Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 36, Number 21, Jasper, Dubois County, 2 February 1894 — Page 2

WEEKLY COURIER.

C. DOAXK, Publisher. JASI'EB. INDIANA. Miic, MArxnsox, wife of CoU Mapleson, the operatic manager, died in New York city on the Slst

I.V compliance with orders issued b J -ridge. Mil and hi message transmitting the Commander Revnolds of the (5nd iifÄ?'1? , , , - . . ' t loa were the two events of Interest forth; Army of Loyal Americans, the officers of the order in Kansas are busy enlist- 1 jN me enat-. on the SM. nearly three hoars inj; recruits. were occupied in th consideration of the reo- . j lutioa. prei louslv offered by Mr. IV Cor i pop.. Tin: president, on the 22d.sent tothe J Kium. declaring tbattbe secretary of the treas t-enatethe nomination of Wheeler IL T " m wttwrttT ta law tue and -ll &- V , , v v- i . i ...?t . rrnt. toads as. propos.-d la Ms published Peckham, of civ ork. to be associate nouCfc Mr IVSerta(l me e. mo,: of lhr justice of the supreme court of the j nee; yielding, however, to other senatcr to

United States. In the United Statescourtat Chicago, on the 20th, Wilbur I Davidson was gfven a verdict of M3.0ÖQ against the MiuoisCentral Hail way Co., as damages for personal injuries. Ho.v, C. IL Rchl, one of Detroit's (Mich.) most prominent and wealthy citizens, died at Iiis residence in that citv, ont lie 28d, after a long illness. aged nearly St years. The great imperial porcelain and , . . J. -i. .i glass factory at iU Petersburg was destroyed by fire, on the 2Sd, together with all the machinery and models. The loss is verv creat, , Sous Mil Mearns. the men who were arrested m IJubitn on suspicion of having murdered Patrick Reid. who. it was Kiid, had knowledge of a dynamite conspiracy there, started for America on the 22d. Joiton Coffey, of San Francisco, has made an order granting Mrs. .lane It. Stanford an allowance of $10,000 monthly, pending- the settlement of the estate of Senator Lcland Stanford, her deceased husband. The thermometer at Guthrie, Okla.. reached 11 deg. lelow zero, the coldest weather ever known there, on the2Uh. (Ireat .suffering prevailed among the new settlers, who were unprepared lor such weather. Tiie schools of thirteen districts in Lyon county, Kas., through which the Santa Fe road passes, will be obliged to close, on account of the refusal of the road to pay its taxes, amounting to $14,000 for that countyJon.v It. ICoettino, cashier of the defunct South Side savings bank of Milwaukee, was sentenced, on the 2.th. to twenty-five years in the penitentiary for accepting deposits after he knew of the insolvent condition of the bank. Tnn last remnant of racing stock from Fred Gebhard.- L.ake county ranch was sold, on the 22d, at auction in San Francisco. Nineteen brood mares brought an average of $475, the highest price being 1,000 for a good mure. As A result of revival services at Oskaloosa, Ivas., .1. C Whiting, the principal druggist of that place, ordered a large supplj of beer, in which he had previously dealt, hack to the dealers in Missouri, and destroyed all the liquors ia his stock. On the 28d the customs committee of the French chamber of deputies discussed a proposal made by M. Edinond Case, to authorize the government to issue a deeree increasing the tax on corn. The propceal received considerable support. The llritish expedition under command of Col A. 15. Ellis, sent out against the Sofas, has returned to Freetown, Sierra Leone, Senegambia. the work of the expedition having been accomplished. The interior of the country is now quiet. Tsie remains of Mme. T-aura Schir-rner-Mapleson ivere taken from ew York to Hoston, on the tlith, accompanied by Henry Mapleson and Mrs. Schirmer. the mother of the prima donna. The funeral services were held at the house of Mrs. Schirmer, on the COth, Rev. Dr. Everett Hale officiating. Ur a decision of Second Comptroller Mansur, Senator Morgan, Justice Harlan and other members and attaches of the Mehring sea commission are required to put in an itemized accountof expenses and, unless the decision is reversed, must refund all the money received for which they can not account. London Truth says that the princcAs of Wales has decided to withdraw from society. The prince of Wales in declining for the princess an invitation to visit Kelvoir castle, the residence of the duke of Rutland, at Grantham. Lincolnshire, stated that the princess would hereafter take no part in social events. Tin: rescuing party in search of Colgate, the missing member of the Carlin excursion party, has Wen forced to re turn to Kendrbks, Idaho, from their ! hunt, otvinir to the condition of the Clearwater river and the heavy fall of l snow. All hope of finding- Colgate has j vani&hctf. His wife has written another letter denouncing young Carlin nnu Jus menus. M. T. KoTiKosiiwn.1- n nnhlpmnr. ! from Tifiis, In the Russian steppe?, and I Miss Jeanne Sorabji, of Poonah. India, j have arrived at San Francisco on a j visit to the Mid-Winter fair. Misa ' Sorabji is in charge of the exhibits of jewels and gold fabrics recently contributed hy different kings of India to the Columbian exposition. The operative potters passed a resolution at Trenton, X. J.. on the 2W. that the reduction in watts An nounced by their employers is "unncc- i

