Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 16 July 1892 — Page 8

JEWELRY, DIAMONDS,

WATCHES, RINGS, Etc.

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WEEKLY JOURNAL.

SATURDAY, JULY 16, 1892.

Dont Lend Your Journal*

But just send us quarter of a dollar and we will send the paper to your borrowing neighbor until Nov. 19.

FLASHES BOM OYER THE OIT I.

—A eon has been born to Mr. and Mrs. Charley ROBS. —Miss Hattie Furcell is visiting friends in Cincinnati. —Hon. E. Y. Brookshire is home from Washington, D.C. —The Big Four will run a cheap excursion to Cincinnati July 20.

J. II. Dilkes and wife, of Indianapolis, are the guests of Frank Coss. —Miss Maggie Cole is home from Elgin, Ills., on a visit w't-b h«r parents. —Tom J. Drake, of Linden, is the new day clerk at the Junction Hoube. —J. A. Gilbert and wife are spending a season at Cedar Lake, in Starke county. —Capt. Herron is able to limp about and now attends to his business as usual. —E. P. McClaskey has been appointed ^administrator of the estate of Albert Allen, deceased. —A son was born to Mrs. Chas. M* Fraley, July 13, at the home of her father, L. A. Swift. —Hong Guay arrived in San Francisco from China on Monday and will be here by the last of the week. —Mrs. J. M. Lane and Misses Mary and Nan Elston and Helen Smith have returned from the lakes —Miss Allie Blaine, of Champaign, 111., is the guest of Miss Mary Harlan, •407 South Walnut street. —The Second Baptist Sunday school will give a Bocial at the Morton club •rooms nest Saturday night. —Mat Brandenburg has gone to

Mace to take charge of Isaac Linn's threshing engine' for the next four •weeks. '—M. H. Ingrim, of the Democratic Journal, and wife, of Winamac, visited this week at Mrs. M. E. Drake's near Linden. —Mrs. H. H. Gortner is very dangerously ill at Goshen. Mr. and Mrs. B.

V. Galey and Dr. Keegan went up this afternoon. —Mrs. J. A. Lindlev and daughter, Miss Myrtie, have concluded a visit with M. E. Clodfelter and returned to Covington. —Mrs. C. T. Hills and children, of Jamestown, S. D., are the guests of Murray Hills, stopping on their way from Bloomington, Ills. —W. B. Vandervolgen, aged 77, the father-in-law of W. B. Gebhart, died July 13 at Hillsboro. Mr. and Mrs. Gebhart are ther« to attend the funeral. —Following Kingfishers left Wednesday to join the party now at Pine Hills: Dr. D. N. Morgan and wife, T. D. Brown and wife, Miss Nell Brown, Walter Hulet, Miss Maude Cowan an Harry Mahorney. —Miss Minnie Harris, of Louisville, will take part in the musicale at the Methodist church Sunday evening. Mies Harris is one of the best singers in the west and sings in the Calvary church, of Louisville. —Those who 6aw Kate Castleton, here in "Faust Up To Date" and heard her sing "For Goodness Sake Don't Say I Told You," and "The Spider and the Fly" will be pained to learn of her death which occurred in the Eest last Sunday. —Mr. Yannett, of the Yandalia postal service, wants it understood that he was in nowise responsible for the report that

Harry Krug and wife objected to young Donaldson who shot hiniBelf in St. Joe recently. The young lad is now improving and will probablv recover all right.

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—George Rogers is in receipt of a postal card from Rev. T. B. Luster, who iB visiting his parents near Whitesville. He has rented a house at Crawfordsville and expects soon to occupy it. Mr. L. has been suffering with inflammation of the bowels and is very weak. LaFayette Call,

—Rev. E.T.Sphon, who has had a successful pastorate at Darlington for three years past, will ask the conference to relieve him of the charge next fall in order that he may enter DePauw University. He will take an irregular course for a year or two and then enter the theological seminary. It may be that Rev. A. A. Nicholls, of West Virginia, who is now visiting his sister in Darlington, will succeed Mr. Spohn.

