Jasper County Democrat, Volume 8, Number 39, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 30 December 1905 — Page 5

Why Refer to Doctors Because we make medicines for them. We tell them all about Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral, and they prescribe it for coughs, colds, bronchitis, consumption. They trust it. Then you can afford to trust it. Ask your own doctor. The beat kind of a teatimonlal—“Sold for over sixty years.** A Mwfoby J.O. AwOo..lx>w»n, M*». Also wnnfootnyri of XA > SARSAPARILLA. We have no secrete! Wo publish the formulae of all Our medicines. Ayer's Pills greatly aid the Chen Pectoral in breaking <up a colt

LOCAL AND PERSONAL.

Brief Items of Interest to City and Country Readers. Com. 37c; oats 280. Remember The Democrat office for job printing. XMr. and Mrs. Geo. Hopkins of Wabash spent Christmas here. Mrs. K. A. Parker and children are visiting in Chicago this week. E. H. Shields spent Christmas at Monticello and Delphi with relatives. ■wferOleve Eger, and Ray and Roe * Yeoman are home from Pardue for the holidays. 7^—-Miss Manda Hoyes of Monticello, spent Christmas with her mother in Rensselaer. and Mrs. G. A. Williams spent the holidays with the latter’s mother at Carthage, 111. I. Adams is spending the holidays with bis sister, Mrs. Milton Beal near Macon, Mo. Hon. Jesse E. Wilson of Washington, D. C.-,is spending the holidays here with bis family. Mr. and Mrs. Vern Shook of 'Roselawn spent Christmas with Rensselaer relatives and friends. Practically all the Rensselaer young people away attending college are home for the holidays. Mr. and Mrs. W. C. McCord of Indianapolis, are visiting relatives and friends here for a few weeks.

Wm. Knox of South Chicago, visited his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Knox, here the first of week. Mrs. A. F. Shesler and children are visiting her sister, Mrs. W. H. Hurd, at Woodland, Til., during holidays. Miss Jeannette Watson of Chicago Heights spent Christmas with her father Henry Watson and family. -\-Miss Nellie Meyers received a handsome new piano for Christmas, a present from her father, Geo. F. Meyers. Prof. W. O. Schanlaub of Morocco spent the week here with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Schanlaub. " \A new life insurance company has been incorporated at Lafayette, called the Lafayette Life Insurance Company Remember the next number of the Library Lecture Course, Lulu Tyler Gates and company, next Friday evening, Jan 5. J. W. Faylor and family of Union tp., are spending the holidays with Mrs, Faylor’s folks in Monroeville, Allen county. F. M. Ross, an old and welT known grocer of Kentland, made an assignment a few days ago for the benefit of bis creditors.

Iroquois Stock Farm pure bred Hereford cattle and pure bred Poland China bog sale will be held in Rensselaer, Saturday, February 3. jf About two or three inches of flnow fell Saturday night <end made a “White Christqifts’’ after all. Most of if disappeared, however, Monday and Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Kohler of Chicago, Mr. and Mrs. Peter Kohler, Mrs. Gilbert and George Kohler of Chicago Heights, spent Christmas with John Kohler and family. Simon Leopold expects to open a merchant tailoring establishment in Rensselaer shortly, and will go to Chicago soon to enter a cutting school to prepare himself for the work.

Sale bills printed while you wait at The Democrat office. T. M. Hibler of Joliet, I 1 is here looking after his farm in Milroy tp. (/Mr. and Mrs. Simon Fendig of Wheatfield were visitors in the city Wednesday. ’/Mrs. W. J. Merica and little daughter Regina, are visiting her sister and other relatives in Terre Haate. The funeral of Mrs. Sarah Marion was held from the M. E. church at 10 a. m., Monday. Rev. Kindig conducting the services. Messrs. Charlie Wiltshire and Jesee Menken of Chicago visited the former’s mother, Mrs. Harry Wiltshire, a few days the first of the week. John R. Ward of Monticello, late Adjutant-General of the state, is now traveling for the Burt-Terry-Wilson stationery firm of Lafayette. We wish to thank those that have helped us purchase our new organ for the Good Hope church, so-called Christain church, near Aix. Committee. Charlie Hanson and family of Gillam tp., moved back to town this week and occupy the Roberts property on South Division street again. We are glad to welcome them back to Rensselaej*, _ ICooney Kellner has purchased recently in Chicago, a fine large team and a new up-to-date ice wagon. Now, if the ice don’t make it wont be Cooney’s fault, for be is already for it in every way.

