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Elkhart Weekly Review

   Elkhart Weekly Review (Newspaper) - April 10, 1884, Elkhart, Indiana                                10, 1884,  cards not exceeding ten oo per following local on FI per week by inside Rooms over Post Office proposition to V in in etc will not be IN A D. and aching treated Artificial t. eth different styles of Gold filling a In Thrilling Adventure in the Wilds of the Sierra on the of a i tain 8pnr.A. Feat to Tremble in the at Law Notary in At of Peace mi insurance Clifton - - M. WATER Chronic with on the Sena or rine Urine first in the Rooms had Cottage ready far tlie TINTED Ground same as White 75 per cent Oil than White covering perfectly with two Oil and Oil and Fulion made a thorough renovation in our storeroom and stock of careful study aud comparison of our goods and prices we have decided not to add lottery scheme or policy shop to our but to carry on the drug business simply as We hold aud contend that the business in a proper aud honest by as much one of the learned professions as that of lawyer or claim to be Druggists and and therefore bend all our energies to the earnest study of aud the selection of pure and wholesome and the proper and compounding offer no prizes or as our prices will not warrant us in doing so. The only we hold out to our friends public are courteous and gentlemanly thorough knowledge of our and the fact that we handle none but the purest drugs tlie market Our are and with the knowledge that they have they have paid We will be found at our place of business at all not arranging dried or polishing but ready to attend to the wants aud desires of either young or rich or with the same We have opened the so da water season with a new Counter Draft Our waters are charged In a improved generator from the purest come in contact only with block 80 we can guarantee them to be free from copery or other noxious Our are made from the box white sugar under our own and flavored with natural fruit As a healthy summer drink we commend for which we are tlie fact that purest is the and that the nest is the and when in want of anything n the line of Chemicals or Toilet call at Star and Crescent No. 90 Main Lecture to Young the nervous aud impediments to marriage world-renowned In this admirable clearly proves from his own that the awful of abuse may be removed without dangerous surgical or pointing out a mode of cure at once certain by which every no what his condition may cure himself privately and prove a boon to and in a plain to any of or two postage N. oil a clear autumn of weU in tba city of San could scarcely crowd come together from aU quarters of city to witness the ascent of a In that ascent our artist aud the faithful reporter were directly the flight into ether captain experienced pt the undertaking proposed a being lass an attempt to cross in mid-air the rango of the and land far ou the other side of that tremendous palisade in Bait Laie City is hardly necessary to state Lhat this aeronautic feat had never been the truthful witer to it had been by the same venturesome sitting in shame on the roof of the where they had collapsed at tho of rallied at the brick chimney which had endured jeers of the throng below w ith ai d vowed to repeat the attempt withina A charity picnic an excellent The balloon bad been the temper of the trio aud once again the immenso swollen bag toppled in pulling upward with all of its cubic feet of IN THE party were fairly We took our places amid tho of the was looked to e you out the let go tho Tho cables were with the sweep of our aerostat shot up into The the buildings the the tallest outlying like enchantment further Our undertaking well has been said of the impressions the air voyager derives during the first hour of his ascent may bo The thrill of intense excitement as all connection earth seems the upturned faces and black coats in the concourse of spectators becoming black and white the of all creation as one looks down upon combino to produce a that can Tile fascination of floating at so an altitude as a balloon can soon attain is Few are troubled by Confused sounds rise to the oito scarcely distinguishable from tho A kind of intoxication steals over the To live and move thus seams a Small wonder that the man who once will again and each time more infatuated in ing evening was perfectly serene and A gentle breeze wafted us The earth became a pale green an I gray map as we reached the level of 3,000 feet above the bay of San wlrich out glimmering toward the We could discern the the Golden the On the east vase Mount and the Coast Range rippled Sacramento with a golden dust of cloud hanging over it. The prospect invigorated and soda water was appropriately absorbed by all Stronger beverages being came We had been gradually reaching tlie speed of ninety miles an Not that it was to the fact without scientific Even if a be these is still the endless sensation of for the and keep exact to the pieces of tissue paper which were flung