Indianapolis Journal, Indianapolis, Marion County, 6 December 1891 — Page 2
THE INDIANAPOLIS JOURNAL, SUNDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1891.
tions - a front view, three-quarter view, and a side view showing the profile. It will take several weeks to harden the brain sufficiently to make a microscopic examination. The bichromate of potash solution will be applied every day. The operation will take several weeks. Then the brain will be given a thorough examination under a powerful microscope and the man's mental condition ascertained. The head can be seen from all sides of the jar in which it was placed without being taken out. Wm. D. Tyler, of Tacoma, Wash., called at the morgue this afternoon and viewed the dead bomb-thrower's face. The face bore a striking resemblance to that of a man named Wilson, who was at one time business manager of the Tacoma Ledger. This Wilson had been confined in an insane asylum in Illinois. Mr. Tyler said he saw Wilson in Portland, Ore., about eight months ago. He will send a telegram to Tacoma to find what became of the Wilson referred to. The police of the second precinct reported, at 5 o'clock this afternoon, that they had found portions of a human body in the ruins of Russell Sage's office. The fragments were sent to the morgue. It was said to-night that the bombthrower has been identified, but so far his name has not been ascertained. He was a rampant Anarchist, and is believed to have hailed from San Francisco. In conversation with a man in this city a few weeks ago the bomb-thrower said
that he had been arrested for making incendiary speeches in San Francisco. Capt. Henry Horne, a museum lecturer, has identified the head of the bomb thrower as that of a man who had a conversation with him two weeks ago. The man, whose name he has forgotten, wanted Horne to go out lecturing on monopolies, railroads and socialistic topics. Horne says all the man told him was that he was going to invite all the capitalists like Gould and Sage, and if they did not come to hear Horne he would write them once again, and if they still ignored his request he would blow them all up. ANOTHER WILSON. Hugh D., an Ex-Real-Estate Dealer of Kansas City, Thought to Be the Dynamiter. Kansas City, Dec. 5. There is reason to believe that Hugh D. Wilson, late a member of the firm of Brewster & Wilson, in this city, is the man who threw the bomb at millionaire Russell Sage, in New York, yesterday. Men who knew Wilson when he lived here say the published description of the would-be assassin is his. For years Hugh D. Wilson was a partner of Charles Brewster in the real-estate business under the firm name of Brewster & Wilson, who had an office at Room 202 American Bank Building. Wilson was successful and made considerable money, but his friends say that with the collapse of the boom he lost almost everything, He began to handle mining stock and about a year ago, not being snccensful here, removed with his family to New York, Persons here who aver that they have lately heard from him say he has for the past few months been in straightened circumstances and in need of support for his family. Nobody here can assign a reason for the wild deed should the dynamiter prove to be Hugh D. Wilson. He never showed signs of insanity, but the trouble which he is averred to have had may have unsettled his mind. Mr. Brewster thinks, from the published description of the dynamiter that he is Wilson. Wilson was in the employ of the American Employes' Insurance Company, at No. 11 Pine street, New York. He lived, when Mr. Brewster last heard of him, on Sixth avenue, near One-hundred-and-fourth street. He was in straightened circumstances. --- Jail Crushed by a Tank of Water. ANAHERM, Cal., Dec. 5. The large sixty-thou-sand-gallon tank at the city water-works collapsed when about half full of water to-day. The hoops gave way, and the tank fell with a crash to the ground, a distance of thirty feet. The noise sounded as if a boiler had burst. The water spurted from the tank, and the staves went flying in all directions, and many fell upon the water-works and city Jail below. Engineer Schneider, who was in the engine-house pumping water, was badly hurt, but stood at his post, bravely opening valves, shutting off steam and drawing the fires. He is badly cut about the head. The jail was demolished and the boiler-house at the waterworks was wrecked. The loss is several thousand dollars. The Mikado's World's Fair Proposition. Chicago, Dec. 5. The Mikado of Japan has made a proposition to the management of the world's fair to erect a permanent building on the grounds, surround it with a typical Japanese garden and then make the city