Lost, Christmas morning, somewhere on the gravel road between Mrs. Gwin’s in East Marion and Rensselaer, a package containing two ladies’ waists, one a dark blue, the other a plaid. Finder please leave at The Demoorat office. A-W. M. Hammonds (Bud) who now resides on the old George Jenkins farm in Barkley tp., has traded bis personal property for a quarter section of land in Ransom county, North Dakota, near Lisbon, and will move there soon. Young people wanted to learn telegraphy. Railroad and telegraph companies need operators badly. Total cost, six months’ course at our school, tuition (telegraphy and typewriting), board and room, s9l; this can be reduced. -Catalogue free. Dodge’s Institute, Monroe St., Valparaiso, Indiana. Prairie Lodge No. 125, F. & A. M., and Evening Star Chapter No. 41, O. E. S., held a public joint installation of officers at their hall in the K- P- building Wednesday evening. Over two hundred lodge members and guests were present and enjoyed a most delightful time. The Rathbone Sisters have elected the following corp of officers for the ensuing term: Blanche Hoyes, M. E. C.; Louella Childers, E. S.; Mrs. Kiplinger, E. G.; Grace Pumphrey, M. of T.: Anna R. Mills, M. of R. & C.; Josie Woodworth, M. of F.; Jessie Grant, P. of T.; Abinell Babcock, O. G.; Mrs. Mae E. Babcock was appointed Installing Officer. Installation Jan. 12.

The third number of the Library Lecture Course will be Lulu Tyler Gates and her company of musical artists, at Ellis opera house next Friday evening, Jan. 5. You will miss a rare treat if you fail to come out to this lecture. Tickets for balance of season, four lectures, $1.25, are on sale at drug stores and Public Library. Single admission, 25, 35 and 50 cents for this number. Quite a number of prominent local democrats have signified their intention of taking in the Jackson day banquet at Lafayette, Jan. 8 It is the intention to go down on the 2.-04 p, m. train and return either on the early Louisville train or the milk train the next morning. If yon want to have a good time and hear some good speakers, make it a point to be one of the crowd that goes down from here. Kenton returned Saturday night from a few weeks visit to his farm near Mitchell, South Dakota. Charlie Zard and two boys and Simon Kenton, son of Wm. Kenton, returned with him for a week’s visit with old friends here. They will return home next week. Simon is now attending university at Mitchell? William and Mason Kenton and Charlie Zard raised over <17,000 bushels of grain this year, including wheat and corn. Jasper brought back with him a few ears of the corn grown by them which compares favorably with corn grown here.