out lavishly from time to and to tho streamers fluttering from our wo could ascertain the direction of the Even a few handfuls of sand thrown out from the ballast bags hanging over the rail caused us to rise for the aud most delicate scales in the chemist's labora tory cannot register the fractions of an ounce as does The sun went Dusk must descend and put up for the said our With the vault above turning to a deep we sank and along the country from which the Coast Bange FIRST were just in time to attract the attention of of farm hands returning from work through the With much shout ing back anil forth our dragging ropes were caught aud made it to from a to a suggested our artist in a series of whoops worthy of a After a stiff in which some of our kind assistere pretty severely pulled we found on teira and on tho way to a neighboring There we made light of a famous washed gayly with superb California Our first was and wa slept the sleep which it would be a great pity for only the just to was the common exclamation when our vigilant captain administered to each one of In an hour breakfast was and we steps the The anchors were loosed after hearty handshakes with our hospitable once more the delightful sensation of boundless freedom and rising early in the morning with a queried one of the as the captain announced us to be 10,000 who will make a joke of that character under such matutinal deserves to be thrown this responded the But our conditions were noD long favorable to The cold grew Our voices seemed mysteriously and it was necessary to shout instead of chat Ears and the rush of blood to the head foreshadowed the sudden that Our prudent approved of husbanding the ascensional powers of his Wo dropped to a warmer and normal where life was livable at lower presura THE SIERRA this time our was weU The morning mists evaporated and belo w The west wind spun us toward the gigantic of the Siena which finally mounted the eastern sky in full We greeted them with ' old we will bo on the other side of you soon cried one of the responded the smilingly are by no means there penciled in green and the forest slopes extended to our over ejaculated ym out the track of the u train up that artist out railroad and and the In a little time passed over and the and roar of wheels and sight of a flurry saluting handkerchiefs from the - car But our ship not fell far wind and all i else we rose With a cheer we saw of the wilderness V lying 3,000. raba we be on the and asleep ' uttered - Streaks above the great The to Its speed and ours captain's grew Ai moisture like to freeze over We began to sink Clearly we in train for experiences of a most GRIM out Rising once darted into a dense and drifted with lightning still Water froze upon pur There was only one thing now ' with all the our It was in We shot the speed of a feet in each Presently the whizzing of the gale in the tree tops of the mountain summits became terribly To land under conditions was we possessed was tossed spare our to no moment or two with a series of crashes and bounds and leaps that made us hold on like grim death our basket was dragged the pine could fitly describe the frightful that AVith all visions dissipated of success in pur and possibly reaching Salt Lake City or anywhere else we with clinched hold and set teeth in the wicker as we were borne depression in the were free from and swept somewhat I well that during one of these our finding the rope of tho escape valve had become entangled with masterly address clambered the network of the bounding clinging tightly to what slender he a it. It was a feat to tremble at in In less than ten minutes after it had been accomplished we struck the and were hurled more than ever among their creaking until with one tremendous shock our basket struck the of a mighty forest giant and To pull the ripping rope was the work of a With a crack a whole seam of the balloon The fell about us in our wretched nearly choking Our late tyrant collapsed aud hung suspended from its colossal the pine We were THE Upon the remaining adventures of that luckless day neither reporter nor artist is disposed to Our valiant being inured to such untimely ends to ail the pomp and circumstance of glorious was subsequently seen to smile over the With vast difficulty we managed to glide own the of the whose which we were from the We had on the summit of a spur of the By compass we took our and set out for Around us the wilderness pure and There was no of road or and we were forced to fight our way through the until and utterly our little party themselves down under the thicket's and slept till the pallid A second day of such fruitless wandering meant something so nearly approaching to death that we hardly cared to contemplate it. as we noon of the second day the strength of one of the party had given out The other two were manfully to cwry him between when a roaring brook was and feebly followed with reviving It scarcely a quai of an hour before the expected flume was disco a t the foot of a steep A solitary