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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 22 Jun 1892, p. 2

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•FL VAN FLY«C, WHW «FN# - ri • t i ILLINOIS. WHHTED A PREACHER. * ^ " ' S 2 9 W 5 P ? ' BELLIGERENT. •.<• _ " • , yt: -J 1 >N .* •tcliJKR-n'H »w Klectoral taw Is ConstI- InUoniil--Providing for Greater Salcty «f Railroad Rmployes--New Bridge for ill* Mississippi--Ives Goes Pr*e» Alan, '&ienWednosday afternoon, FnQmr j or fatally. There is no provision AS to wu Moud&y (St. i rai« of-tnterAssfc- *«« <>vd«.'i' ti.»prt»vkt« Anthony's day) while ministering to the j funds, treasury notes are to be. issued. At Washington. - Many hours were wasted over the Sibley claim In the House, on the 17th. They (ailed to agree the river and harbor bill report, and a further coufcrenee was or­ dered. Chairman Durborow, with but. tine dissenting vote in committee. reported' to the House a bill for the issue of 10.OQO.QOO •liver half dollars. io he used as souvenir coins in aid of the World's Fair. o rilv Proviri'ng Automatic Brake*.. THE House Committee on Interstate sad Foreign Commerce authorized Rep­ resentative O'Xeillof Missouri to report favorably a bill to promote the safety of railway employes and passengers. It requires locomotives to be t quipped with power brakes sufficient to ton- trol a train. Every new locomotive af­ ter July, 1893, muit be equipped, and after July, 1895, all locomotives. After July, 18i»5, all new cats, or old cars sent to the shops for repa'rs, must bo equipped with automatic, couplers, and after July, 1898, all cars must be «o equipped. After July, 1895, all new cars, and alter July, 1898, all «ars must be provided with 00117 tinuous brakes to be operated by the locomotive. In July, 1893, every com­ mon carrier shall file with tho Interstate Commerce Commission a statement stating the automatic coupler which it prefers. If any ccu.ler receives 73 per cent of the votes it shall be adopted as the standard automatic coupler. If no coupler receives this percentage the commission shall within six months designate a standard automatic coupler. Thra«he:l by a Kaloonketpw. AT Lebanon, Ind., the Rev. R. Neal, '•m. Englishman and Deputy State Or­ ganizer of the Good Templars, was beaten by an enraged whisky man whom he had worked aga'nst. Neal re­ cently organized a lodge of Good Tem­ plars, taking fifty charter members at Lapel, and had remonstrated against the reissuing of licenses permitting the sale of liquors, but in this he had not been successful. Lee Lloyd, an ex-saloon- keeper, met Neal and began to speak of his failure to close up the saloons. Bit­ ter words passed between the men. and Neal, intimating that Lloyd lied, Lloyd tftruck him and kept it up until Neal was badly used up. Lloyd appeared immed­ iately alterward before the 'Squire, pleaded guilty to assault and battery, and was fined. More tiouLie is looked for between the better class of citizens and the salcon element. Prlnca Michael Is Glv?n Five Tears. , AT Ann Arbor, Mich., the jury in tho jPrince Michael case in the Circuit Court, being out one hour and twenty minutes, found him guilty under the consent law. He was lorthwith sentenced to five years in the Jackson State Prison. The case had been transferred from the Wayne circuit. . thousands of pilgrims that had gone there from nil parts of the country to be healed. He gradually grew worse, and an operation ven-s perlormed for rupture of the stomach, instead of relieving him he b«gan sink rapidly, and in a few hours was dead. The Rev. Father Mollinger was born in Holland, and was educated as a physician, but later Joined the priesthood. Ho was 70 years of age and reputed to oe worth from $2,000,00(1 to $3,000,000. Tho fame of his cures is world-wido. THE largest fire that has ever oc­ curred on the water front at Baltimore occurred Tuesday. It destroyed the wharves and freight houses of the Bay Line Steamboat Company, two large schooners, the offices of James Corner & Sons, dealers in naval stores, and other property, including several thou­ sand bales of cotton, 1,000 barrels of whisky, and general jaierehandise in tore for shipment. Theure was caused by the intense heat inducing spontane­ ous combustion in the bales of cotton, and the temperature on the wharf being over 100 degrees about the time the tire started. The Bay Line wharf was 500 feet long, with 20o feet water front, and had on it a largo warehouse, a big laundry, and a newly erected office building. Total loss, $1,200,000. WESTERN." A MOST daring robbery was perpe­ trated at Oakland, Cal„ when John Gil- son, Secretary of the Judson Iron Works, was held up on" the Berkeley train at 11a. m. by two men and robbed of $17,000 in coin. Thirty other passen­ gers were present, but the robbers es­ caped. * GOVERNOR TOOLE, of Montana, has issued a proclamation forbidding the equal in amount to $1.50 for every dol­ lar's worth of gold and silver coin and bullion be onging to the United States-- the bullion to be estimated at its coin­ age value. No banking firm, company, or corporation is hereafter to receive in­ terest, at a higher rate per annum than 5 per cent, for short time or A per. cent, for a year or looser. - 2 . BREVITIES. THE Michigan Supreme Court has rendered a decision sustaining the con­ stitutionality of the Miner election law. .THE Unionists of Ulster held a great aonvpntion at Belfast to protest against establishment of .aa Irish Parlia­ ment. SO FAB this week $6,600,CO") in gold coin has been ordered at the Sub- Treasury in New York for shipment to