cssary ana uncalled for at this time." J m im? morning oi uiCMtii, in Fort A committee, representing; all branches hcott atMl Leavenworth several perof the trade, will 1 appointed to confer I sons ,,a"1 lMe5r acprs and toes frocn, with the employers, anil unless n com- f aml at other places there was intense .promise of a liberal nature is effected j -veering. Cool car robberies were re,a strike will be Inaugurated, I Parted at scrcrsl oints.

C "BRENT TOPICS.

THE XEWS 15 BRTET. FIFTY-THIRD CONGRESS. The eate a not In session on the 3Mh I I be Inn:-- a cumser of MBendmenls to the WIUos tsriS bill "ere oered, but only on - tuczmsikg Boro rxpiiciuy cuitn t iron taxable under the Mllw paised. The prest- ; dent's veto of the New YorU and New Jersey Isterpose reanrks- A resolution oa the .subJect of civil-scrvtoe reform was considered la the raernlsag hoar and was. alter some debate. agreed to In the house the entire day was given up to the consideration of the sugar t.chedule. Amendment- striking out the KkikIy feature of the Wilson bill and putting reßaed su;ar oo the free 111 nere agreed tu. A roe-fwge from the president oa Hawaiian affair was received. In th senate, on the wd. the Hawaiian question was further consider! by resolution f ram the commute? oo foretjrn aSalrs and by a speech by Senator Cclloni severely criticising j agalast the legality of the proposed Isswr of Kwwiered tothewroaUtoa ßnance. and the hoevi Mil for the repeal of the federal eMlUn, U wa, ,art&er considered U J Sh hoe. after routine business, the Wilsoa j tariff t ill was takes up la committee of the ! xb,''-- ao& an attempt to take coal from the j l'"1 a pat a duty of tortr cent per ten is the wwate. oa the Slth. after mora than usually iBtere-iia preliminary besiaes. the Hawaiian re-ohii!oa wa taken up. but Cnaiir went over wltaotst actios, and the uofinHhed bule-wla; the boce bill to rep-a! the federal elections law was cocsIiWrisI at length, after which a ntmtter of minr bills were lateen from the calendar and pa'Cd Ia the h(ie the V.'il-ton tariS bill was early taken up and the attempt to remove iron ore from the free Hit was dcfeateX Is the caate. oa the Sthi. the Hawaiian res olution? were presented, bit er laid aside to me Mr. Allen, the Nebraska popalKt. an op portunity to deliver a lesal arsvraent a.-aint the authority of the secretary of the treasury to Issu 5-per-ent txinds. An hour wa pent in an uninteresting dUcasion of tha hocso bill for the repeat of the federal election law, after which the time was taken up In calories of the late Mr. Chipniaa ..In the house the day was marked by the fUibasterin; of the New York mvmbtrs a?aias: the Income tas bill Mr. Morse iatroluceJ a joint resolution acknowledging Uod in the coastltatloa. PERSONAL AND GENERAL. The Marietta tCU Chair Co. resumed operations on the 2-Jd, giving employment to nearly C00 hands, who are to work ten hours for eight hoars" pay. The senate committee on public lands has authorized Senator l'ettigre.v to prepare a bill looking; to the payment of damages to settlers who were driven out of Sequoia and Yosemtte national parks by the order of the secretary of the interior when these parks were es tablished. Anon f 100 in counterfeit money was unearthed at Louisville, Ky., recently by a woman who was digging some roots for tea. Each piece of coin was wrapped in tissue paper, and but little of it was tarnished. The find consisted of dollars and quarters. The coin is a very dangerous counterfeit, having an excellent ring. ISihce Stew akt, aged S3, for sixty years a resident of Clarksville, Tenn. and one of the most conspicuous characters in the history, progress and development of middle Tennesee, died on the He wasone of the first engaged in establishing a tobacco market in Clarksville, operating stemmeries also in Missouri and Kentucky. His wealth is estimated at $1,000,000. JcaoK E. L. IL)ioNi.of the federal district court in .laekson. Tenn., on the iu concluded the famous case of the I'nitetl States against G. F. It. Howard by refuing to direct that his writ of error nhall operate as a supersedeas and to tlx a bail bond pending decision of the supreme court- Howard has been taken to the penitentiary at Colutnbu". O. SftT. Sti jip of the immigration bureau, on the 23d, intimated that he would take early action in the case of the alleged importation of nearly 200 cigar-makers from Havana to work in the cigar factories at Key West. Fla. It is believed that he will order the return of the men to Havana, and povsibly the prosecution of those who brought them over. U.t.F.- the unexpected happens the Kansas City (Ma) exposition building will Ix; sold under foreclosure of mortgage. The foreclosure will le made uudcr the first mortgage, which is for alKHtt 150.000. The incumbrance was placed on the property byJamesUoodin when the exposition building wasbnilt. The historical exhibits and theothor relics from the Vatican, which were loa ne! to the Columbian exposition, are not to be retnmed to Rome at present. They arc in the hands of Archbishop Ireland and will appear in the Columbus museum in Chicago when that i opened for the public. After deliberatinir for three hours, on the night of the ilkl, the jury in the case of John It. Koeting, cashier of the defunct South Side savings bank, Mil waukee, returned a verdict of "guilty on wcond count.' charges Koeting as This count owner" of the hunk, with having received a deposit ,ter he knew the bank to be insolr. Yut" Wtr.UAM Pheasant, a farmer's wife near Columbus Ind., was found dead in her bed on the Ätd. She helped ,,cr isband saw woou all the day be!oTV- Fonl Va? s suspected. Pheasant ,,ait v'etl a term in the penitentiary 'oran attempted outrage six years ago. ,T ls Prted that gold ore to the va,,Kof flÄS'00 was lacn "orn the j.nue .lonnnte mine at JteauviIIe, Col., In one dat recently. This lwaU all LeadviUc records, the largest previous output for a single day being 110. 000 worth of silver ore taken from the Robert K. Le mine. A tea MP was found frozen to death m l,,e highway near Pittsburg, Kas.,