of Chicago a present of the building and gardens. The Mikado is willing to spend $100,000 on it if the world's fair board gives him the site he wants. This is about two acres at the north end of the wooded inland. The building would be copied from the finest specimens of Japanese architecture extant at the time Columbus discovered America. In the elaboration of the grounds, the highest achievement of Japanese landscape gardeners would be shown. Kansas County Treasurer Short. St. John, Kan., Dec. 5. The treasury of Stafford county is short $15,120, and Treasurer E. H. Landes has been arrested, charged with being responsible for the shortage. He claims that on the night of Nov. 6 last burglars entered his office, blew open the safe and secured $7,000 in cash. He, however, did not report the facts to the authorities until last Tuesday, and before that made no reference to it to any one excepting his chief clerk. The rest of the shortage he accounts for by stating that the experts who furnished the evidence upon which he was arrested made a mistake in their footings. The Treasurer is under $90,000 bonds. Flower's Plurality 47,937. ALBANY, N. Y.. Dec. 5. The vote on the State ticket, as canvassed by the State Board of Canvassers to-day at noon, shows the following as the total on State officers, and to the successful candidates certificate will be issued: For Governor - Flower, Democrat, 582,893; Fassett. Republican, 534,956; Bruce, Prohibition. 30,353; De Leon, Socialist. 14,651: defective and scattering. 2,232; whole number, 1,165,085. Lieutenant-Governor Sheehan, Democrat, 575,012; Vrooman, Republican, 540,593; Hallock, Prohibition, 31,064, whole number, 1,164,668. Stars and Stripes Unfurled at Windfall. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. Windfall, Ind., Dec. 5. To-day the stars and stripes were set to the breeze on the public school building with appropriate ceremonies. The services were held at the M. K. Church, under the auspices of the teachers of the school, of which L. A. Smart is principal. The G.A.R. post participated. Speeches were made by comrades W. O. Dean, Milton Cox, J. H. Zehner, B. F. Legg and J. H. Lemington. Three Sisters Eloped. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. FOWLER, Ind., Dec. 5. Three daughters of Albert Solomon, of Union township, eloped with three corn-huskers, and left for Davenport, Ia., yesterday. One of the girls is only fourteen years of age, and she went off with a man aged fifty, who has a family of his own. An uncle of the girls followed the fleeing party and is determined on bringing the married man to justice for abduction. The girl is under the lawful age of consent. Governor Chase at Liberty. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. LIBERTY, Ind., Dec. 5. Governor Chase was to-night the guest of the women of Duvall Post, W. R. C, who gave a supper and campfire in the new court-house. The commodious court-room was packed to honor the Governor, who delivered a eulogy on the late Governor Hovey. The G.A.R. Post and Sons of Veterans were out in force to attend the exercises. Three Assassinations In a Week. Birmingham. Ala.. Dec. 5. Blount county has had three desperate murders within the week. The first was the cool assasination of an old farmer, the second the deliberate murder of a woman by her husband, who shot her as she opened the door to let him in at night. And last night Robert Gunde, a saloon-keeper, shot and killed George Braseale, an unarmed farmer, for a cause that nobody can surmise. Showered Ashes on the City. Crrr or Mexico, Dee. 5. Thursday was a day of terror in Colima. Between the hours of 4 P. M. and 5:30 P. M. on that day the volcano of Colima was in a state of violent eruption, and at 8 o'clock that night a heavy shower of ashes began falling on the city. It lasted over an hour, covering the streets and roofs of buildings with ashes and greatly terrifying the inhabitants. ----- Cyrus W. Field's Condition. New York, Dec. 5. Dr. Fuller said this afternoon that he did not have such encouraging hopes about Cyrus W. Field's condition as he has had on the two preceding evenings. The Doctor said his patient was very much depressed mentally and it was difficult to build him up under those circumstances. Mrs. Lindley's condition has not improved. Yesterday's Race-Winners. At Chicago Getaway, Freedom, Pilgrim, Jake Saunders. Elia Blackburn and Sunny Brook. At Guttenburg, N.J. - Marmont. Sparling, Marie Lovell, Lepanto, Volunteer and Romance. Gov. Campbell Recovering from the Grip. COLUMBUS, O., Dec. 5. Governor Campbell is slightly improved to-day. Dr. Loving says it is nothing more serious than an unusually severe case of the grip.