Chinaman stood beside it plying a AVe made our way At our haggard appearance and scarcely understood tongue made the suspicious Celestial little disposed to listen to us or have aught to do with speedily becoming convinced that we had no designs upon his he lent a very wondering nd compassionate ear to the narrative which our captain and presently summoned all his pigtailed fellowship to hearken and aid We in very kindly cared for by our friends during the two days which we found we must pass in that lonely camp before mules and wagons and men could be summoned from Nevada fifty miles they arrived the balloon was looked ripped forwarded to The overland train was finally and oui trio speeded to San in but with thankful in Baltimore Well do I recall a visit made early in the morning to the city year and niy surprise to see such flocks oi these ungainly bopping picking up the Tho noticing my communicated to stories of their and what I then saw was really in The birds were collected on the peaked roof of the n aud not seem to be in any comedown to the street to gather of meat which the had asked him why they did they hasn't come the Them don't dare till he and presently he I looked up the marveling much of was bada market inspector do with a lot of My was Not don't you see All I saw the was a few the I on the and the color of his head was It was I did see this fellow hop then to the and Americans Are Grossly lank and ms hair are very his clothes very outre aud perhaps he to attend to his and his in it may bel the - If a she covered witli or lor she has o' I am always than annoyed when in books in plays I see such caricatures sedan and they are their at ithe palace the golden bags on two covered yellow when the members of the deliver them to the proper who and carry them with great the foot of the The bags are sent in a similar manner it is the princes of the royal after deny that this is not only the the and other great of the but it is the European When I am in America I meet few of this of All my friends are ladies and gentlemen in y. way as well as in every real sense of these I have and mingled with more social refinement on i the face of this I know somewhat i of life in and of the continental i I have ever seen and state present themselves in turn and kneel with reverence to receive their which are regarded as gifts from the The of distribution at court being the boolis for the use of the people are sent by the tribunal into province of the where the forms observed at tile imperial are the court of the head after which the people are allowed to purchase their and as this is a Laird Collier in Chicago Ti I went the to see Mr. new with tbe misleading and unfortunate title of and and here again I encountered this same albat good-hearted American The play is as nearly perfect as 1 have seen on the for a It is clean and and the dialogue holds attention and interest first to it as. all the are at the under the management Mr. apd Mrs. it not delicious for Mr. Bancroft his clever name so conspicuously with Mrs. Stirling as Countess the dear old J wanted to her every minute on the lady of at least the ^t left no. f fpr function of J Mr. ' equaL to J so and so off on the i and Bancroft land Bancroft this wholly American as a lAU put is of this ill-bred If a in and of which few omit to avail | is a type of social life in America which I; and adds yearly thousands hold as inestimably higher than that of any of to the It is as as i well-bred added to rnor more move more loyal in less at the of Mrs. story is told of tlian life I S baas in actual and fancy of although I am more than annoyed at these portraitures of my I know the caricaturist th It be denied that newspapers deal and sometimes with affairs and life as the of no other This leads to exaggeration and the making of occurrences and out of been in the habit London or even the leading provincial one is instantly struck at tUe enormous enterprise and of American but perhaps even more so the and in instances trivial way In which all affairs of society and individuals discussed and canvassed by the less important metropolitan papere arid by almost all country Thus the less journals America those of least influence at portray and really American social life that when they find their waj abroad these caricatures are accepted as the great battle was in when a large under Gen. came on the He reported to Gen. All day the tide of battle had first in favor of the and then of the Gen. Thomas pointed to a certain and want your mon to hold It they can do They and there they liko animated Time and again the came at them but could not break tiie At length Gen. Gary gave tho and at And with a shout the men charged down on flying Dying men heard tho of victory and waved their feeble lu the evening the generals were each there was a call for who saved At last he was found sitting dejected in his and to the who came to summon him to receive tbe his he am shot through the you must I thought you escaped a a word Gen. Gary drew aside