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The Monument Courier from Monument, Kansas • 2

The Monument Courier du lieu suivant : Monument, Kansas • 2

Lieu:
Monument, Kansas
Date de parution:
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2
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A. Craig Palmer has been appointed tem KANSAS STATE NEWS. Eottis City Courier FINANCE AND TJIADE. WOMAN'S DEPARTMENT. J.

H. JORDAN, Editor and Proprietor. WOMEN AS EXECUTIVES. Dun's Agency Reports Money Close in Many of "the Financial Centers. NNIS CITY.

Wliat Har- History Shows as to Women KANSAS. women bear a banner with the tvordsi "We follow our Political Mrs. Cleveland, Mrs. Garfield and Mrs. Hayes should be in this procession-Would not such an exhibit help to open blind eyes to the degradation of women? Would they not see what tho State loses, when all male scalawags out of prison may vote and no good woman may do so? Lucy Stone.

inz Administrative Ability. porary receiver of the Covington Macon railway of Georgia. A report reached Austin, on the 22d that the stage between Comfort and Rodericksburg was robbed the previous night by two masked highwaymen, who made their escape in the darkness. Officers started immediately on the track of the robbers. The yellow fever epidemic at Key West, is practically at an end, not a death having occurred during the past week.

1 have been much impressed, in histoi-ical studies of nations with THE WORLD AT LARGE. of which we are little acquainted, at tho A post -office to be known as Guerney has been established in Cheyenne County, with Willard F. Blake as postmaster. Governor Martin has made the following appointments of delegates and alternates to the seventh annual session of the Farmers' Congress of the United States, to be held at Chicago, November 1 to 5 At large, Hon. A.

W. Smith, of McPherson, and Hon. Matt. Edmunds, of McLouth; First district, B. F.

Wallack, of Effingham; Second, Hon. F. W. Breyfogel, of Lenexa: Third, A. P.

Sanders, of Mound Valley; Fourth, Thomas M. Potter, of Peabody; Fifth, Hon. A. P. Collins, of Solomon City; Sixth, Captain A.

B. Balch, of Cerro Gordo; Seventh, Hon. R. E. Lawrence, of Wichita.

Alternates at large, Hon. James C. Cusev. Relief Experienced by the Action the Treasury Clearings Generally Good. irequency witn wnnrn came across Summary of tho Dally Newa instances of high administrative abil The George Weber Brewing Company, of Cincinnati, has made an assignment.

The liabilities were estimated at $500,000, and assets at 350, 000. The assignment grew out of the Fidelity Bank failure. Judge Crozier has verbally given his opinion that the appointment of police commissioners and other officers for Leavenworth, by Governor Martin was unconstitutional. Proceedings were to be taken to have them ousted. The rains of the past lew days have put an end to the most destructive drought known to the Ohio valley.

Pastures have been improved, but the ordinary crops are wofully deficient. Captain I. W. S. Kidd, editor of the Monitor of "Springfield, I1L, was assaulted recently by John T.

Bretz, superintendent of streets, and roughly pounded. The cause of the assault was an article in the Monitor relating to Bretz's administration. The coroner's jury in the case of the railroad accident near Canton, D. censured the Milwaukee road for not having stringent rules in regard to leaving brakes set on cars standing still on a down grade. The bodies of the dead were sent East.

WOMEN. ITEMS ABOUT ity on the part of women, shown un der circumstances where we have little Some Palling Off in Leather and Iron reason to look for it. I recentlv stum bled upon an institnce in the history of Brad street on the Grain Market, Sail-road Earnings, Etc. China at the present time. Some fourteen years ago, the Emperor Tung Chi died without issue, and New Yohk, Sept.

24. R. G. Dun Ca's a council of Princes chose the present review oi trade says A suttden change in GENERAL. Captain General Terrere has published an edict in the Manila Gazette declaring the Caroline and Pewee islands to be in a state of siege owing to manifestations of rebellion on the part ol the natives.

The Duke of Devonshire denies that he has been converted to Gladstone's Irish policy. A duel was fought in the City of Mexico recently between General Rocha and Antonie Gayon. The latter was dangerously wounded in the right breast. The trouble grew out of the Maximilian controversy, and other duels were reported likely on the same subject. A dispatch from London says: Eigfct men were killed by a boiler explosion on board the new West Indian steamer Elbe of Linsborg, and Hon.

J. J. Veatch, of Morrow; First district, Hon. J. J.

Elliott, of Morrill; Second, Hon. S. J. Stewart, of Iola; Third, W. H.

Gibson, of Sedan; Fourth, John C. Rankin, of Quenemo; Fifth, Theodore Ingersoli, of Clay Center; Sixth, Martin Mohler. of Osborne; Seventh, the Government's policy brings hopeful Emperor, Kwang IIsu, a child three news to the local money market. Probably, years of age, as his successor. The management of the empire during his minority passed into the hands of two indeed, too much may be expected.

Treas ury purchases can not entirely remove th tion. jn. c. St. Clair, of Belle Plain.

consequences of short crops, harmful spec Mrs. Nellie Geant Saktokis and one of her children have arrived in this country for a visit Miss Heloise Hekset will return to Boston late in October, and open a class in English literature. Miss Anna Dickinson, who has been very ill at Honesdale, has so far recovered as to be able to take short walks. Mrs. Anna B.