Europe. < CONGRESSMAN W. S. HOLMAN and Mrs. Holman celebrated their' golden wedding anniversary, at Washington, Thursday*. , "5 "ght between union and non - union roustabouts on the St. Louis levee Thursday, "Doc" Hughes was fatally shot. THE German Ambassador at Vienna has been granted leave of absence, so that he may not be put to the painful task of publicly snubbing Herbert Bis­ marck by refusing to attend Ids wed­ ding. 8IB JAMES HANNEX has been ap­ pointed as one of Great Britain's repre­ sentatives on the Behring Sea Commis­ sion. He was President of the Parnell Inquiry Commission and is considered a very able jurist. THE eight indictments that have been pending against Henry S. Ives and Geo. H. Stayner, of New York, for several years have been dismissed, the District Attorney agreeing that there was not evidence to convict. OYER 1,500,000 feet of yellow pino timber is now being delivered for the Chicago, Burlington and Quincy bridge Over the Missouri Biver near its mouth. Work on ' /illy 1, cost $i",500,00a. * MRS. LOUISE POLITICAL* names mentioned as pos­ sible successors to Mr. Blaine as Secre tary of State are thoso of ex-Governors W. W. Crapo, Rice, and Robinson, of Massachusetts, and Cheney, of New Hampshire. SINCE the death of President Polk, of the Farmers' Alliance, thero has been talk of the domination by the People's party of Senator Stewart, of Nevada, for President, and Congressman Wat son, of Georgia, for Vice President. AT Wichita, Kan., the Farmers' Al­ liance Convention of the Seventh Con­ gressional District on Tuesday after­ noon renominated Jerry Simpson by acclamation. It is believed Simpson^ will be indorsed by the Democrats of the district. A NEW YORK dispatch says: Up to date tho managers of Senator Hill's canvass for the Presidential nomination have not given out any figures tending to verify their claim that the Senator has more than an even chance to win at Chicago. One day last week a very prominent leader of Tammany said that Hill would have at least 260 votes on the first ballot and Cleveland probably 500. There has been a tally kept of the prefer­ ences of delegates so fa|^ as eould be ascertained. A national delegate from the midwinter State convention yester- shipment of sheep into Montana from day canvassed the roll of States care- LEAD1R mm DEATH soioisf PRKtMDBNT L. L. FOLK EXPIRES AT WASHINGTON. L. I. POLK. Oregon, Washington, Nevada, Califor cln, Idaho, Wyoming uud Vtah. The proclamation was issuod by the Gov­ ernor on a statement made by State Veterinarian Halloway that sheep from the States named were infected with scabs. THE safe in Davis' general store at Rosston, Ind., was blown open Thurs­ day night during a thunder storm and $2,000 taken. One of the safe doors went through the wall into the street. The Sheriff arrested Sam Jones and Henry Smith at Indianapolis as the cracksmen and landed them, in jail. Thirteen hundred dollars was found in their possession. LIGHTNING displayed its terrific, un- cxplainable power in a shocking manner Thursday nieht at Chicago. During the thunder-storm shortly after 6 o'clock a bolt struck the bronze horse of the Grant monument in Lincoln Park. At the time no less than forty people were crowded in the open corridor just be­ neath the pedestal on which the bronze work rests. There was a blinding flash, a loud report, and all who were under Ihe shelter were thrown off their feet. Three people, two men and a woman, were instantly kilted. All received a terrible shock, but only four were so badly injured that they required im­ mediate attention. s WITH a roar equal to the din of twenty railway trains running over a score of Iron bridges, a great cyclone swept over the Southern Minnesota counties of Jack­ son, Martin, Faribault, Freeborn, Mower and Fillmore Wednesday alternoon. The storm began about seven miles west of the village of Jackson, moved eastward over the villages of Sher­ burne and Wells, in Martin County, passed lightly over Faribault County, created great havo3 in Freeborn, and Bpent itself iji th£ two counties fur­ ther ea*t. '/he lols of liTe has been very heavy, how much so will not be known for several days, as rail­ way trains are abandoned because of washed-out bridges and tracks. Wagon roads are flooded and wholly impassa­ ble and telegraph wires are in such a tangle that it will be impossible to put them to rights for several days. Be­ sides this the I06S to buildings, crops and railway piopertv in the half-dozen counties will reach $300,C00. The Root, Zumbro and other rivers in Southern Minnesota are raging torrents. SOUTHERN. THE Mississippi floods are rapidly becoming a thing of the past at St. Louis. The river fell six inches durfn? \wenty-four hours, and the water will loon be off the crown of the levee. As joon as the harbor boat can wash off the slime deposited by the water, operations there will be resumed. Farmers along the river have some hopes, of yet raising part of a crop. A TERRIBLE disaster, which caused the death of over fortv workmen, oc­ curred at the new bridge which is being constructed over the Licking River, be­ tween Covington and Newport, Ky. The entire false work fell with a crash, hurling a large force of carpenters and, ironworkers into the river. Most of tho men were disabled by the falling timbers and were drowned. The bridge was be­ ing built by the Keaton and Campbell County Bridge Company, and had been in course of erection for about a month. Tuesday the laying of the iron floor was begun. The heavy iron beams proved too heavy a weight for the false work and with scarcely a minute's warn- fully with these