Greenfield Evening Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 9 October 1895 — Page 4
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MADAGASCAR FALLEM
French Soldiers March Into Her Capital.
NO DFi3LrjS OF THE BATTLE.
C-r-'.f Prevails In l'arls—Cause of the Warfare. A Tim-Wars' liisp"tc—Nearly a Year of .-r Great Cost of Life and
Health.
PARIS,
Ot. 9.—A -dispatch received
Jiere from Port Louis, island of Mauritius, r.n.'rjvafes the -capturo of Antananarivo, capital of the island of Madagascar, by the French troops, and caused pre.')! relief to tho ^ovoru r, as it has been recognize! past that :h«) defeax ot xi^u-sn troops meant a ciuu.^e ci iiuui.-.Ci'y. The news quickly spread v:ir:ii\. huut the city, cau.siug great esoiteiueu .' aai much rejoicing.
Frr a'i'j .•!:,.d '^:i.S":,r have bo.:i -it logg*.H'iie id'' for inorij rhaii 10 y^ai's, chieliy uvor tho right ul" tho go\ eminent of iiada.gascar
to
act independ
ently of the irench resident in granting exequaturs to foreign consular agents ami coo sals. According to the French, by the treaty of December, 18%, v.K! j-Vouch resilient- and a niiiitary guard ov French troops was to reside at die capital and control tlie foreigu rea i-"!i.s of Madagascar, making the is...
I'd ail in tents and purposes a
Frencu inou-ciorate.
4.
The government of Madagascar has all ill-. tj'j'Med thai the treaty ga-.'O France the rights she claimed, holding that M. Le My re de Vilers, the French
dipiuax..i.o in l8oi'( entered into an agree.utui -with Madagascar, on behalf of Fiiiucc, to the eixect that the exequaturs of consuls and consular agents should be given in the future, as an the past, by the Queen of Madagascar, ami thai the later treaty did not changs the situation. On this question is based the dispute which led to disturbances during which the representatives of France were insulted by tho populace an:l slighted by the government of Madagascar, and, in addition, a number of Frenchmen were assassinated.
In September, 1894, matters finally reached sue a a state that M. La Myre de Vilers w.»: sent to Madagascar with an ultimatum from th£ French government iusisiiug in sub.-*tnce that France should co:: :'oi the foreign relations of Madagascar. Tho ultimatum was delivered to the prime minister, Painilaiariveny, who is also the husband of Queen lianavadona II. After several days of deliberation the prime minister rejected the ui rimatum saying that Madagascar would only submit to superior force. M. De Vilers and all the French agents thereupon returned to Tamatave, and Fiuuce uogan making preparations to bring the Hovas, the predominant tribe of the island to terms.
In November last the French minister for foreign affairs, M. Hauotaux, asked for a credit of 65,000,000 francs and 15,GOO men for an expedition to Madagascar, an his request was promptly grantf*d. The expedition, which was planned by Conoral Borgnis-Desbordes, left France in January, under command I of (aen-.val l.'uchesne. The insalnbriety of the chiwate iias proved a more dan- I gerous foe to the invaders than the m».tives, ami liio capture of the Maiagassy capital has been accomplished at great cost of life ami licaith.
CAPTAIN SMITH NOT KILLED.
1
by an
The I nd ian Massacre liepoi Denied Indian Inspector.
SALT LAKa Crrv, Oct. 9.—The Tribnne has received the following uispatch from P. McC'ormick, United States Indian inspector at Fort Hall Indian reservation, Rose Fork, Ida., via "Pocatello, Icia., Oct. 8: "There are no Bannock Indians in I the vicinity of Jackson's Hole. The socalled Capta'n .Smith and other Jackson Hole residents who lired on the Ban-' 'nock Indians last July are reported to 3iaye passed Pocatello, in charge of "United States marshals, en route to 32vauston, Wy., for trial before the United Statss court 011 the 6th inst. The Bannock Indians are hunting on and in the immediate vicinity ox the reservation and are peaceably disponed."
RIOTING IN ARMENIA.
Serious Disturbances Have Broken Oat in Three Leading Cities.
CONSTANTINOPLE, Oct. 9.—It is reported that serious disturbances between the Armenians and the Turks have broken out at Sivas, Van and liitlia, three of the leading cities of Armenia.
