Decatur Journal, Volume 18, Number 22, Decatur, Adams County, 15 January 1897 — Page 6

THE DECATUR JOURNAL 1 .1 •" FRANK A. EVARTS, Ed. and Pub. ! DECATUR, - - INDIANA

HISTORY OF A WEEK. THE NEWS OF SEVEN DAYS UP TO DATE. Polltiral* Religion*, Social and Criminal Doing* of the Whole World Carefully Condensed for Our Readers —The Accident Record. The First Baptist church of Rat Portage, Wis., was destroyed by Are. Alfred Rank was drowned in the Kinnickinnic river at Milwaukee while skating. ~ t. Mary J. Hawley, an old pioneer widely known, fell dead from heart disease on the street while returning from church at West Branch, lowa. Dora, the 1-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elsie Brown, living east of La Grange, Ind., died ffom the effects of swallowing chewing gum. Washington Cox, aged 60 years, committed suicide at Martinsville, Ill.; by. shooting. 11l health and despondency were the causes. He left a widow and seven children. William Devine, a farmer near Shakertown, Ky., returning home found his wife murdered. Two infants were clinging to the dead body of their mother. Thomas Reynolds, 21 years old, was drowned while skating on the , bay at Sturgeon Bay, Wis. He was a school teacher in Hainesville and a nephew of Charles Reynolds, member of the republican state central committee. Edward Meyers and William Williams are charged with having passed counterfeit silver dollars at Wilton and Durant, lowa. The men have been buying Babbitt metal and block tin from hardware stores at Wilton. The Rev. Dr. Kirkpatrick, pastor of the Se|cond Universalist church of Rochester, N. Y., who was arrested some days ago, charged with Impersonating an officer, has been unanimously acquitted by jury trial. The Reichert flour mill, the oldest and largest in St. Clair county, was totally destroyed by Are at Freeburg, 111. The loss is estimated at $50,000, which is fully covered by Insurance. The owners of the plant say It will be rebuilt. The flve-story brick building on the' corner of Ellicott and Seneca streets, Buffalo, N. Y., occupied by Altman & Co., wholesale and retail clothiers, was badly damaged by Are. Mr. Altman estimates the loss at $150,000. The Arm carried an insurance of $175,000. John M. Gossler, aged 40 years, -Whjer t>f Il on w _Pa., national bank, attempted to commit suicide by shooting himself in the head. He will die. For some time past his health has not been good and this, it is believed, prompted him to end his life. The Russian academy has elected as honorary members Lord Kelvin of England and Dr. Simon Newcomb of Washington. The London Standard's Rome correspondent asserts that the pope has decided to notify Austria, France, Spain and Portugal that the powers will not be allowed to exercise a veto at the next papal election. The Queen has donated £SOO to the India famine fund, which has been opened by the lord mayor of London.

- It is state! that Baroness Hirseh will give another 2,000,000 francs ($400,000) to build a hospital for consumptive children on the Riveris. Thomas G. Conkling, local superintendent of the Pinkerton detective agency at Kansas City, committed suicide by firing a bullet into his brain. His dead body was found in a chair in his office. Fire which broke out in the Anchor flour mill, Minneapolis, at 1 o'clock Sunday morning threatened for a time the entire milling district. The entire fire department was called to the scene and succeeded in confining tho flames to the packing department of the Anchor establishment. The loss will reach $10,000; fully insured. E. A. Shores, Sr., and E. A. Shores, Jr., each made an assignment to Gov. \V. H. Vpham of Marshfield of their individual property. This assignment, it is said, in no way affects the standing of the Shores Lumber company, the Shores Mining company, or the Shores Building association. The First National bank of Alma. Nob., was closed by order of the comptroller of tho cuirency, and is now in the hands of the hank examiner. Liabiliti s are $125,000, with assets at about the same amount. The chief item of indebtedness is a state deposit of $40,900. Milburn & Bell, implement dealers at Winterset. la., have assigned. Assets $20,000. Liabilities $13,000. An attachment by the Studebaker Wagon company was the cause for the assignment. The G. R. Raynor company, book at Kalamazoo. Mich., gave a trust deed to H. W. Beecher of Grand Rapids for $10,245. An unsuccessful attempt was made at Green BaV. Wis.. to wreck the northbound Chicago & Northwestern railway. Ties and cedar posts were piled on the track within the southern citylimits. The obstruction was struck by a freight train, fortunately with litttle damage The Cardinal Archbishop of Naples is dead. He born in 1534 and was created a cardinal at the consistory of March 24. ISS4. The Chicago Board of Trade held its annual election Monday. WiUlam T. i Baker bad no opposition for re-elec-tion to the president’