resulting totals: Total delegates, 898; necessary to a choice (two-thirds), 599; Cleveland 453; Hill, 336; Palmer, 48; Carlisle, 35; Bolefe, 26. These results are arrived at by split­ ting delegations, but It is believed most of the States will vote under the unit rule. If they do, Mr. Hill's vote would be reduced to 215 and Cleveland's in­ creased Io 577, or within 22 of the requisite number. FOREIGN. REPORTS from Persia are to the effect that the epidemic of cholera', which has prevailed in that country for some time, is now on tlje decrease. BY an explosion of petroleum on the British steamer Petrolia, while that vessel was lying in the harbor of Blaye, France, twenty lives were lost. UNION and social reforms are to be the battle cries of the Tories during the coming campaign, according to the lat­ est pronunciameqto of Mr. Balfour. FRAULEIN ELISE W0EL1KER boxed a lieutenant's ears in the public square at Berlin the other night for insulting her male companion. She "was arrest­ ed, but was acquitted. THE Currency Committee of the lower house of the Austrian Reiohsrath has, by a vote of 29 to 11, adopted a clause affirming a gold standard with the krone as the unit of value. THE Boulangist Deputy Lagucrre has challenged the Marquis de Mores to fight a duel. The latter in giving evi­ dence at the Durmont trial accused the former of accepting a bribe from the Bank of Franco. IN GENERAL the superstructure will begin 1 . !in ^arceiy a minute s warn- The structure, completed, will »£ gave way Wednesday shortly after .« v f ' I r> n man rrnt i A TnA t»tvar la nulla BOWMAN MCCLAIN, the men got to work. The river is quite deep at that point an«j the current Is Btro'ng. Word --* * ' --1 " THE direc'ore of the whisky trust have declared a dividend of £ per cent. THOMAS Cross, of Ottawa, Ont., committed suicide by deliberately hold­ ing his head under water. ADVICES from the rebellious state of Matto Grosso, Brazil, announce terrific fighting in and around the capital, Cuyaba, and the utter defeat of the Government forces sent from Rio Jan­ eiro some time ago by land sea to quell the uprising. The combat is said to have lasted twelve days, when the Govern­ ment troops fled in the utmost disorder. They are reported to have left 1,000 filled upon the battlefield and even a larger prober wgiyided. : T&E Ontario g^jrtnJTent crop report, just issued, states that present condi­ tions point to a first-class crop of- fall wheat. An extra good crop may be ex­ pected should the bright, warm weather continue. The prospects of spring wheat are up to the average, but suc­ cess is depended upon warm weather. The condition of barley is fair but back­ ward, with the prospect of a very much decreased total yield unless the weather becomes and continues more favorable. The acreage is still decreasing. WEDNESDAY afternoon a terrible tor­ nado devastated the Province of Que­ bec, causing frightful destruction to property and loss of life. The places that suffered most were 8t. Rose, a summer resort on the Canadian Pacific Railway twenty miles from Montreal; Lachute, St. John's and the Ottawa Valley. At St. Rose the school-house was blown down. The school mistress was fatally injured, and from six to ten children were killed and thirty-three injured, a number of them fatally. sent was once army, Tjho f$JJ in Jgye with her when j engineer of Cincinnati, had charge of in m&iriage to her. times offered age THE stage between Junction, in the Crow Reservation, in Montana, and Musselshell, in Yellowstone County, Was held up Thursday. The hold-up is probably the work of the same gang that stopped the GreatF alls-Billings •tage June 2 and 3, and shows that it has been working east. Officers are in pursuit* THE Department of State has been in­ formed by the United States Legation at Caracas of the resignation of Presi­ dent Paiacio, of Venezuela. THE Colorado Supreme Couft. has refused to advance the appeal of Dr. T. W. Graves, under sentence of death for the poisoning of Mrs. Barnaby. THE National Convention of Loyal jjj,* , Orangemen, held at Pittsburg, adopted •- • a resolution calling for Sunday closing of the World's Fair. Robert G. Padew, of Pittsburg, was elected Most Worthy jpraod Master of the Order. MARKET REPORT8. r " cafCIao. ^ CATTLE---Common to Prime. Hoos--Shipping tirades 3HEKP--Fsirto Choice \VHE> "'--NO. 2 Spring CORN--No. 2, new OATH--No. 2 BYE--No. 2 tlie work, but was not on the ground at the time of the accident. His assistant, John llson, was on the bridge when \ BUTTER--Choice Creamery the structure gave way and was fatally j CHEESE--Full Cream, flats., injured. His back is broken and flying timbers rendered him unconscious. KGGB--Fresh. POTATOES--Choice old oerjm.. INDIANAPOLIS. T3.50 3.50 *.00 .78 .47 @ .30 & .74 .IK .09 & .14 & .35 & % 8.00 & S.25 & 6.2S @ .79 @ .48 & .31 75)4 J9 .0934 .16 .45 WASHINGTON. CATTLE-t-Shipiiin<f. I.IKIH EDWIN B. HAY, of Washington, has been elected Grand Exalted Ruler of the Order of Elks. ON Monday night. General Eli T. Stackh.ouse, Congressman from South 8.25 ® 4.50 3.60 @ 5.00 9.00 @ 5.00 .87*4 .5154# .M H .37) IT® .38& HOGS--Choice WKht SHEEP--Common to Prime.... WHEAT--No. 2 lied COBM--No. 1 White OATS--No. 2 White BT. LOUIS. CATTLE 8.00 & 4 75 HOGS 8.50 @ 5.25 WHEAT--No. 2 lied «I <A> .82 CORN--No. 2 43!