the of and tUere lay bis who had been pierced through the bullet while ma Icing that Quit in Herald ane Sage and those bugs think they fire on said a old gentleman from Pa. I'll wager none ever did cuter thing than our Scott did about five years of heard of William L. big railroad and lie had never been Wall street deals up to that had just attended strictly to business and let others do tbe One day a friend gave him a believed went in aud quit Up in Erie point out to the Scott building in tell 'em the money built it in a Soott made his deal in a single and then saying that he knew when he liad and that he was bound to be one man to quit abend of AVall So he put his into that block and has never gambled Sensible don't you THE Morris in 34. A dreamy a Two cups of coffee whose rich perfume Steals over our souses while fancy flies To Indian isles and eastern A heavy a full Odors of rose and violet blent With faint patchouli and new mown A memory of meadows a bearskin lie at ease And listen to wondrous harmonies As they softly with charm Through the velvet sweeping fold The passion is rich and strange It holds me I'm swayed at will By master's subtle grace and eyes are raised with movement low To on a. slumberous divan T see you so near the place That your soft breath fans my eager The firelight gleams on your silken kisses the brow so passing ' While I look on with jealous glance As your the try in vain to study your To read the thoughts which lie behind Those deep gray to fathom the And find the power holds control Of my my Which binds me a slave With claim And makes me follow you life the all which my life doth the no sign will e'er the lips But when they q and and My own respond with why should hold our lives I cannot my hungry Better defy the And shape a new for ybu its My creep still slave at ' ' bands touch those I A a haunting Which and fades The waltz }s But safe on my your of Francisco All are in are distributed in the following certain appointed for the which takes place in the mandarins early in the to the ' and the of the state proceed to hall to which are carried tho imperial Those ave intended for tho - are bound in yellow satin and of cloth of They placed on a gilded bome about - forty Next witli containing the books for are bound in he ran from to just as the train approached a station half way between the two noticed a crowd standing near tho they seemed very train reached the station Groome saw a colored man tightly held by two white while the danced around jumped off as soon as the train The nervous looking white men told him that they were peace that the negro was a and that the crowd were Groome ordered the officers and their prisoner on the told the that he was the nor of Maryland and that they would stop him at and on the forced the negro through the cars up to the engina Putting the now half dead with into the ha ordered the engineer to cut the engine ran back This the leaving the in the At Annapolis the 1 the prisoner to the sheriff and thou to I am sorry to say that three nights after that the lynchers came into took tho negro out of jail and hanged All the Groome is a plucky Home of lattle of are sui rounding the home of Little in which is soon to ba is pome doubt as to tho of this Curiosity not affect the and especially tbe went there to a neighboring shop keeper off their hats when they got through the and asked questions about and the Grandfather as if thoy had actual The ladies were tbe I have known them to get down oa their knees and out crying about Little Miss Mary Anderson might have been seen there Miore than with her heart full of tenderness for the little so delighted was the fair American with the dwelling and its overhanging story that the doors of the Lyceum were oponed to tho fortunate occupant w ho chose to of a Steamship suid Fearful of Claims a of 120 the of Old Ocean Sins t o the iu the N. S. April startling re port the White Cross line steamer Daniel had in the gale off Sambro proves to be Tugs were dispatched to and reach the but they l reporting that they could not get in the neighborhood of the owing to tho extremely rough sea and boisterous Another attempt will be made if the weather Agents of the line report the passenger list of the about 130, but they pf except some fifteen who were to bo landed at Halifax for Montreal and points in the of These were natives of Holland and Prussia The Daniel Steinmann an iron 1,785 built at Antwerp in 1875, owned by of that schooner rigged with an engine of 183 horse and bulk hca N. April passengers from the steamer Daniel Steinmann were with the captain and five of the Their names have not yet been are all on light the only which is by in The weather is thick and and ic is if any further particulars can .be Reporters have left for by The roads are aud even when there their chances of securing any N. pe rson arrived in this city from the vicinity of Sambro and reported that the of the steamer Daniel who was saved from the wreck was Capt. which was entering the being bound