McHanan has just issued a little xiamphlet of "Outlines" for the study of Shakespeare and Browning by classes. Mrs. Maria White, an old friend of the Beecher family, has rented the bouse of Henry Ward Beecher, and will let the furnished rooms to lodgers. Miss F. Henrietta Mueller, of London, and for some years a member of the School Board there is in Boston.

She is an earnest suffragist also, much ulation, over hasty development of the change of active into fixed capital. Wall The Acting Secretary of the Interior has disallowed the claim of John R. Allen, of Morris County, for alleged depredations by WASHINGTON NOTES. The recent report that the President would call an extra session of CoDgress to meet early in Novemher for the purpose of providing means to relieve the present stringency ia the money market created considerable comment in public circles, but obtained but little, if any, official credence. Rumobs were floating about "Washington on the 20th regarding the retirement of James Hyatt from tho office of the United States Treasurer.

Acting Secretary Muldeow has requested the Attorney-General to institute suit against Thomas li. Greenough, principal tie contractor for the Northern Pacific railroad, for the value of 700 fir and tamarack and pine trees, alleged to hae been unlawfully cut from the Government land by the defendant. Acting Secretary Thompson accepted 11,065,800 of the bonds offered for sale on the 21st. The President ha3 recognized Narcisso Perez Pelinto as Consul of Spain at Savannah, Ga. Atkins, Commissioner of Indian Affairs.

Empresses dowager the mother and aunt, respectively, of the deceased monarch. The two sisters, as co-regents, carried on the Government street looks for the whole of the 14.000,000, the Indians in 1SG1. Dut a large part oi tne Donds will come from the interior, and the money will go Captain" Quintan Campbell, formerly of the regular army, and a newspaper man well-known in Kansas Citv, recently shot with unusual vigor and success till thither. Much of it is wanted to meet com The Ohio Mississippi at St. Louis on the 21st enlarged its fields of operations in the rate-cutting line, and made a round-trip fare to Baltimore and Washington of $20.25, being a cut of $5.15.

The Louisville, Evansville St. Louis road, or what is known as the Air Line, met the rate, but the Vandalia took no notice of it. Hon. W. R.

Morrison, who was in Chicago recently, was visited by a number of his political friends. In regard to making the race for Congress in his own district next year he said it was a little early to commence campaigning, but he was rather 1881, when one of them, the "Empress mitments in new enterprises, and may be his young wife at Leavenworth, but fortu of the Eastern Palace," died, leaving during a trial trip recently. Five persons were drowned in Lake Geneva, Switzerland, the other day, by the swamping ol their boat by a steamer. The Tonquin finances as prepared by the French Minister of Foreign Affairs show a deficit of 20,000,000 francs. No railways so absorbed.

The speculative advances in prices which at onco begun, will make mora nately not inflicting a fatal wound. There the whole power in the hands of her money neeaea to carry tne StocK or pro were conflicting accounts as to tho exact cause for the act. While in Kansas City some five or six years ago, Captain Camp sister, Tzu Hsi, "Empress of the Western Palace." Now the instances would be rare in which the absolute power over a vast empire could be shared equally between two men, Avith-out harm to the efficiency of the Gov bell was married to his present wife, who was then only sixteen years old. He had but recently taken a position on the Hun, a interested in other reforms. new evening paper at Leavenworth.

Mrs. Martha II. Mooke has be declares that he will never consent that any language but English shall be taught in the Indian schools. Topeka has an embryo Anarchist, named Boutwell, who has been giving the police no inclined to think he would be there when the time came. Of President Cleveland he said the indications wherever he had been were that he was growing stronger all the time with the people and would continue to grow until the next Presidential election day.

President F. F. Leonard, of the Toledo, ernment. History shows that double rulerships, as well as triumvirantes, are queathed to Colby University $5,000. The proceeds are to be applied for the little trouble.

Recently he refused to fur nish names of men boarding with him so apt to prove disastrous in tneir conse use of the library, the same to be that tax notices could be served on them. known as the Martha Moore Library ror xms ne was arrested, ana threw a Fund. quences, and it is evidence of much unselfishness as well as ability upon the part of these ladies, that their joint hatchet at the officer. With the help of two are to be constructed at present. The London Times speaks in high terms of the Constitution celebration held in Philadelphia.

It was said that forty sailors were injured by an explosion of fireworks during the recent reception to Lord Landsdowne on the Bellerophen at Quebec. The matter was hushed up as much as possible, and the report given out that only one or two, including a midshipman, were hurt. The Dublin Gazette publishes a proclamation suppressing the Irish National League and all its branches in County Clare and baronies Leitrim and Loughrea in Galway, Corkaguinty in Kerry; Condon, Clongib-bon, Dunhallow and Muskerry in Cork and Sherburne in Wexford. It is said the Zalinski dynamite gun is a success. Trials were made recently in the presence of Secretary hitney and representatives of foreign powers.