TRAIN DROPS INTO A BAYOU
Five Cars Fall Thirty Feet through a Trestle Near Evansville, Tenn. Thirty Passengers and Trainmen Injured, Some Very Seriously -- Two Men Beheaded at a Crossing --Three Italians Killed. MEMPHIS. Tenn., Dec. 5. A north-bound passenger train on the Louisville, New Orleans &. Texas railroad left the track near Evansville, Miss., this morning, ran along the ties for 150 feet and on to a trestle over a bayou. This gave way and the train, consisting of two day coaches, one Pullman sleeper and two baggage-cars, was precipitated thirty feet into the bayou, which is partially filled with water. Sixteen persons were injured, a number of them quite seriously. Following is the list: Conductor L. J. Thomas, arm mashed and hip bruised; C. Pennington, newsboy, badly bruised about body; Alfred Carr, internally injured; L. Williams, colored, hip sprained and shoulder hurt; Thomas Carr, hip hurt and bruised badly; W.B. Perkins, head bruised and arm injured; William Thomas, colored, wrist sprained and face cut; Andy Holmes, colored, face cut; Peyton Godfrey, colored, leg broken and face cut; E. T. Robertson, injured internally and head cut; L. J. Kinehen. Pullman porter, cut about head; J. E. Carver, hip hurt; Judge J. L. Steele, of New York, knee hurt; W. H. Blakeman, cut about hips; Cicero Thomas, colored, face cut and shoulder hurt; Lawrence Plant, of New Orleans, cut in head and back bruised. The wreck was caused by broken trucks on the tender, and considering with what speed the train was running and the distance it dropped into White Oak bayou, it is strange that no one was killed. The loss to the road is enormous. Passengers will be transferred at the scene of the wreck for several days to come. Two Frightful Accidents. LIMA, O., Dec 5. A frightful railroad accident happened at Ottawa, a small station north of this city, on the Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton road, this evening. William M. Meadlowe and Harry Knipe attempted to drive across the railroad track ahead of the south-bound passenger train, but the engine struck them. Both were beheaded aud Knipe lost his arms and legs also. The Findley, Fort Wayne & Western road had a bad accident about eight miles east of Ottawa this evening. The work train was returning to Ottawa when a bridge about three miles from the town broke down just after the engine had passed over it. The caboose, contained a large number of employes, was precipitated into the river, about fifty feet below. Three Italians, whose names are unknown, were killed, and a number of others, whose names are not known, were injured. Two More Still In the Ruins. St. Paul, Dec. 5. The coroner's jury this morning viewed the bodies of the eight men killed, and adjourned until Monday. A small gang of men are at work on the ruins to-day. At least one man. and probably two, still lay buried in the ruins. One man known to be missing is John Wolfinger. but the identity of the other cannot be discovered. Those who had assisted to unearth the unfortunate yesterday were sickened with horror, and turned over the mass of stone and rubbish with evident reluctance. John Wolfinger, the laborer reported missing and thought to be under the ruins, was this afternoon reported seriously injured at St. Joseph's Hospital. The workmen in the ruins in the course of the afternoon discovered the cold and mangled form of Hans Hanson, the ninth and last of those killed outright by the accident, while three of the injured are in precarious condition and their recovery seems scarcely possible. --- Poisoned by Embalming Fluid. Grand Rapids Mich., Dec. 5. A week ago undertaker A. C. Posner died from blood poisoning contracted while embalming a corpse, a scratch on his hand allowing the deadly vims to get into his system. Yesterday his sister, Mrs. William Fiebig, who nursed him during his illness, was compelled to give up and go to bed. Spots have appeared similar to those which were first noticed on her brother's face, and other symptoms are the same, she is dangerously ill and fears are entertained for her recovery. Only Two Perished. New York, Dec. 5. A dispatch from Haverstraw received by the Associated Press to-day states that only two lives were lost by the Hudson river disaster last night. All who were on board the barges have now been accounted for, and Nicholas Nagel and Frank Murray are the only ones dead. -----*---- TELEGRAPHIC BREVITIES. N. M. Daniels, of the West Bend Lumber Company, has left Emmetsburg, Ia., with $15,000 in his pocket. He had recently organized a bank. William Dean Howells will retire from Harper's Magazine on the first