CASUALTIES. f Frank Borden, aged 40, head miller at the Zenith mills, Princeton, Ind., was caught in a belt and mangled so that it is not possible for him to live. At Houghton, Mich., Con Driscoll, aged 50, was killed by striking a projecting timber in the Franklin mine. Driscoll’s son and son-in-law were killed in the mine last summer. Fred Faulk, a farmer, near Atlantic, lowa, was attacked,, killed and devoured by hogs. Sergeant of Police Amer Keller is dead at Dayton, Ohio, from concussion of the brain received by a ladder falling upon him at a Are. Lulu Jones, aged 24, a servant employed at the home of E. G. Rathbone, Hamilton, Ohio, was burned to death, and Mrs. .Rathbone, in attempting to save the girl’s life, was painfully burned. At Lima, 0., Thursday a pet bulldog owned by John Mann went mad while in the house and attacked three children. One was frightfully mangled before the father could kill the animal. Fire destroyed property on the north side of the public square at Athens, Henderson county, Texas, Thursday, estimated in value at from $75,000 to SIOO,OOO. The farm residence of William Belhke of the town of Newton, Wis., burned. Four of the oldest children in the family, the eldest 14 years of age, perished in the flames. Three younger children were rescued. Colonel L. Severy fell on the ice in his yard, at Emporia, Kan., and broke his hip. He is so badly Injured that his recovery is doubtful He is one of the most prominent citizens of Kansas. For years he was a director of the Santa Fe railroad. By an explosion of giant powder at Twin Lakes station, Colo., Peter Fagin and Michael Sebla were killed and Joseph Larkin fatally injured. They were thawing the powder, when it exploded. FOREIGN. Bishop Keane, who was formerly the director of the Catholic university in Washington, has been appointed canon of St. John Lateran and nominated bishop assistant at the pontifical .throne. Yellow fever has again appeared in Rio Janeiro. Thirteen cases have been reported. The British board of trade returns show that the total imports for 1896 have increased £25,117,677 over 1895. The exports have increased £14,032,193 over those of 1895. The Paris Petite Republique says that the government has no faith in the duration of peace, as evidenced by the fact that it has addressed to the officers on the frontier a series of special questions relative to the eventual mobilization of the forces. Maximo i Gomez, the insurgent-fear-er, has crossed the military line Os "Puerto Principe, which extends from Jucaro, on the south coast, to Moron, in the northern part of that province. The Dauntless has successfully landed its expedition in Cuba. The cargo, it is said, consisted of 400,000 cartridges and 1,040 rifles, some dynamite, one twelve-pound rapid-flring Hotchkiss gun, medicine, etc. Fifty men were also carried to Cuba by the vessel. Nicholas de Cardenas, delegate extraordinary of the Cuban republic to France, has delivered to Gen. Palma’s desk a draft on Paris for $103,000, the contribution of Cuban sympathizers abroad. CRIME. The body of William Speidel, aged 24 years, was found down the Erie railroad bank near the Delaware river at Port Jervis, N. Y., with a handkerchief stuffed in his mouth and his face fearfully distorted, the result of being choked to death. Speidel had been married only four days. It is thought that the murder is the work of tramps. Three prisoners who escaped from the county jail at Minneapolis were recaptured at Fort Snelling. Lizzie Knotek, living near Riverside, not far from Washington, lowa, loved a man living at Lone Tree. Her mother opposed the match, and Lizzie killed herself with a revolver.

