Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1870), 1873-04-28 page 1 |
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liilil Pitte jgEiiiEl vm yyytv - ; v f . COLUMBUS, MONDAY, APRIL 28, 1873. NO. 99. THE CELEBBATED "CENTURY." Valuable and important Improvements secured by letters patent, possessed by no other stove. - WROUGHT IRON OVKX, TILB FIRE BACK (Everlasting1: IN DE9TRUCT BLE CENTERS; ONLY ONE FLUK; FLAME-ENCIRCLED OVEN;, SPLENDID FRED DOOR; ' '-';,. LOW DOWN RESERVOIR; . LARQE OAST IRON ASH PAN. !f you want to avoid a smoky kitchen and dipgy walls; if you want to avoid replenishing lire bacus every few months; if you want to avoid warped up top plates; if yon want to avoid all the trying; things connected with a poor Cooking Stove, call and see the O E NT TJ 11 Y . For heating water for Bath Rooms, the Water Back of the Century is nnoaqiialled. Call anrtexuniine, at s ASTON TAYLOR & HUFFS, 20 NORTH HIGH ST., ColiintbuM. Ohio. marSl Miller i High, t'enrl mill limpet tit. COSILY & HMIT1I, ri'liLlHIIERH AKP PttOPRIKTORS. JAMES M. COMI.Y, .... Ktlltor. OFFICIAL PAPER OF THE CITY The Cleveland Herald Is sound on the State University vote of the Legislature. It saya, after auch a vote, the best thing the Legislature can do is to adjourn without day and without night, and go home. It saya the vote is a disgrace to the after part of the nineteenth century. Upon which we beg respectfully to remark", nur-ray 1 pr bully for you 1 or words to that effect. ' " . The Akron Beacon seems to have been little surprised but much disgusted by the vote j it expected. nothing better on the first vote, but it has a conviction that the more we agitate the more light we shall have, and the more light we have the more votes there will be in favor of a nobly endowed and thoroughly grounded Ohio Bute University, such as Judge Oliver pleaded for. . .. . Of all horned cattle, deliver us lrom the stupid bull calf people who have opposed this grand projeot because they supposed that If anything beyond planting and breeding were taught In the "Agricultural College" it would no longer be a farmer's college" as though it were con trary to the law of nature for a farmer to know anything except how to breed bull calves and rotate crops properly. PERSONALS. .egialntlve nummary. HOUSE. Apt -il 2(1.- -Bills passed authorizing county commissioners to vacate ditches; creating a board of fire commissioners for Cincinnati and Cleveland; authorizing Dover township, Cuyahoga county, to build a town hall .... Senate joint resolution passed giving the trustees of the Central Ohio Lunatic Asylum further discre- tionary power relating to the details in the construction of said institution House adjourned during a discussion of the bill to amend section fifty-four of the act providing for the location and regu lation of incorporated companies relating to the creation of more than one Gas company in a town or municipal corpora tion without submitting the same to a vote of the people. The bill therefore lies on the table. ' SENATE. Bills passed providing that one justice of the peace may be sued before another justice of the peace for neglecting or refusing to pay over money collected in his official capacity when the amount does not exceed $100; prescribing the duties of certain officers in the county of Hamilton amending the Longview Lunatic Asylum act; authorizing towns and villages to exchange lands donated for school purposes for other lands; authorizing Perry township, Lake county, to take control of the cemeteries in said township; authorizing Lake county to build an infirmary; authorizing cities and villages to take charge of so much of the National road as lies within their corporate limits; authorizing municipal corporations to prevent the overflow of watercourses; authorizing municipal corporations to extend streets and alleys across railway tracks; authorizing Clermont and Brown counties to construct a free turnpike; for the preservation of the Western Reserve and Mauniee road and collection of tolls thereon; authorizing Celina, Mercer county, to build a school house; authorizing Pleasant township, Clarke county, to build school houses. ....The General Appropriation bill was made the Bpecial order for Monday, 10 Gen. Alvan C. Gillem, Colonel of the First Cavalry, now commanding in the Mod oo war, ia a Tenneaseean, and while in command of a mounted division under Stoneman in 1864-5, saw some of the roughest riding and sharpest fighting of the war. M. Victorien Sardou is doing his best to have the veto of L'Oncle Sam withdrawn. , He argues that as tho Americans themselves applauded his play none of their countrymen resident in France could take offence at it. His efforts have as yet been in vain. " 1 Nathan F. Dixon was elected in 1840, and for twenty-one successive years, to the Rhode Island Legislature. Then he was sent to Congress for four terms, until he declined a re-election. Now he has just been elected to the Legislature again from the town of Westerly. . The white lawyer of Washington who is about to marry a colored girl, the daughter of Downing, the caterer, is named John W. Le BarneB. He is from Massachusetts and was a lieutenant in the Twentieth Massachusetts regiment in the war. He afterward was an officer in the House of Representatives and now is a lawyer. The wedding is to come off in one of the most fashionable churches and the couple are to sail in a steamer of the White Star line. The death is announced of Mr. Charles Alston Collins, brother of Mr. Willi ie Collins, and son-in-law of the late Mr. Charles Dickens. Mr. Collins, who was in hia forty-sixth year, begun his career as a painter, and exhibited several pictures in the Royal Academy. He afterward tcok to literature and contributed to Household Words, All the Year Round, and other periodicals. He is best known, perhaps, as the author of a description of n inn.ln tiVania nntitlarl " A Princonnnn Wheels," and two novels called "The Bar Sinister" and "Strathcairn." A settlement of Northern immigrants in Virginia ia known as "Chase City" after Chief Justice Chase. He was visited bv a deputation from the locality recent ly, during his stay in Richmond, Virginia, Citizen Seriously Injured Lab Erie and Louisville Railroad. Special to the Ohio State Journal. Lima, April 27. One of our citizens, Baitley Smith, while removing a portion of his house on Friday, was caught in such a manner as to result in serious in ternal injuries. It is thougltt this afternoon that he cannot recover, x It is understood here that the Lake Erie and Louisville railroad will be completed to Cambridge City, Indiana, this year. A new force of graders have com menced on the line between St. Mary s, Ohio, and Union City, Indiana, and as soon as the weather settles, work will begin in earnest. The work of laying iron between Lima and St. Mary's is progressing slowly, owing to so much rain. J. H. Burgon, Superintendent, and E. L. Bennett, Chief Engineer, have this portion of the line in charge, and will reach St. Mary's in as short time as practicable. CHICAGO. It is a consolation to learn from the heaven-edited Nation that "if it is true" that the President has appointed Mr. Dorman B. Eaton of N.Y. to Bucceed Mr. Curtis on the Civil Service Comniis-. ... ii i ji Bion, "a better selection eora iwnu have been made ;" and furthermore, that "if the President has picked out Mr. Eaton, he undoubtedly furnishes Btrong proof of his sincerity." It is still unfortunate for the President that he is not able to conform his evidence to the sup-. port of tho Nation's theories as to his action on any given Bubjcct; but the Nation is evidently a little Bhaken. It does not know Mr. Shellabarger, however; which is sad." It thinks he is "too much of a politician" to be a reformer. Persons who do know Mr. Shellabarger will be surpised to learn this. He is usually supposed by persons who know him to be and, in response to an inquiry on the part utterly deficient in all the art of the of the Chief Justice, the deputation stated ii ii .1.. i.:.,:kl j.n, thafboth English and Northern settlers "politician," .,, the objectionable modern av fully Bati8fied witll their penseoftheword. The Nation says red- 8UCCCB8 "in this State. General Johnson erick Law Olmsted was offered a place on entertained the deputation in elegant style, the Commission, and declined. It would be well for Col. Ball's Inves, There has PU8,ice' and after toasting success to Chase city the visiting settlers withdrew, .highly gratified with their reception by the Chief tigating committee to report. been a looseness of insinuation againat certain State officials which should be backed by proofs, or cleared away in honorable, nianlv fashion bv a report. The BY TELEGRAPH 10 THE OHIO STATE JOURNAL. LIMA. OHIO. When you find an ablebodied man who sneers at "Generals and Colonels," you may generally set him down as one who spent his time during the late unpleasant ness in sneaking from the draft or specu lating in whisky. Young men of action who were old enough were mostly at the front, and have a personal interest and delight in standing up for the soldierly honor of their comrades. Political Progress In Austria, Austria has gone much farther toward amalgamating the various ethnical ele ments or which it is composed man couia L.h cnnmail im.alhlo fit'lAHfl .Ml. nan making of charges calculated to dishonor Then tie geventeen provincial diets of men, and then allowing no public vindi- which it is composed seemed hopelessly ' ... ... . -I . ...... i.... : ,oei ...I 1. ... cation to appear, is a disreputable stvieoi antagonistic; um m moi, wuei. nuw' . . , . , . n.. ling devised a constitution which was in- Dusiness wuicu we cannot ) geniously arranged to preserve the entire gentlemen of that committee will be p,,,,,,, Kaj i tBe nands of the imperial guilty ot. 11 us nave meir cuticiutiiuiiD government wniie uianiietiting it tiiruugii in a brief report. Or, if they have found constitutional tonus, diets minerio oc-.. . .i -j leu Died chiefly with municipal affairs, be nn n..intinii ml. im iiilvb liih hviuciiwu. i - . . . .. - ..v r , ,0 now B oetermination to preserve It is said the committee has examined ,;,. political rights, somewhat as the fifteen hundred witnesses it must have noisy deputations in England, wnicn in found out something. Fifteen hundred the dayso William kuius werei content ii u ji . ,11 . : to entreat the barons for favors, began to men could hardly talk on the most n- infliBt upon their propositions iii the lime different subjects before a solemn legisla- 0f tne Edwards, and to organize them- tive committee without dropping a little 'selves into what gradually grew into the :..f-..it f .!,. House of Commons. At this late day AUBina is passing uiruugn a Biuiiiiar a ..! .i ti.;. l.i. phase. Xhe wetoi lyroi is demanding . i ii l .i' o-.... t..