Indiana State Sentinel, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 May 1894 — Page 9
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I PAGES 9 TO 12. -0 ESTABLISHED 1822. INDIANAPOLIS, WEDNESDAY MORNING, MAY UJ, 1891-TAVELYE TAGES. ONE DOLLAR A YEAR. FATHER AND SON utensils, a "Winchester rifle and a. number of rartri'lgts w.-re FoaUeT'3 atvut thf f-r"t. The loiies Tvere partly devoured by coyotes, but wwre easily Identified. The oWhinjr hid nearly all been torn from Hall's ljy. Dn ton's remains were badly disfigured. The remains of the two men were buried with polemn ceremonies nnd a mound of ft ones raised The Victims Mob's of a Kansas Wrath. over them. Th others were not found. GRESHAM AND SAMOA. William and Lewis McKinley Hanged to a Bridge. Yletr of the Serrrinry on th Tri partitr Alliance.
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THEY BEGGED FOR MERCY,
But Their Piteous Appeals Moved No Hearts.
They Were Guilty of the Murder of Charles Carley,
Who V; n Snn-ind.nw of the i:idcr JIcKlnloy The Mnrrlnue Contract C'ulletl for the Payment of $20 to the Father of the Cilrl, nut the Son. In-I.nw Kefnnetl I'ajment After the A e ild in er.
SHARON SPRINT.S, Ka.f May 9 Ohr of the most determined mobs tint ever con predated in this i-ution of th state lynched "Williim McKinley and his son Lewis, for the murder of CharK'.--Carley, committed one week ago. About a week ajjo, Charles Carley, a son-in-law of William McKinley, was murdered. An investigation revealed the fact that Fred, a seventeen-year-old son of McKinley, senior, had committed the crime. The boy, when arnpsted. made a confession, stating that he had Leen induced to kill his brother-in-law by his father and his older brother, Lewis. The motives for the murder seemed principally revenue and hatred. The murdered man had only a few weeks before married McKlnley's daughter. It had been stipulated before the marrlape that the proom was to pay the bride's father $200 for the privilege of marrying her. The groom refused to pay this money after he was safely married, and thus incurred the enmity of his wife's father and brothers. Tho boy surprised Carley while asleep, cutting him horribly with a parden hoe. He was f'jund dead and horribly mutilated. On the Monday the three were arraigned in court where Fred pleaded guilty, as charged, but his father and Lewis pleaded not guilty, waived, trial and were placed in the county jail. Late Monday night a mob of several hundred took the father and son to a bridge about a mile west of town and lynched them. They both begged piteously for mercy. Fred would probably have been hanged with the others, but instead of taking him to the jail he was kept under guard in the hotel. The people of the county are aroused at the -disposition juries have shown to turn criminals loose and say they intend that justice shall be done in some manner if not by the proper course of law.
LIEUT. MANEY THRASHED.
Another Sensation Growing Out of the Killing; of Cant. Iledbcrj;.
CHICAGO, May 8. Lieut. James Maney, recently acquitted of the charge of murdering: Capt. Hedbergr, has furnished Ft. Sheridan with another sensation. The stury current tonight is, since the shooting1 of I led berg1, that there has been much ill feeling between Maney and Maj. Baldwin of the Seventh cavalry. Maney at last called at Maj. IlaUwin's quarters for an explanation. "I have called to see you, major," he said, "in regard to certain remarks I have heard you have made about me In relation to the Hedbers affair." "Yes?" said the major, interrogatively. "Yes, sir," continued the lieutenant. "I understand you have expressed the opinion 1hat the killing of Hedberpr was a cold blooded murder, and to have advised my ostracism by the officers of the post. Is that true?" "Every word of it." was Maj. Raidwin's prompt reply, "and now that you are here I'll tell you to your fare that I think you were in big luck when you were acquitted." Some versions are that th lieutenant's right hand sought his hip pocket in search of his gun while others deny that the lieutenant was armed. In any event Baldwin landed vigorously with his right, and followed up the blow with an enthusiasm that landed Maney in a heap. The lieutenant was grame, however, and jumping to his feet, distributed upper cuts and body blows with science and precision. Rut Maj. Raidwin was pugilistic-ally the better man, and after a short, sharp struggle, clinched with his adversary, choked him into submission and pitched him out doors. Lieut. Maney failed to materialize at inspection today and the story leaked out despite the efforts of the officers to maintain secresy. He was found in close communion with raw beefsteak and bandages, but refused to talk about the affair. A possible courtmartial is hinted at, but it is not thought that the lieutenant will prefer charges.
HUNTERS STARVED TO DEATH.
IIOflieK of Two of the Men Found in n fa nyoii.