£<§ .44*4 Carolina, died suddenly at Washington. RYE--NO? 2.... ... /.".....!.!! .77 % '.M SENATOR DUBOIS, of Idaho, has been designated to make the official an­ nouncement to the President ot his re- nomination by the Minneapolis con­ vention. Sfcstch of His Connection with tho Flwni- •W Alliance Movement--A. Mao ot Omt Ifwrsonal Magnetism, a Good r»»Wamea« Vlnian a*4 Wreefnl Speaker. * The KuU Has Come. l^eonidas L. Polk, President of the National Farmers* Alliance, is dead. The end oame at 11:15 Sat­ urday forenoon, at tbe Garfield Hospi­ tal, Washington, where he had been removed for treat­ ment. Blood poison­ ing caused by blad­ der trouble was tho cause of'his demise. The patient had- been lying seriously ill at his private residence for ten days. The result of a consultation of physicians was JUs removal to the Gar- Held Hospital, where an operation was deemed the only means of saving his life. He became unconscious, from which condition he never rallied, and it was decided net to perform the opera­ tion. When the end came Mrs. Polk, who had just arrived in the city, was at his bedside. Telegrams from all parts of the South were received inquiring after Mr. Poik*s condition, and he had been daily visited by prominent men of the Farmers' Alliance. Leonldas L. Polk was a native of An- eon County, North Carolina, and was born on April 24, 1837. He was a de­ scendant of the Mecklenburg family bearing that Same, and was related to Colonel Thomas and William Polk, brave soldiers of the revo­ lution, and James K. Polk. President of tho United States. His parents died while he was a youth. He was married when 21 years of age, and Was soon after nominated and elected to the lower house of the State Legislature, serving at the regular and two extra sessions in 1860 aud 1861. He enlisted in the Confederate army as a private, declining the offer of a captaincy, and served in the Twenty-fifth and Forty- third North Carolina regiments of in­ fantry till the autumn of 1864, at which time he became the army candidate for the Legislature, and was elected with practical unanimity. In 1865, against his expressed desire, he was chosen a member of the State Constitutional Convention. In 1877 he was elected Commissioner of Agriculture for his State. He had meantime con­ tinued on his farm and left it with great reluctance to attend to his official duties. In every instance the offices bestowed upon him sought the man, not the man the office He was one of the earliest advocates of the establishment of a de­ partment of agriculture. In 1880 he be­ gan the publication of the Progressive Farmer, and at the same time began the organization of farmers' dubs, and 6oon had 500 chartered and in active working order. He also advocated the establishment of an agricultural and and mechanical college and his plan was finally adopted by the State. He brought the alliance before the people and at its organization in North Carolina he became its State Secretary and through his influence the farmers' clubs previously organized by him be­ came a part of the new organization. He was the first Wee President of the alliance in 1887, and in 1889 was chosen a delegate to the national convention of the order held in St. Louis, in December, 1889, and took an active part in its de­ liberations. When the Interstate Farm­ ers' Association, composed of delegates from all cotton States, was organ­ ized in 1887, Colonel Polk was elect­ ed President by acclamation. , He was twice re-elected to that position without contest. At the convention in St. Louis in December, 1889, Col. Polk was chosen President of the National Farmers' Alliance, and held that posi­ tion continuously up to the date of his death. Under his management the or- deer had a marvelous growth, especially in the South and West, and its influence was shown by the election of members of Congress in North Carolina, Georgia, Kansas and Minnesota, and has made great progress in other States, notably Illinois and Indiana, where in a number of districts it holds the balance of powef. Colonel Polk possessed great per­ sonal magnetism, and was an excellent organizer, a good parliamentarian, and a pleasing public speaker. He was in the farmers' movement from DO motives of personal ambition or profit, for he sacrificed much more than he ever could hope to gain from the success of his ideas and plans. He was earnest, en­ thusiastic and sincere, laboring with all his energies for the good of his fel­ low farmers and the nation at large. If he had lived he would undoubtedly have been the candidate of the Alliance for President of the United States at the election in November next. The funeral was held at Raleigh, N. C., his home, Sunday. The train bear­ ing the body did not arrivo until 3 o'clock in the afternoon. It was met at the depot by hundreds of people. The procession was formed and the body was escorted to th§ first Baptist Church, of which Mr. Polk was a com­ municant. By 4 o'clock the church was packed, the audience numbering at least a thousand. Among those pres­ ent were Gov. Holt and all the State officers, members ol the Su­ preme Court, officers of the State Farmers' Alliance, and Grand Sire Buissee, of tho Sovereign Grand Lodge Odd Fellows. The service? were conducted by Rev. IJrSt W. Carter^ T. E. Skinner and J. J. Hall. The face of the dead was exposed, and after the choir had sung "Abide with Me" the en­ tire audience passed in single file by the casket and viewed the body. The casket was taken into and out of the church by the pallbearers, who came from Wash­ ington, and who, with ladies who also came, were given seats in front. At the conclusion of the services the Washing­ ton party returned to the train and left for that city. 8.00 8.00 4.00 .87 .48 .35 EASTERN. it" - I' THE Presbytery of New York received, Tuesday, the official announcement from the General Assembly that it had ruled for a new trial of