E. B. Spencer, the cashier of the Sioux City & Omaha offices, has not been heard of since Dec. 29. E. B. Demarest arrived at Sioux City from Kansas City to investigate his accounts He suspects that the defalcation will reach $5,000. Anthony Henderson was lynched at Unadilla Ga., for the assassination of George Sumner. At the preliminary hearing he made a full confession of the crime. ) Charles Powell, with Bill Doolin in many of his raids, has been captured at Eldorado Springs, twenty miles east of Nevada. Mont., after a fight with officers. He finally surrendered and will be taken back to Oklahoma. At Guthrie, Ok., Felix Ott, who claims to have been fleeced out of S2O by Jennie Anderson and her mother, assaulted the two women. The elder woman had three ribs broken and skull crushed, and will die, Her daughter was seriously hurt, but will recover. Ott is in jail. Burglars broke Into the postoffice at Carrrollton, 111., and secured $95 in cash. I. M. Keller, an alleged expert check forger, has been surrendered by Kansas City officers to a Chicago detective. It was thought he would be punished more severely in Illinois. From injuries received Dec. 5 at the hands of footpads in East St Louis, T. C. Wakefield, a traveling salesman for the Rock Island Lumber company, is dead. In a deserted farmhouse. near La Porte City the body of an unknown man was found hanging to the rafters A gold watch, set of barber'a tools and ; a small amount of motsy were found In the pocketa.

7 MISCELLANEOUS. The Electric Grain Elevator company of Buffalo has been incorporated, with a capital stock of $350,000, to operate grain elevators. Ensign N- T. Coleman, who has been detailed for steel inspection duty at Harrisburg, Pa., will be court-mar-tialed on charges of neglect of duty. The suit for divorce and alimony brought by Mrs. Emma Cecil against her husband, Granville Cecil, was compromised at Danville, Ky., Mrs. Cecil surrendering all claims on her husband’s estate in consideration of $25,000 cash and an annuity of $2,000. Henry M. Clapp of Ohio, stenographer in the office of the secretary of the treasury, has been appointed examiner of the mint at a salary of $2,500 per annum. This position has been vacant since the appointment of W. E. Morgan to be coiner of the mint at Philadelphia in June, 1895. H. G. Simmons, for several years past master workman of District assembly 66, Knights of Labor, the head of the knights In Washington, D. C., has been expelled from the order by the executive board for alleged violation of its rules. Simmons announced that he would sue the board for damages for defamation of character. On application of the depositors the Commercial bank of Eau Claire, Wis., was placed in the hands of C. M. Buffington as receiver. It is not practically certain that it will be impossible for the committees of the Wisconsin semi-centennial to raise the sum of $400,000 before Jan. 16, but $200,000 will be pledged. William E. Drew, formerly a wealthy carriage and wagon manufacturer of La Porte, Ind., died in the poorhouse. Drew’s wife died, his fortune dwindled away, and in his friendless poverty he was obliged to become a public charge. H. Stearns, president of the New York Western Veterans’ association, is missing. He has long been commander of Shiloh post, Grand Army |O® the Republic, of Elkhart, Ind. His wife blames a woman named Scott, but believes Stearns will return. W, C. Creede, the millionaire miner, whom the town of Creede, Colo., is named for, and his wife have separated. A stipulation has been drawn up and signed by which Mrs. Creede accepts $20,000 and surrenders all further claim upon her husband. The Democrats of the Missouri senate and house met in joint caucus Friday night and nominated George G. Vest for United States senator for the fourth tCrm. During the year recently ended 51,724 families in New York were evicted from their homes. The Van Tassel school at Milwaukee has been closed by order of the health department. The janitor’s wife has diphtheria. The Commercial bank of Eau Claire, Wis., capital $30,000, closed owing to' the suspension of the Allemania bank ■ of St. Paul. President Allen says that depositors will be paid in full. Word has been received at Peoria, 111., of the death at Denver, Colo., of James Millard, city collector, who had I been a sufferer from bronchial troubles. | He came to Peoria in 1853 and engaged in the coal business at Wesley City. The Protective League of American Showmen, in session at Cincinnati, have elected officers and adjourned. Excessive taxes in several cities are to be fought in the courts. Colonel J. P. Canby, chief paymaster of the United States ■army, department of Colorado, has resigned, having reached the age of 64 years. He has served thirty-three years. He is succeeded by Maj. C. C. Sniffin' of New York. Governor’s Councilor Allen, the col- , jored citlzeu ? who was elected by chance ' ‘lo a position only one removed from the highest in the state, was sworn in at Boston Thursday. Harry Oliver, aged 11 years, the son o a business man of Des Moines, lowa, was whipped by Miss Florence Mills, a teacher in the Grant Park school, which the boy attended, and a halfhour later died. LATEST MARKET REPORTS. CHICAGO. Cattle, common to primesl.Bs @5.75 Hogs, all grades 1.75 @3.55 Sheep and lambs 2.10 @5.30 Corn, No. 2 5....' 23 @ .23% Wheat, No. 2 red 90%@ .91% Oats, No. 3 15% @ .16 Eggs 16% Rye, No. 2 3814 Potatoes 17 @ .23 Butter 08 @ .19 DETROIT. Wheat, No. 1 white 93% 1 Corn, No. 2 22 • Oats, No. 2 white 20 Rye, No. 2 37% KANSAS CITY. Cattle, all grades 1.55 @3.95 Hogs, all grades 3.05 @3.40 Sheep and lambs 2.10 @5.10 ST. LOUIS. Cattle, all grades 1.75 @5.15 Hogs 3.15 @3.45 Sheep 2.50 @3.85 Wheat, No. 2 red 92 Corn No. 2 cash.... 20% Oats, No. 2 cash 17% PEORIA. Rye, No. 1 39 # Corn, No. 2 .20 Oats, No. 2 white 1$ @ .19% TOLEDO. Wheat, No. 2 cash .95% Corn, No. 2 mixed .21% Oats, No. 2 mixed 18 Rye. No. 2 cash 38 Clovereeed, March 5.42% MILWAUKEE. Wheat. No. 2 spring 79% Own. No. 2 20 Oats. No 2 white 18 @ .19 Barley. No. 2 34% NEW YORK. Wheat. No. 1 hard 97% Oom. No. 2 29%@ .29% ■ Osts, No. 2 22% Batter 07 @ll !<