REVERED JURIST DEAD

Judge Murray F. Tuley, of Chicago, Has Adjourned Court for All Time. HE BREAKS DOWN IN HARNESS But Was Full or Years and Honors When Time Said “Stop’’—His Life and Services. Milwaukee, Dec. 20.—Judge Tuley, of Chicago, died at the Pennoyer sanatorium in Kenosha at 2:30 p. m. yesterday. He went to the sanatorium on Oct. 31 suffering Trom nervous exhaustion caused by overwork,, and failed gradually until the end came. The funeral will be held at his home in Chicago and will be private. Was Born in Old Kentucky. Judge Tuley was born in Louisville, Ky., on March 4, 1827. His parents were of English extraction, being descended from early Virginia settlers who had moved west His father died when he was 5 years old, but his mother gave the child a thorough schooling in the Louisville public schools. At the age of 15 the youth became a clerk in a country store, but found time for the study of law. In 1843, when Murray was 16 years old, his mother was married to Colonel Richard J. Hamilton, a Chicago attorney, who then was well-known throughout the west. Family Moves to Chicago. The family removed to Chicago and the l>oy entered his foster father’s law office. Three years later he went back to Louisville and took a course In law under the tutelage of Duncan Loughborough and Judge Pirie in the Louisville Law Institute. On his return to Chicago in 1847, young Tuley was admitted to the bar and started to practice law. But the Mexican war was coming on. and as a result of the excitement during the succeeding months and because threatened with consumption. Tuley enlisted In company F, Fifth Illinois volunteers, the regiment commanded by Colonel Newby, and was elected first lieutenant of his company. Fights in the Laat, Battle. The regiment went to the front as part of the brigade commanded by General Sterling Price, afterward one of the Confederate generals in the civil war. Young Tuley saw some active service in the campaign, but his regiment got no farther than New Mexico, where a part of the brigade fought the last battle of the war. He fought through one campaign subsequently against the Navajo Indians, and then the regiment was ordered back to Illinois to be mustered out. But Tuley got himself mustered out at the front and hung out his shingle as a lawyer in Santa Fe. N. M.

IS PITTED AGAINST J. E. GARY Honored in the Territory, but Finally Returns to Chicago. Also practicing law at Santa Fe was Joseph E. Gary, another young man whom the thirst for adventure had drawn to the frontier. Tuley and Gary met for the first time as opposing counsel in a murder case. In that case began the friendship of the tw«young men. which was to last a lifetime. From 1849 to 1851 Tuley served as attorney general of New Mexico. He was a member of the territorial legislature in the winter of 1853-1854. In the summer of the latter year he returned to Chicago, and a few years later young Gary also located at Chicago. The professional life of Judge Tuley in Chicago was interwoven with the history of the judiciary in Cook county. He had seen the growth of the courts from a bench of one judge to forty. He took personal part in constitutional conventions and the stamp of his mind is left on statutory changes of the code of Illinois. He practiced law at Chicago until 1879. when he was elected circuit judge, and from that time he had remained on the bench. The work of Tuley as a judge long was confined in the main to chancery cases Involving wills, real estate, and trusts of various kinds. Of recent years, however, be had been assigned for considerable periods to the criminal branch of the circuit court. The distinguished cases which he decided were listed a year or two ago and were found to number more than 300. He was always a worker; bls court opened early and closed late; he often heard two cases at the same time—one in court and one in chambers. But with all his professional activity Judge Tuley never was too busy to take aggressive Interest in all public questions. He was a leader in the local Democratic organization. He attended precinct and ward meetings, had been a delegate to city and county and state conventions, and w-as active in stump speaking during campaigns. For the last few- years he had been an advocate of municipal ownership, and originated the idea of running Jndge Dunne for mayor; Dunne lieing also a ihunicipal ownership man. Judge Tuley was ever associated in he public mind with Judge Gary. A singular coincidence ruled the lives of these two men. A full generation they served on the bench, Judge Tuley a steadfast Democrat and Judge Gary a stanch Republican. Judge Tuley married in 1851 Miss Katherine Edmonson, of Missouri.

Mrs, Fitzsimmons at Sioux Falls.

Sioux Falla, 8. D., Dec. 28. Mrs, Robert Fitzsimmons, wife of the prize fighter, has arrived in this city. Her presence has started gossip as to a possible divorce suit j