of January and take editorial control of the Cosmopolitan Magazine, conjointly with John Crisben Walker. The Belle Centre bank in Logan county, Ohio, was robbed Friday night of $1,300. The safe was blown open with dynamite. Only the cash was taken; the securities were not disturbed. Mrs. Delia Stewart Parnell, mother of the late Charles Stewart Parnell, sailed for England from New York yesterday on the steamer Aurania. She was accompanied by her son, John Parnell G. T. Thomas, an Ashland, Wis, real-estate-dealer, has commenced action to gain possession of three hundred acres of valuable land right in the heart of West Superior. He claims the land under an old title, which was supposed to have been long ago destroyed, B. S. Barrett, the ex-piano dealer of Cleveland, who disappeared more than a year ago, leaving behind him about seven thousand dollars' worth of forged promissory notes which he had used as collateral, and who was recently captured in West Virginia, was sentenced yesterday to six years in the penitentiary. The whaleback barge C. W. Wetmore was signaled of Point Lobos. Cal. yesterday. The Wetmore is the first of the whaleback class of vessels to make a trip to the Pacific, and left Philadelphia for Seattle 106 days ago. She carries a cargo of machinery for a ship-building plant to be set up on Puget sound for the construction of whaleback barges. Losses by Fire. CRAWFORDSVILLE. Ind., Dec. 5. The old home residence of the late Professor Caleb Mills, of Wabash College, was damaged by fire this morning, the flames having caught from a large fire-place flue, which had been in use over fifty years. The house was erected by Professor Mills about the year 1835 and stood in the west part of the college campus. It has been a landmark of this city, and was the residence of Professor Mills Until his death. Professor Mills was one of the first instructors in Wabash College, and this house was always considered as one of the sacred spots of the college. It is now owned by his daughter, Mrs. O. M. Gregg. DES MOINES, Ia., Dec. 5. - The Des Moines cotton-mill burned to-night. Tho mill has been in operation for four years, and employed 150 hands. The product last year amounting to about $100,000. The value of the property destroyed was altout $150,000: largely covered by insurance. The fire caught in the machinery shortly after it was shut down for the week. It was the only cotton-mill in the State. RICHMOND, Ind., Dec. 5. Henry Nolte's stable and contents, including sets of harness and a colt, were burned at 3 o'clock this morning. It is supposed to have been the work of an incendiary. Loss about $1.000; insurance, $100. COEUR D'ALENE, Ida.. Dec. 5.- Fire early this morning destroyed the large saw-mill of the Saginaw Mill Company, together with 400,000 feet of lumber. The total loss is about $40,000. Richmond. Va. Dec. 5. The dry-goods and fancy store of Messrs. A. Gann & Co., No 113 East Broad street, burned to-day. Loss about $40,000; insured. REDKEY, Ind., Dec. 5. - Fire last night destroyed the dry-house of M. A. Brown's handle factory, entailing a loss of $500. No insurance. Movements of Steamers. Hamburg, Dec. 5. Arrived: Russia, from New York. New York, Dec. 5. Arrived: Umbria, from Liverpool. Kinsale, Dec. 5. Passed: Holland, from New York, for Liverpool Star Point, Dec. 15. Passcd: Waesland, from New York, for Antwerp. Hero of Three Wars Dead. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. Valparaiso, Ind.. Dec. 5. Harry Crowe died to-day, aged ninety-seven years. Mr. Crowe was a hero of three wars, entering the service in 1812 as a drummer-boy, he served successively in the Mexican campaign and in the war of the rebellion. He has been living the life of a hermit for the past five years. Chauncey Depew's Prediction. PITTSBURG, Dec. 5. The distinguished officials of the Vanderbilt system of roads arrived at the South-side Depot of the Pittsburg & Lake Erie railroad early this morning. They came here from Cleveland and occupied private palace cars. Chauncey M. Depew, president of the New York Central, was with the party. To a Pittsburg admirer who questioned Mr. Depew this morning
he said: "Mr. Blaine will be tendered the nomination for President, and, if he does not want it, Harrison can have it. Mills will be the next Speaker of the House. He is the only man who ever introduced a pure Democratic bill in the House that amounted to anything. Crisp is not known. I venture to say you might walk three block without ever meeting a man who ever heard of him. Springer is a hustler and will get a good many votes. I look upon Flower as a presidential possibility."