from struck on the southern of the Sambro only 1 of yards from the during a dense great hole was knocked in her bottom and she filled and sank at her topmasts visible above the latest information from the captain of the wrecked steamer Daniel Steinmann is to the effect that out of the crew of and the captain and ninety but nine were the of three now on Sambro mile the It is impossible that the will reach the mainland till the mid die of the owing to the exceptionally heavy sea that rages in the vicinity of the Nothing definite can therefore be regarding the of the government steamer Newfield left the pity for the scene of the The fog so that no attempt was to reach tbe fatal The captain deems it unsafe to latinch a on account of sea and imprudent .to go nearer than five miles of the wreck because of the of the - The Newfield will make another effort near the place vessel was also attempted to make way to the wrecked but were to being unable Herring ten the sunken will leave ip the ere will to rescue the bodies and whatever portion of the cargo can be of the sea will certainly cause a the vessel before many captain of the being unacquainted with the dangerous coast Sambro was probably unaware of the peril he was in until it was too late to avoid the disaster occurred in the same locality which in 1ST3, proved fatal to the White Star steamer Atlantic and 546 of her passengers and and not many miles from the of the wrecks of the Arctic in 1854," with 562.soulSj and the Hungarian in 1860, with 203.  The Very 5 a. Daniel Steinmann struck about 10 o'clock Thursday night on Mad rock about 200 yards distant from during a terrible and dense Stie immediately backed and the next moment strack on Gardner immense hole was in her She speedily filled and within a few minutes went At high water the only thing visible is the top as at present is was but how many it at first contained is C About the men at Sambro island boat making for the and guiding it around with torches to Calm the se ven in They were five of the crew and two After daylight broke people could be made out clinging to the rigging of the and a boat putting out from the thep were rescued from their perilous tobe Capt. and a bov Alinn t. 0  or touched at Sambro island and received the above meager facts and then to the 1 with the following message to Chipman agents of. the White Cross in I Tue Belgian steamer Daniel Capt. wrecked on April 3, about 10 p. the rocks off Ninety and of the crow are Five of the three pas and the captain were After Pilot the island thesea became so rough that for to again lyach it from the which la three miles Efforts were made all day from Camperdown station to information tho Morse signal but the fog was so dense that one station was not visible to those at the The names of are not yet but there are no women among of The were to have been lauded Hender consisting of aged 3-2, his wife aoj and their aged 17, aged 9, aged 8, aged 4, and Aria aged 1.  Paulus consisting of tho aged 35, wife aged 33, and their aged 10, aged 8. aged 4.  and Martinas both aged and their families from were also Sebastian aged 3S, of aud George aged 23, The last two were for and the rest for 5.The Daniel which on night off ia the fourth steamer of the White line lost sin ce The Ludwig sailed iu ISSI ou a to aud was never heard She was built by an company and named the but was sold to the White Cross the name being to She bad made but four three of thorn Tbe Henry iye was lost in Tbe by this sailed from New York November 11, 1SS3, for with aud was abandoned at sia December 6 in a sinking lier passengers being taken off by the brig G. D. and landed at Oporto December 2t5, The Daniel from March 13, for and New under command of Captain passed St. Catherine in the English channel the next Her passage from that point to the place where she sunk is considered a remarkably quick one for She was built in 1ST5 by an English company and named the but was sold to her present Steinmann of in 1878, her name was changed to the Daniel of tho New April 5.Soon after the disaster became known in the city crowds of flocked to the office of the agents of the vessel to learn the No one who had friends or relatives on board among the but many who were interested in the vessel and were acquainted with her captain and were and various opinions were expressed as to how accident where the steamer was is southeast of the to the harbor of A known as is placed in the center of lihe and about one mile further north is another light ou the marking the Ou a dark in weather the Sambro light is apt. to be mistaken for the light at especially approached it is ha ve been the direction by the ill-fated The island is surrounded for fully 500 feet by almost It is hardly that many lives have been as the reefs would prove a great to the New Aprii 5.Alfred general passenger of the White Cross line said think the reports as to the loss of life are When the vessel left Antwerp we received our usual advices agents in that port that there were ninety-three