Premier Norquay, of Manitoba, who was men iioulwellwas loaded a wagon and Mrs. Fanny Villard, only of the "liberator," William Lloyd rule should be successful. hauled to jail. He had to be carried before the police justice, and refused to answer duce, lhe country is now using, outside the treasury, 1,323,000,000 of various kinds of money, and a clear addition of one per cent, would not go very far. But the disbursement will not be wholly an addition of currency to the sum in use, because the Government receipts exceed the regular expenditures by 3,000,000 or more each week.

The best of it is that the treasury has done, and may be expected to do, whatever it can to avoid disturbance. While money is constantly made easier in Wall street, it grows lighter through the interior. Effects of absorption of capital in building and rapid development are each week felt more clearly. At Cleveland money is very close. At Chicago the constant demand from country towas causes a pressure of which no relaxation at present is expected.

Recent failures cause caution at Philadelphia. Former failures also cause pressure at Cincinnati, where 7 per cent, is commonly paid. At New Orleans money has not been so tight since the Grant-Ward failure. At Kansas City, Omaha and Milwaukee money is close, and from nearly all points collections are reported siow or only fair. During the past week the treasury has But the survivor's reign has been even more distinguished, and I read in Garrison, is entertaining her brothers Willia ri Lloyd and Wen dell Phil ips Garrison, at ber home in General vvuson recent worK on China that "it is asserted by the best Peoria Western, has filed with the Illinois Railroad and Warehouse Commission an official report of the Chatsworth accident.

It estimates from the number of tickets sold that there were 540 persons on the train, of whom eighty were dead. The number injured was given as 151, ten of whom were employed on the road. New complications were reported to have arisen at Chicago on the 2lst which were almost certain to create another passenger war among the roads running east from that city. Oak Lawn Retreat, a private insane asylum near Jacksonville, 111., was destroyed by fire recently, and the proprietor Dobb's Ferry, N. Y.

Rev. Samuel informed foreigners in Pekin that she THE EAST. The 257th anniversary of the settlement of Boston and the centennial anniversary of the close of the revolutionary war was observed there on the 17th by the raising of flags on all public buildings of the city, while bells were rung at morning, noon and sunset. Hon. Joseph Cillet, the oldest United States ex-Senator and a veteran of the war of 1812, died on the 17th at Nottingham, N.

at the age of ninety-six years. Nelson Campman was suffocated in bed during a fire at No. 10 South street, New York, recently. Jacob Lokillakd's brick works at Key-port, N. the largest in the United States, were destroyed by fire on the 18th.

The loss was 1500,000 no insurance. The works will be rebuilt. Rev Dr. Bernard O'Reilly, of New York, has received the appointment of Domestic Prelate to the Pope. The National Association of Local Preach May is Is- staying with Mr.

and Mrs. Villard. has proved herself to be the ablest ruler of China since the days of Kien- Mrs. Nancy Sophia Bryant, who lung, whose reign was contempora was well known and active in caring in jn ew ork trying to raise money to build a proposed Red River vallev railroad t.n neous with the life of George Washino-- for orphans and the destitute of this as 1817, is preparing a book of reminis city, as long ago ton. She is fifty-three years of age, and is said to give the closest personal for publication attention to public business.

She has cences of Boston and its noted characters. Mrs. Bryant is nearly eighty never been seen by a foreign omcial. paid out $4,500,000 more than it has taken seriously burned. No patients were hurt.

Five persons in Novi, have been poisoned by corn beef bought of a peddler. One will die. By a natural gas explosion at Oil Center, Wood County, the other night, flowing oil tanks and machinerv were destroved and, so far as is known, takes no no in, so that its payments exceed its receipts years of ge. questions or even speak. The judge fined him $100 and ordered him to the stone gang.

The officers had to drag him, and on his refusal to work he was placed in close confinement. He regrets that he is not one of the Chicago Anarchists to be hanged and become a martyr. Members of the Sovereign Grand Lodge, I. O. O.

had a regalar ovation on their passage through Kansas on their way to Denver. Bids were opened at Washington on the 16th for joiner work, roof tiling and additional flooring for the public building at Leavenworth. There were bidders from a number of places, but the bid of J. McGon-igle, of Leavenworth, was the lowest. A Leavenworth officer recently stopped a lot of children having a "play show," for which they charged a penny admission, until a city license was obtained.

General Black, Commissioner of Pensions, will visit Kansas about October 12, on which occasion he will accompany the board of managers of the National Soldiers' Home. The officers of the Temperance Mutual Benefit Union will -fight in the courts th2 recent decision of Insurance Commissionei Wilder declaring forfeited the right of the company to conduct an insurance business in the State. Leavenworth recently rung her fire bells, blew her steam whistles and other Miss Frances E. Willard, after tice or account of their doings. Yet she is supposed to bealiberal, or to in for the month by 1,000,000.

Gold continues to arrive from Europe, but no more is shipped. The merchandise exports from consultation with Mrs. Margaret Bright Lucas, president of the "World's Christian Temperance Union, calls upon the members in this country to New York for three weeks are six per cent, above last year, against an increase of 10 per cent, in imports here. It is still the fact that gold comes only for investment or speculation, so that discouragement cline toward liberalism and progress in her ideas. She has seen the entire country restored to peace and comparative prosperity under her rule, and her dominion, at the surrender of it to her connect with the Northern Pacific, left for Winnipeg on the 20th, having failed in his financial errand.