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THE END OF THE WOBLD,

Brother Oberhaltzer Tells the Denizens of New Market it is Near at Hand. But they don't believe it. In fact they are inclined to laugh at Brother Oberhaltzer for preaching such foolish doctrine. He and two assistant evangelists, all Second Day Adventists, one, a blind singer named McKinzie, from Battle Creek, Mich., came to New Market about three weekB ago. They put up a tent and invited saint and sinner to come and hear. Every night they are open to the public, and the public for lack of anything else to do and out of curiosity attends. Mr. Oberhaltzer has not asked for signers to hie peculiar doctrine and his only object seems to be to have the people get ready for the eud of the world. He and his two helpers have no visible means of support except the voluntary contributions of the good peoples of New Mar ket. Besides the hat collections thoy are invited to send around spare victuals or old clothes they may have. Brother Oberhaltzer is so confident that what he promulgates is true that he defies the world to prove it different. Last Sunday night Rev. Mr. Jacobs, the eminent Universalist divine, of Whitesville, arrived at the tent and offered himself as a champion of Sun day Sabbath, as opposed to the Saturday Sabbath and of a good long life for this earth. He is said to have strayed from the subject considerably but he made a good hit when he announced at the close that he would preach next Sunday at Whitesville on the Homestead troubles. The Second Day Adventists expect to be in New Market three weeks more. Those who have never seen a real live one should go down.

A TERRIBLE FALL.

A Bi,e Four Bridge Gana Fall Nearly Twenty Feet From a Trestle. Wednesday afternoon the Big Four bridge gang met with an accident, which was truly remarkable in that it caused no fatalities. The bridge over the Wabash river at Covington needed some repairs and the workmen in order to make them erected a large scaffold. Upon this were hoisted up a number of heavy timbers and the work begun. Suddenly the scaffold gave away and men, timbers and all were precipitated to the ground nearly twenty feet below. There were three Crawfordsville boys picked out of the debris, Lon and Charley Whittaker and Howard Ashley. Howard Ashley's head was badly cut and one arm terribly bruised. Charley Whittaker's head was gashed and his toes mashed almost to jelly. Lon Whittaker had his ankle badly sprained and a big toe fairly crushed off while several other toes were badly mashed. The boys had fallen down with the great beams and it is almost wonderful to think that they did. not fall under them. The injured were brought home on the o'clock train and are doing as well as possible under the circumstances.

He Has Departed.

Mr. Tom Drake, late of Linden, is now later of the Junction House. He has departed, gotten himself hence, in short, he has gone. Tom had no sooner become installed at. the Junction House than he became involved. One of the pretty waiter ^irls, while sitting on a high stool eating prune pie, accidently spilled a pitcher of cider into a large bowl of turkey sandwiches. This, very naturally, aroused the ire of Tom and he made a remark which incidentally reflected on the virtue of the young lady. Perhaps Tom didn't mean for it to reflect but it did just the same and left a black spot on her white character as large as the top of a tar barrel. The lady came back at him in right good style, proving conclusively that her education had not been neglected nor her vocabulary impaired by a residence on Goose Nibble. There was a pretty enough row ensued and the young lady, getting the worst of it, cut across the Nibble "to find pa." In the course of some minutes she was observed returning with the gentleman who was responsible for her being and under whose guidance the early footsteps of her career had been taken. The old gentleman waB rolling up his eyes and his sleeves while his grizzled whiskers stood out like quills upon the back of the fretful porcupine. One glance for Mr. Drake was enough. Those standing by heard a body rush by them and soon afterwards the cracking of bushes in the adjacent woods. The administration of Mr. Drake had closed and everybody ate pie without money and without price.

A Sad Oase.

The following from the LaFayette Courier relates the sad case of a young man well known in this county and city:

Arthur Parker, a young man 19 years old, residing with his widowed mother, Mrs. Sarah Parker, near Romney, was brought here yesterday afternoon in a violent state of insanity, having been so pronounced by a commission composed of 'Squires Allen and James and Drs. Pyke and Simison yesterday morning. For several days he has sought destruction upon everything, breaking household furniture and trying to take his own life. Three years ago his father, A. Parker, killed himself in a fit of insanity and this second great trouble has completely prostrated the mother. The young man has a hallucination that an old friend of his has proved traitor and seeks to kill him. He constantly sees his friend before him and engages in a figbt with his imaginary presence. One cause of his insanity is alleged to be on account of a disapointment in a love affair with a young lady whom the young man has been courting for some time. This is generally believed to be the cause, but it is strange that in his mutterings he never mentions tier name. His case is a sad one, his condition being one of the most distressing that was ever revealed in this county, and the poor old mother, whoEe sorrow is so great, has the sympathy of all..