passengers The crew of the Steinmann did not number over all would make the number 123 names those onboard are not known I dot not they had any cabin of. the Schoonhoven has been in the service of the company for two and is a brave and efficient I think the vessel must have been far put of her owing probably to heavy the is the accident to any steamer of this lino wherein a life The White for April 5.The committee of Sfty proposed the following remedies for existing the law exempting the members of military organizations from jury be the number of peremptory allowed the prisoner in a homicide case be reduced and the law that and the accused be on like a law be passed setting a verdict on purely the time j of the of the court and execution of the same be reduced from ninety days to thirty jat Hw Were and n in the 84th year of bis OCEAN of the Loss of the 111-Fated Daniel tba Engulfed tlie Stricken of the Captain and Another the Ship of of P. candle N. April 7.J. A. the agent of the steamer Daniel which went at 10 o'clock returned from the He states that at 5 a. m. ho engaged a pilot boat and went out to the they took with them a getting as near to the island as they launched the after managed to effect a with assistance from at 7 m. He saw Capt. and obtained from him the following of the sad steamer had fine weather on the exception of the last two which were very it being to get any and he thinks bo must have overrun his At 10 p. m. on tho 3d inst. he saw a light which he first took for the fog making it appear to be about five miles off. but it could not have been more than He discovered as he neared the that it was aud that before he had time to reverse his engines he was among the ledges northeast of the The steamer struck aud began Jilling He then tried to run her but she in a few soon as the struck the captain ordered the passengers all oa but they were all swept and by the Two of the passengers and live of tho into a boat and managed to the The ship wont down stern The was at his post on tbe bridge when she threw off boots and coat and took to the forward but she sank faster than he could so he was obliged to let himself aud after considerable trouble caught the yard yard and clung with one of the who also managed to keep himself afloat until 5 a. when a boat put of from the island and rescued in his shock was the second carrying the and we could no longer get the engines to Next w-e drifted over the rocks an I It was and there was littlo I ordered to lower the boats and get the and passengers iu Having one boat iu the water I saw the ship coming near the breakers I ran to sea if the chain cable was Before getting there a monstrous sea over tho washing every passenger on deck This was followed an awful crash and the ship wouL down as quick as stern every one I got my last observation on morning of the 3d. There was a storm from the eastward when we thick fog and It im possible to save any whose brother is the keeper of the tells the following the time of tbe disaster the keeper and the bombardier were in their I was iu charge of tho fog having released the It was thick all I kept the going to 8:43, when it off so that I could see Devil's island and the and I stopped the Just the engineer relieved at the lookout man sighted the about a mile south of the She was lying and lay there about ten she started and ran about a She theu She started ahead again w ent about 500 yards and again I she struck for 5be to 1 judged her motions by her Tbe whistle was started again to warn tho ship from the Twenty minutes after she began backing she struck She then let go the This did not seem to hold and she drifted the and the went to the lookout at 9 It was foggy and there snd The captain had been left to look at the He would not trust any one We were going I reported a but the captain thought it was a revolving I threw the and found Immediately after we With some men I got a boat We rowed through a struggling mass of survivors of the were Capt. Fritz Eugene Sacco Nickola John Otto Frank Florentine Charles and Petro N. April 7.The three surviving passengers of the Daniel now in the state the vessel but lightly The captain then summoned them all on deck and directed them to prepare to enter the boats if such would be One boat was launched and all made a for although good discipline was maintained among the ships The boat was well aud being attached to the s teamer by a some of those on board about cutting the line when the steamer suddenly dragging the boat and the unfortunate occupants The boat turneil over and every person in it was thrown out and When the stem of the vessel the cries and screams of women and children but lasted only for a few made his way up the Two men caught the rigging of the and endeavored to climb along the stays between the One The John by a t m the where lie was pulled into a safe position the One of the wire uplifts was broken and this gave play to the which worked back forth with the action of the and threatened to tear out the The unfortunates