-.. the emancipation of the schools from the wants to know "why the State Jocbnai, c,ergy 0f Cam iola aims to let up bo suddenly on Rickly?" To tell ,lnite ,n the small provinces south of the the truth and - shame the Statesman, Styrian Alps down to the Adriatic into Baber was sure to be elected, and the pne group. The Diets of Galicia, Bo- . , . , , ii. , ... . hernia, and Moravia are requiring a larger worst luck we could wish our bitterest tnd.Mndence in local adininh.. enemy was to be in the Convention with tration, but they seek it through an in- him. Think of itl no chance for a mem- crease ot power in tne national congress, bcr of the Convention to send word to Keichsrath. A very significant move- , , ...... . i ment is that for a fuller representation of the door that he is dead, or sick of small chie and towna in , EeSchliralh it be. pox, or anything oi tnat sort. ig an old device of Austrian premiers, - carried to perfection under Mettermch, to A number of Toledo, Columbus and outweigh the always democratically in- Lancastcr capitalists have formed a heavy clined towns by a preponderant repre- coal company to operate in Hocking S: county, ihey have 3,000 acres of . the cIaBiveiy Austrian ; there are fifty-Bix best oi coal lands and intend to "lay out" small boroughs in England.' having be- atown. The project is in the hands of tween them 4u0,U0U inhabitant, while some of the best solid men of the three Z l . i' b' uw iuiiu.i Hi... .vw . ni .la ment, the latter two. That Vienna es pecially shall have its representation in the Diet of Lower Austria increased from thirteen to twenty-two seems nearly set tled, and that will probably secure her a proportionate increase in the Keichsrath a measure which will be hardly of in ferior importance to the whole country than the consolidation of the Austro- This last-named event New Tlcarrntu71ce-Falal Reault of a StabbirT AITray An Abomination EraJt.ecd-Two Hulcidei. Chicago. April 27. The Western Union Telegraph 'company moved to- dayinto their magnificent new office on the southwest corner oi insane ana Washington streets, immediately opposite the site of tho office occupied by them before the lire. The new office . is believed to be the most elegant and complete in - all its arrangements of any in the country, naving oeen duhi especially for the company under the immediate supervision of General Anson Stager, General Superintendent of the Central Divison of the company, J. J. Wi son. District Superintendent, (J. 11. Summers, Electrician, and is supplied with all the latest and improved tele graphic instruments and apparatus. The operating room is particularly handsome in all its appointments and is providedwith accommodations for one hundred and fif ty operators. Tne man connecieu wun tne ureal Eastern circus, who was stabbed at Springfield, Illinois, on Friday last, died ycBterday. His name was Olney Clarity instead of Older, as stated in a previous dispatch. He was from South Boston, Mafs. .Tnn. McLauzhlin s Occidental parlors were yesterday raided upon by constables representing three sets of creditors, A mob gathered around the place in the evening, burst in the ljall door and would have undoubtedly lynched Mcuuigimn hod lie been found. All the movable property was taken away by officers and the abomination is a thing of the past. . Two case of suicide are reported here to-dav. Miss Crawford, a beautiful and estimable lady, living with her brother at 613 West Washington street, hung herself this afternoon, during the absonce of the family at church, to a hook in her closet, and was found quite dead. She had been for some time an invalid, and was undoubtedly laboring under temporary aberration of the mind. This afternoon Jno. Coffee, a laboring man, blew the top of his head off with a shotirun at his boarding house, corner Maxwell and Clinton streets. Whisky is said to be the cause. FOBKIGN. FBANCE. elections fob. members oV the assembly,Paris, April 27. The election of Deputy to fill the vacant seat for this city in the Assembly was held to-day. The vote cast' was unusually large. The following are the latest returns: M. Barodet, Radical, 166,000; Baron Stoffel, Conservative, 127,000; Count de Retnusat, supporter of Thiers, 25,000. The official returns will probably differ little from tbese figures, which insure the election of M. Barodet. Large and animated crowds are in the streets, notwithstanding a cold rain, awaiting the latest news and eagerly discussing the result. Elections were held to-day in Marseilles and Bordeaux, in which Radical candidates were also successful. RUSSIA. THE GERMAN EMPEROR'S RECEPTION. Br. Petersburg, April 27. The Ger-Aao Emperor arrived in this city to-day, and was received with extraordinary honors.) He was met at Gotschira, thirty miles hence, by the Czar and Grand Dukes, who accompanied him to the city. The two Emperors made their entrance in the presence of immense crowds of people, who manifested the greatest enthusiasm. Emperor William first reviewed the regiment of which he is honorary Colonel, and was then conducted to the winter palace, where he was formally received by the Court with most imposing ceremonies. The Czar presented to him his portrait and sword of honor, the Cross of St. George, the Iron Cross for merit, with the additional Inscription "for valor," and an inkstand and vases in Lapis Lazuli. SPAIN. PAYMENT OF TREASURY BILLS SAB ALLS'S CARLIST8 ROUTED COUNTRY INHABI- , TANTS ORDERED TO ABANDON THEIR HOMES. ' Madrid, April 27. The Minister of Finance announces that arrangements have been made for the payment of treasury bills due at the end of May, one-third in specie and two-thirds in new acceptances, payable one month from date. The band commanded by the famous chieftain, Saballs, has been routed and its leader has disappeared. Captain General Vellarde has ordered the inhabitants of the country districts invaded by Carlists to abandon their farms and houses and retire into cities with all the provisions they can carry. WASHINGTON. FIRES. A Damaging Frost In lb South. Charleston. S. C. AdHI 27. Advices from neighboring coast sections report disastrous results to crops from the Kill ing trost or yesterday morning. Much ot the cotton will have to be replanted and the injury to early vegetables is irreparable. Frost so late in the season has not been known in this region for fifty years. Gen. Canby'a Remalua The Epizootic.San Francisco, April 27. The body of Gen. Canby is expected to arrive from Portland by Bteamer Tuesday. Many branches of business is almost paralyzed by the epizootic. A few fatal canes are reported. The disease is spreading rapidly. Death or a Well Known merchant, Pouohkeefsie, N. Y April 27. Wil liam W. Reynolds, for nearly forty yean a merchant in this city, died to-day from a stroke of paralysis. He was well known l j i e .i in... among grain ueaiera ui tne vieiHuru States. BY HAIL AMI) TELEHRAPII. Races at Memphis begin to-day. Carl Schnrz sailed from New York Saturday for Europe. The sailors at Cleveland are on a strike for an advance from $2 to $2.50. The failure of James A. Ward, pork packer, Kansas City, is announced. Frank Emerson, 14! yean old. hanged himself in Exeter, N. H., on Wednesday. Two Sargeants of the New York police have been arrested for clubbing a man to death. The 56th anniversary of Odd Fellowship in the United States was celebrated Saturday. John J. Murphy was executed at Stockton, California, Friday, for the murder of fatricK Murray five years ago. Hon. Levi Walker, of Flint, Represen tative lrom Uenesee county, Michigan, died at Lansing Saturday forenoon. The Memphis Life and General Insurance bank, D. B. Malloy, President, suspended Saturday. Liabilities $25,000. - Ex-Representatives Cox, of New York, and Peters, of Maine, have sent to the Treasury the amount of their extra pay. E. W. Williams, aged fifty-three, s well-known merchant tailor at Hartford, cal end Connecticut, hanged himself Saturday. tinually hears in the cafes. The freedom Treasuer Spinner has received two con- accorded to religious heresy is equally tributions to the Conscience Fund : $ 3 great- One hears continually loud theo- from a stove, and exploded, filling the room with flames. A little child of the proprietor, named - Harding, was so burned that its life is despaired of, and Hardin8 himself received severe injuries, as did also Robert Simpson, an employe. J. E. Chamberlain, President of the St. Joseph Fruit Growers' Association, Michigan, announces as a result of a tour of observation through fruit farms sf that rsgion, that so many peach buds are alive that sanguine fruit growers estimate the crop of peaches at only a third of a full crop. The peach trees killed bv the- se vere cold, were mostly old and sickly trees. The apples never looked better. Pear trees are unhurt. Grapes promise an abundant crop. Strawberries are in a splendid condition and will yield a full crop, and cherries and plums equally as well. Austrian Radicalism, With all the social conservatism in Vienna, and the hardness of the aristocracy the noblemen being more like kinirs than even the Junkers of Prussia before Bismarck compelled these to commit hari-kari one can not help being struck bv the degree of freedom allowed in that city. It is said, indeed, not to be found in other cities under Austrian rule, poor rrague, especially, oeing under such surveillance that many of the best plays are proniDiiea to its theaters, in Vienna Herr Etienne, an old revolutinnistof 1848, who edits the Free Press, informed me tnat tie was able to write as much radicalism as he pleased in his Daner without interference from the police. I remember on one occasion, while the celebrated crypt in which the remains of the em perors are preserved in fine coffins loaded with wreaths, our party paused for some time at that of the late Prince Maxim ilian, who was shot in Mexico; It was inscribed by the emperor, "To our dear brother, who was shot by Mexican bar barians." two Hermans present commented upon the inscription in their own language, and very audibly to the company present one declaring that the Mexicans had served "our dear brother" just right, the other expressing the belief that the emperor had helped to send his brother away through jealousy of his greater attainments and popularity, and tear ot his tendency to radicalism, and that he (the emperor) was by no means sorry when he heard of the prince's tragi- Much tree talk as this one con- BONDS AND OOLD. Washington, April 27. The Secretary of thR Treastirv has directed the As sistant Treasurer at New York to sell one million dollars in gold on the first, third and fifth Thursdays, and a million and a tinlf nn thn secon d and fourth Thursdays in all six million dollars and to buy five hundred thousand dollars of bonds on thn 1st. and five hundred thousand on the 3d, Wednesdays of May in all one mil lion dollars. INTEREST on bonds. The Secretary has directed the payment without rebate, on and after Monday, the 28th inst., of interest due on bonds May 1st. S. 8. COX RETURNS IT. Hon. S. S. Cox has sent his check to the Treasurer of the United States for his back pay ns member of Congress. DIED. Commodore John H. Auleck, U. S. navy, on the retired list, died here this morning. . - NEW YORK. from Boston, and $2.60 from Charleston, S. V. The town of Moriana, Arkansas, was nearly destroyed by fire on Thursday. The loss is estimated at htty thousand dollars. logical discussions going on in public rooms, where u reeks, Arminians, and Catholics assemble. There is very apt to be present, also, a Unitarian, whose ar guments sometimes make one fancy him' self in the atmosphere of Boston. In T..n..i.:. ,!, . .... k.,njj Six men, charged with the robbing of tt.ii..:.. -:,i. . .... .... freight cars on railroads centering in ,-: -..F..,l ' j .. ii Quincy, Illinois, were arrested Saturday thlU Uli, form 0f be'lief is spreading to ill Ot. IjOUIB. I ViAtinn nnH nthni narta nf Antlrin In An investigation is being made by the public libraries one sees shelves hicrh un Washington authorities into the accounts inscribed "Verbotene Bucher." and on of Henry M. Whiting, cashier of the New them heretical theology is curiouslv min- iors; roBionice. gied with works ot immoral tendena, Indian scents at Laramie. Dakota, re- such as J2ouseau' Confusions. Ovid's Art port the killing of one man and the of Love, etc. ; but these shelves have be- wounding ot another by the Mineconjaus, come so nine pronioueo, ano so popular, OP OBSOLETE AND UNSERVICE ABLE ORDNANCE AND ORDNANCE STOBES. U.S. ORDNANCE AGENCY, Cos. or Hocrtow anh riDi.u. s..a (Entrance on Greene St.