MARTIAL LAW.

It Is About to Be Declared in Homestead.

THE STRIKERS IN AN UGLY TEMPER.

They lielicve That the Contemplated Action Means That Non-Union Men Ar« to lie I'ut to AVork—II" !so, un

Outbreak Is Imminent.

TROUBLE IN SIGHT.

•..IIo.MF.3TK.vu, Pa., July

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seems almost certain that martial law will be declared within the next few hours, possibly at o'clock this morning'. The staff officers were in conference until midnight at division headquarters, and did not deny that they were considering important business. It became known that they were discussing- plans for putting the town and the mills under martial protection. This is taken as an indication that nonunion men will be brought into town earl}- in the morning and that the soldiers will be needed to preserve order. At the office of the Carnegie mills late Wednesday evening an attendant said that preparations had been made to begin work in the mills and that a force would probably be in some time today. The report that martial law was to be established came at a time when but few people were on the streets and did not obtain general circulation. At division headquarters it was not denied that an important order was imminent, but no one was in a position to say when it would go into effect.

It is believed that Gen. Snowden will disband the special police and put the town in the hands of the sheriff, with the troops to assist him in maintaining order. A report from apparently good authority is that 400 non-union men will arrive in the first detachment and will be put in the mills under guard.

The Day's Developments. .y.

The strikers were jubilant Wednesday over the report that at 4 o'clock today all of the men in the Carnegie mills of Pittsburgh would quit work. They claimed that the general strike would give the Carnegie company the hardest fight it has ever known and would insure victory for the Amalgamated association. This satisfaction was tempered by an uglj- disposition to resent the presence of the national guards. Homestead does not like the militia as well as it did, and the smothered sentiment of resistance is venting itself on the non-residents who are in town. A reaction has set in and many of the idle strikers on the streets are becoming loud-moutlied and insolent. There is imminent danger that any moment one of them will start an outbreak.

Strikers AVero Deceived.

A feeling of unrest and discontent has arisen now that the workmen realize that the militia are here to assist Carnegie, Phipps & Co. in opening the steel mills. As indicated in the dispatches of Wednesday the men were deceived into believing that the soldiers were their friends and did not intend to protect non-union men. To-day it is understood that the encampment will continue for thirty days, and that any interference with the Carnegie company will bring over three thousand aoldiers in line around the mills. There are no cheers for the militia now. Instead there are muttered curses and a sentiment of blind hostility toward every stranger.

No Authority to Make Arrant*. A newspaper man and a government inspector of steel plate were arrested by special policemen Wednesday, more for the purpose of making them trouble than anything else. Gen. Snowden has said that the advisory committee of the strikers is not authorized to make arrests or send men out of town. A repetition of some of the outrages of Wednesday will result in trouble.

The Leaders Will He Arrested. Regarding the arrest of the Homestead rioters Sheriff McCleary can say nothing definite. He claimed to have no information that the Carnegie company would swear out warrants within a day or two, hut he intimated that a large number of arrests would be made sooner or later. Of this there can be but little doubt. It is- said that the company is waiting for the coroner to finish his investigating. An adjournment has been taken and the inquest will not be finished before August, but the company would prefer that the charges of murder come from the coroner. All of the testimony thus far taken is to the effect that the strikers fired many shots before the men on the barges began to shoot. This is generally admitted in Homestead, but those who assisted in the attack boast that in the excitement of the morning no one on the shore .was positively identified by any person who could testify for the prosecution. In this the men are probably mistaken, for Secretary Lovejoy has practically admitted that the company had detectives among the men previous to the attack and learned more particulars of the battle than were published in any newspaper.

Krlck Continues.

PITTSBURGH, Pa., July 14.—Manager Frick, of the Carnegie works, resumed his testimony at the morning session of the congressional investigating committee. Mr. Frick said the arms were consigned to the Union Supply Company, and by it delivered to Capt. Rodgers, of the steamer Little Bill. His arrangements to obtain Pinkerton men were completed July 1. So far as he knew there was no letter from Pinkerton accepting the offer contained in the letter of June 25. The negotiations were carried on by Mr. Frick, the New York agent and the Philadelphia agent asked if he had anything to do with the furnishing of arms. Mr. Frick became very noncommittal in his replies. All efforts to obtain a direct answer to the question were futile. All the witness would say was he believed he had, but was not sure. He said that in the employment of the Pinkerton men it was not stipu­

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lated that they should be armed. He did not join in the sheriff's request to the governor for troops until Saturday night.