The guardships of the various powers aue moored so as to be in position to render aid to the foreign residents in case it is needed.
Determined to Have Reform.
PARIS. Oct. 9.—The Eclair declares Ttnat the powers have decided to sumjnon the porte to submit categorically the reforms demanded by the administration of Armenia.
MORE MONEY,
Glass Work.
LESS SCRIPT.
Demand That IMay Cause a Strike at, Hellaire.
BKLLAIUE, O., Oct. 9.—The members ut the American if Lint Class Workers' union employed at Rodefer Brothers' &-.'ass works, who have been working 3'or part mou"y and part script, have jpven the company notice they would not work longer if they were not granted 75 per cent in money and 2b per cent i:i script.
Their demands were not granted aud the flint jiiass workers' union sustained he demand an ', tho company has notified the men they would be discharged next SatuKh.y. if a compromise is not effected ovo "i()0 people will be idle.
ra
I.Miners
Abroad.
GALLJPOLIS, O., Oct. 9.—Fire destroyed two large barns, granaries and adjoining buildings owned by John Trichler, iu Addison township, this county, Monday night. Four valuable lioreea were burned, together with feed on farming implements. It was the HtJjrk. of an incendiary. No insurance.
A Hundred I'cople Drowned.
Moscow, Oct. 9.—It is reported hero 4li 100 persons were drowned near the viu&ge of Ozery by the capsizing of a raft 011 h. rive Oka.
DEAD 'BODIES RECOVERED..
rive
Taken From the
Charred Corpse# Dorrance Mine. )%.
WILKESBAKUE, Pa., Oct. 9.—The bodies of three engineers and the fire boss who -were killed in the explosion in ib isionlny recovered yesterday. A party of res- I cuers, heai-'5i tw Foreman Jones. wpre tho
IlTis. u'MO.l t-ild 0(/ it^S. Lie
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o.j
:i.icu u..
I porary morgue and as -the mangled remains were brought to the surface they were laid out in it.
The corpses were burned almost beyond recognition. Fire iBoss Davis and Engineer Owens were literally roasted and Cahill's body had .a large gash on the forehead, evidently from the force of the ospiosi on. The ruen were .killed "by the force of the explosion, and all died nearly in the same spot. No more bodice boen found, and it is now bfiil' oa (ijy list of ut-a/.t will bo confined tu tin? luiiowing:
William Jones, mining-"engineer, aged o~' years. William (Jaliill, mining engineer, 21 years old, tingle.
Llellyn Owens, mining engineer, 21 years old. son ot 1)]v!-!o:E Snpci'intendent Owens of West- Pitt scon. ia\ id J.. Davis, lire boss, leaves a wife and two children.
Michael Morris, 40 years, Polauder, single. Eobert- Mi'lor and Robert Blanchard, the two members of tho engineering party broachout of the mine Monday night, are siiil in a precarious condition lie the hospital. The physicians fear their burns and other injuries will prove fatal. The other injured men brought out
nr.
the same time, George
Laphy and .Joseph Murphy, are on a lair wav t• recuvtsry.
SAVED NOTHING.
Hotel ni Jiuintul, the Guests i-Js-'itli Tlieir Lives. EiATiiA, O Oct. 9.—The guests in
the Hotel Darling at Lorain had a narrow escape at 3 o'clock yesterday morning, making their way out of the blazing structure in their night clothing. They were awakened to find the largo frame structure on fire. The flames originated in the kitchen and spread with marvelous rapidity. There was no chance to save furniture or any of the effects of the guests, who were exposed to the biting cold.
Owing to iusullicient hydrant pressure, the firemen could do nothing with the flames, and the structure was leveled. An adjoining building was damaged. The hotel was only partially insured. A company represented here recently carried $16,000 on the structure, which was allowed to lapse.
FELL A HUNDRED FEET,
by a Falling
Two Persons iatally Injured levator.
CHICAGO, Oct. 9.—An elevator in the building of the National Tailoring company 011 Franklin street fell 100 feet yesterday, fatally injuring a man and a boy and seriously injuring two other passengers. The injured are:
Joseph Rosenberg, internally injured will die. Hyman Kown, legs fractured and otherwise bruised.