from time to time cried put for but the roar of wind and water drowned their They saw lights burning on shore and signals while conscious that they yond At last daylight Soon after a boat put out from the The captain was by this time so benumbed that his companion had to use force to disengage him from the spar and aid him into the He followed and both were exhausted and taken into the where their needs were promptly bodies have so far been None jf the cargo has drifted ashore or Capt. has arrived liera The body was a little girl 6 years The features were one of the eyes almost torn was comfortably and other apparently a few years are the only females Beside the est iu the is the body of a boy of supposed to a A man picked up had the letter in India ink on his left of those recovered is supposed to be of All recovered are terribly are smashed in and eyes torn About fifty boats are engaged for ithe -i Sambro of the Sambro sea n hich iute or I about either side aro islands and ledge forming which the waves roll in from the Atlantic oven in the calmest and iri storm in spray a hundred feet At times easterly or southeasterly gale these rpU over across the whole the bardi granite to if under the influence of an There are but small spots or cones on the island at which a landing is ever and in rough weather no ope to pt leave the for to do so would be The view from the summit of the m the early The shore of the main was frowning with hugh granite cliffs and the basis was studded with and while the sky was overcast with a mantle of heavy gray clouds and To barely 400 yards from the rocky base of the laid the broken of the steamer that a few hours freighted with 124 souls and a very valuable cargo in safety the shores of All that visible of her was a small portion of her bow the foremast and at a distance of perhaps fifty but turned round so as to front the stood the and April 7.A telegram from Antwerp gives the following list of the passengers and crew of the of Aachen of Dusseldorf I of of of of and of of Matthias and Nicholas of of of New of of of of Bosse of of Sacco of of three persons named of of William Franz and of J. of of of of of John and George of of of a family of six persons named and a family of seven named oE Boeder of of of of of of of of of of of of of of a of eleven persons named troni of two families of seven persons named and and subordinate The names of the sailors - and UP THE Then 9Iarche(t Back A April 7.The et appointed at the here March 26 to their views of the subject of convened in the court house Saturday and in a body went to tbe residence of Orrin A. to present him with a copy of the among which was we demand of the said Carpenter that he leave Logan county without the residence Mr. H. L. as advanced to the door and presented tho paper inclosed in an which Carpenter refused to and it on tbe floor at his and in response to ne ao not recognize your authority to pass or to present to me any such and I refuse to I have lived a law-abiding citizen in this county for the last thirty and know any more about the killing of that girl than you I shall use my own judgment and as to my future I thank you all for your the appearance of the procession upon the streets moving in the direction the residence created much but no demonstration of violence was and no reply was made to Carpenter's refusal to receive the and all is quiet as though the proceeding bad been and how the shocking affair that has so torn up this community will end it is impossible to see or It is reported that suit will be entered against each member of the and it appears from indications that the end is far April 7.The national convention of the Amalgamated association Convened It is understood that adopted favoring a slight from the present but to what extent could not be ascertained from any Delegates were elected to the conference to be held with the but Secretary Martin refused to give the names of those A number manufacturers not to sign last year's They sey they cannot afford to pay such prices at the condition of The convention 1 April 7.Be v. Thomas the boy home from Louis and spent Sunday his at Dorchester lower He reports as a result of his labor's at St. Louis about 1,300 conversions in ten April 7.Osman Digma is reported to be in command of 1,000 who are eager to be led to He is at and has sent 200 Arabs to wasch the ments of the friendly tribes at White robin was at tiy Dr. P. R. Berlin cablegram announces the of Gustav the famous of Harold S. of to his has been admitted to probate the soap and candle aud Alfred W. the died iu S. postmaster of was dead -in Jle yeai s of an exhaustive the British cabinet decided against formally ' establishing a protectorate over police - of arrested the house in the when ten rifles arid fourteen bombshells fires doing vast damage among the and trees in the The flames extend oVer six counties In each ' ' ' An express train on the Grand sPoad leaped the track near were wore t  

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