Dr. Briggs on the charge of heresy. On motion of Dr. Thompson, it was moved that the trial of the case now is impracticable, it be­ ing summer, but it will receive the at­ tention of the Presbytery when it as- ' eernbles. Dr. Briggs was present and said he did not fear the issue. THE Rev. Father MollUjger, the fa-, pious Pittsburg, Pa., priest and pUyel- THE bill introduced by Mr. Peffer on j May 26 "to increase the currency and 1 provide for its circulation, to reduce the I rates of interest, and to establish a ' bureau of loans," was taken from tho ! table and Mr. Peffer addressed the Sen- | ate in explanation and advocacy of it. It provides for the appointment by the President of three commissioners, to hold their office in Washington, whose duty it shall be to establish loan agencies, one at the capital of every State and Territory and at other convenient places--such loan agency to l»e known as the Central Loan Agency for that Stat-e or Territory. The business of these local agencies is to be to lend money to the people on the plan pf well-regulated real estate and loan agencies, secured by real estate. The loans are to be for not Lrss than one year nor longer than (blank) years. They are to be for not less than $100 nor n.ore than $2,500 to any one persoa .53!I@ .40 ,8« •48 & .78 & CINCINNATI. CATTLE HOGS SHEEP WHEAT--No. 2 Red CORN--No. 2 OATS--No. 2 Mixed DETROIT. CATTLE 3.00 HOGS. 3.00 SHEEP 3.00 WHEAT--N^ 2Red .sa CORN--No. »Yellow...-. OATS--No. 2 White TOLEDO. WHEAT--No. 2 CORN--No. 2 White.... OATS-TNO. 2 White lira......... BUFFALO. BEEF CATTLE--Com. to Prime. HOGS--Best Orades WHEAT--No. I Hard COBJT-^NO. 2 MILWAUKEE. WHEAT--No. 2 Spring .It & : CORN--No. 3 ,46%<$ OATS--No. 2 White ^33 ® RYE--NO. 1....^^........^..^.. .77 ; BARLEY--NO. .56 I PORK--Mess '10.50 I NEW YORK. CATTLE -.A FCSO ' HOGR 8.00 SHEEP 4.50 • WHEAT--No. 2Red. .93 1 CORK--No. 2 .54 j OATS--Mixed Western .83 t BUTTEB--Creamery .15 PORK--Old Mesa 10.00 & 4.50 & 5.25 & 6.50 & .89 <3 .60 & .80 & 4.50 @ 4.75 5.75 M »64*4 .41 .97 .49 .36 !4 .79 "a suori ration, xrfcten contains material a romance, if toid in the "Jowrfial" of an English riergyniatt. A bachelor residing in lodgings umlrcsBccl one night by the sitting-room lire, wound up #hi3 watch, deposited it, vrtWi liis chaln, two seals and a rin# attached to it, on the cfaimney piece, and then jumped into bed in tbe next room. In tiic morning, on going to the chimney-piece for his watch, hb dis­ covered that tho ring, which t he Valued, was gone. No one had entered the room ex­ cept, the maid-servant, who had swept it early in the morning, and laid the table for breakfast. She was so pretty, neat, gentle, and weil- behaved that the gentleman was loth to tell her his suspicions; but the moral certainty he entertained of her guilt, and the value he set on the ring overcame his scruples. On hearing herself chargcd with the theft, the maid started, indig­ nantly denied the charge, and burst into tears. The landlady espoused the servant's cause; strong language was used; the gentleman's blood was roused, and he brought the matter before the b^nch of magistrates. Though they were prepossessed by the girls looks and iiianners, the circum­ stantial evidence obliged them to com­ mit her to ̂ ii for trial at tbe next assizes. A few weeks after the gentleman went into a confectioner's for an ice creani. While he was pausing after each spoonful, he saw something glistening in the sunlight between the joints of the flooring. He inserted the point of his jpenknife between the boards, and to his amazement fished up his lost ring, \ ; He ran back to his lodgings, re­ ferred to his dairy, and found that on the evening he had left his watch and its appendages on the chimney piece he haa been at the same con­ fectioner's. He thought the matter over, and concluded that the ring must have become detached and fallen on the floor, where it had been wedged in between the boards of the flooring. 1 Stung to the quick bvself-reproach for tarnishing the good name of an innocent girl, he drove off to the Jail where she was conllncd, explained matters, procured her release, had an interview with the girl, offered her his hand, and in due time married her. Stories of Lucky Miner*, Tfiere is an ex-State senator in Beaver Head County who owns a very rich mine, the ore yielding $700 to the ton net. He is a California "41'er," who came as a prospector to Montana, and since discovering his mine has lived upon it in a peculiar way. He has no faith in banks. He says his money is safest in the ground. When he has spent what money he has he takes out a wagon load or ore, ships it to Omaha, sells it, and lives on the return until he needs another wagon load. There is a queer story concerning the Spotted Horse mine, in Fergus County. It was found by IV A. Mc- Adow, who.sold it to Gov. Hauser and A. M. Holder for $500,000 three years ago. They paid a large sum down in cash and the other payments were to come out of the ground. The ore was in pockets, each of which was easily exhausted. Whatever was taken out went to McAdow, who got about 8100,000. Then the purchas­ ers abandoned it, on the advice of ex­ perts. and Mr. McAdow took hold of it. He found the vein, over which rails had been laid for a mining car. He has taken out still a good mine. dten of luck came money, picked out then a poor seamstress, hired a hotel, and invited the town to the wedding. The amount of champagne that flowed at that wedding was fabulous, and Harper's Magazine says the whole town reeled to bed that night. $500,000, and it is One of these chil- to Helena with a wife, who was 4.00 @ 6.00 4.00 @ 6.50 .87̂ 0 .