WORK OF CONGRESS. LEGISLATIVE AT WASHINGTON. Load Bill Amending Postal Laws Pa**e<l by the House —Pacific Railroad* Defended by Mr. Powers —Recognition of Republic of Cuba Advocated. The house took up the Loud bill to amend the laws relating to secondclass mail matter. Mr. Quigg (N. Y.) denied emphatically that the transmission of books as serial publications was an abuse of the present law. He argued that it was impossible to approximate the saving to the government involved in the bill. Mr. Johnson (Rep., Cal.) ridiculed Mr. Loud’s statement that the bill would effect a saving of $40,000,000 annually, and said that every country newspaper and every cheap magazine in the country was opposed a to the pending bill. The senate passed the house bill abolishing the death penalty in a large number of cases. The bill reduces the capital offenses to five —Viz, treason, rape, murder and two offenses applicable to the army and navy. In all other offenses hard labor for life is substituted as the maximum punishment, and even in cases of murder and rape hard labor may be substituted if the jury states in its verdict “without capital punishment.” Wednesday, Jan. 6. The Lo|ud bill to amend the law relating to second-class mail matter was passed by the house after two days of debate by a vote of 144 to 105. The most Important provision of the bill denies to serial publications admission to the mails at 1 cent a pound rates. The day in the senate was chiefly taken up by a speech by Senator Call of Florida on Cuba. He advocated instant intervention on the part of the United States. Thursday, Jan. 7. The Pacific railroad funding bill came up in the house under a special order. Mr. Powers (rep., Vt.) the chairman of the Pacific railroad committee, opened with an exhaustive argument in support of the bill. Mr.

