kept, in the . ark by the directors and emiui only deplore the faults and lies and boundless waste of the company's adininis'ration. M. Chevil uird, employe socit. dynamite, test! lied that lie signed checks for fOO.OOU francs which M. llarbc cashed at the llauk of France. He thought the checks were given as bribes. Xo: O l.geil u be a Lawyer. Toi-Enj., Kas.. Dec.,12.-The supreme court decided thai a county attorney does not have to be a lawyer as long as lie has legal assistance, and where he Is recognized as county attorney by the judge of the district court. The case dscided was from Ottowacuunty where a murder case was appealed on the ground that K. A. Holderraan, the populist county attorney, had not been admitted to the bar. NEBRAS The new HaptUteW aras dedicated tMndayJ The state teacben' 1 be held in Lincoln dJ The Ames Cattle raise 500 acres of J leason. Tbe pay roll of the I Fremont schools amog per month. Agricultural exchaiJ late snow in Nebraska of winter wheat. Work has begnn , factory at Superior. not be completed uatj The Silver Creef f again, ana is brighter fire. John Fitzgerald of killed by being thrown in a runaway. The total deposits Knox county NoveralJ 0.1,87, over $33 per cap: J he Osmond Hepa funny" column headed! It displays considerable J George Godfrey livjnir raised 30,000 bushels 0f i from 400 acres. lti0rl Abe Samuels, a forjjJ Ulue Springs, has it,J Arizona that pans out $J the ton. Grafton scores a record aways m one week, safe in comparison toJ IUUOII, Crciu New A Mont hern l-'lre. Okijcanh. La. Dec. Pa special from Piau(uemln says: Fire jn uus village yesterday morninir de stroyed three spiares of business bouses and residences. whole r:ur,e ha a ftevere Hllsiard. London, Dec. 12,-Accordlng to-the standard's weather reports inter.. rrii and heavy snow falls are reported from' north and central Spain. The whole of central and southern hussia was visited for three days by an exceptionally, so-! vere blizzard. Kuch severity has twenj r.u ",,,nwoscow fw right yei All the railway! except the Viti.i blocked with snow and direct com muni- w.tn me south is Interrupted. vmbw nun ped. r entirely stop- 1 he fire alarm whixfe can be distinctly heard fourteen miles. It ia loul oriel strumpet. An effort is being mad county divided. A petitii leci iin.1 received lie sigtl uw resident freeholders. J fie real estate market .seems to be in a healthr The transfers this year reach about 19,000,01)0. -it uieirist term or com county three legally nmJ were freed from the gallin: matrimonial misalliance, II. J. Skinner has sold view Republican to It. II, is an excellent newspspe maintain its high stand! new management. A. E. Fuwlie of Aosley employed to go over the county in the interest of ment. He gave a bond in .? 10,000 for the faithful per: his task. The production of sugsr Island ttiis year was 2.210X 'ihe .Norfolk lactory ti 1,700,000 pounds. The vd product at the market price The now creamery aud cm at David City will begin about March. II113 msti'J farmers and a few people is who are also interested i: So.oOO. An Ogalalla exchange liig Springs Land and Catti will bo into the cattle bud extensively than ever. They inthesouth in the winler,drif and feed during the summer in the fall. Eustis is to have a Gena The paper will be partly F.ustisand partly at l'iiw where it will be published. ivmed monthly and ssiitfret to subscribers, as it is to principally to religions maM James White, a Sauodw farmer, fell from his by distance of fifteen feet, head foremost in the wagon. Beyond a fe I Ltcerations and abrasitf fered no injury. While Henry Wehmer, i young farmer living near hauling hay, his teat) frightened and ran away. X was overturned and he wisl the ground and his left k;. betweeu the kuee and hip. The contract has been system of water works at 83;J0. a reservoir will 1J the bluff back of the artesW the water will be supplied force and then reach the the reservoir. In case of . . . . . 1 . .. nr,.,uian had. j Tlavit I'.ifrul rttv ahrotliS V Clerk Uigelow of Adanujf twenty feet from the a, I H ... ill I.I. rnt muuuiui Uil Ilia evening while engaged tome of the machinery ou his feet, but the grott hard he was quite sevr ft foot being so badly crii thought amputate J necessary. v. V p? Two sporty gnlblrjti! Evansville, IihI. and vZf. Iropped into llastiuff ilng and proceeded , I tociacle among tb I hey visited two w,l Hastings avenue, md , uid walked out of ttttyl M.000, the amount rP ullattbebankhi ''or j ioe house went broke alar atarted oat to '""Lit' Kavaral local IF . reported that Wler ehickei Klsoon tbuffa' tut W ' rV wh! ulcssfi Wjou titer Cfold. Wrtsman -iuw t krswiw L niilrt 1 vbc met iTih'-S dJ ato the s-i-auieu -nil lis r. K lh' itkaio pfttwt unoutii , the i.b' lincntrd !)areJ t1 wild t lit in ,j the un tli'' I . o( VIM' 1 him.-! fowl inhered, bens, iwnon ' it ffray .f bull .luMiini i:. tw: .e, mak r of 1 irief hey ai d, K-gi - i.'.V.ini r wit !:ing Lat cv Wh c! yntly ' ktical bird y are tlegni Je b; diri Lte of a ie It 1 1 hble b be di the I id tint! phe pt thci ihcd. J UH e wa t, ye L'ht ii ffht y taV W air 1 Itil mt twill Us. Vrdor Oi tequs fry (I Inner tnt. iTbep 'd. ljl Whtl Med 1 in. ( luntr rt c thU .iftet rlx?ai n tl iw ni d sit lactic lue V belt teak 2fi vr.lli ! lit la 'I ret