**>4 .52 @ .53 .77 .47$ .84 .79 58 00 tJ ll.i & 8.00 (<«'6.75 ® 6.25 & .94 @ .55 m .*8 © .20 <810.75 World's Fair Motes. THE American Library Association will make a notable exhibit. THE English Admiralty authorities will send to Chicago models of a num­ ber of English war vessels. CARL HAGEXBECK, of Hamburg, the celebrated dealer in wild animals, will take to Chicago his entire collection of trained animals. THE H. C. Frick Ooke Company, of Pennsylvania, has decided to make a complete working model in miniature of its entire plant. THE New York Exposition Board is planning to show In its State building an exhibit illustrating completely the art history of "the State. HON. J. J. GBINXINTOW, World's Fair Commissioner from Ceylon, is in Chicago, engaged in making arrange­ ments for tbe .Ceylon court. THE Southern States will be well rep­ resented at the Exposition, notwith­ standing only a few of them have made appropriations for that purpose. THE chief motive power for the ma­ chinery at the Exposition will be sup­ plied by a giganting engine, to be fur­ nished free to the Exposition by the E. P. Allis Company, of .ililwaukee. ' : LIGHTNING STRIKES IN LIN­ COLN PARK, CHICAGO. Three Persons Killed Under the Sheltei ol the Grant Monument, Three Mare uXJXL'Z "" 8^w' ' K.U.--«*. Lightning laid livid fingers upon the mammoth Grant monument in Lincoln Park, Chicago, Thursday evening and the two-score of pleasure-seekers who had crowded under tho granite arches to seek protection from the shower fell prostrate upon the stjno floor. Three were instantly killed. Of the injured one was picked up raving liko a maniac, two were unconscious and another sup­ posed to be dead. A little infant in the arms of its grandmother, who lay black­ ened from head to foot and almost de­ nuded, was taken away unharmed. The alarm Was given by a park policeman who had just left the shelter, and a few moments later the clang of the ambu­ lance bell parted the surging throng that instantly gathered about the scene of horror. The dead were lifted into a patrol wagon and sent to the morgue and the injured weire taken to the Ger­ man hospital. Lincoln Park was crowded during the afternoon with men, women and chil­ dren, peeking in the cool lake breezes and the shade of many trees to escape tho sweltering heat of tho homes and down-town streets. When, at 6:30 o'clock, tho eky darkenod and a storm- cloud blotted out the sun,.shelter was taken wherever it could be found. The pavilions ware crowded, and -many sought the questionable shelter of the trees. A large number were on the lakeside, and many were viewing the monument. When the big drops came down about eighty clustered about the great base of the monument, fully forty crowding into the little room directly beneath the bronze soldier and horse, and as many more standing in the roadway beneath. At 6:45 o'clock the fatal bolt fell, jarring the granite base and turning deathly pale with fear every mortal in its em­ brace. The scene that followed was appall­ ing. For an instant those upon the ground looked into one another's eyes, then followed scream after scream from the death chamber above. Men pushed up the winding stairs at either end of the arch, and when they looked out in the gathering gloom, made almost dark by the massive masonry^ not a person was standing. Then began the work of rescue. Men and women were lifted to their feet. Water was brought from tho lake in hats and sprinkled upon the blanched faces and consciousness restored to fainting ones, who hutrried away from the scene. SENATE AND HOUSE OP REPR SENTATIVES. Our Transatlantic Friends, ,4The economy of the Europeans surprised-me at first," said an intelli­ gent woman who has lived abroad for some time, "but 1 soon saw the wisdom of it- We lavish Americans are inclined to jeer at the accounting for candle ends in the household of a British peeV or the careful thrift of the German housewife who binds her bed blankets with a deep, loosely- caught binding of cheese cloth to pre­ served the nap that comes off infl- nitcsimally from handling in daily bedmaking; but after awhile we dis­ cover that side by side with this rigid avoidance of waste and needless expenditure there are impressive re­ sults, and generous, handsome out- lavs, Tney arc all skilful, too, in making the most of everything, much more so than we with the Yankee in­ genuity of which we boast-^-it seems inherent, not acquired. At this mo­ ment I think the French peasant woman can serve for five sous a better, more nourishing and appetizing meal than our scientific kitchcnsrpan put forth for three times that sum, and this with no disparagement to the latter As a people we seem to lack the faculty of getting the most out ot the least; that is the maximum of comfort out of the minimum of ex­ penditure, in striking contrast to the wisdom of our friends across the water." ^^ Head of the House. When once a man has established a home, his most . important duties are fairiy begun. The errors of youth may be overlooked; want of purpose, and even honor, in his earl­ ier days may be forgotton. But, from the moment of his marriage, he begins to write his indelible history --not by pen and ink, but by actions, by which he must ever afterwards be reported and judged. His conduct at home; his solicitude for his family; the training ot his children; his de­ votion to his wife; his regard for t, great interests of eternity--these a the tests by which his worth will ever afterwards be estimated by all who think or care about him. These will determine his position