REDS AT MOSCOW HAVE SUCCUMBED

Heel of the Military on Their Necks and Anarchy , Crushed. STREETS OF MOSCOW RUN RED Women Fight the Soldiers from Behind Barricades in ths Streets. Bloodshed Kept Up Until the Slain Now Number 5,000. WOUNDED ESTIMATED AT 14,000 Troops Seem To Be Faithful to the Czar—No Authentic Report ot Disloyalty—St. Petersburg Quiet. St Petersburg, Dec, 27. Emperor Nicholas and Count de Witte received last night a report from General Doubassoff, governor general of Moscow, saying that the revolt there had failed. St Petersburg. Dec. 27. The revolt at Moscow has practically been crushed. A corresi>ondent of the Associated Press telephoned at 7 p, m. yesterday that-the Insurgents no longer have a chance and that they are making a last stand. He predicts that there will be no further heavy fighting. All the troops, he says, are now fighting on the side of the government London, Dec. 25. —Accounts of urday’s bloodshed at Moscow are appalling. Women anarchists stood behind the barricades, taking care of the wounded, and in many instances taking the places of fallen rebels. Fighting went on all over the city. The rebels used bombs, of which they had a large supply, and many soldiers were killed or wounded with them. It is believed that the death roll will reach thousands. Fighting on Sunday.

London. Dec. 25.—Following is a dispatch from Moscow giving an account of the fighting in the streets on Sunday: •‘Artillery, rifle and revolver firing continued throughout the day, but the noise of the battle has now somewhat abated. The guns have been bombarding one barricade after another. the cannonade being followed by charges by the dragoons, who set fire to the debris. The area of the fighting today was more extended, and included Trabnois square, Sadovia, Karetnaia and many other streets. The revolutionaries apiiarently have not in the least lost heart, notwithstanding Saturday’s heavy casualties. It is now known that 500 is a moderate estimate of the losses, and many more persons fell today. Five Thousand Killed. London, Dec. 25.—The correspondent of The Daily Telegraph at St. Petersburg, in a dispatch, dated at 6:45 p. m., Dec. 25, says: “At an early hour this morning the casualties at Moscow were estimated at 5,000 killed and 14,000 wounded, with the fighting still proceeding. The inhabitants of Moscow have been forbidden to leave their dwellings after 7 o’clock in the evening. It is impossible to move about the city, in consequence of the frequency of stray bullets. Many innocent persons have been accidentally killed. A scarcity of provisions is threatened.” The same correspondent, telegraphing at 10:3.8 p. m.. says: “Your Moscow correspondent’s telegrams have not been accepted because all private messages were refused this afternoon. It is learned, however, that cannon firing is now proceeding in various parts of the city where tonight, very near the railroad stations, the barricades erected by the revolutionaries are being desperately defended. The Kursk terminus at Moscow is being pillaged and many wagons laden with provisions are being looted. ALL DEPENDS ON THE ARMY Anarchists Order Uprisings Everywhere to Test Its Fidelity. London, Dec. 25.—Dispatches from St. Petersburg, dated Dec. 24, 8:30 p. m., say; “With Moscow’s baptism of blood the revolutionaries made good their threat to transform the strike into armed rebellion, and the next for-ty-eight hours should determine whether they can marshal suflicietit strength to plunge the country into an actual state of civil war and seriously threaten the immediate downfall of the government. The government professes confidence that the whole attempt will fall, owing to the woeful insufficiency of arms in possession of the proletariat, and by reason of the loyalty of the army as a whole. “Instructions have gone forth from the revolutionists that risings must occur everywhere, in order to test the tropps, and if a foothold can lie secured it is the intention of the revolutionaries to set up a provisional government and proclaim a republic. Thus far reports from Moscow do not clear up the vital gplnt as to whether