Abraham Clemange, spine injured and lower limbs paralyzed. Herman Clemange, a boy, right side injured aud internally hurt will die.
The victim. were ail tailor shop employes. The car had reached the fourth ficor, when the cable snapped. The elevator was an old and rickety freight lixt.
Short in His Accounts.
FINDLAY, O., Oct. 9.—Thomas C. Dunn, secretary of the North Side Building and Loan association, is short in his accounts $15,000 according to the report made yesterday by a committee wiio investigated his books. Tho report shows that- Dunn from the first month of his secretaryship has been a defaulter. The stockholders have been assessed 43 per cent to make good the deficiency. Dunn is said also to have been short $,000 111 his accounts as justice of tho peaee. liis present whereabouts is unknown.
A Colmiihus iila/.u.
COIA'MBUS, O., Oct. 9.—A lire of unknown origin broke out in the building at the northeast corner of Rich and High streets yesterday, and the building was burned to the ground. Several persons living in upper rooms had narx-ow escapes in getting out. Armbruster's stocking factory was damaged to the extent of $1,000, S. H. Kerins & Company's picture frame factory was damaged $2,000, and the Boston Shoe company's loss is $2,000. Roomers on the upper floors-lost everything.
lilack Flags Hauled Down.
SHANGHAI, Oct. 9.—A special dispatch received here from Toiio announces that Japanese forces 011 the island of Formosa have met and routed the main body, consisting of 10,000 men, of the Black Flags. The engagement took place near the river Tao-Linmai. The dispatch adds that the Black Flag leader, General Liu Yung Full, is surrounded on three sides by the Japanese troops and that his capture and that of all his warriors is assured.
Motormau Fatally Hurt.
WRSTKRVILLH, O., Oct. 9.T-A collision 011 the Columbus Central railway resulted in a bad wreck, in which Motorman C. H. Herr was probably fatally injured and passengers H. W. Scatterday and Bertlga Ranclc of this place were bad!}' bruised and cut by flying glass. The wreck occurred two and one-half miles south, of here on the single track running between Westorville and Minerva park.
Electa-icity for Diphtheria. CHICAGO, Oct. 9.—Dr. J. W. Was of West Pullman claims to have discovered a cure for diptheria which far exceeds anti-toxine in efiicieuo3r. Dr. Was' remedy is electricity, which is applied directly to the throat. It is claimed to have been successful in a large number of recent virulent cases. A conference of physicians will pass 011 the alleged cure during the week.
The Jni-en's Life Threatened.
YOKOHAMA, Oct. 9.—A telegram received here from Seoul, Corea, says that Tai Ron Kin, the king's father, aud leader of the anti-reform party, entered tho palace at the head of an armed force, and the queen's life is reported to be in'danger.
Indication*,
Fair weather northwesterly winds, shilling to southerly slightly warmer by Wednesday evening.
HIS
GEN. HAHONB IS DEAD
The NotedgVirginian Breathes His Last.
END AN EVENTFUL CAREER.
-ikying Aknu riui Lain Unconscious
Ever Since Last Sunday Morning—All
the Members of the Family Were About
the Kiedsido When the End Came —Fu
neral Arrangements.
WASHINGTON, Oct. 9.—General Mahone died at 1 o'clock yesterday afternoon. The end came peacefully and almost imperceptibly. The dying man had lain unconscious ever since last Sunday morning. All the members of the family were about the bedside when the end came, including Mrs. Malione, the two sons, Butler and William Malione, Jr., Mrs. McGill, a daughter Mr. L. L. Maury of Virginia, a nephew, and Captain Rogers, an old friend of the general and present chairman of tb*. ii.gii.-u liepuoiiCan uOiuuinibJ. nT---A '.vill Lo no public iunera.1 at Washington, as, in accordance with the wishes of the widow, the remains will be borne quietly to the general's old home at Petersburg, Va., where the service and interment will occur. njh.-i services v/ill be held at St. Paul's Episcopal church. The active pallbearers will be members of General Mahone's old command, famous as "Mahone's Brigade,"' the one which held the '-Craicr." The honorary pallbearers will be selected from officers of the same brieade. The Confederate Veterans union tendered their services as a military escort to the body, but it was the family's w'ish to -.-void any display.