(P. O. Box 1811), flaw IOBS, April 17, 11173, SEALED PROPOSALS, IN DUPLICATE, will be received at this office, for the purchase of Ordnance and Ordnance 8tores, embracing Cannon, Small Arms. Leatber- :i "l lao various Arsenals, Fortsi and Depots, in the United States Bids rill be opened at la o'clock M,on Wednesday, the 28th day of May, 1878, for stores located at Posts in the following named States, to-wit.: Connecticut, Delaware, Indiana, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts. Michigan, Missouri, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Hhode Island, Virginia and the District of Columbia. bids will be opened at 12 o'clock M , on Thursdyi the 12th day of June, 1873, for stores located at Posts in the following named States and Territories, to-wit.: Alabama, California, Florida, Geornia, Kansas, Louisiana, Minnesota, Nebraska, Nevada, North Carolina, Oregon, South Carolina, Texas, Arizona, Colorado, Dakota, Idaho, Indian, Montana, New Mexico, Washington and Wyoming. For list of stores in detail, location, terms, Ac, see Catalogues, which can be procun (1 on application auhe Ordnance Office, War Department, Washington, D. N, at this Agency ,or at any of The Arsenals or Depots, and Commanding Officers of other posts will furnish on application, information as to what stores on hand at their respective posts are for sale. The Department reseivesthe riehtto re ject all bids which are not deemed satisfacto ry, rrior to tne acceptance or anv bid, it will have to be approved by the WarDepartment. i crms casn : Ten per cent, at the time of the avard, and the remaii der when the property is delivered. Thirty days will be allowed for the removal of the stores. Packing boxes will be charged at prices to be de-termed by the Department. Bidders will state explicitly the Post where the stores are located which they bid for, and will gi.e the kinds and quantities they propose to purchase. Deliveries will only be mado at the various Posts where stored. Proposals will be addressed to the U.S. Ordnance Agency. N. Y. (P. O. Box 18111, and should be indorsed "Proposals for Purchasing Obsolete and Unserviceable Ordnance and Ordnance Stores," vrith the names of vue ftrsenms, tors or Depots wbero stored,, and the names of States or Territories n which the stores proposed to be purchased are locaied. By authority ot the Chief of Ordnance. 8. CRISPIN, Itrevet-Col. V. 8. A. that it iB doubtful w hether the warni ng does not act rather as a guide to the hereticallv or pruriently disposed. lrom Ktenno, by M. V. t ontcay, in Harper Magazine for Mag. Crook to Succeed Cooke. apr28 6t Major of Ordiumce. There are seventy-five members of the Constitutional Convention who have speeches already prepared upon capital punishment; sixty who are prepared with views on usury laws; thirty-seven who are bursting to express themselves on female suffrage; twenty who think they can infallibly manage railroad freights; and one who wants to make judges appointive and then go home. We understand that Pat and Put, in view of their irregular bushwhacking engagement with Halstead, have exchanged parts of their names and intertwined the two, after the manner of heroic sagamores who have achieved any chivalric enter prise in partnership. Hereafter the Sena, tors from Ross and Tuscarawas will be known as Patram and Putnick. Why don't tho Legislature adjourn, ia the conundrum every where. Because they can't get enough together to pass the joint resolution. At last there is a suitable opening for Private Daltell. Send him as a Peace Commissioner to the gentle Modoc It ia not true that "Itlmriel" belongs to J. B. L.'s Sunday ' School class. Ithiiriel has a class of his own. David A. Wells highly compliments Secretary Sherwood's last statistical port. Hubbard A Jokes have the London Saturday Review of April 12. The Temperance Cause. Coshocton, O., April 25. To the Editor of the Ohio State Journal: The people of Ohio are thoroughly alive on tlte temperance question. During the past week I have lectured on the "Noble County Temperance Reform" in Hungarian power. four different counties to large audiences, nas unquesuonauiy cunvmceu me u. I have found the people In earnest, and ""U?. .U"d"i,!i,!LA"f8. 2 anxious to learn how to suppress the lng the renifeatVon of many of their as- liquor tramc. 1 he ministers oi an ue- pirations by fraternization, so tliey have nominations tender me the of their lost them bv mutual jealousies. The ex- churches, help me to procure audiences, ample of Prussia has not been lost either and assist me in every way possible. 1 lie upon the Austrian rulers or the many people contribute enough to pay my ex- iribes under them. Solidarity has become pensea and wish me uoa-speeo on my lour the order ol the day ; and though tne through the State. , evolution of the heterogeneous races re- Not the least surprising thing to me is ferred to in a United States of Austria the unanimity with which the press steps will involve a severer struggle than that forward ana tenders Its gigantic power which United Uermany has had with for the good of the cause. In every in- Jnnkerism. there can hardly be a doubt stance the press of both parties have that the tide is every where setting toward civen notices ot my meetings, i he tact such a freedom as shall swallow ud petty that they do this without charge precludes principalities. Liberty is the root, eqnali- ine loea oi any seinsn niouve un meir iy me Dioaaom, uui ooin must reacn meir part; and l oelieve that they win suppori fruit in the iraiernuy ot peoples, the temperance people in all their res- There can be no doubt that there has sonable demands. Let the coming Con- beer) a disposition among liberal thinkers stitutional Convention remember that the in Europe to estimate Austria more fa Deonleare not asleep, and that any effort I vorablv as a political force since it has to insert a license clause in the new Con- withdrawn from Italy. The retention of stitution will meet with a prompt and Venetia especially embittered the Uioet decided rebuKK jas. v. barbe. eminent friends oi iioeny against inai countrv. and kept alive the ugliest tradi- About Candidate!. tlons of he HPhurg house, whose To th. Ediur of the Ohio State J.umd: " ? re'u"T reniernoer- a nas always oeen me usage oi ino .m, u mmA. Mninil publican party to giva State officers a rc-i t0 the popular movements of the times. nomination at the end of their first ,errai and the tact that a hard asistocracy stands ..j T h.i;.- it !. nnJ1 iW ready in each of the countries subjected ., , to Austria to oppress the lower classes, if Governor oycs, Tre.su rer Welsh and madg over to them, more heavily thanthe Comptroller Wilson will be again placed elnperor has ever done, has induced a sus- in nomination at our approaching state pension ot inose anathemas which re-Convention without any serious opposi- formers like Manini and poets like 8win-tion. ' bume have hurled so terribly against that Now, Mr. Editor, I have been indnoei country. It is further now recognised to write the above nararranh. because of thai-Austria is necessarily a peaceful ele- the fact that certain parties are nsing the Iment in the European situation. There name of Charles H. Babeock in connec- is no neighboring country she can wish to UOn Willi IDC OUHIWUIM tl'I MMIKnnni I in.HU., Miu muugi, w iu.j w 1, of the Treasury, in opposition to the tone of popular feeling some remnant of present incumbent, tienerai w.T. Wilson, antagonism to rruasia, me uermaa eie-who is not ealv jaatly entitled to a mom-1 merit of the country are too strong tosaf- ination. bnt who will most certainlv be fer such sentiments to survive verv Ions'. renominated. There is every reaaoa to believe that Aas- My object Simply to notify General tria is contented, and has honestly set Wilson's aeata ei friend ia the State of herself to develop her resources and to what ia roine oa at the Capital, that thev harmonise her government with the age. may govern themselves accordingly. from " rSeaaa," fry M. D. Conway, in iutubucak. Harper i jiaeanac nr May. DESTRUCTIVE FIRS IN WASHINGTON SEVERAL HOUSES ANO CONTENTS DAM AGED NARROW ESCAPE OF . BONN PIATT'S RESIDENCE. Washington, April 27.-This morning fire broke out iu the basement of the house occupied bv Pay Inspector J. N. Carpenter in Mechaeler row on F street, between Seventeenth and Eighteenth streets. Before the familv were aware ot the dan ger the fire had reached the upper Btorics, and Mr. and Mrs. Carpenter with difficulty escaped to the Btreet, the latter screaming for her child which was sleep ing in the Mansard story 01 tne ouuoing. On hearing the cry, William Diggs ran through an adjoining house and along the cornice to tne ourning aweiung, burst in the window, seized the nearly suffocated child, carried it out on the roof of the next house and delivered it to a colored man who restored the child to its mother. . This gentleman had his wrist severely cut by the glass on the cornice. The interior ot tne nouse was aimosi en tirely deBtroyed. It was the property of A. R. Shepherd and insured. The flames spread to the adjoining double Mansard roof of the residence of Col. Donn Piatt on the west, burning it to snch an extent that it will have to be en tirely removed. That gentleman a library and mostof his furniture were saved lrom the flames, but some of the latter was in jured by water. He had no insurance whatever on the nouse ann contents. The Barnes alro extended to the Man sard roofs on the east, damaging more or less eight or ten ot them. Ihe most ot the furniture in ine upper aiories was ue- tmved bv fire and that below consider. ably damaged by water. Loss on houses comparatively small, wiin me exception of those belonging to Mr. Shepherd and Oilnnel Piatt. Une ot tne houses in me row was occupied by Lieutenant Wheeler, of the United States engineer corps, ana where he and his assistants were employ ed completing the record of the survey maae aunng miv im. iuui m nnu-na, Utah and xtevada. All the surveying instruments, records, plates, photo-irranhs. etc.. were saved. Harry Elliott, a young lawyer, while assisting in removing furniture from one of the houses, tell through an opening oi a winding stairway to the basement, a distance of about forty-five feet, receiving serious injuries of the spine. A HOTEL W FLAMES MARROW ESCAPE OF BOARDERS. Patebson. N. J April 27. A fire in the St. Charles Hotel, opposite the Erie denot. this morning, completely gutted the first floor, and the whole building was pons derablv damaged bv Ire and water. A number ol ooaraers narrowly eacapea with their Uvea by leaping from the u pper windows upon adjoining buildings. Une man who jumped from the third story to the ground was very badly hurt. Two women were seriously injured and several firemen nearly suffocated. RAILROAD BTATTOH BURNED. Memphis, April 