any of the troops there actually refused to obey commands, although there are persistent rumors that they did. Revolutionary leaders here claim to have confirmation of a report that a grenadier brigade and some Cossacks mutinied, and are now locked up In their barracks.” “The Associated Press understands that orders have been Issued for an uprising here, but the government’s measures seemingly render this impossible. No meetings, public or private, are allowed, which makes an assembly of more than five persons in a private lodging illegal. The prisons and jails are filled* with leaders of the revolutionaries and agitators. Two caches of arms have been seized, and an entire organization consisting of 300 “crujina,” as the student militia is called, has been captured. BEGUN BY THE ANARCHISTS Open on the Troops After Thinking It Over an Hour. London, Dec. 25.—The Daily Telegraph’s St. Petersburg correspondent, describing the fight at Moscow, under date of Dec. 24, says: “The first shots were fired by the revolutionaries on the troops outside Fidler’s school, which was surrounded. The revolutionaries had been given one hour in which to surrender. Fifty-five minutes had passed, and the commander of the troops was about to give the order to fire, when a volley came from the house, Several soldiers were killed or wounded. The troops immediately replied. “Soon a white handkerchief , was waved from a window. The troops entered, but were greeted with rifle fire, and they retired and again bombarded the house. Shortly afterwards a w’hite flag was again waved and the surrender of the revolutionaries was completed.” The correspondent also describes the fighting in other sections of the city, resulting in every case in the defeat of the revolutionaries. “The desperate courage of the mob,” the corresi>ondent says, “w’as marvelous. Units of threes, tens and hundreds would sally forth, be driven back and rally again against the enormous odds, eager to accomplish the impossible. Early in the evening the hospitals were filled and private dwelling houses were crowded with the wounded. The principal thoroughfare, the Everskaia, looks like a street in a city captured by a foreign foe. Bivouac fires burn In the streets and rifles are stacked on the pavement. “During all this needless effusion of blood, in old Moscow’ the people were shopping, visiting and otherwise carrying on the ordinary occupations as if nothing in particular was going on.”

FIGHTING WAS BUTCHERY Rebels Mowed Down in the Streets— Strike at, Warsaw Ends. St. Petersburg, Dec. 26. Direct telegraphic communication with Moscow was severed Sunday night, but the government succeeded in restoring communication by a roundaliout route. All reports agree that the fighting Sunday, which continued until midnight assumed the nature of a butchery by the machine guns of the artillery, grape and canister being employed mercilessly against the illarmed insurgents. Atrocious tales are told of the Cossacks, who, plied with vodka until drunk, tired down the streets, sometimes charging with lances. The insurgents displayed great stubbornness In holding barricades, even advancing in a mass to the slaughter. Where bombs were thrown from windows the artillery was summoned and battered the houses to pieces. The plan of the insurgents, it is stated, is to hold 1 the outskirts and gradually enclose the troops in the center of the city. Leaders announce that an army of 30,000 is concentrated at Orechoffsueff, northeast of Moscow, and will soon be ready to march to the insurgents’ assistance. The latest report is that lioth sides were exhausted at midnight, when firing practically ceased. The streets were in absolute darkness, save for searchlights in the towers and bivouacs behind barricades. Preparing ft>r Trouble in Poland. Warsaw, Dec. 27.—The street railroad employes struck last night and the employes of the steam railroads are expected to follow suit. The revolutionists are threatening an armed insurrection similar to that at Moscow. The military authorities are making every preparation, and have ordered the entire garrison to tie ready for any emegency. The authorities have arrested many members of the trades unions and a number of revolutionists. »/

Situation at Odessa. Odessa, Dec. 28.—At tbe moment of sending this dispatch the revolutionary party is endeavoring to close the banks. Fresh strikes are declared daily and a general strike is exjtected every moment. Train service is cut off beyond Zhmerinka. St. Petersburg, end Moscow. Tbe frontiers are isolated. Tbe exodus from Odessa continues. Steamers leaving here are full of passengers. Most of tbe families of the foreign residents have already left.

Swell Wedding at Chicago.

Chicago, Dec. 28.—The wedding of Edward O. Trostel, of Milwaukee, and Miss Clara Ulhleln, 34 Ewing place, which took place at (5 o’clock at night at the Auditorium hotel, was an unusual affair in many respects. All the parlors of the hotel were engaged, as well as the banquet hall. After the ceremony a dinner was served, followed by dancing. Sixty’ guests from Milwaukee arrived by special train.