THE NOTABLE DEAD OF 1896. I ■ITIf Wh »iO ’Jr xdl 1 I W I Cgl' cir OK 1. Antonio Macco. 2. Lyman Trumbull. 3. William E. Russell. 4. J. H. McVicker. 5. George Du Mattrier. 6. Dr. Benson, Archbishop of Canterbury. 7. Alexander Salvini. 8. Clara Schumann, 9. Lord Leighton. 10. Coventry Patmore. 11. Harriet Beecher Stowe. 12. William Morris. 13. Frau Klafsky. 14. Thomas Hughes. 15. Italio Campanini.l6. Sir John E. Millais. 17. Baron Hlrsch. 18. Ambroise Thomas. 19. Alexander Herrmann. 20. Shah of Persia.

TAYLOR WARNS SPAIN. Reported Threat of Recognition of the Cubans. A dispatch to the New York Journal from Madrid says that a bold and extraordinary letter has been addressed to the Spanish government by Minister Taylor, which said to the Spanish minister of foreign affairs that unless Spain offers clear and reasonable terms as a basis of peace in Cuba before President Cleveland goes out of office, the question remaining to be settled by the United States would be the immediate and unconditional recognition of the Cuban republic. Gov. Tanner Inaugurated. John R. Tanner took the oath of office at noon Monday and thus was formally inaugurated governor of Illinois. The Inaugural programme was as follows: Both houses met in joint cession and the roll was called. Then the speaker formally announced that the new officers had been declared elected and asked if they were ready to appear to take the oath. Then the chief justice of the supreme court appeared and administered the oath of office to each of the new state officers, and Gov. Tanner delivered his inaugural address. Gordon (hoeen Speaker. Opposition to William 1). Gordon for speaker of the Michigan legislature was abandoned, all candidates withdrawing in favor of Gordon, who bad no opposition In the carcus. being nominated by acclamation. Pope Leo*. Health Ke.tored, The pope is pronounced to be well again after the slight indisposition re suiting from the exertions attendant upon his Christmas and Nit Year’s receptions. . .

Hubbard (rep., Mo.) the minority member of the committee, who has charge of the opposition, and Messrs. Grow (rep., Pa.) and Bell (dem., Tex.) spoke respectively for and against the measure. Mr. Powers gave a history of the Pacific lipes, in the course of which he said: “They strung towns along their lines like beads; they made the states of the west. If the government should lose every dollar of the debts rs these roads, it could credit itself and the American people With .ten times as much in dollars and cents as they aggregated.” The senate had a long and busy session, passing a number of bills on the calendar, including several amendments to the law of navigation. The Cuban development of the day was a joint resolution offered by Mr. Mills (dem., Tex.) declaring that the power of recognizing a new republic resides in congress, recognizing the independence of Cuba and appropriating $lO,000 for a United States minister to the republic of Cuba. The senate adjourned over until Monday. . Friday, Jan. 8. Friday, Jan. B—The second day’s debate on the Pacific Railroad funding bill developed by far the most sensational incident of this session of congress. Mr. Johnson (Rep., Cal.), the only member of the California delegation who favors the funding bill, took occasion to make a remarkable personal attack on Editor Hearst of the San Francisco Examiner. When Mr. Johnson concluded his speech Mr. Cooper (Rep., Wis.), one of the strongest foes of the Pacific bill, took the floor. Mr. Arnold (Rep., Pa.), followed in favor of the bill, and Messrs. Parker (Rep., N. J.), Bell (Pop., Col.) and Shafroth (Rep., Col.) against it. Mr. Hepburn (Rep., Iowa) supported the measure in an extended argument, as the only solution of the problem at this juncture. He argued that government ownership of railroads was bound up in the defeat of the pending bill. Curtis Chosen Speaker. Edward C. Curtis oi Grant Park, Kankakee County, was chosen as the Republican candidate for speaker ol the House at the Republican caucus Tuesday night.