General Malione was born in Southampton county. Va., Dec. 1, 1826. He graduated at the Virginia Military Institute in 1847, and until the beginning of the civil war was engaged in engineering and was the constructor of the Norfolk and Petarsbiu raioud. He joined the Confederate army in 1661, took part in the capture of the Norfolk navyyard in April of that year, raised and commanded tho Sixth Virginia regiment, and won tho "Sobriquet of the "Hero of the Crater." He was commissioned brigadier general in March, 1864, and major general in August of the same year. He subsequently led a division in Ambrose P. Hill's corps, and at Lee's surrender was at Bermuda Hundred.
At the close of the war he became president of tlie Norfolk and Tennessee railroad. He also engaged in politics, and was the leader of the movement that elected Gilbert C. Walked governor of Virginia. After failing to secure the nomination for that office in 1878 he organized and became the leader of the Readjuster party. He was elected to tho United States senate in 1831 and served until 1SS7. Though elected as a Readjustor, he voted with the Republicans, and by so doing gave them the control of the senate.
Since General Mahone left congress he has been a familiar figure about the Capitol. During the last session of congress he spent considerable time between tho senate and house looking after a bill under consideration for the purchase of certain property from him for a site for a new government printing office.
PAYING THE MORA CLAIM.
The State Department licady to Settle With the Different Parties.
WASHINGTON, Oct. 9.—It is expected that the state department, which is the I custodian of the funds paid by Spain 011 the Mora claim, will pay the money to the different parties in interest 011 Thursday. The amount finally agreed 1 011 for Antonio Maximo Mora, principal I in the claim, is $867,085. This sum has been reduced somewhat by assignments, and the actual amount to be 1 paid Mr. Mora will be slightly above I $700,000.
The next payment of importance •will be $287,000 to Dr. Jose I. Rodiguez, who has been the attorney of Mr. Mora since the inception of the case in 1870. A further amount, approximately $285,000, wTill be devoted to the payment of Mr. iWithaniel Page, who was at one time an attorney in the case, or to those to whom he may have assigned his interest. I11 the original agreement between Mr. Mora and his attorneys, he was to retain 60 per cent and they were to have 40 per cent, the latter sum to cover all legal expenses.
RELIGIOUS RIOTS.
Liberal and Catholic Students at It in tlie City of ISarcelona.
MADRID, Oct. 9.—Dispatches received here from tho city of Barcelona announce that serious conflicts have taken place there between the Liberal and Catholic students of the university. The trouble, it appears, is due to the fact that the government suspended a professor who published a book which was declared to be heretical.
The riots started in the university and finally reached the streets, where the rioters were reinforced by crowds of people. A series of fierce conflicts between Catholics aud Liberals, led by students, during which many persons were wounded, followed, and the disorder was with difficulty suppressed by the police.
DESTRUCTIVE FOREST FIRES.
liurned Forty Miles, Alter ISeing Started by a Careless Smoker.
Er-LHNDALis, N. D., Oct. 9.—The great prairie fire which raged throughout this and adjoining counties during tho latter part of last week has been extinguished. It was started west of Frederick by a match, which had been used to light a cigar, and spread rapidly despite the immediate elforts to extinguish it.
The burned district lies in Brown county, S. D., covering a region nearly 40 miles in length. A Russian was burned to death while plowing a fire break around his grain. A boy was fatally burned and several others badly burned. Much grain and hay were destroyed.
Giant. I'owdcr Explodes in a Shaft.
LMADVILLK, Colo., Oct. 9.—James Moore was instantly killed and Doo Morrison fatally injured by an explosion of giant powder in a shaft of the Matchless mine. The explosion occurren Monday night, but the men were not found until yesterday. Morrison lay at the bottom of the shaft all night in terrible agony, his eye sight being destroyed and his body frightfully mangled.
4
POINTS UN FREAKS.