27. Village station, on the Memphia and Louisville railroad, was destroyed by fire last night. .No particulars. Loss estimated at $15,000. ST. CBISPINS' STRIKE. New York, April 27. A movement is on foot among the St. Crispins to strike for eight hours and an increase of wages. The societies had secret meetings and resolved to strike at an early day. TO BE TORN DOWN. The old TJ. S. arsenal ereeted in 1812 on Jersey City Heights will be torn down after the first of May. MINISTER BELONG. The Times learns DeLong is likely to be continued Minister to Japan. CINCINNATI. Bishop Mcllvalne's RemnlllM -Im ported Hinging Birds. Cincinnati. April 27. Rev. Thomas S. Yocum and Thomas G. Odiorne start from here to New York to-morrow to receive the body of Bishop Mcllvaine and brine it here for burial. Fifteen hundred singing birds of differ ent varieties, imported from Uermany by asocietv organized for that purpose, were turned loose in the suburbs to-day. The object is to domesticate them in this coun try, if possible. Weather Prcbabllltles. Washington. April 27. The tempera ture will continue increasing very gener ally from Mississippi to the Atlantic sea board; tor tne JMonnwesianu upper taxes, and thence to the lower Ohio and lower Missouri Valley, cloudy weather, falling barometer, fresh to brisk southeasterly to northeasterly winds and occasional rain; for the Southwest and Western Gulf States, southwesterly and southerly winds, falling barometer, threatening and rainy weather; for the upper Ohio Valley and Kentucky, winds veering to southeasterly, increasing by cloudy and warmer weather; for the lower lakes and Middle States, srenerallv clear weather with northwest erly to southwesterly winds and higher . . t 1. I v I.'- temperature; lur v-unaua wiu cw England, northwesterly winds, partly cloudy and cool weather. of the sioux tribe. The Indian Bureau does not share in the apprehensions indulged in by the reg ular army relating to the probability of a general ludian outbreak A call has been issued to the heirs of .1 ,n I n,.' . c c I 1 me lowniey vuo estate, Tbere to be no doubt that Brig, who reside in Southern Ohio to meet in p,,.,. g Q . mw ? uayion 10 iaaesieps,waru receiving me command ,t 'Detroit. Michigan will be property. retired by the President soon, he being Republicans have undertaken the pros- over the prescribed age. This retirement, ecution of the Carlist Commissioners in a9 Btate(i jn tne gtar a few day, ag0i wjl London who are collecting funds lor JJon occasion one vacancv in the list of Briga- Carlos, as it is claimed, in violation ot in- 0ier Generals, the number now being six, lern.tiional law. ag authorized by law. and it is the general J. L. Taietor, cashier of the Atlantic impression that Colonel George Crook, National Bank, is r. ported to have cot,- who is now doing such excellent service fessed himself a defaulter in $400,OUf, in Arizona, will be promoted to the grade The bank is said to be temporarily bui- of Brigadier General. Colonel Crook is pended. Taistor is in jail. personally one of the most popular ofli PpABiitnnf Grant, lifli lnt.olv oIV0n Now cers of the army, and his promotion will Orleans parlies to understand that if the be generally acceptable. Waihingtm Star. l- T' ; I. .J I . I-I 1 , people ui iiuiBiana coiisuiteu meir uem uoou enougn t interests, they would submit at once to the Kellogg state Government. The front of Recorder Hackett's house New York was besmeared Friday night and he has been threatened hia life for imposing such heavy penalties on New lork rascals and thieaes. A person representing himself as M. P. Levy, of Levy & (Jo.,ol Mobile, Ala., has been arrested in Baltimore, for swindling several Baltimore merchants, the Mobile hrm having telegraphed that he was an l m poster, At Annapolis, Md., Saturday, in the My Kingdom for a Horse! What the purse of King Richard could not then pro cure, all can now purchase toi a snnc. The Centaur Lini ment w ill i ot raise the dead horse of a Kiog. but it will cure a lame one, and more than that it is the most re- L.Jt.m.. mmlratila Ihini. fnr awollmtra cam of Elisabeth U. Wharton, indicted Ltiff iaintfL Cflked breaata. Btintts andbruiwi, t .at ... . k'ni.ann Van I . " . . : . ' a 1, iur nu ttucmpt w uiumci uugcug I the world nas ever seen, a man oupmvu Nesa by poison, a nolle waa entered by the guffer with the Rheumatism who has not proftecimng attorney, thus ending tne tried this Liniment, Wharton trials. York of the Board of Indian Commis- Umldrfiil 017 For Pitcher's Cas' nneM iova nnnlMOtoil tnv liillX nnrn I a butcher knives and 120 dozen skinning tona, u regulates me siomacn, cure, wuiu knives, among the other articles to be lur-nished to the Indians. The report of the investigation, now making in Vienna by Mr. Jay, United States Minister, and Thomas McElroth, into the conduct of the American Com missioners to the Exposition, will be made public as soon as received. As the southern train on the Memphis and Louisville railroad approached Trese- vant Station, Tennessee, Saturday, a lady M this ( Monday) eveniil Aprp JStk, 1873, named Mra. Ellis attempted to cross the at 7 o'clock. i l'i" v IteMMralle Primary aicetlnca In Ft. Wayne. . Ft. Wayne, Ind, April 27. The Democrats held primary meetings in the various wards last night for the election of delegates to the city convention next Saturday. There is a close contest for the Democratic nomination for mavor between the present incumbent, F. R. Randall esq., and Colonel Tollinger. with the probabilities in favor of the former. Enforrlna; Law anal Order In Louisi ana. Baton Rouge. April 27. A detach ment of one hundred and twenty-five metropolitan police, armed with Win chester rifles and one piece of artillery, arrived here last evening from New Orleans, and left this forenoon for Port Vincent, Livingstone parish, for the pur pose of installing the appointees of Gover nor Kellogg. They were met at Harrold's Ferry, Amite river, at noon to-day, by a committee of three persons representing the Port Vincent party, and it is pre sumed mat matters will be anjusiea with out bloodshed. President erant at Denver. Denver. Col.. April 20. President Grant and oartv reached Denver safe and well at 1:30 p. in. to-day. They will remain here till Monday morning, when the partv will leave for (.olden, Black hawk and Central City. From Central City to Idaho Springs they take private carriasea. and returning to Denver Mon day evening,the President will give a public reception Monday evening atJGovernors Hall. He will probablv go east by way of Omaha, lneaday. rirat Terael Oat mm BnlTaln. Buffalo, April 27. The propeller Equinox, the Brat vessel of the season. left here this forenoon for Cleveland. At 3 p. m. she had reacheJ Windmill Point, and was alowly working ber way through the mast of floating ice which had come from the upper lakes. colic and causes natural sleep. It la a sub stitute for castor oil. aprd eod 2w New Advertisement. MASONIC. BOSTON Shoe Store! 123 South High St. OUR CONNKCTIOH WITH EASTERN FACTORIES Enables na to Dell all Goods In onr Line CHEAPER than any other Honae In Colnmbna. CHAS. E. CONRADE, (Directly Opposite Osborn's.) oet29 2taw 6m A. STATED COMMUNICATION Goodale Lod-a, No. 871, F. a A. LAMB'S OINTMENT, THIS HIGHLY POfULAR ARTICLE IS unequalled by any other application for the cure of Ascne In the Breaat, Cabins; of the Milk, or Tumors lrom other causes; Fresh Wounds or Brnine., fever norm, or other old Sores or VI eersi Chapped Hands, Skin alaeaes, Hnralna, King worm. Salt HheHm, letter. Aha. eeiie , Balls, Buroa. Sralda, Pelona. Pressing or Blisters, Corn. Chilblains. Carbunelea, Swe Hilars, ate. It will also he found very efficacinns in the cure of NEURALGIA, SORE EYES, r AUK AUtiK and ALL KINDS UP IN FLAMMATORY SWELLINGS. Price, SOCKETS PHt BtlX. H. c.CADY.Sole Pron'r, Cincinnati. X9-S0LD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. feb22 2taw 3m track in front of ' the engine, which run over and instantly killed her. The Dutch Government has ordered fourteen steamers to proceed immediately to Sumatra and co-operate with the Dutch troops in their movements against the Achinese. The vessels will carry a large quantity of ammunition and arms for the troops. John Hutchinson was convicted in Bos ton Saturday of swindling the sexton of St. Paul's Church out of about $1800 through a pretended business copartner ship. Hutchinson is a clergyman, iorm-erly connected with the Anglican diocese of A ova Dcotia, Bill Brown, alias Campbell, the negro roustabout who assaulted Thomaa Doyle, mate of the Bteamer brand lower, Ihurs- day night, was arrested Saturday in Cairo on the strength oi a telegram irom Mem phis, announcing the deatn oi voyie irom his iniuries. Brown acknowledges mak ing the assault, and says it was in revenge for a blow given him by uoyie mree wees ago, S CO., 14 WALL STREET, . T. ANQRZ1WS OO., la Place Vendome. PARIS. TRAVELERS' CREDITS Issued, both ia STERLING, on Hutchinson is a clergyman, form- D3II05T BANK OF LOXDON And ia France, on. PARIS, VVDEB TKB S4XS LRTKB. CIRCULAR NOTES Of 110, MO and 90 on the roios bask or LOSDOX, ROBERT A. GAWLER, AMtnACTVIl OF ARB DBA 1KB IB Human Hair Goods Of Every Description. CASH PAD) FOR HUMAN HAIR 77 East Town Street. july!3 dtawfcw ly Commercial Credits, Exchange London and Paris. OB Ctr. IlAnfla an A Cli-IA hnnnkt flnit flnllt All The Troy Times says that Boss Tweed eommiasion Railway Loans Negotiated. feb 2taw ly laatratnents, arrived at the Delavan House, Albany, Wednesdav afternoon, and was secretly having a "loud time" with several Demo-ivatic Amemblvmen. when the news reached him that the Sergeant-at-Arms of the Assembly was bearing down upon Uiim with an order for hia arrest on the Erie Investigating business, and he was spirited away to other ana more seciuaea quarters. An explosion occurred Friday evening at 169 West Madison atreet, Chicago, in a clothes cleaning and dying establishment, The roots in which the garments weiel Philadelbhla. hanging and cleaned with ben line, be-1 Kent on that yon saw this in the Uaro , . . ... ...... 1 . C ln . 1 - M, came so niiea Wltn gas un u caugn. ore state jocesau urii . 'lalfcrnsnlicnl Is l.l iersMeopoo. I B I auric Lanie-ras. eteorologiesil Inatrainrnta, PHYSICAL APPARATUS, Proftietly Illustrated and Priced, mtilti Is eny nwta oa receipt of 10 cents eaca. J AMES W. tfJE. COOnllrlana, 924 CHESTS tT ST. 601 BB'DW'f new lor I PAVING NOTICE. TO AM. WHOM IT MAY COXCERX Crrt Clkrk'r OmcE, 1 Oil-mi., O., April 15, U73. ( Nntiiw ii, herebr riven, thnt nroceedinss nave- been instituted in the City Council of Columbus lor makinathe rollowmg improvements, towil: For trading the loedway, grading and paving. tho gutters snd setting the curb on Buttle avenue from High street to Dennison aveutic; oxtinisted con, fciirtf.oa. For grading and bouldering Rmlroad allev, from Nxghten street to Maple street; estimated cot, ti;6.t. The same to be done in accordance with pints and estimates to bo prepared bv the City Civil Engineer, and filed in the office of the City Clerk. Al nersona elaimms damages on awmmi ot aaid improvements, are required lo file their elaima in the oroeo of the Clerk, in anting, on orhetore the roth day oi May, . v. ie, i. Li. E.. n ill,l. I. IIJ II".- Aparil IB. A. D. 1S73. aprtl Staaniw OLD XIEIIS FOR SAXsia AT THIS OFFICE, By the pound or by the handred. Storekeepers will realize a saving by nsing them sa wrapping paper.