NEW CATHOLIC ARCHDIOCESE. One to Be Established at Dubuque, Ia, and Bishop Hennessy Placed at Its Head. St. Louis, Dec 5. A new archbishop and five new bishops are due the Catholic Church of this country, according to the late council of prelates in this city, and the appointments are soon to come from Rome. An archdiocese is to be established at Dubuque, Ia., and Bishop Hennessy, of that place, is to be the archbishop. Bishops will be appointed for Des Moines and Sioux City, Ia.; Monterey, Cal; M. Joseph. Mo., and Concordia, Kan. Des Moines and Sioux City have believed for some time that they were entitled each to a bishopric, and forming them into a diocese has made way for the new archdioceses. Monterey's bishop is to be the Very Rev. Jaochim Adams. Bishop Hogan. of Kansas City, has had included in his diocese St. Joseph, which is to have a bishop of its own, and Concordia is to be made the seat of a new diocese. No coadjutor to Archbishop Kenrick has been nominated, for the reason that the Archbishop has objected to such appointment, and the bishops do not feel like forcing one on him. The priests of each diocese will select three names to be sent to Rome. and the selection will then be made of the new bishops. Mgr. O'Bryen, of the Papal household, who came to this country to be present at the golden jubilee, will start for Europe on Tuesday. He will bear with him church papers relative to the new appointments. Obituary. WATERTOWN, N. Y., Dec. 5. Right Rev. Edgar P. Wadhams, bishop of the diocese of Ogdensburg, died at the episcopal residence in Ogdensburg, about 8 o'clock this morning, aged seventy-four years. He has been ill for some time. When his death was announced, the cathedral and City Hall bells were tolled. OMAHA, Neb., Dec. 5. Col. Joseph S. Conrad, Twenty-first United States Infantry, died yesterday at Fort Randall while on a tour of inspection of his regiment. He was stationed at Fort Sidney, Neb., and caught cold while crossing the country, which resulted in pneumonia, Omaha, Neb. Dec. 5. F. B. Whitney, assistant general freight agent of the Union Pacific railroad, died this morning. Death was the result of an operation for ulceration of the bowels. Boise City, Ida., Dec. 5. Capt. Joseph Keef, Company C, Fourth Infantry, died here yesterday. PARIS, Dec. 5. M. Lemonier, president of the International League of Peace, is dead. A Divorce In Four Minutes at Chicago. Chicago. Dec. 5. Judge Collins yesterday beat the record in divorce cases. He heard and took under advisement twenty-six cases in two hours and twenty minutes, or an average of about one every five minutes. Several were heard inside of four minutes each. HIS SINGLE THOUGHT. An Infant's Ruling Passion Was Strong When Death Was Near. New York Commercial Advertiser. "Speaking of the ruling passion, strong in death,' said one of New York's swell physicians yesterday, "I encountered an odd example of it a short time ago. In a family wherein I have a couple of regular patients there is a small boy who has lived four brief but exciting years. I have no hesitation in saying that he is absolutely the worst child that I ever met. His ingenuity in all forms of infantile misbehavior is marvellous, and, left to himself, he can devise an endless number of unique ways for getting into hot water. About two months ago he began an open warfare on the grand piano which stands in his parents' parlor, he filled the legs of this unfortunate instrument full of dents, and then began to rip the ivory coverings from its keys whenever occasion offered. His delight in this was deep-rooted and all-absorbing. A sudden change in the weather, however, laid this incorrigible infant low with a first-class attack of pneumonia, and the piano was given a rest and a chance to recuperate. One evening I came to the conclusion that there was no hope of the child's life, and. as tenderly as possible, conveyed that fact to his parents, who for five days had never left his bedside. In a spasm of grief the mother lifted the boy from the bed and hysterically clasped him to her bosom. That action saved his life. The shock set the blood, which clogged his lungs, in circulation again, and another possibility of saving him materialized. As I was hastily giving my