Other Testimony.

Sheriff McCleary was next sworn, and testified that counsel for the Carnegies had notified him a week before the men went out that there would be trouble and that the company had arranged to send H00 men to Homestead and they wanted them deputized. He was notified July 4 that he must protect the property of their company. Tuesday he sent twelve deputies to the works and they were driven away. His efforts to secure a posse were detailed at length. He was notified the night the l'inkertons went up and he tried to persuade them not to send them, as he feared trouble. He was finally induced to send Col. Gray along to try and prevent trouble. Sheriff McCleary said the people would not serve on his posse because thev were afraid of being killed. The sheriff said he had not authorized Coi. Gray to deputize the Pinkertons. He did not go to Homestead on the day of the trouble because it was useless.

I'lrat A\ltiicss 011 the Side of Ksihor*

President Weihe was the first witness on the side of labor. He reviewed the slidingscale and the failure to reach an agreement with the company. Reductions, he said, were proposed in almost all departments. The men objected because they did not think a reduction necessary. The reductions would average IS per cent. The date of the expiration of this scale was a vital question to the men all over the country, because they could not work in the heated season. As near as he could estimate the labor cost of a ton of steel at Homestead was SI. 55. In reply to Judge Taylor as to why the men thought they had a right to take possession of the mill Mr. Weihe said: "There may be some who think so, but they are not so tnught in the association." Mr. Weihe said no offer to arbitrate the question was made until after the trouble. The Homestead men are now willing to settle by arbitration. "r v.::v

O'Donnell on the Stand.

Hugh O'Donnell was called and Mr. Oates said: "Now, Mr. O'Donnell, while we are noi here to assume anything, we wish to say that if the answers to an3T questions we may ask you should tend to criminate you you need not answer them." "Well, 1 am not afraid," said Mr. O'Donnell. In answer to questions Mr. O'Donnell said that when the men went out the eight lodges held a joint meeting and appointed the advisory committee, of which witness was chairman. Men were placed around the fence "to keep out irresponsible people." This was done July 1.

The

men were instructed to use only moral suasion. They were not instructed to keep anyone out of the mill. They were there to try and persuade non-union men to remain out of the mill. "We intended to use only peaceful means," said the witness. "And no one more regrets the assault than the advisory committee does." The witness then repeated the story of the battle and his efforts to prevent the firing by the crowd on the shore. The inhuman treatment of the Pinkertons after the surrender, he said, was not the work of the strikers, but of irresponsible parties. The laboring people, he said, look upon the Pinkertons as enemies of the laboring man. The chief objection to them coming here was that it was feared with them would come non-union men.

Says There Is a Conspiracy. In the afternoen Burgess McLuckie, William Roberts, ex-vice president of the Amalgamated association, and Col. Gray, deputy sheriff, were examined. Burgess McLuckie said he thought there was a gigantic conspiracy some where, aided and abetted by legislation to deprive workingmen of their rights under the constitution of this government—that of "life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness."

Mr. Taylor asked why he had formed such on opinion. The witness said: "Well, after going to work fully assured that we had a safe basis upon which we could depend the Melviuley bill came in and reduced that identical article upor. which our compensation was based, and raised the tariff on other articles."

He thought the Union Pacific railway and the Carnegies, with Frick at the head, were in the conspiracy. He would not say that he thought a majority of congressmen were in it, too.

THE FAIR BILL PASSED.

It Goes Through the Senate by a Vote of 51 to 14—Quay's Sunday Closing Amendment and Peffer's Liquor Prohibition

Both Accepted. WASHINGTON. July 14.—The"world's fair bill, with the Quay Sunday closing and the Peffer liquor amendments attached, has passed the senate by a vote of 51 to 14. Senator Quay's amendment was first adopted and then Senator l'effer's amendment. prohibiting the sale of liquor on the grounds, was accepted by an almost strictly party vote, the republicans being for and the democrats against it. The opposition to the bill, as a whole, was weak.

With the various amendments disposed of, the question reverted to the passage of the $5,000,000 world's fair appropriation as amended. The result was extremely gratifying to the friends of the exposition, as it showed only fourteen senators opposed to the appropriation, while fifty-one recorded themselves in favor of it. The senators voting "nay" were Bate, Barry, Blackburn, Blodgett, Butler, Carlisle, Cockrell, Coke, George, Horris, Irby, Jones (Ark.), Vest and Walthall.