Object Description
Title | Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1870), 1873-04-28 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Date of Original | 1873-04-28 |
Searchable Date | 1873-04-28 |
Submitting Institution | Ohio History Connection |
Rights | Online access is provided for research purposes only. For rights and reproduction requests or more information, go to http://www.ohiohistory.org/images/information |
Type | Text |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn84028631 |
Reel Number | 00000000037 |
Description
Title | Daily Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1870), 1873-04-28 page 1 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Searchable Date | 1873-04-28 |
Submitting Institution | Ohio History Connection |
Type | Text |
File Size | 3882.76KB |
Full Text | liilil Pitte jgEiiiEl vm yyytv - ; v f . COLUMBUS, MONDAY, APRIL 28, 1873. NO. 99. THE CELEBBATED "CENTURY." Valuable and important Improvements secured by letters patent, possessed by no other stove. - WROUGHT IRON OVKX, TILB FIRE BACK (Everlasting1: IN DE9TRUCT BLE CENTERS; ONLY ONE FLUK; FLAME-ENCIRCLED OVEN;, SPLENDID FRED DOOR; ' '-';,. LOW DOWN RESERVOIR; . LARQE OAST IRON ASH PAN. !f you want to avoid a smoky kitchen and dipgy walls; if you want to avoid replenishing lire bacus every few months; if you want to avoid warped up top plates; if yon want to avoid all the trying; things connected with a poor Cooking Stove, call and see the O E NT TJ 11 Y . For heating water for Bath Rooms, the Water Back of the Century is nnoaqiialled. Call anrtexuniine, at s ASTON TAYLOR & HUFFS, 20 NORTH HIGH ST., ColiintbuM. Ohio. marSl Miller i High, t'enrl mill limpet tit. COSILY & HMIT1I, ri'liLlHIIERH AKP PttOPRIKTORS. JAMES M. COMI.Y, .... Ktlltor. OFFICIAL PAPER OF THE CITY The Cleveland Herald Is sound on the State University vote of the Legislature. It saya, after auch a vote, the best thing the Legislature can do is to adjourn without day and without night, and go home. It saya the vote is a disgrace to the after part of the nineteenth century. Upon which we beg respectfully to remark", nur-ray 1 pr bully for you 1 or words to that effect. ' " . The Akron Beacon seems to have been little surprised but much disgusted by the vote j it expected. nothing better on the first vote, but it has a conviction that the more we agitate the more light we shall have, and the more light we have the more votes there will be in favor of a nobly endowed and thoroughly grounded Ohio Bute University, such as Judge Oliver pleaded for. . .. . Of all horned cattle, deliver us lrom the stupid bull calf people who have opposed this grand projeot because they supposed that If anything beyond planting and breeding were taught In the "Agricultural College" it would no longer be a farmer's college" as though it were con trary to the law of nature for a farmer to know anything except how to breed bull calves and rotate crops properly. PERSONALS. .egialntlve nummary. HOUSE. Apt -il 2(1.- -Bills passed authorizing county commissioners to vacate ditches; creating a board of fire commissioners for Cincinnati and Cleveland; authorizing Dover township, Cuyahoga county, to build a town hall .... Senate joint resolution passed giving the trustees of the Central Ohio Lunatic Asylum further discre- tionary power relating to the details in the construction of said institution House adjourned during a discussion of the bill to amend section fifty-four of the act providing for the location and regu lation of incorporated companies relating to the creation of more than one Gas company in a town or municipal corpora tion without submitting the same to a vote of the people. The bill therefore lies on the table. ' SENATE. Bills passed providing that one justice of the peace may be sued before another justice of the peace for neglecting or refusing to pay over money collected in his official capacity when the amount does not exceed $100; prescribing the duties of certain officers in the county of Hamilton amending the Longview Lunatic Asylum act; authorizing towns and villages to exchange lands donated for school purposes for other lands; authorizing Perry township, Lake county, to take control of the cemeteries in said township; authorizing Lake county to build an infirmary; authorizing cities and villages to take charge of so much of the National road as lies within their corporate limits; authorizing municipal corporations to prevent the overflow of watercourses; authorizing municipal corporations to extend streets and alleys across railway tracks; authorizing Clermont and Brown counties to construct a free turnpike; for the preservation of the Western Reserve and Mauniee road and collection of tolls thereon; authorizing Celina, Mercer county, to build a school house; authorizing Pleasant township, Clarke county, to build school houses. ....The General Appropriation bill was made the Bpecial order for Monday, 10 Gen. Alvan C. Gillem, Colonel of the First Cavalry, now commanding in the Mod oo war, ia a Tenneaseean, and while in command of a mounted division under Stoneman in 1864-5, saw some of the roughest riding and sharpest fighting of the war. M. Victorien Sardou is doing his best to have the veto of L'Oncle Sam withdrawn. , He argues that as tho Americans themselves applauded his play none of their countrymen resident in France could take offence at it. His efforts have as yet been in vain. " 1 Nathan F. Dixon was elected in 1840, and for twenty-one successive years, to the Rhode Island Legislature. Then he was sent to Congress for four terms, until he declined a re-election. Now he has just been elected to the Legislature again from the town of Westerly. . The white lawyer of Washington who is about to marry a colored girl, the daughter of Downing, the caterer, is named John W. Le BarneB. He is from Massachusetts and was a lieutenant in the Twentieth Massachusetts regiment in the war. He afterward was an officer in the House of Representatives and now is a lawyer. The wedding is to come off in one of the most fashionable churches and the couple are to sail in a steamer of the White Star line. The death is announced of Mr. Charles Alston Collins, brother of Mr. Willi ie Collins, and son-in-law of the late Mr. Charles Dickens. Mr. Collins, who was in hia forty-sixth year, begun his career as a painter, and exhibited several pictures in the Royal Academy. He afterward tcok to literature and contributed to Household Words, All the Year Round, and other periodicals. He is best known, perhaps, as the author of a description of n inn.ln tiVania nntitlarl " A Princonnnn Wheels," and two novels called "The Bar Sinister" and "Strathcairn." A settlement of Northern immigrants in Virginia ia known as "Chase City" after Chief Justice Chase. He was visited bv a deputation from the locality recent ly, during his stay in Richmond, Virginia, Citizen Seriously Injured Lab Erie and Louisville Railroad. Special to the Ohio State Journal. Lima, April 27. One of our citizens, Baitley Smith, while removing a portion of his house on Friday, was caught in such a manner as to result in serious in ternal injuries. It is thougltt this afternoon that he cannot recover, x It is understood here that the Lake Erie and Louisville railroad will be completed to Cambridge City, Indiana, this year. A new force of graders have com menced on the line between St. Mary s, Ohio, and Union City, Indiana, and as soon as the weather settles, work will begin in earnest. The work of laying iron between Lima and St. Mary's is progressing slowly, owing to so much rain. J. H. Burgon, Superintendent, and E. L. Bennett, Chief Engineer, have this portion of the line in charge, and will reach St. Mary's in as short time as practicable. CHICAGO. It is a consolation to learn from the heaven-edited Nation that "if it is true" that the President has appointed Mr. Dorman B. Eaton of N.Y. to Bucceed Mr. Curtis on the Civil Service Comniis-. ... ii i ji Bion, "a better selection eora iwnu have been made ;" and furthermore, that "if the President has picked out Mr. Eaton, he undoubtedly furnishes Btrong proof of his sincerity." It is still unfortunate for the President that he is not able to conform his evidence to the sup-. port of tho Nation's theories as to his action on any given Bubjcct; but the Nation is evidently a little Bhaken. It does not know Mr. Shellabarger, however; which is sad." It thinks he is "too much of a politician" to be a reformer. Persons who do know Mr. Shellabarger will be surpised to learn this. He is usually supposed by persons who know him to be and, in response to an inquiry on the part utterly deficient in all the art of the of the Chief Justice, the deputation stated ii ii .1.. i.:.,:kl j.n, thafboth English and Northern settlers "politician," .,, the objectionable modern av fully Bati8fied witll their penseoftheword. The Nation says red- 8UCCCB8 "in this State. General Johnson erick Law Olmsted was offered a place on entertained the deputation in elegant style, the Commission, and declined. It would be well for Col. Ball's Inves, There has PU8,ice' and after toasting success to Chase city the visiting settlers withdrew, .highly gratified with their reception by the Chief tigating committee to report. been a looseness of insinuation againat certain State officials which should be backed by proofs, or cleared away in honorable, nianlv fashion bv a report. The BY TELEGRAPH 10 THE OHIO STATE JOURNAL. LIMA. OHIO. When you find an ablebodied man who sneers at "Generals and Colonels," you may generally set him down as one who spent his time during the late unpleasant ness in sneaking from the draft or specu lating in whisky. Young men of action who were old enough were mostly at the front, and have a personal interest and delight in standing up for the soldierly honor of their comrades. Political Progress In Austria, Austria has gone much farther toward amalgamating the various ethnical ele ments or which it is composed man couia L.h cnnmail im.alhlo fit'lAHfl .Ml. nan making of charges calculated to dishonor Then tie geventeen provincial diets of men, and then allowing no public vindi- which it is composed seemed hopelessly ' ... ... . -I . ...... i.... : ,oei ...I 1. ... cation to appear, is a disreputable stvieoi antagonistic; um m moi, wuei. nuw' . . , . , . n.. ling devised a constitution which was in- Dusiness wuicu we cannot ) geniously arranged to preserve the entire gentlemen of that committee will be p,,,,,,, Kaj i tBe nands of the imperial guilty ot. 11 us nave meir cuticiutiiuiiD government wniie uianiietiting it tiiruugii in a brief report. Or, if they have found constitutional tonus, diets minerio oc-.. . .i -j leu Died chiefly with municipal affairs, be nn n..intinii ml. im iiilvb liih hviuciiwu. i - . . . .. - ..v r , ,0 now B oetermination to preserve It is said the committee has examined ,;,. political rights, somewhat as the fifteen hundred witnesses it must have noisy deputations in England, wnicn in found out something. Fifteen hundred the dayso William kuius werei content ii u ji . ,11 . : to entreat the barons for favors, began to men could hardly talk on the most n- infliBt upon their propositions iii the lime different subjects before a solemn legisla- 0f tne Edwards, and to organize them- tive committee without dropping a little 'selves into what gradually grew into the :..f-..it f .!,. House of Commons. At this late day AUBina is passing uiruugn a Biuiiiiar a ..! .i ti.;. l.i. phase. Xhe wetoi lyroi is demanding . i ii l .i' o-.... t..