SAN FRANCISCO. May S. Francis Murphy, an American engineer and mining man, returned to this city from Mazatlan, Mexico, states that he was 'a member of a searching party that left Durango about five weeks ago to find the whereabouts of H. L. Denton, C. P. Hall. Frank Turnstall, Americans, and two Mexican guides, who started from Salto, state of Durango, on a prospecting and hunting expedition into the Sierra Madre mountains. The bleak and almost inaccessible parts of the Sierra Madre range were explored. In a ravine, nearly forty miles from Salto, part of a camping outfit belonging to the missing men was discovered. A blind trail was followed for ten miles over the most rugged and inhospitable of the mountain region. At one point a pole had been driven into the ground to which had been fastened a torn Phirt and a piece of paier on Vhich was printed with a" pencil the words, "Out of provisions; no water; have struck out for the foot of this canyon." Five miles in a westerly direction from this signal the bodies of Denton and Hall were found lying on their backs. Several camp
WASHINGTON", May 9. Th preHdnt tr.day submitted to the senate thfl corrcspond---nco relative to Samoa, called f..r by oratop Quay's resolution of the Cth ult. Th. correspondence i very voluminous, covering about ln.orii) pagr-s. In submitting it to the president Secretary Oresham has taken the bpportunity to' set out at length his conclusions as to the workings of the tripartite agreenjpnt. This letter of tho secretary's is ccrtainv to give ri:-e to much discussion and controversy. "The ccasion," says the secretary, "'to make good the obligation of the United States under the treaty of InTS to employ its good f.flices in behalf of the Samoa n government arose in lv", when Dr. s"!-ul;l, the fierman consul-general, took possession of all the land within the municipality of Apia, so far as tha Sampan government's sovereign rights in it were concerned, to hold it as security till an understanding with that, government should be arrived at for the proteo ti -n of German interests. As a counter demonstration the American consul, Oreenbaum, raised the American f.as and proclaimed a protectorate. Subsequently our ministers at London and Berlin were instructed to say that the claim of an American protectorate over Samoa by the United States consul at Apia was wholly unauthorized and disapproved, no protectorate by any foreign power being desired; and. to suggest that the British and German ministers at Washington be instructed to confer with the secretary of state with a view to the establishment of order." The secretary details at some length the events connected with the tripartite protectorate in Samoa, the establishment of a new form of government, the election of Malietoa as king, the rcluctanceof the natives to accept the new regime, the resort to coercive measures, the breaking out of war in July, 1W, th intervention of the treaty powers, and the deportation of Mattafa ami eleven oth r chiefs. Ther followed the apjointment of Henry C. Ide as chief iustice and the more recent troubles in Samoa. The secretary concludes as follows: "Soberly surveying the history of our relations with Samoa, we well may inquire what we have gained by our departure from our established policy beyond the expenses, the responsibilities and the entanglements that have so far been its only fruits. One of the greatest difficulties in dealing with matters that lie at a distance is the fact that the imagination is no longer restrained by ths contemplation of objects in th-ir real proportions. Our experience in the cafe of Samoa serves to show that for our usual exemption from the consequences of their infirmity we are indebted to the wise policy that had previously preserved us from such engagements as those embodied in the general act of Deri in, which, besides involving us in an entangling alliance, has utterly failed to correct, if, indeed, it has not aggravated the very evils it Avas designed to prevent."
JUMPED IN THE CANAL.
Two Person Drowned During a Fire nt Syrneune.
SYRACUSn. X. Y., May 10. At midnight lire was discovered in the lumber yard of C. H. Haker fc Co., situated on the Oswego canal near the center of this city. A bri.sk wind was blowing and the flames spread rapidly, soon destroying the entire stock in the yard, valued at J40,0i0, upon which there is about $25.000 insurance. Tied to the dock at the yard was the gospel canal boat, "Good News." In charge of Mr. and Mrs. Wilson, aged about thirty and twentytwo years respectively, who, with Mrs. Wilson's brother, slept aboard the boat. Awakened by the noise and light they hastened to th deck and jumped Into the canal. "Joe" Dunfee, the local pugilist, who in April. lSi3, killed Daniel Donovan of Cleveland, in a sparring match, saw tne kcu pants of the boat jump and at once dove into the canal to rescue them. His efforts were unavailing. KILLED IN A WRECK.
Dinnslrnu Head-ITnd Collision on thd 4 liif-tiK" & orthwmtfrn.
FAX CLAinn. Wis., May 10. A headend collision occurred between a passenger train from Minneapolis, du here at 10:".4 a. ni., and a freight train, near Minnominee Junction. The dead and injured are: jAMF.S JEFFREYS. the oldest engineer in point of service on the Chicagi & Northwestern road; instantly killed. K. H. Hurt, express messenger, serl ouslv crushed. Seth Gardner, fireman on passenger train, both legs crushed; injuries fatal. W. S. Heese, mail clerk, arm crushed and injured internally. The passenger train was the through Minneapolis-Chicago vestibuled train. No iassengers were injur-d. WILL EXPLORE IN AFRICA.
Dr. Smith i:ielitlon I.enve for tha Dark Continent Jane 1.
LON'DON. May S. Dr. Donaldson Smith of Philadelphia, who explored Somallatid, on the African coast of the gulf of Aden in 1$?3. starts, on June 1, on a scientific expedition to the unknown region 2'X) miles west of Herhera, the chief town on the coast, and Lake Rudolph, where traces of ancient civilization are believed to exist. Dr. Smith will be accompanied by Gillett, the explorer. ATE CANNED SALMON.
An Kntlre Vnnilly Polnoned Tni Children Dead.
YOrXC.Sr.ORO, Ala., May 10. John Williamson, wife and five children, partook of salmon for supper from a can opened some days ago. They all fell into convulsions almost Immediately. The two youncest children died In frightt'jl agony. The others of the family arc ia precarious conditions.