The Catholic Archbishop and some of his friends who are opposed to the present Government of Guatemala, are reported to have left that country for San Francisco for the purpose of procuring means to bring about a revolution against President Barillos. The present Government has declined to declare against the Protestant churches established in Guatemala by Rev. Clark Hill, of this country. Fifteen officers of all ranks have been put on trial in St. Petersburg on the charge of being Nihilists.

British artillerymen in a town In India being ordered to prepare to move aboard smashed windows and created a lively riot recently. In the divorce case of David De Bensaud against his wife, Violet Cameron, the actress, the court at London issued an injunction against the husband restraining recognize November 12 and 13, as days for prayer for the growth and universa1 might turn the tide. Clearings continue to show an increase ward, on the 5th of February, 1887, was undisputed to the very outermost diffusion of all forms of temperance work. over last year, for last week 7.3 per limits of the empire. Mrs.

Mart Kellerman, of Chetopa, this, however, includes large payments on accounts of building and speculation. Some depression results from recent failures ia and several persons badly burned. Dick Vaun, who shot Captain Sam Six-killer at Muskogee, I. December 24, died recently of wounds received from an Indian policeman. Near Purcell, I.

a serious train wreck occurred on the 21st. A working train was ran into by a light engine. The number of killed and injured was thought to be about fiiteen, but nothing definite was known. Hon. E.

B. Washburn, formerly United States Minister to France, was taken with congestion of the brain at Chicago on the 21st and was in a precarious condition. A. R. Parsons, one of the condemned Anarchists, has given to the press a lengthy document, in which he demands either his freedom or execution.

Another railway horror on the Chicago, Rock Island Pacific almost happened at Killar, near Peoria, I1L, on the Mist. A ers session at Harriaburg, recently, elected C. B. Stemen, of Fort Wayne, president for the ensuing year. The next convention will be held at Columbus, In September, 1888.

The Italians of New York City on the 20th celebrated with a parade, which was reviewed by Mayor Hewitt, and with subsequent festivities in an up-town park, the seventeenth anniversary of the entry of the Italian troops into Roma Over fifty societies participated. The Democrats of Massachusetts met in convention at "Worcester on the 20th and adopted a platform. H. B. Lovering was nominated for Governor.

The rest of the ticket was as follows: Lieutenant Governor, Walter E. Cutting, of Pittsfield; Secretary of State, John F. Murphy, of Lowell; Treasurer, Henry C. Thatcher, of Yarmouth; Attorney-General, John W. Corcoran, of Clinton; Auditor, William F.

Cook, of Springfield. The liabilities of Grovesteen Pell, took brokers of New York, aggregate and the actual assets $833,899. The Inter-State Commerce Commission is a member of the Board of Education of that city, a member of the Board of Examiners, of the W. C. T.

U-, of the Woman's Foreign Missionary Society, and of the Orphans' and the iron trade, and from continued heavy importations, and, while the best brands of pig are firm, the heavy cut but tends to weaken other grades. One large order for rails has been cancelled. Boot and shoe wise made a noise over the successful operation of another coal shaft which had struck coal in paying quantities at a depth Home Belief Association, all because mm irom molesting his wile. The Marquis of Lonsdale admitted that he had been sales are not up to recent expectations. she wants to help woman's cause.

travelers reporting orders contracted bv and there are so few who will take the monetary pressure. Leather and hides are consequently dull, and some slacking in the woolen goods trade checks the late responsibility." Mrs. Mary Seymour Howell spoke bridge over a chasm fifty feet deep had promise of greater activity in wooL on Woman bunrage in Byron, N. Dry goods experience some reaction from the unusual activity of recent week3, but August 4. Mr.

Sylvina M. Green arranged the meeting, which was largely Ana yet me women oi tjmna are cdt off from educational advantages equal to those of men. they are kept in Oriental seclusion from early youth, and less ought to be expected of them than of men. Yet the experince of China seems to be the same as that of other countries. In a few cases where women have been invested with administrative functions, they have, as a rule, been eminently successful.

I have read of late in several articles written by anti-suffragists, arguments drawn from the supposed incapacity of the female mind for the higher kinds of intellectual activity. It is repeated ad nauseam, that women have never originated any great intellectual movement, have never written any epic or dramatic masterpieces, etc. if this ivere true, it might furnish an argument (though a very poor one) for passing a law forbidding all women from writing epic or dramatic poetry and originat prices are firmly held. Prices in the stock market declined Mon attended. Mrs.

Howell will accept in day and Tuesday to the lowest of the year, has decided in favor of the Vermont State Grange in a case against the Central Vermont railroad. It anneared that the Boston out have since recovered smartly. vitations to lecture and organize in Northern and Eastern New York in September, and in Western New York Wheat is also shifting a little, and a new speculation appears oil, with some ad vance in coffee. The tendency for the mo in October and November. Her address is 151 Hamilton street, Albany, ment is to advance prices in all markets on account of treasury disbursements, and the shortness of crops and the absorption of guilty of improper relations with Miss Cameron.