-.. the emancipation of the schools from the wants to know "why the State Jocbnai, c,ergy 0f Cam iola aims to let up bo suddenly on Rickly?" To tell ,lnite ,n the small provinces south of the the truth and - shame the Statesman, Styrian Alps down to the Adriatic into Baber was sure to be elected, and the pne group. The Diets of Galicia, Bo- . , . , , ii. , ... . hernia, and Moravia are requiring a larger worst luck we could wish our bitterest tnd.Mndence in local adininh.. enemy was to be in the Convention with tration, but they seek it through an in- him. Think of itl no chance for a mem- crease ot power in tne national congress, bcr of the Convention to send word to Keichsrath. A very significant move- , , ...... . i ment is that for a fuller representation of the door that he is dead, or sick of small chie and towna in , EeSchliralh it be. pox, or anything oi tnat sort. ig an old device of Austrian premiers, - carried to perfection under Mettermch, to A number of Toledo, Columbus and outweigh the always democratically in- Lancastcr capitalists have formed a heavy clined towns by a preponderant repre- coal company to operate in Hocking S: county, ihey have 3,000 acres of . the cIaBiveiy Austrian ; there are fifty-Bix best oi coal lands and intend to "lay out" small boroughs in England.' having be- atown. The project is in the hands of tween them 4u0,U0U inhabitant, while some of the best solid men of the three Z l . i' b' uw iuiiu.i Hi... .vw . ni .la ment, the latter two. That Vienna es pecially shall have its representation in the Diet of Lower Austria increased from thirteen to twenty-two seems nearly set tled, and that will probably secure her a proportionate increase in the Keichsrath a measure which will be hardly of in ferior importance to the whole country than the consolidation of the Austro- This last-named event New Tlcarrntu71ce-Falal Reault of a StabbirT AITray An Abomination EraJt.ecd-Two Hulcidei. Chicago. April 27. The Western Union Telegraph 'company moved to- dayinto their magnificent new office on the southwest corner oi insane ana Washington streets, immediately opposite the site of tho office occupied by them before the lire. The new office . is believed to be the most elegant and complete in - all its arrangements of any in the country, naving oeen duhi especially for the company under the immediate supervision of General Anson Stager, General Superintendent of the Central Divison of the company, J. J. Wi son. District Superintendent, (J. 11. Summers, Electrician, and is supplied with all the latest and improved tele graphic instruments and apparatus. The operating room is particularly handsome in all its appointments and is providedwith accommodations for one hundred and fif ty operators. Tne man connecieu wun tne ureal Eastern circus, who was stabbed at Springfield, Illinois, on Friday last, died ycBterday. His name was Olney Clarity instead of Older, as stated in a previous dispatch. He was from South Boston, Mafs. .Tnn. McLauzhlin s Occidental parlors were yesterday raided upon by constables representing three sets of creditors, A mob gathered around the place in the evening, burst in the ljall door and would have undoubtedly lynched Mcuuigimn hod lie been found. All the movable property was taken away by officers and the abomination is a thing of the past. . Two case of suicide are reported here to-dav. Miss Crawford, a beautiful and estimable lady, living with her brother at 613 West Washington street, hung herself this afternoon, during the absonce of the family at church, to a hook in her closet, and was found quite dead. She had been for some time an invalid, and was undoubtedly laboring under temporary aberration of the mind. This afternoon Jno. Coffee, a laboring man, blew the top of his head off with a shotirun at his boarding house, corner Maxwell and Clinton streets. Whisky is said to be the cause. FOBKIGN. FBANCE. elections fob. members oV the assembly,Paris, April 27. The election of Deputy to fill the vacant seat for this city in the Assembly was held to-day. The vote cast' was unusually large. The following are the latest returns: M. Barodet, Radical, 166,000; Baron Stoffel, Conservative, 127,000; Count de Retnusat, supporter of Thiers, 25,000. The official returns will probably differ little from tbese figures, which insure the election of M. Barodet. Large and animated crowds are in the streets, notwithstanding a cold rain, awaiting the latest news and eagerly discussing the result. Elections were held to-day in Marseilles and Bordeaux, in which Radical candidates were also successful. RUSSIA. THE GERMAN EMPEROR'S RECEPTION. Br. Petersburg, April 27. The Ger-Aao Emperor arrived in this city to-day, and was received with extraordinary honors.) He was met at Gotschira, thirty miles hence, by the Czar and Grand Dukes, who accompanied him to the city. The two Emperors made their entrance in the presence of immense crowds of people, who manifested the greatest enthusiasm. Emperor William first reviewed the regiment of which he is honorary Colonel, and was then conducted to the winter palace, where he was formally received by the Court with most imposing ceremonies. The Czar presented to him his portrait and sword of honor, the Cross of St. George, the Iron Cross for merit, with the additional Inscription "for valor," and an inkstand and vases in Lapis Lazuli. SPAIN. PAYMENT OF TREASURY BILLS SAB ALLS'S CARLIST8 ROUTED COUNTRY INHABI- , TANTS ORDERED TO ABANDON THEIR HOMES. ' Madrid, April 27. The Minister of Finance announces that arrangements have been made for the payment of treasury bills due at the end of May, one-third in specie and two-thirds in new acceptances, payable one month from date. The band commanded by the famous chieftain, Saballs, has been routed and its leader has disappeared. Captain General Vellarde has ordered the inhabitants of the country districts invaded by Carlists to abandon their farms and houses and retire into cities with all the provisions they can carry. WASHINGTON. FIRES. A Damaging Frost In lb South. Charleston. S. C. AdHI 27. Advices from neighboring coast sections report disastrous results to crops from the Kill ing trost or yesterday morning. Much ot the cotton will have to be replanted and the injury to early vegetables is irreparable. Frost so late in the season has not been known in this region for fifty years. Gen. Canby'a Remalua The Epizootic.San Francisco, April 27. The body of Gen. Canby is expected to arrive from Portland by Bteamer Tuesday. Many branches of business is almost paralyzed by the epizootic. A few fatal canes are reported. The disease is spreading rapidly. Death or a Well Known merchant, Pouohkeefsie, N. Y April 27. Wil liam W. Reynolds, for nearly forty yean a merchant in this city, died to-day from a stroke of paralysis. He was well known l j i e .i in... among grain ueaiera ui tne vieiHuru States. BY HAIL AMI) TELEHRAPII. Races at Memphis begin to-day. Carl Schnrz sailed from New York Saturday for Europe. The sailors at Cleveland are on a strike for an advance from $2 to $2.50. The failure of James A. Ward, pork packer, Kansas City, is announced. Frank Emerson, 14! yean old. hanged himself in Exeter, N. H., on Wednesday. Two Sargeants of the New York police have been arrested for clubbing a man to death. The 56th anniversary of Odd Fellowship in the United States was celebrated Saturday. John J. Murphy was executed at Stockton, California, Friday, for the murder of fatricK Murray five years ago. Hon. Levi Walker, of Flint, Represen tative lrom Uenesee county, Michigan, died at Lansing Saturday forenoon. The Memphis Life and General Insurance bank, D. B. Malloy, President, suspended Saturday. Liabilities $25,000. - Ex-Representatives Cox, of New York, and Peters, of Maine, have sent to the Treasury the amount of their extra pay. E. W. Williams, aged fifty-three, s well-known merchant tailor at Hartford, cal end Connecticut, hanged himself Saturday. tinually hears in the cafes. The freedom Treasuer Spinner has received two con- accorded to religious heresy is equally tributions to the Conscience Fund : $ 3 great- One hears continually loud theo- from a stove, and exploded, filling the room with flames. A little child of the proprietor, named - Harding, was so burned that its life is despaired of, and Hardin8 himself received severe injuries, as did also Robert Simpson, an employe. J. E. Chamberlain, President of the St. Joseph Fruit Growers' Association, Michigan, announces as a result of a tour of observation through fruit farms sf that rsgion, that so many peach buds are alive that sanguine fruit growers estimate the crop of peaches at only a third of a full crop. The peach trees killed bv the- se vere cold, were mostly old and sickly trees. The apples never looked better. Pear trees are unhurt. Grapes promise an abundant crop. Strawberries are in a splendid condition and will yield a full crop, and cherries and plums equally as well. Austrian Radicalism, With all the social conservatism in Vienna, and the hardness of the aristocracy the noblemen being more like kinirs than even the Junkers of Prussia before Bismarck compelled these to commit hari-kari one can not help being struck bv the degree of freedom allowed in that city. It is said, indeed, not to be found in other cities under Austrian rule, poor rrague, especially, oeing under such surveillance that many of the best plays are proniDiiea to its theaters, in Vienna Herr Etienne, an old revolutinnistof 1848, who edits the Free Press, informed me tnat tie was able to write as much radicalism as he pleased in his Daner without interference from the police. I remember on one occasion, while the celebrated crypt in which the remains of the em perors are preserved in fine coffins loaded with wreaths, our party paused for some time at that of the late Prince Maxim ilian, who was shot in Mexico; It was inscribed by the emperor, "To our dear brother, who was shot by Mexican bar barians." two Hermans present commented upon the inscription in their own language, and very audibly to the company present one declaring that the Mexicans had served "our dear brother" just right, the other expressing the belief that the emperor had helped to send his brother away through jealousy of his greater attainments and popularity, and tear ot his tendency to radicalism, and that he (the emperor) was by no means sorry when he heard of the prince's tragi- Much tree talk as this one con- BONDS AND OOLD. Washington, April 27. The Secretary of thR Treastirv has directed the As sistant Treasurer at New York to sell one million dollars in gold on the first, third and fifth Thursdays, and a million and a tinlf nn thn secon d and fourth Thursdays in all six million dollars and to buy five hundred thousand dollars of bonds on thn 1st. and five hundred thousand on the 3d, Wednesdays of May in all one mil lion dollars. INTEREST on bonds. The Secretary has directed the payment without rebate, on and after Monday, the 28th inst., of interest due on bonds May 1st. S. 8. COX RETURNS IT. Hon. S. S. Cox has sent his check to the Treasurer of the United States for his back pay ns member of Congress. DIED. Commodore John H. Auleck, U. S. navy, on the retired list, died here this morning. . - NEW YORK. from Boston, and $2.60 from Charleston, S. V. The town of Moriana, Arkansas, was nearly destroyed by fire on Thursday. The loss is estimated at htty thousand dollars. logical discussions going on in public rooms, where u reeks, Arminians, and Catholics assemble. There is very apt to be present, also, a Unitarian, whose ar guments sometimes make one fancy him' self in the atmosphere of Boston. In T..n..i.:. ,!, . .... k.,njj Six men, charged with the robbing of tt.ii..:.. -:,i. . .... .... freight cars on railroads centering in ,-: -..F..,l ' j .. ii Quincy, Illinois, were arrested Saturday thlU Uli, form 0f be'lief is spreading to ill Ot. IjOUIB. I ViAtinn nnH nthni narta nf Antlrin In An investigation is being made by the public libraries one sees shelves hicrh un Washington authorities into the accounts inscribed "Verbotene Bucher." and on of Henry M. Whiting, cashier of the New them heretical theology is curiouslv min- iors; roBionice. gied with works ot immoral tendena, Indian scents at Laramie. Dakota, re- such as J2ouseau' Confusions. Ovid's Art port the killing of one man and the of Love, etc. ; but these shelves have be- wounding ot another by the Mineconjaus, come so nine pronioueo, ano so popular, OP OBSOLETE AND UNSERVICE ABLE ORDNANCE AND ORDNANCE STOBES. U.S. ORDNANCE AGENCY, Cos. or Hocrtow anh riDi.u. s..a (Entrance on Greene St.