orders for some medicines that would be needed at once the boy's eyes opened languidly and he looked around the room with au expression of unutterable weariness. "Give him anything,'" I cried, "anything that he wants!" A gleam ot interest shot into those tired eyes, and the weakest of voices piped: "Please, mamma, can I keep on bustin' the piano!" A COMMON-SENSE RULE. Foreign Legislative Bodies Count All Mem bers Who Are Present. Philadelphia North American. A writer in the North American Review has examined the practice in foreign legislative bodies as respects the quorum, and the consensus of practice is that ex-Speaker Reed is sustained in his rule to count all members present, whether voting or not, if it be necessary to a quorum. It was hardly necessary to go abroad to learn this, because the structure of parliamentary usage is common sense, and Mr. Heed's rule is in strict accord with common sense. If a man necessary to constitute a quorum can escape being counted by refusing to vote when called upon, and so put an end to business, then parliamentary law is a farce, and the men who hold to such shallow views are farce-actors. There has never been an instant of doubt touching the right and the duty of a presiding officer to regard every member of the body present as on duty. If not on duty he has no business in the body. The government pays every Congressman a salary, and it has always been held that a salaried officer or servant must obey every summons to his post when he can be present. A member of Congress has no more right to refuse to act than a clerk in any department. The doctrine that a Congressman is superior to the laws that govern in any other branch of the service as regards duty is simply absurd, and the man who teaches such rot is too shallow or too dishonest to be trusted anywhere. The kittiwake politicians and other gentlemen who cried out so lustily against Speaker Reed because he counted a man present when he was present only exposed their ignorance. Girls with Duplicate Eyes. New York Press. There are two girls in New York city who are well provided against emergencies. They have duplicate eyes safely packed away in their jewel-boxes against possible accident. When they were in Vienna last summer they visited the Salviati glass factory, where the finest artificial eyes in the world are made. During their visit they were surprised at the very steadfast gaze of one of the workmen, but, of course, took no notice of the seeming impertinence. A few days later each received a little box, which, being opened, was found to contain most accurate copies in glass of their lovely eyes, and a little note requesting their acceptance, and saying that they might at some future time be found a great convenience. Restaurant Reed Birds. New York Advertiser. While the great work of exterminating English sparrows at 2 cents a head is going forward in Chicago reed birds fried, stewed, broiled, grilled, on and off toast, are found on all the restaurant bills of fare. If the provisions should happen to run low during the world's fair the crusade against the sparrow will be renewed. It may be, therefore, that the despised sparrow may yet turn out to be a life-saver. Found $20 in a Horse's Hoof. Philadelphia Record. Something out of the drift of events common is graciously furnished by the narrative of a blacksmith, plying his hammer and bellows on Chestnut street near Thirtieth. This brawny son of Vulcan relates that while shoeing an indifferently constructed horse a few days ago he came across a gold double eagle imbedded in the hoof of the animal.
rose, the violet, or whatever may be the favorite among a "thousand fragrant posies," dainty as the flower itself, and suggestive of no coarser essence, that causes frequent dissatisfaction among purchasers. It is to overcome this difficulty, and to meet the demand for the finest grade of perfumes, that we have engaged in their manufacture. The best and purest materials are carefully distilled, and no stale odor of cheap spirits is left after using. No gift is more acceptable than a handsome bottle or ornamental ease of fine perfumery. Ours is sold by dealers everywhere. We make these varieties:
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