The brush fires which have been raging around Dandy, Quebec, extended to that village on the 21st, and twenty-two houses and the railway station were consumed. Many families lost every thing. During a recent festival four bombs were thrown in front of the Vatican at Rome. One entered the Papal barracks. A mammoth salt company composed of all the large salt manufacturers in the United States was reported forming.

It will be known as the National Salt Union and will be headquarters for the salt supply of the whole country. The iron manufacturers of America propose to hold a meeting soon and arrange for an association to combat the workmen incase unjust demands are made. The smoke from the bush fires north ol Quebec has almost stopped navigation on the St. Lawrence. The weekly Nationalist papers throughout Ireland publish the usual reports of the proceedings of various local branches oi the league, despite the fact that under the terms of the new Crimes act the editors are liable to imprisonment for publishing reports which violent denunciations of the Government.

N. Y. Miss May Monroe, is a daughter money into fixed forms must still have oi 7ao leet, An unfortunate veteran by the name of Leland G. Townsend, was helped off the Union Pacific train at Topeka the other afternoon. He was paralyzed, deaf and helpless.

His home is at Denver. He was taken in liana by some kind passengers and assisted into the depot. They left him in charge of a stranger while they went to dinner, and the scoundrel robbed him of his ticket and his pocket-book, containing $S5. The local G. A.

R. members made up a purse and fcrwarded him on his way. Thomas Larkin, twenty years old, recently attempted to board a Missouri Pacific freight tram at Leavenworth, made a misstep, fell under the cars and was killed. In the late habeas corpus case of James fcrrace, an alleged liquor dealer, against Marshal Roberts, before the district court of Leavenworth, Judge Crozier discharged the plaintiff as to keeping a place whera liquors were so'd. Judge Crozier rendered a verbal opinion declaring the power of the Governor over the police courts of cities and his control through the police commissioners as unconstitutional.

Grace's attorney will therefore institute proceedings to oust the police judge, the polica commissioners, city marshal and the polica force. The other even ing Chief of Police Harris, of Wichita, received a telegram to arrest a seventeen-year-old boy, named Charley Brown, for whom a reward was offered. He was charged with breaking into a store some influence. of the late Prof. Lewis B.

Monroe, Xhe -business failures during the last Dean of the Boston University School been burned out, but the fact was discovered by a foreman. He went one way and flagged the passenger train while bis wife stopped one the other way. Policemen found a gas pipe bomb at the Cottage Grove Avenue car barn, Chicago, the other morning. It was ten inches in length and two inches in diameter. P.

R. Scott, sou of ex-Governor Scott, of Arkansas, reported to the Chicago police recently that he robbed of $4,500 in notes and $500 in money. Rev. Alfred Beddington, a Baptist minister, was shot and mortally wounded by a man named Glassmore on the line between the Chickasaw and Choctaw Nations recently. The murder was prompted by jealousy.

The Typographical Union of Detroit, has made a demand for nine hours a day, without any reduction of wages. The Employing Printers' Association, composed of the ten largest job printing houses in the city, has issued a circular refusing to comply. The annual convention of the National Association of ex-Prisoners of War began in Chicago on the 22d. A cold wave struck Abercrombie, on the 22d, the thermometer being only two above zero. seven days number for the United States 156 and for Canada 27, a total of 183, as com of Oratory.

Miss Monroe has been interested in her father's work from chill- pared with 1S7 last week and 187 for the Albany Railroad Company and the Ver- mont State Grange complained of the Central Vermont Company for charging a less rate in similar service for a long than for a short haul over the Central's lines between Boston and Detroit, Milwaukee and Chicago. The Commission declared the rates were illegal. The report of the New Hampshire Senate Investigating Committee on the alleged attempt to bribe C. D. Sawyer by Kirk Pierce was that such attempt had been made.

The report proceeds at length to set forth the temptations which surround legislators and the debasing wiles employed by professional lobbyists. Two men fell asleep on the railroad platform at Scotthaven, the other night, and were instantly killed by a train. Harry Miles and Eddy Medium trotted a mile in 2:24 at the New Jersey State fair the other day, breaking the record on a half-mile track. At the Chenango County (N. Democratic Convention, both President Cleve corresponding week of 1888.

brad-street's revikw. hood, especially iu that part of oratory which relates to gesture and its under ing great intellectual movements; but it would not seem to be a good argument for excluding her from administrative duties, which are fields of usefulness, for which she has shown a New York, Sept. 24. Bradstreet says lhe decline in the stocks of wheat lying principles, as discovered by For the last few years she hfis afloat and ashore, unfavorable weather re ports in the Northwest and stronger cables served to stimulate prices of wheat some, special aptitude wherever she has been tried; j-et, thess ire the only domains from which she is excluded lhe total exports of wheat and of flour as wheat, from July 1 to September 22 inclu sive, (specially wired to Bradstreet's during to-day by the inconsistency of a legis At lllabota, Italy, recently a mob shot a postman under the impression that he spread the cholera epidemic through th letters which he distributed. lation framed wholly by the other sex.

the current week) will approximate close to 43,500,000 bushels of wheat, or about 38 per cent, of the probable available export surplus to July 1, 1888, in about one-fifth of William D. Foulke, in Woman's Jour nal. Her Husband Made a Mistake. the cereal year. For six days ended with yes and then stealing a horse at Bartlesville, in the Indian Territory, from a man named Brooks, who would arrive and identify him.