(P. O. Box 1811), flaw IOBS, April 17, 11173, SEALED PROPOSALS, IN DUPLICATE, will be received at this office, for the purchase of Ordnance and Ordnance 8tores, embracing Cannon, Small Arms. Leatber- :i "l lao various Arsenals, Fortsi and Depots, in the United States Bids rill be opened at la o'clock M,on Wednesday, the 28th day of May, 1878, for stores located at Posts in the following named States, to-wit.: Connecticut, Delaware, Indiana, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts. Michigan, Missouri, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Hhode Island, Virginia and the District of Columbia. bids will be opened at 12 o'clock M , on Thursdyi the 12th day of June, 1873, for stores located at Posts in the following named States and Territories, to-wit.: Alabama, California, Florida, Geornia, Kansas, Louisiana, Minnesota, Nebraska, Nevada, North Carolina, Oregon, South Carolina, Texas, Arizona, Colorado, Dakota, Idaho, Indian, Montana, New Mexico, Washington and Wyoming. For list of stores in detail, location, terms, Ac, see Catalogues, which can be procun (1 on application auhe Ordnance Office, War Department, Washington, D. N, at this Agency ,or at any of The Arsenals or Depots, and Commanding Officers of other posts will furnish on application, information as to what stores on hand at their respective posts are for sale. The Department reseivesthe riehtto re ject all bids which are not deemed satisfacto ry, rrior to tne acceptance or anv bid, it will have to be approved by the WarDepartment. i crms casn : Ten per cent, at the time of the avard, and the remaii der when the property is delivered. Thirty days will be allowed for the removal of the stores. Packing boxes will be charged at prices to be de-termed by the Department. Bidders will state explicitly the Post where the stores are located which they bid for, and will gi.e the kinds and quantities they propose to purchase. Deliveries will only be mado at the various Posts where stored. Proposals will be addressed to the U.S. Ordnance Agency. N. Y. (P. O. Box 18111, and should be indorsed "Proposals for Purchasing Obsolete and Unserviceable Ordnance and Ordnance Stores," vrith the names of vue ftrsenms, tors or Depots wbero stored,, and the names of States or Territories n which the stores proposed to be purchased are locaied. By authority ot the Chief of Ordnance. 8. CRISPIN, Itrevet-Col. V. 8. A. that it iB doubtful w hether the warni ng does not act rather as a guide to the hereticallv or pruriently disposed. lrom Ktenno, by M. V. t ontcay, in Harper Magazine for Mag. Crook to Succeed Cooke. apr28 6t Major of Ordiumce. There are seventy-five members of the Constitutional Convention who have speeches already prepared upon capital punishment; sixty who are prepared with views on usury laws; thirty-seven who are bursting to express themselves on female suffrage; twenty who think they can infallibly manage railroad freights; and one who wants to make judges appointive and then go home. We understand that Pat and Put, in view of their irregular bushwhacking engagement with Halstead, have exchanged parts of their names and intertwined the two, after the manner of heroic sagamores who have achieved any chivalric enter prise in partnership. Hereafter the Sena, tors from Ross and Tuscarawas will be known as Patram and Putnick. Why don't tho Legislature adjourn, ia the conundrum every where. Because they can't get enough together to pass the joint resolution. At last there is a suitable opening for Private Daltell. Send him as a Peace Commissioner to the gentle Modoc It ia not true that "Itlmriel" belongs to J. B. L.'s Sunday ' School class. Ithiiriel has a class of his own. David A. Wells highly compliments Secretary Sherwood's last statistical port. Hubbard A Jokes have the London Saturday Review of April 12. The Temperance Cause. Coshocton, O., April 25. To the Editor of the Ohio State Journal: The people of Ohio are thoroughly alive on tlte temperance question. During the past week I have lectured on the "Noble County Temperance Reform" in Hungarian power. four different counties to large audiences, nas unquesuonauiy cunvmceu me u. I have found the people In earnest, and ""U?. .U"d"i,!i,!LA"f8. 2 anxious to learn how to suppress the lng the renifeatVon of many of their as- liquor tramc. 1 he ministers oi an ue- pirations by fraternization, so tliey have nominations tender me the of their lost them bv mutual jealousies. The ex- churches, help me to procure audiences, ample of Prussia has not been lost either and assist me in every way possible. 1 lie upon the Austrian rulers or the many people contribute enough to pay my ex- iribes under them. Solidarity has become pensea and wish me uoa-speeo on my lour the order ol the day ; and though tne through the State. , evolution of the heterogeneous races re- Not the least surprising thing to me is ferred to in a United States of Austria the unanimity with which the press steps will involve a severer struggle than that forward ana tenders Its gigantic power which United Uermany has had with for the good of the cause. In every in- Jnnkerism. there can hardly be a doubt stance the press of both parties have that the tide is every where setting toward civen notices ot my meetings, i he tact such a freedom as shall swallow ud petty that they do this without charge precludes principalities. Liberty is the root, eqnali- ine loea oi any seinsn niouve un meir iy me Dioaaom, uui ooin must reacn meir part; and l oelieve that they win suppori fruit in the iraiernuy ot peoples, the temperance people in all their res- There can be no doubt that there has sonable demands. Let the coming Con- beer) a disposition among liberal thinkers stitutional Convention remember that the in Europe to estimate Austria more fa Deonleare not asleep, and that any effort I vorablv as a political force since it has to insert a license clause in the new Con- withdrawn from Italy. The retention of stitution will meet with a prompt and Venetia especially embittered the Uioet decided rebuKK jas. v. barbe. eminent friends oi iioeny against inai countrv. and kept alive the ugliest tradi- About Candidate!. tlons of he HPhurg house, whose To th. Ediur of the Ohio State J.umd: " ? re'u"T reniernoer- a nas always oeen me usage oi ino .m, u mmA. Mninil publican party to giva State officers a rc-i t0 the popular movements of the times. nomination at the end of their first ,errai and the tact that a hard asistocracy stands ..j T h.i;.- it !. nnJ1 iW ready in each of the countries subjected ., , to Austria to oppress the lower classes, if Governor oycs, Tre.su rer Welsh and madg over to them, more heavily thanthe Comptroller Wilson will be again placed elnperor has ever done, has induced a sus- in nomination at our approaching state pension ot inose anathemas which re-Convention without any serious opposi- formers like Manini and poets like 8win-tion. ' bume have hurled so terribly against that Now, Mr. Editor, I have been indnoei country. It is further now recognised to write the above nararranh. because of thai-Austria is necessarily a peaceful ele- the fact that certain parties are nsing the Iment in the European situation. There name of Charles H. Babeock in connec- is no neighboring country she can wish to UOn Willi IDC OUHIWUIM tl'I MMIKnnni I in.HU., Miu muugi, w iu.j w 1, of the Treasury, in opposition to the tone of popular feeling some remnant of present incumbent, tienerai w.T. Wilson, antagonism to rruasia, me uermaa eie-who is not ealv jaatly entitled to a mom-1 merit of the country are too strong tosaf- ination. bnt who will most certainlv be fer such sentiments to survive verv Ions'. renominated. There is every reaaoa to believe that Aas- My object Simply to notify General tria is contented, and has honestly set Wilson's aeata ei friend ia the State of herself to develop her resources and to what ia roine oa at the Capital, that thev harmonise her government with the age. may govern themselves accordingly. from " rSeaaa," fry M. D. Conway, in iutubucak. Harper i jiaeanac nr May. DESTRUCTIVE FIRS IN WASHINGTON SEVERAL HOUSES ANO CONTENTS DAM AGED NARROW ESCAPE OF . BONN PIATT'S RESIDENCE. Washington, April 27.-This morning fire broke out iu the basement of the house occupied bv Pay Inspector J. N. Carpenter in Mechaeler row on F street, between Seventeenth and Eighteenth streets. Before the familv were aware ot the dan ger the fire had reached the upper Btorics, and Mr. and Mrs. Carpenter with difficulty escaped to the Btreet, the latter screaming for her child which was sleep ing in the Mansard story 01 tne ouuoing. On hearing the cry, William Diggs ran through an adjoining house and along the cornice to tne ourning aweiung, burst in the window, seized the nearly suffocated child, carried it out on the roof of the next house and delivered it to a colored man who restored the child to its mother. . This gentleman had his wrist severely cut by the glass on the cornice. The interior ot tne nouse was aimosi en tirely deBtroyed. It was the property of A. R. Shepherd and insured. The flames spread to the adjoining double Mansard roof of the residence of Col. Donn Piatt on the west, burning it to snch an extent that it will have to be en tirely removed. That gentleman a library and mostof his furniture were saved lrom the flames, but some of the latter was in jured by water. He had no insurance whatever on the nouse ann contents. The Barnes alro extended to the Man sard roofs on the east, damaging more or less eight or ten ot them. Ihe most ot the furniture in ine upper aiories was ue- tmved bv fire and that below consider. ably damaged by water. Loss on houses comparatively small, wiin me exception of those belonging to Mr. Shepherd and Oilnnel Piatt. Une ot tne houses in me row was occupied by Lieutenant Wheeler, of the United States engineer corps, ana where he and his assistants were employ ed completing the record of the survey maae aunng miv im. iuui m nnu-na, Utah and xtevada. All the surveying instruments, records, plates, photo-irranhs. etc.. were saved. Harry Elliott, a young lawyer, while assisting in removing furniture from one of the houses, tell through an opening oi a winding stairway to the basement, a distance of about forty-five feet, receiving serious injuries of the spine. A HOTEL W FLAMES MARROW ESCAPE OF BOARDERS. Patebson. N. J April 27. A fire in the St. Charles Hotel, opposite the Erie denot. this morning, completely gutted the first floor, and the whole building was pons derablv damaged bv Ire and water. A number ol ooaraers narrowly eacapea with their Uvea by leaping from the u pper windows upon adjoining buildings. Une man who jumped from the third story to the ground was very badly hurt. Two women