WORKMEN TO BUILD MILLS. Carnegie Employes Plan Co-operative Plant at Port Angeles, Wash. Mill workers at the Carnegie plants. | at Braddock. Homestead, Duquesne and- ; Pittsburgh, and employes of the West- | inghouse works at Tuttle Creek and 1 Wilmerding are forming a joint stock I company to build a $2,000,000 iron and I steel plant at Port Angeles on Puget sound. Twelve hundred prominent mill workers of Braddock have in the past I fortnight subscribed for about $1,000,- ; 000 worth of stock. The plant will employ 2.000 men and will cover thirty j acres of ground. France’’ Falling Population. The results of the last French cen- | sue, which arc just published, show that there is no sign of recovery in the birth rate. The tctal increase in the I population of France since 1891 is only I 175,027, while ihe number of foreign- . ers in France is deci easing. Heavy la»«ei by the .Storm*. Reports from the country indicate • severe stock losses by Sunday and i Monday's storm in South Dakota, it ' will be several days before news from the ranges can be had. but it is feared ; losses there will be very heavy. BHm Will Not Talk. Cornelius N. Bliss was asked if It I were true that he bad been tendered and had accepted the navy portfolio. : He replied: “My lips are sealed as to I what passed between Mr. McKinley and tnj self." Populiat’ and Silver < out rut. The twenty-filth session t> Li. Nei breska Legislature was* ca le.l te 0.j der at noon TueaJ -y. iopulisu are | given coatrc'. of’th- bouse and Democrats and free-s’hc.-- Republicans o* I the senste.

HOW TO FIND OUT. Fill a bottle or common water glass with urine and let it stand twenty-four hours; a sediment or settling indicates a diseased condition of the kidneys. When urine stains linen it is positive evidence of kidney trouble. Too frequent desire to urinate or pain in the back, is also convincing proof that the kidneys and bladder are out of order. WHAT TO DO. There is comfort in the knowledge so often expressed, that Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, the great kidney remedy, fulfills every Wish in relieving pain in the back, kidneys, liver, bladder and every part of the urinary passages. It corrects inability to hold urine and scalding pain in passing it, or bad effects following use of liquor, wine or beer, and overcomes that unpleasant necessity of being compelled to get up many times during the night to urinate. The mild and the extraordinary effect of Swamp-Root is soon realized. It stands the highest for its wonderful cures of the most distressing cases. Sold by druggists, price fifty cents, and one dollar. For a sample bottle and pamphlet, both sent free by mail, mention this paper, and send your full postoffice address to Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y. The proprietors of this paper guarantee the genuineness of this offer. Stole Church Carpets. Two churches of Jasper county, Mo., have been visited by thieves, who stole even the carpets of the aisles and pulpit platform. Lane's Family Medicine. Moves the bowels each day. In order to be healthy this is necessary. Acts gently on the liver and kidneys. Cures sick headache. Price 25 and 50c. Illinois spends at least $2,000,000 a year in punishing criminals. It spends scarcely anything for their reform. TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund the money if it fails to cure. 25c Water color drawings will, it is said, j last four hundred years if they are protected from direct sunlight. FITS Stopped free «no permanently cured. No fits after first day's use of Dr. Kline’s Great Nerve Restorer. Free S 2 trial hottie and treatise. Feud to Pa. Klink, 931 Arcli St. Philadelphia, Pa. There are about 15,000 bales of 1895 hops stored in Puyallup, Wash., warehouses. I believe Piso’s Cure is the only medicine that will cure consumption.—Anna M. Ross, Williamsport, Pa., Nov. 12, ’95. Os Germany's present population of about 52,000,000, Prussia has about 32,000,000. liegeman s Camphor lee with Glycerine. The original and only genuine- Cures Chapped Hands and Face, Cold Sores, Ac. C.O.Clark A Co.,N.Haren,Ct. A company of Spokane, Wash., citizens is organizing to emigrate to Siberia. Mra. Wlnslow’a Soothinc Sjrnp For children teethlng.softens tho gums, reduces Inflam, mation, allays pain, cures wind colic.«» cents a bottle. It robs the world for a man of ability to live in idleness. When billions cr costive, eat a Cascaret, candy cathartic, cure guaranteed, 10c, 25c. The sun’s bulk is 1,300 times that of the earth.

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