THE LATEST. The French Cabinet Council has decided not to order the expulsion of the Orleanist Princes unless they attempt to circulate the manifesto of the Comte de Paris. A lad. soon arrived on a construction train An elderly married woman in By field, who possesses property in her and was pointed out as tho party wanted. When accosted by the officer he ran and own right, says the Newburyport It is reported that over 100 lives have been lost in Egypt by the floods in the Nile was fired on and fatally wounded.

His companions declared that he was not the Herald, had frequently expressed basin. THE SOUTH. The Federal Court at Baltimore, has restrained William C. Trumbull from using or furnishing for use any Bell telephones. The suit is brought at the instance of the Bell Telephone Company, and appears to be particularly directed against Mr.

Trumbull in order to shut off the Chinese telephone scheme, with which Count Mitkie-wicz has recently been prominently connected. George W. Titlow, grain dealer of Baltimore, has suspended. He was long on wheat 240,000 bushels, and asked that his contracts be closed out. party wanted, and in his dying declarations desire to make a gift to the church Captain John Freer, of the schooner Marsh, who assisted Boodler McGarlgle to with which she is connected.

Accord the lad corroborated their statement, and requested that his body be sent to his parents at Meridian, Tex. escapo to Canada, has been arrested in Chi ingly, when the society determined on been studying with Mr. Steole Mackayc, of New York, a favorite pupil of Delsarte, who has invented a series of "harmoniae gym nasties "for freeing the body from its restrictions and imparting grace to all its movements. Certain men in times past, as well as in Georgia at present, have clamored to be protected from the ambition of the black man. We have a vtrry poor opinion of such chaps, for they admit their inferiority when they ask tor special legislation to bar out 1 ha blacks; but, much as we despise this cowardly exhibition of intolerance, we despise the man more who -will by -word, actor deed prevent woman from entering the lists to compete with him in her endeavor to earn an honest livelihood.

Woman should have an equal chance with man, and, so far as we are concerned, we are not in tho least afraid to arm her with the ballot. Meadville Republican. Mrs. Hancock says that once, when the General felt called upon to entertain half a dozen Sioux chieftains, she helped him in his task by playing the piano for them. The music evidently had power to please if not to "soothe the savage" for immediately negotiations commenced, through an cago.

repairing ana remodeling the meet about nine o'cioca the other morning Engineer Freeman, of D. 8. Erviu's stone quarry at Yellow Springs, was ing-house, the minister, as chairman of the soliciting committee, called on blown into the air fifty feet and killed by boiler explosion the other dayr terday, the total exports of wheat and flour, both coasts, declined about 1,400,000 bushels (flour as wheat), nearly 36 per cent, as compared with the preceding week. Special returns of the gross earnings of 106 railroads for eight months of 1887, show a gain of 14 per cent, over a like period in 1886; 19 per cent, over 18S5; and 16 per cent, over 1884. There is no change in wool, but the tone is better, and there has been some pressure to sell by holders who have been large borrowers.

Late favorable features shown by the New England cotton goods trade continue, but at New York and Philadelphia the stringency of money has checked distribution some. There is a lull as well in the movement at St. Louis. There are no pronounced changes in pig iron East or West which can not be regarded as favorable, except at St Louis, where the demand, which was active, is slack. At Pittsburgh bnr iron mills are very busy and the outlook is called bright.

Coffee has fluctuated and closed one-quarter cent higher than last week. Raw sugar is from four to five cents higher by the barrel on speculation. ner lor a contriDution ana was pre land and Governor Hill were strongly indorsed. Capbon Wolverton's flour mill, Albany, N. was destroyed by fire on the 21st with 100,000 bushels of grain, causing 1150,000 loss.

Eight firemen had narrow escapes. Rev. E. A. Copeland appeared at the United Labor Club meeting at Rochester, recently and avowed himself for the George movement.

He had been one of the leading Prohibition workers, and last year was the candidate -of that party for Congress. Governor Hill addressed ten thousand persons at the fair at Newburg, N. on the 22d. He denied that he was making any attack upon Henry George. He believed that Mr.

George was sincere, and he highly respected him, though he could not indorse his idea of putting all taxes on land values. Several collieries about Wilkesbarre, have signified their willingness to concede to the demands of the miners. Seven hundred bales of cotton on a lighter were destroyed by fire in New York harbor the other day. Loss, $35,000. The New York Produce Exchange ha3 voted to hold daily sessions hereafter from 10:30 to three o'clock.

The Government offer to purchase four and four-and-a-half bonds dissipated the The Utah Commission had a consultation sented with a check for five hundred dollars. The clergyman went home with the President recently regarding the worKmgs of the Edmunds law. highly elated, but was taken aback Chinese residents of San Francisco had the next day when the lady's husband The agent of the Pittsburgh coal combination at New Orleans reports the sinking of twenty-four boats at Willow Grove, valued at $3,000 each. Most of the coal will probably be recovered. Ten miles west of Fort Worth, on the 20th, the Texas St.