were seriously injured and several firemen nearly suffocated. RAILROAD BTATTOH BURNED. Memphis, April 27. Village station, on the Memphia and Louisville railroad, was destroyed by fire last night. .No particulars. Loss estimated at $15,000. ST. CBISPINS' STRIKE. New York, April 27. A movement is on foot among the St. Crispins to strike for eight hours and an increase of wages. The societies had secret meetings and resolved to strike at an early day. TO BE TORN DOWN. The old TJ. S. arsenal ereeted in 1812 on Jersey City Heights will be torn down after the first of May. MINISTER BELONG. The Times learns DeLong is likely to be continued Minister to Japan. CINCINNATI. Bishop Mcllvalne's RemnlllM -Im ported Hinging Birds. Cincinnati. April 27. Rev. Thomas S. Yocum and Thomas G. Odiorne start from here to New York to-morrow to receive the body of Bishop Mcllvaine and brine it here for burial. Fifteen hundred singing birds of differ ent varieties, imported from Uermany by asocietv organized for that purpose, were turned loose in the suburbs to-day. The object is to domesticate them in this coun try, if possible. Weather Prcbabllltles. Washington. April 27. The tempera ture will continue increasing very gener ally from Mississippi to the Atlantic sea board; tor tne JMonnwesianu upper taxes, and thence to the lower Ohio and lower Missouri Valley, cloudy weather, falling barometer, fresh to brisk southeasterly to northeasterly winds and occasional rain; for the Southwest and Western Gulf States, southwesterly and southerly winds, falling barometer, threatening and rainy weather; for the upper Ohio Valley and Kentucky, winds veering to southeasterly, increasing by cloudy and warmer weather; for the lower lakes and Middle States, srenerallv clear weather with northwest erly to southwesterly winds and higher . . t 1. I v I.'- temperature; lur v-unaua wiu cw England, northwesterly winds, partly cloudy and cool weather. of the sioux tribe. The Indian Bureau does not share in the apprehensions indulged in by the reg ular army relating to the probability of a general ludian outbreak A call has been issued to the heirs of .1 ,n I n,.' . c c I 1 me lowniey vuo estate, Tbere to be no doubt that Brig, who reside in Southern Ohio to meet in p,,.,. g Q . mw ? uayion 10 iaaesieps,waru receiving me command ,t 'Detroit. Michigan will be property. retired by the President soon, he being Republicans have undertaken the pros- over the prescribed age. This retirement, ecution of the Carlist Commissioners in a9 Btate(i jn tne gtar a few day, ag0i wjl London who are collecting funds lor JJon occasion one vacancv in the list of Briga- Carlos, as it is claimed, in violation ot in- 0ier Generals, the number now being six, lern.tiional law. ag authorized by law. and it is the general J. L. Taietor, cashier of the Atlantic impression that Colonel George Crook, National Bank, is r. ported to have cot,- who is now doing such excellent service fessed himself a defaulter in $400,OUf, in Arizona, will be promoted to the grade The bank is said to be temporarily bui- of Brigadier General. Colonel Crook is pended. Taistor is in jail. personally one of the most popular ofli PpABiitnnf Grant, lifli lnt.olv oIV0n Now cers of the army, and his promotion will Orleans parlies to understand that if the be generally acceptable. Waihingtm Star. l- T' ; I. .J I . I-I 1 , people ui iiuiBiana coiisuiteu meir uem uoou enougn t interests, they would submit at once to the Kellogg state Government. The front of Recorder Hackett's house New York was besmeared Friday night and he has been threatened hia life for imposing such heavy penalties on New lork rascals and thieaes. A person representing himself as M. P. Levy, of Levy & (Jo.,ol Mobile, Ala., has been arrested in Baltimore, for swindling several Baltimore merchants, the Mobile hrm having telegraphed that he was an l m poster, At Annapolis, Md., Saturday, in the My Kingdom for a Horse! What the purse of King Richard could not then pro cure, all can now purchase toi a snnc. The Centaur Lini ment w ill i ot raise the dead horse of a Kiog. but it will cure a lame one, and more than that it is the most re- L.Jt.m.. mmlratila Ihini. fnr awollmtra cam of Elisabeth U. Wharton, indicted Ltiff iaintfL Cflked breaata. Btintts andbruiwi, t .at ... . k'ni.ann Van I . " . . : . ' a 1, iur nu ttucmpt w uiumci uugcug I the world nas ever seen, a man oupmvu Nesa by poison, a nolle waa entered by the guffer with the Rheumatism who has not proftecimng attorney, thus ending tne tried this Liniment, Wharton trials. York of the Board of Indian Commis- Umldrfiil 017 For Pitcher's Cas' nneM iova nnnlMOtoil tnv liillX nnrn I a butcher knives and 120 dozen skinning tona, u regulates me siomacn, cure, wuiu knives, among the other articles to be lur-nished to the Indians. The report of the investigation, now making in Vienna by Mr. Jay, United States Minister, and Thomas McElroth, into the conduct of the American Com missioners to the Exposition, will be made public as soon as received. As the southern train on the Memphis and Louisville railroad approached Trese- vant Station, Tennessee, Saturday, a lady M this ( Monday) eveniil Aprp JStk, 1873, named Mra. Ellis attempted to cross the at 7 o'clock. i l'i" v IteMMralle Primary aicetlnca In Ft. Wayne. . Ft. Wayne, Ind, April 27. The Democrats held primary meetings in the various wards last night for the election of delegates to the city convention next Saturday. There is a close contest for the Democratic nomination for mavor between the present incumbent, F. R. Randall esq., and Colonel Tollinger. with the probabilities in favor of the former. Enforrlna; Law anal Order In Louisi ana. Baton Rouge. April 27. A detach ment of one hundred and twenty-five metropolitan police, armed with Win chester rifles and one piece of artillery, arrived here last evening from New Orleans, and left this forenoon for Port Vincent, Livingstone parish, for the pur pose of installing the appointees of Gover nor Kellogg. They were met at Harrold's Ferry, Amite river, at noon to-day, by a committee of three persons representing the Port Vincent party, and it is pre sumed mat matters will be anjusiea with out bloodshed. President erant at Denver. Denver. Col.. April 20. President Grant and oartv reached Denver safe and well at 1:30 p. in. to-day. They will remain here till Monday morning, when the partv will leave for (.olden, Black hawk and Central City. From Central City to Idaho Springs they take private carriasea. and returning to Denver Mon day evening,the President will give a public reception Monday evening atJGovernors Hall. He will probablv go east by way of Omaha, lneaday. rirat Terael Oat mm BnlTaln. Buffalo, April 27. The propeller Equinox, the Brat vessel of the season. left here this forenoon for Cleveland. At 3 p. m. she had reacheJ Windmill Point, and was alowly working ber way through the mast of floating ice which had come from the upper lakes. colic and causes natural sleep. It la a sub stitute for castor oil. aprd eod 2w New Advertisement. MASONIC. BOSTON Shoe Store! 123 South High St. OUR CONNKCTIOH WITH EASTERN FACTORIES Enables na to Dell all Goods In onr Line CHEAPER than any other Honae In Colnmbna. CHAS. E. CONRADE, (Directly Opposite Osborn's.) oet29 2taw 6m A. STATED COMMUNICATION Goodale Lod-a, No. 871, F. a A. LAMB'S OINTMENT, THIS HIGHLY POfULAR ARTICLE IS unequalled by any other application for the cure of Ascne In the Breaat, Cabins; of the Milk, or Tumors lrom other causes; Fresh Wounds or Brnine., fever norm, or other old Sores or VI eersi Chapped Hands, Skin alaeaes, Hnralna, King worm. Salt HheHm, letter. Aha. eeiie , Balls, Buroa. Sralda, Pelona. Pressing or Blisters, Corn. Chilblains. Carbunelea, Swe Hilars, ate. It will also he found very efficacinns in the cure of NEURALGIA, SORE EYES, r AUK AUtiK and ALL KINDS UP IN FLAMMATORY SWELLINGS. Price, SOCKETS PHt BtlX. H. c.CADY.Sole Pron'r, Cincinnati. X9-S0LD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. feb22 2taw 3m track in front of ' the engine, which run over and instantly killed her. The Dutch Government has ordered fourteen steamers to proceed immediately to Sumatra and co-operate with the Dutch troops in their movements against the Achinese. The vessels will carry a large quantity of ammunition and arms for the troops. John Hutchinson was convicted in Bos ton Saturday of swindling the sexton of St. Paul's Church out of about $1800 through a pretended business copartner ship. Hutchinson is a clergyman, iorm-erly connected with the Anglican diocese of A ova Dcotia, Bill Brown, alias Campbell, the negro roustabout who assaulted Thomaa Doyle, mate of the Bteamer brand lower, Ihurs- day night, was arrested Saturday in Cairo on the strength oi a telegram irom Mem phis, announcing the deatn oi voyie irom his iniuries. Brown acknowledges mak ing the assault, and says it was in revenge for a blow given him by uoyie mree wees ago, S CO., 14 WALL STREET, . T. ANQRZ1WS OO., la Place Vendome. PARIS. TRAVELERS' CREDITS Issued, both ia STERLING, on Hutchinson is a clergyman, form- D3II05T BANK OF LOXDON And ia France, on. PARIS, VVDEB TKB S4XS LRTKB. CIRCULAR NOTES Of 110, MO and 90 on the roios bask or LOSDOX, ROBERT A. GAWLER, AMtnACTVIl OF ARB DBA 1KB IB Human Hair Goods Of Every Description. CASH PAD) FOR HUMAN HAIR 77 East Town Street. july!3 dtawfcw ly Commercial Credits, Exchange London and Paris. OB Ctr. IlAnfla an A Cli-IA hnnnkt flnit flnllt All The Troy Times says that Boss Tweed eommiasion Railway Loans Negotiated. feb 2taw ly laatratnents, arrived at the Delavan House, Albany, Wednesdav afternoon, and was secretly having a "loud time" with several Demo-ivatic Amemblvmen. when the news reached him that the Sergeant-at-Arms of the Assembly was bearing down upon Uiim with an order for hia arrest on the Erie Investigating business, and he was spirited away to other ana more seciuaea quarters. An explosion occurred Friday evening at 169 West Madison atreet, Chicago, in a clothes cleaning and dying establishment, The roots in which the garments weiel Philadelbhla. hanging and cleaned with ben line, be-1 Kent on that yon saw this in the Uaro , . . ... ...... 1 . C ln . 1 - M, came so niiea Wltn gas un u caugn. ore state jocesau urii . 'lalfcrnsnlicnl Is l.l iersMeopoo. I B I auric Lanie-ras. eteorologiesil Inatrainrnta, PHYSICAL APPARATUS, Proftietly Illustrated and Priced, mtilti Is eny nwta oa receipt of 10 cents eaca. J AMES W. tfJE. COOnllrlana, 924 CHESTS tT ST. 601 BB'DW'f new lor I PAVING NOTICE. TO AM. WHOM IT MAY COXCERX Crrt Clkrk'r OmcE, 1 Oil-mi., O., April 15, U73. ( Nntiiw ii, herebr riven, thnt nroceedinss nave- been instituted in the City Council of Columbus lor makinathe rollowmg improvements, towil: For trading the loedway, grading and paving. tho gutters snd setting the curb on Buttle avenue from High street to Dennison aveutic; oxtinisted con, fciirtf.oa. For grading and bouldering Rmlroad allev, from Nxghten street to Maple street; estimated cot, ti;6.t. The same to be done in accordance with pints and estimates to bo prepared bv the City Civil Engineer, and filed in the office of the City Clerk. Al nersona elaimms damages on awmmi ot aaid improvements, are required lo file their elaima in the oroeo of the Clerk, in anting, on orhetore the roth day oi May, . v. ie, i. Li. E.. n ill,l. I. IIJ II".- Aparil IB. A. D. 1S73. aprtl Staaniw OLD XIEIIS FOR SAXsia AT THIS OFFICE, By the pound or by the handred. Storekeepers will realize a saving by nsing them sa wrapping paper. |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn84028631 |
Reel Number | 00000000037 |
File Name | 0426 |