STORMS MAY FIGHT

Will Not Talk, but Said To Ba Inclined to Defy the Governor to Fire Him. SOME OF THE CHARGES ALLEGED Teachers Pay a Tribute to the Poet Riley—Efftoct of a Whitecap Outrage—ltems. Indianapolis, Dec. 29. Daniel IL Storms, secretary of state, has not resigned, and it is not known whether he will comply with the demand of Governor Hanly or not. He refusee to discuss the subject. It is understood that in addition to the situation disclosed by the secretary of state placing his affairs in the hands of a trustee a committee that has been examining the records of his office has reported that Storms did not turn into the state treasury a fee of $25,000 paid by the Vandalia Railroad company until several months after it was due; that while the entire salary of the foreign corporations clerk was drawn from the treasury a less amount was paid him; that an error of SI,OOO was corrected later, and that an appropriation for an extra stenographer was anticipated by Storms. Storms May Put Up a Fight. It is reported that Storms has retained counsel and will contest the demand of the governor for his resignation on the ground that he has not violated the law.

Tribute to Indiana's Poet. Indianapolis, Dec. 29. —The afternoon session of the Indiana State Teachers’ association was a tribute to James Whitcomb Riiey. Addressee were delivered by Senator Beveridge; President Hughes, of Depauw university; Henry Watterson, of Louisville, Ky.; Charles R. Williams, editor of the Indianapolis News, and Meredith Nicholson, the author. Riley was present and responded. Why Watterson Exalts. In his speech Watterson, after referring to the New’ York celebration of Mark Twain’s birthday anniversary, and declaring that he sectionalism in all forms, said: “I cannot repress a kind of sneaking satisfaction in the thought that the east, having exhausted its supply, has had to come "west fdFa fresh crop of poets and humorists and novelists—finding most of them, by the way, in Indiana—even Howells in Ohio—and the satisfaction rises into exultation when I reflect that the standards of the literature of my country, thus following the star of empire, are held by hands so-stalwart as those of Mark Twain and William Dean Howells and James Whitcomb Riley, with the Tarkingtons, the Majors. the Dunnes and the Ades to bring up the supports and take their places when they are gone.” THUG WORK DONE BY A MOB Result of a Whitecap Incident of Fifteen Years Ago—Victim Is at Last Dying. Corydon. Ind., Dec. 29. Murray Foster, of Heth township, this county, is rejx>rted to be dying. Fifteen years ago “whitecappers” forcibly entered his home, over;lowered and tied him to a tree, and gave him a terrible beating. Foster was a strong man, and he made a strenuous resistance. He exerted himself so vigorously, and the whipping which he received w’as so severe that he was completely prostrated, and he has been confined to his bod ever slcne, being unable to sit up or to walk. His wife has also been an invalid ever since that time. At the time of the assault she tried to protect her husband, and begged them to desist, even threatening the lives of tlie regulators, but all to no purpose. Runaway Team Destroys a Monument. Fort Wayne, Ind., Dec. 29. —Horses attached to a lumber wagon lielonging to the Gil Martin company ran away in Calhoun street, and after a halfmile run steered into the monument and drinking fountain erected in 1889, in memory of J. W. Seaney by his son. The statue was a figure of Hebe, and was a handsome work of art. It w’as demolished by the contact, although it stopped the team.

Strike on the C.. I. and E. Muncie, Ind., Dec. 29.—A1l freight trains on the Chicago, Indiana and Eastern railroad, the short line between Muncie and Converse, Ind., are tied up, owing to a strike of the freight crews. No freight train has moved since Tuesday. The men say the company has required them to keep on duty as long as twenty-eight tours at a time, and that their wages are inadequate. Impeachment ft>r Bidaman Urged. Terre Haute, Ind., Dec. 29.—Owing to a technicality in the call for a special meeting of the city council the proceedings to impeach Mayor Bldaman were posti>oned. Petitions to the council were circulated, calling for tbe mayor’s impeachment because of his opposition to enforcing the saloon-clos-ing law. Gov. Chase’s Daughter Married. Wabash, Ind., Dec. 29.—Horace G. Murphy, of Muncie, Ind., and Miss Etreta Chase, daughter of the late Governor Chase, were married at the residence of Dr. ,T. W. M. Stewart. Shot Himself Blind. Boonville, Ind., Dec. 29. While hunting Charles Hale. 10 years old, living near Chrisney, Spencer county, accidentally shot blinself, destroying the sight of both his eyes.