while liv­ ing. and influence his memory when dead. He uses well or ill the brief space allotted to him out of all etern­ ity to build up a frame founded upon the most sol hi of all foundations- private worth. THERE are too many artfatu who can paint poor pictures of the Alps, who can't paint good sign-boards. s®T Our National Lawmakers and What Thsj^' Are Doing for the Good of the CoDa rr«. xS ~ Various Measures Propose*}* •nd Aeted Cpon. Doings of Congress. "t~a<s House on the 13th passed tho eenatil - bill to protect settlement rights-where twifc or more persons settle on the same seetlo# of agricultural public lands before survey thereof. Secretary Foster sent a letter to> Speaker Crisp asking for an appropriation ? of 1250.000 for adequate precautions the World's Fair for the protection of reve.» nue from customs, and for the supervision < of importation. In the Senate tho pensiof^ appropriation bill, with amendments, wag.' reported back by the committee and placeft on the calendar. The bill carries a total ' of $146,737,000, which 1s an increase cif'U $11,013,000 over the House bill and is ?327^r';? 200 less than the estimate. On the 14th. Representative Fowler raSjiv.;?" ported to the House from the Committee o||,, the Merchant Marine the Geary bill, grant* Ins an American register to tho steamship China. The bill, says an accompanying report, ftrants the same privileges to tha ' ship as have been recently jrranted bJ Consress to the Inman steamships CitJT of Paris and City of New York. If" • thl9 bill be passed the company will not only build a vessel in an American shlj^, yard equal in tonnage to the China as re*-., quired by the bill, but the committee _ assured by tbe company's representativeir that it will build two vessels of at leasfc 8.000 tons each. The China is a vessel or about 5.000 tons register. General Eli TV Stackhouse, member of Congress froi% the Sixth District of Soutli Caro*- lina and a prominent member nf the Farmers' Alliance, died. He was one of the party that accompanied t.hto remains of the late Col. L L. Polk. Presi­ dent of the Farmers' Alliance, to Raleigh^ N. (X, last Saturday. The session of th® Senate was only lonj* enougb to receive message from the House announcing thv death of Mr. Stackhouso and tc adopt reso«. lut!ons of sorrow, and providing for a com­ mittee of five Senators to escort the body to Its place of burial. Conferrees on the river and harbor appro­ priation bill have failed to agree Fortifi­ xation measures were discussed at length In the Hou«e the 15th. Senator Morgan spoke to, tbe Senate In behalf of free silver. Consressman Shively introduced his tin- plate bill in the House Senator Peffer has presented a petition to the Senate from colored citizens of Kansa% protesting against Southern outrages. In tbe Senate the 16th, Mr. Morrill spoka> In opposition to free oulmt^e. The Kaictk. anti-option bill was referred to Judiciary Committee In the House th* time was passed In debate upon tin. Not a single- appropriation bill is yet s gned. and the majority of those bills are yet in the hands of the committee. t On the Diamond. Following Is a showing of tbe standing of each'of tbe teams of the different assocla- tlousi GREAT -LOSS OP LIPB. Terrible Work of a Cyclone In Southern Minnesota. St. Paul dispatch: The phenomenally wet and stormy season has culminated in a series of cyclone bursts, which occurred Thursday afternoon, and were spread over half the southern end of the State, extending from Spring Val­ ley, Fillmore County, on the east, to Heron Lake, Jackson County, on the west, and to Blue Earth County on the north. It was the fiercest and most destructive storm Minnesota ever knew, not excepting even the ter­ rible St. Cloud cyclona of 1886, in which eight-six lives were sacrificed. At this time only the most meager details can be gathered. Not only are the telegraph wires down in the section devastated but the train service is utter­ ly demoralized, and many of the worst casualties occurred in districts remote from either trail or wire.' Three distinct cyclone centers seemed to have been 'marked, and in each the havoc was frightful. It is now believed that near­ ly 100 lives have been lost, as nearly every meage<* report received here con­ cludes by saying the worst is to come, and later reports will swell the number of the killed arid injured. In every case there was the regular funnel cloud with its deadly sections, roar and restl* ss sweep, followed by a cloudburst. Nothing was left standing in the path of the cyclone, houses, trees and barns having been swept away. The storm centers seem to have been at Wells, Faribault, County; Sherbourne, Morton County; and Spring Valley, Fill­ more County. At Wells the storm came on without the slightest warning, the frightful roar or the apprbaching whirling column being the first intimation. The cloud veered to the south as it reached the outskirts of .the village, leaving a terri­ ble scene of death and destruction. So far as now known, seventeen per­ sons were killed In this immediate vi­ cinity, as follows: John Brown and wife, Herman Brenner, Mrs. John Matusick, Wealand Steen. wife and child, John Pic- tios, Wm. Pictlos, Mrs. John Dell, Albert Klingbert and two children, Mrs. John Joerson and two children. AH of these are farming people. Twenty-five aro reported more or less seriously injured, but in the excitement that reigned their names could not bo ascertained. The damage to houses, barns, cattle and crops cannot now be even estimated, but it will b? very great. At Albert Lea eight are known to have been killed, and many others