Louis express was robbed by masked men, supposed to be members of the old gang of Texas train robbers. The loss was put at between and $30,000, and would have been much a remarkable parade on the 23d in honor of the great idol known-as Tan Wong, recent and son called tc protest against her ly Drought from China. One of the features of the, parade, besides Tan Wong, was a munificence. They declared that she had not been in her right mind for a longtime, and didn't know what she huge artificial dragon 175 feet long. Uravenhurst, was almost totally was doing when she yielded to the un destroyed by hre on the 23d and 23d.

The Heury Frey, an eld citizen of Lawrence, was found lying in a half conscious condition in a storeroom over his place of 'business, with his head in a pool of blood and an ugly bullet wound in his forehead. his side lay a revolver. He was taken to his house and an examination made. This showed that, the bullet upon entering just above the left eye took a downward course and kdged in the lower left lobe of the brain, paralyzing one entire side of tho body. He had been in a despondent mood for some weeks.

It was thought he would die. F. S. Thorne, of Kearney County, has filed a suit in the District Court at Topeka against Governor Martin to enjoin him from declaring Lakin the county seat of Kearney County. A proclamation issued by Governor Moonlight, of Wyoming Territory, has been received at the Executive Department revoking the quarantine against Kan- sas cattle.

Topeka is to have a cotton mill. After quietly collecting samples of the beverage being sold as cider the police of Topeka recently made a descent upon a number of vendors and arrested them. loss reached $500,000. larger 11 me messenger naa not secreted a large amount while the door was being aue innuence Drought to bear upon her. Though the minister knew that forced open.

Commissioner Miller, of the internal revenue, says it is his intention to have the 1 he Louisville (Ky.) Commercial Club she was as sane as her husband, to say beer of all the leading breweries in the the least, he sent back the money. gave a banquet and reception to the commercial travelers of that city recently. interpreter to purchase the "big country analyzed by competent chemists, and gives as his reason therefor the many The husband recently sold a tract of Jkx-Governor Knott made the principal captain's squaw," along with the table." Beads, robes and land. The deed was dulv drawn, speech. complaints made in the press and to himself against the quality of the beers in the Veteran Firemen.

Kansas City, Sept. 24. The veterrn firemen of New York arrived in Kansas City from Denver last night in charge of the committee which had gone to Topeka to meet them. At the Union Depot they were received by the Kansas City fire department and paraded through the city. blankets were first offered for the signed and sealed by the grantor, who passed it to his wife to sign for the re- The chemical works and warehouses and three stores at Elgin, were destroyed fears of a stringent money market that had been prevailing in New York.

E. S. Wheeler, the insolvent iron dealer of New who failed recently for $2,000,000, has been arrested, charged with fraud. exchange. When the "big captain" re linquisment of dower, but to his aston jected these, supposing the induce Dy fire the other night.

Loss, $40,000. General William Preston died at Lexington, on the 21st. He had been ill jshment she remarked: "No, I am not ments were not sufficient, they added ponies to an increased number of "Do Saratoc chips come from Sarato in my right mind, you know, and my act would be The old gentle ga?" inquired a reporter of a grocer. "Not much," said the grocer. ''They are made market.

A recent statement showed that the tax on whisky decreased from $69,092,266 in 1S85-6 to $65,827,821 in 1886-7, while the tax on beer increased from $19,676,731 in 1885-6 to $21,922,187 in 18S6-7. The steamship Alesia, which arrived off New York on the 22d from Marseilles and Naples with six hundred passengers, had Asiatic cholera aboard. Eight of her passengers died on the passage and on her arrival at quarantine, the health officer found robes and trinkets of all kinds. Their indignation and dissatisfaction were man has the land still on his hands Whisky and beer were found in various forms and the parties were held to answer instead of the money in his pocket. apparent, and quickly made evident the charge of violating the Prohibitory law.

At Leavenworth the other day Judge by their leaving the house in Indian file, without a glance here or there, seeming deaf to the interpreter's ap A Primary Lesson in Politics. It is not to be supposed that the ma Brewer rendered decisions in fifteen cases, brought by the United States to set aside four cases aboard. He sent the Alesia and her passengers to the west bank in the peals to return. jority of men are intentionally unjust the patents to fifteen tracts of land in Harper County, on the ground that fraud was used in obtaining the patents. After re ower bay.

Fire broke out in a bakery in Sanford. Heels on the shoes first originated the other day and destroyed almost viewing the cases and the ruling of the Supreme Court at length he dismissed the bills in each. with the Persians. A person of low stature was regardedras an oljeet of contempt, and therefore the heel was the entire business portion of the town. The loss was estimated at $300,000, with little insurance.

A post-office has been established at Burdick, in Morris County, with Calvin L. The schooner Orkney Lass was thought Reed as postmaster. the happy thought of some one of the unfortunates, thus providing by art that wrhich nature denied. to have been lost in Lake Michigan. Some few days ago the captain refused assist THE WEST.

Another accident occurred at the South Jackson mine near Neguanee, the other night, resulting in the death of one miner, Thomas Williams, and the serious Injury of his uncle, Thomas Williams. The cause was the breaking of timbers supporting the roof of the chamber ia which the men were working. The defalcation of $4,800 by Charles Ferry, clerk of the deputy internal revenue collector, at Evansville, has been paid by the sureties. No person was implicated except the clerk, who left for parts unknown. Captain J.