SOME BORN TO THE PROFESSION, OTHERS THRUST UPON IT.
rf Iliid to Toil In
(jririne You an Odd Number of Limbs or AtTf-nrsxe-nts W'«»-r-ra ThoT
-p.-
"Any cue who has remarked the gregarious element in human nature, which makes every one eager t© see what the other has seen, will not marvel at the success which notoriety has attained in the show business," said thf ^Tinnger of a popular museum. "Notoriety, no matter how and where obtained, is just so much stock in trade, and people in our line of work are willing to pay any price for it. To make no account of the money value of the advertisement, they are delighted to know that they are about and speculated about, and to see their names in the newspapers. You see how high that dome is:" he continued, pointing to the arched space far above UdO lopes and bars stretched across for acrobatic performances. "Well, a man came in here, offered to jump from its highest point down to the floor so as to make a name for himself It 'vonM have been certain death, you know, to attempt it, but he said he had practiced jumping, knew how to manage aud would escape injury. He berried tele allowed to make the jump and was much cast down at our refusal. "That man only expected to jump ouec. Alter having performed the feat he felt that he would be a curiosity wevt'i money to sxj. "Anyway, we business people see that the public crave amusement of this kind, and we are delighted to gratify them. "At tho time of the 'White Cap' agitation, when there was so much talk in ths papers about their outrages, a man offered to exhibit himself as a tarred and feathered victim just returned from the west, and wo let him do it. Moreover, tho public encouraged him to do it, for they came in flocks to see him. The tattooed woman who was paid $100 a day was tattooed right here in New York, but the work was marvelously well done, and the fairy tale about her, as told by the showman, only heightened the crowd's interest and harmed nobody. She was represented in the story as having been stranded on one of the Sandwich islands, shipwrecked, with her husband, who was put to death. Her life was spared, but she was put to torture, having these extraordinary characters tattooed all over her body. There were from 500 to 700 people at each one of the 21 daily performances at which that- tattooed woman was exhibited, and all were pleased at the show, for which they paid 10 cents. "Do many 01 those ireaks, remarket fine sala-
able, for various reason ries?" A "Indeed they do. We paid a certain midget £700 a week. Her father and tho family traveled with her, and got rich out fit it. Then that wonderful Oregon horse with the trailing mane and tail was paid $900 a week for several months. Tho two headed negro girl, or girls, has mado a fortune, aud I could mention any number of celebrated frea'.-s who have profited financially. "Each day wo get letters from all over tho country—all over tho world— offering us freaks of nature. This one sends a photograph of a sheep having a fifth leg and hoof growing out of liis shoulder. This one sends a cow with a horn projecting from her back. Hero is a letter from a hand less man in West Virginia. IIo writes with his toes and writes a very good letter."
That box of photographs unearthed from little used recesses to refresh the showman's mind! What a galaxy, not of beauty, but of tho bizarre and tho grotesque! Bearded women taken in decolleto gowns, their masculine faces in revolting contrast to the feminine neck and arms men without legs or arms tremendously fat. men, and men so thin that they were photographed prone upon a couch, limp and helpless men who had starved themselves in order to live. The strong woman is there, and her remarkable sister, with a veritable horse's mane growing upon her back. "That was a clever scheme this fellow devised," said tho showman, adjusting his glasses so as to view a likeness. "He represented himself as having a gunshot wound through and through the body, and then lie fixed up an optical delusion apparatus which made it appear that pcoplo could look straight through him. We displayed a colored photograph at tlie back, and tho people could see that picture 011 the other ":do of the man. You have 110 idea what a furore there was about it. That .: down on the Bowery. Everybody waj.t.d to look through tho man with the gunshot wound. Thou, finding that the man was such a howling success a woman f.xed herself up as having been speared t! .••• ngh the body with her husband's bayonet, the victim of cruelty and brutality. We fixed i." for tho vrowd to look tb.ror her, and she was no end of a succet. -. She stood there surrounded by red eir-'ains with a pathetic, lapt look on her face, and tho peoplo couldn't get enough of looking through her at tho bouquet of flowers displayed at, her back. "Peoplo will delight in signs and wonders as long as tho world endures," added the showman, "and just so long will scient ists and magicians cater to their desires. In Paris there is an institution where infants are mado into freaks as systematically as flour is made into bread. Thoso in charge are skillful physicians, it is said, who know just how much the human anatomy can be crippled and cramped and distorted without injury to life. The babies' limbs are manipulated when tender and pliable, and they soon grow misshapen and grotesque."—New York Tribune.
jr^rpFr
1895 00T0BEE. 1895
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The author of Helen's Babies," has written a number of other tales that are quite as good as that popular story. One of them is
What Was He Made For
delightful short story which Mil be published in this paper. Other Splendid
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