are missing. Minnesota Lak 3 reports five dead. The cyclone was followed by a terrific downpour of rain, the water falling In an apparently solid mass. Every stream is out of its banks, and not a train is to­ day running. WashoutsCare reported in every direction, with bridges gone, trestles undermined, and in places the roadbeds themselves are gone. It is thought when communication is established throughout the stormswept district the list of dead will be found uot far short of one hundred persons. This and That. THERE are 300,000 commercial trav­ elers in the United States. THE man who keeps his mouth shut never has to eat any crow. WHAT is done cannot be undone, es­ pecially a hard-boiled egg. A DOLLAR in your po3ket Is worth five invested in a lottery ticket. A Fit 1 END in need Is a friend who gen­ erally strikes you for quarter. THE sire of -a oaa» has nothing to do Wit1i the size of -a lie he can tell. WHEN a sick man refuses to send for «, doctor that is a sign lie still diogs to life. I MODERN society overlooks a soiled | •reputation much more rapidly than it does soiled gloves. THE telephone is an arrangement by which two men can .lie to each other without becoming confused. THE girl who runs away with the hired man is hold up in ridicule, but she frequently does better than the one who marries a poet. CHiiiDHooD is the nursery rhyme, youth the love ballad, middle age the prose, and old ago the blank verse in man's book of life. A COCOON of a well-fed silkworm will often yield a„*hread 1>000 yards long, and one has been produced which con­ tained 1,295 yards. To PRESERVE the color of black ging­ hams or ratine gowns, previous to wash­ ing dip them in boiling suds «r..ia salt and watir. Dry in the shade. W. Boston..... 35 Brooklyn....30 Cincinnati. ..23 Phliadelp'ia.27 Cleveland ...J* Chicago 28 NATIONAL LEAOTTB. fc.1 w; L. 714 New York.. .2* 24 CwPittsbuirjr. 2-t .671:Washington.23 SB .551! Louisville.. .20 31 .53S St. Louis....17 32 Baltimore . ..14 86 Voi. .510 472* .4TFL 892 .347' .280 ILLINOIS LEAGUE. W. li. Jollet 1 Jacksonville l Jl. I.-Moline. 1 Evansville... 0 (NEW SEBTEB.) W. L. 0 l.owi:Aurora 0. 1 0 1.000 Terre Haute. 0 l 0 i.oooRockfora.... 0 0 1 .000 Quincy 0 0 W. Colnmbus.. .83 Milwaukee. .22 Kansas City.21 Toledo 19 WESTEBN ASSOCIATION. L. #C. 12 .73i 13 .62;) 11 .525 18 .514 W. Omaha 20 Minneap'lls.14 Ft. Wayne.. 13 Indian'pTs. 7 WISCONSIN-MICHIGAN LEAGUE. W. L. Wc.| W. L. Oshkosh 6 2 .750; Menominee.. 6 6 Marquette.. 8 3 .727ll«h -Near 7 0 Marinette..,. 6 5 .545,Green Bay.. 2 >10 TPc. .000- .IKMJ .000- .000- <p«. .487 .434. .179 % .438 .ier THE ELECTORAL VOTE OP 1892. The Element of Uncertainty in the Com­ ing National Content. When Washington was first chosen* President in 1789 only ten States voted, giving him G9 Electoral votes. In 188® the Electoral vote was 401, of which Harrison received 233 and Cleveland 168. The Electoral vote of 1892 has- been increased to 444, and it will require 223 votes in the Electoral College to- elect. The following table exhibits,the Elec­ toral v$tes cast for Washington in 1789,. the!^ Electoral vote of 1888, with the- States which voted for Harrison marked by a star (*), and the Electoral vote of 1892: 1780. 1S88. 1892. Alabama Arkansas California* Coloradp*v» Conneeticint Delaware Florida. Georgia Idaho Illinois* Indiana* Iowa* Kansas* Kentucky Louisiana... Maine* Maryland '. Massachusetts* Michigan* Minnesota* Mississippi. Missouri Montana Nebraska* Nevada* New Hampshire*. New Jersey New York* North Carolina North Dakota Ohio* Oregon*. , Pennsylvania* Rhode Island* South Carolina South Dakota. Tennessee - Texas Vermont* ..i Virginia Washington West Virginia Wisconsin* Wyoming Total 401 444 Six new States have been admitted into th« Union since 1888, viz., Idaho,. Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota, Washington and Wyoming, with an ag­ gregate of nineteen electoral votes. AIL of them voted Republican in 1888, but. Montana elected a Democratic Con­ gressman and Legislature in 1890. This* large addition of States and yet larger additions of electoral votes multiply the element of uncertainty in the coming nation?', contest. IV 10 7 8 3 1 3 4 12 22 15 13 9 13 8 (I 8 14 13 7 9 10 6 3 4 l» 36 11 23 3 80 4 » iii 13 4 12 6 11 11 8 »• 4• 6. 3 4 13 3- 24 15 13 10 13 8 6 a 15 lk 9 9< 17 8 3 4 10 80 11 3 23 4 82 4, 9 4- lfl 16 4 W 4 « 12: . 8 Condition of Crops. Acoording to the Farmer's Review of this week the Illinois oats crop genet al~ ly is in gi od condition. One-half of the> counties report winter wheat in good condition, while in the remainder it is. fair. Spring wheat is fair and fruit- poor. In Indiana, two-thirds of the counties- report the oats rop in good condition. Winter, wheat is generally pood. Fruit is reported poor by 30 per cent. In Ohio,, oats are reported good by 37 per cent; poor by 18 per cent. Winter wheat the- same. Fruit is poor by 41 per cent. In. Michigan, little spring wheat is reported, butit is in good condition. WTinter wheat is reported good by 55 per cent. Fridt poor by only 8 per cent. In Nebraska, spring wheat is reported good by 60 per cent. Oats poor by 5 per cent. Winter wheat is reported good by 70 per cent.; fruit poor by 50 per cent. In Iowa, spring; wheat and oats are reported good. Win­ ter wheat is good by 48 per cent. Fruit is fair. In Wisconsin*, spring wheat and. oats are reported good. Winter wheat good. Fruit fair. In the Dakotas, spring? wheat is in fine condition, as are also* oats. There is not muchvfruit grown, but what is grown is in good condition*

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