In Madison Square Garden. NEW YORK, July 14.—The probability now is that the ceremony of notifying Messrs. Cleveland and Stevenson that they have been nominated by the democratic party for president and vice president respectively will take place in the vast amphitheater of the Madison square garden the night of Wednesday, July 20. That it will be an affair of unusual importance is certain.

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Under Martial Law.' ,•

Special to The Journal. PITTSBURG, PA., July 14.—A Homestead dispatch says that that borrough was placed under martial law this morning an outcome of the unwarranted arrest of strangers yesterday.

Separated.

If desert sands my eager feet would journey. Nor weary till I kissed the earth where thou shouldst stand If it were sea, I'd cross the waters over,

Nor fear the tempest till I reached thy land

If it were death, I would not live without thee The weary hours could never solace know, But gladly from the empty world about me.

Through death's dark way to seek thee, love, I'd go.

Not desert lands, nor sea, nor oven death, dear, Divides our lives and keeps our souls apart But distance wider than two worlds compute, love.

Hath its equator in thy silent heart. —Louisville Courier-Journal.

•••a. Harrison's Outing.

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MRS. BENJAMIN HARRISON.

The lovers of primeval nature who are laboring to get the Adirondack region set apart and preserved from civilization as a great national park, are delighted to learn that Mrs. Harrison is with them. She is going to recuperate in that region from the effects of her recent illness, and as soon as the public business allows the president will join her there. Mrs. Harrison has been from youth a lover of wild nature and has always found it a tonic, and surely nothing could be more appropriate than to make the Adirondacks the presidential retreat.

CROWN AND SCEPTER.

The queen of Roumania's latest work is a novel, "Edleen Vaughan." The favorite employment of the Prince of Montenegro is the composition of war songs and historical dramas, in which he delights to sing and act with great vigor.

Queen Victoria is fond of gardening, and all her children have been taught to dig and plant flowers and vegetables in season. She is also passionately fond of horses and dogs.

The ex-Empress Eugenie goes daily to pray in the mortuary chapel near her present home, Farnsborough Hall. There is an altar, before which a monk says mass with only one mortal auditor. Every one else is excluded while the unhappy wife and mother is within.

The Hindoo prince, the Gaikwar of Baroda, is one of the most progressive rulers in Hindostan. Ho does not want costly buildings merely for show, but spends his money preferably on schools, railroads and drainage. His personal character is good, and he is philanthropic in his instincts.

The dowager queen of Portugal is passionately fond of shooting, and spends a great deal of time while at her country place, on the seaboard of Caldas, where she amuses herself by aiming with a ri$e from a high window at bottles thrown into the sea for that purpose. She is said to be a remarkable expert markswoman.

A Home Wanted.

In the country near" a school house for two bright boys aged twelve and nine years. If they can find a home in a nice familp I will pay their board. Mrs. Belle Wallace, 206 west College street.

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TICURA REMEDIES, in two months the awful disease had ceased its veugonnce, and my darling boy had rest, and to ail appearancc the disease bad yielded, but I continued the medicine for several months after no trace could be seen of it on any part of hia body. The doctors here

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NOTICE TO NON-H ESI DENTS.

State of Indiana, Montgomery county: In the Montgomery Circuit Court, September term, IS!)'-1.

William It. l'lerce et :il. v-. Thomas J. Mills et :il. Complaint No. 10,487. Now comes the plaintiffs by Crane Anderson, their attorneys, and tiles their complaint herein, to recover possession of certain re:tl estate in said eountj and to have a deed iitteeting said real estate said aside, together with an atlidavit. that said defendants, Sarah A. Gtenard and William B. Merrell are each nonresident a of the ?tate of Indiana.

Notice is theretore hereby given said defendants, Sarah A. Grenard and William 11. Merrell that unless they be and appear on tne first, day of the next term of the Montgomery Circuit Court, the same being the fifth clay of September, A. D., 1892, at the court house in Crawfordsville. In said county and State, and answer or demur to said complaint, the same will be heard and determined in their ab-

SODCC

Witness my name, and the seal of said court, affixed at Crawfordsville, this 27th day or June, A. 1892.

HENRY B. HULETT.

July 2, 1892. Clerk.

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