B. Mullett, an officer in the United States revenue marine service, committed suicide in San Francisco recently, shooting himself in the head. Moroseness, due to ill health, is supposed to be the cause of the deed. Three serious railroad accidents occurred on the 19th. At Eagle Point, near Dubuque, Iowa, on the Chicago Milwaukee, two passenger trains met on a curve, killing five of the train men.

At Honey Pot, near Wilkesbarre, two freights Collided, causing giant powder to explode ind creating much havoc Three brake-Sien were fatally injured. Near Forest, tlL, on the Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne Chicago, a section of a freight train broke pausing a collision and exploding dynamite. A fireman was killed and two or 8hree other persons injured. since July. He was to be buried at Louisville.

At Duvall's Bluff, recently, the station agent of the Little Rock Memphis railroad became involved in a quarrel with a wealthy planter named Richardson and was shot to death by him. Great excitement prevailed. The jury at Baton Rouge, in the case of ex-Secretary of State W. A. Strong has returned a verdict of guilty, as charged.

Strong was indicted for the embezzlement of about $3,000 of the State's money in connection with the sale of election ticket paper. Frederick W. Hendricks, a brakeman on the South Carolina road, fell headlong from the top of a car, near Charleston recently, and his head struck the corner of a tie, from the effects of which he died. The fruit growers of Florida are talking of forming a shippers' union to regulate the sale of fruit in- the North and West and do away with commission men. Fire in Baltimore recently destroyed Dobler, Mudge paper warehouse, causing $60,000 loss.

The Georgia Senate passed the Glenn substitute bill by 23 to 13. A tornado visited the country adjacent to Brownsville, Tex, on the 22d. The damage was estimated at $1,000,000. At Brownsville seventy houses were blown down; at Matamoras, about 200 houses were destroyed. M.

Tnojirsos, of North Topeka, an ex ance to reach port and the vessel was not in this city, and many are shipped to Saratoga. But if you want to know all about them just go up to the bakery and see how they are made." At the bakery it was learned that the concern has a monopoly of the business in this city, and that there are only three makers of Saratogachips in the country. Chips are an American institution, and are not known abroad save for some small lots that have been exported. The process of manufacturing is in part a secret. Ths potatoes are pealed and sliced by machinery.

They are washed and then dried between muslin cloth3. If they were now fried the amount of starch that they contain would make them brown, and the secret of the business is to remove all of the starch, so that the chips will be perfectly white. When this is done they are put into the hot grease, and come out curled aud crisp and with tho del'cious flavor that has made them famous the world over. Said the manager: "We use soventy-five barrels of potatoes a week, keep seven bakers at work, and have three wagons out delivering. Hotels take them by the barrel, restaurants take them in twenty-five pound boxes, and for grocers to serve to private families we put them up in one-pound cartons.

The dining-cars on nearly all the railroads use them, and we have sent some to England. A few minutes in a hot oven makes them as crisp as- if just fried." T. Mail. pressman, recently took several colored men out to a dance at Grantville, and became involved in a dispute on the way Ada "Why, one of your cheeks is terward seen. Business failures during the seven davs back, when one of the colored men drew a revolver and shot Thompson in the left ended September 22 numbered for the Unified States, 156: Canada, 27: total, 183: com to women.

They custom and the orcejof tradition, and leave women at every disadvantage politically, without much thought about it. They need an object-lesson. What more opportune occasion for this than the Centennial observance" of the adoption of the Constitution, in Philadelphia, on the 17th instant Let Mrs. Julia Ward Howe, Mary A. Livermore, Lucretia Mott's daughters, and Mary Grew appear somewhere in the great audience, eeated with Chinese men and unpardoned criminals from the State prison.

Let a banner over them say: "Political equals." Then, in the procession, let the army of educated women graduates of our schools and colleges follow behind the still larger army of ignorant, unwashed men who are all voters, and let these red as fire and the other pale as a ghost." Ella "Yes, Harry was on one side and I was afraid mamma would see us on the other." Town side, causing a dangerous wound. The negro escaped. pared with 187 the previous week and 187 the corresponding week last year. Miss Ella Talbott. daughter of City At vtenebal j.

b. Rickbtts, commander of Topics. torney Tulbott. of Parsons, and a promin Ricketts' Battery, which made such a fight ent young society lady of that city, com- ing reputation during the war, especially A man named Brigham, livin at Gettysbnrg, died at New York on the nutiea suicide the other day by taking morphine. No cause could be assigned for Navarro, stands in a doorway, and his two feet, placed heel and toe, till it the act.

Not more ha.n fiicrht mrvnths as-o a 22d, aged seventy years. He was born in New York, June 2L 1817. He commanded the Sixth Army Corps and was wounded brother of the young' ladv also committed from sill to sill. Te r. News.

live times. His death was caused bv a. suicide by taking morphine. Emporia has of late been seriously trou A French wound received at the battle of Winchester, i rf bled with cattle thieves. Arabian horses in D.u;o: I.

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À propos de la collection The Monument Courier

Pages disponibles:
486
Années disponibles:
1886-1888