Ts new Heavilon shops building annex to Purdue university, Lafayette, Ind., recently eoiuylet'd and equipped at a cot of ClSO.OO'J, uas destroyetl by tire on the night of the 2:UL Loss estimated at 173.000; insurance. $ 13.000. Slit. Wiu.ivm P. Hazkn, of the treasury secret service, stationed at Cincinnati, is slated to succeed Mr. Drummond as chief of the secret service. The latter will probably be transferred to some otherstutiou. Heuhan ll.vniis. of Utica, Minn., who has slept most of the time for sixteen vears, and whose ease has become famous, has again awakened and is apparently in a normal state. He weighs less than 100 pounds, but has a good appetite and is improving !n health. A niMMTOii was received in London from Rio .Janeiro, on the '-'lid, which stated that efforts were being made to arrange for the arbitration of the differences Imtween the insurgents and the Rrajsilian government. The decrees expelling ex-King Milan and ex-Queen Natalie from Servia have been canceled. The building on the Roono county (Ia.) poor farm, in which the incurably insane were eon titled, was destroyed by fire, on the night of the 23d, and eight of the nine inmates were burned to death. Meaoei: particulars of the most uppalling railway disaster of thenge were received from Orenburg, Russia, on the 2Uh. A passenger train collided with a heavy freigilt, near Samara. Five of the passenger coaches caught fire and

were completely consumed, while some ISO persons were killed, many of the bodies being cremated. Probably as many more were injured. Skct.ktaey C.viti.ist.K lias sent a communication to the senate showing the amounts due the United States from the territory of Utah on account of costs and expenses of prosecution. These expenditures began in IST., and continued ever since, the total amount being ? 72., 555. It appears that the law requires that these expenses be paid by the territory, but congress has annually appropriated the money required. The Union Pacific is preparing to put in a new schedule of wages for organized lator, which will be a reduction on all lines. Noallowance will be made for excess mileage and the overtime limit has been extended. Iy the collision between a heavy freight and a heavy passenger train near Samara, Russia, five of the passenger coaches caught lire and fifteen persons were killed many of them being cremated. KlYEiisitiE hospital. North Krothcrs island. X. Y is attempting, under the direction of the board of health, to care smallpox with red light. The experiment has succeeded in Hurgeu, Norway. AxAKcmsT Yaiixant must die. The French court of cassation, which heard the case, has decided that there are no grounds upon which to base an appeal, and it was therefore refused. Sin Gehau Hkiuiekt Rahtei Rritish political agent and consul-general at Zanzibar, died in London, on the 25th, from typhoid fever. An intimate friend of Attorney-General Olney said, on the 25th, that the rumored resignation of Mr. Olney will become a fact very soon. A head tramp and an empty whisky bottle were found side by side 'J miles from Pittsburgh, Pa., on the 25th. A majority of the members of the customs committee of the French chamber of deputies still propose that a tariff of eight francs be placed on corn. LATE NEWS ITEMS. In the senate, on the 20th, ttie morning hour was occupied by -Mr. Call in a speech condemning the action of the interior department in giving land in Florida to a railroad in violation, as he claimed, of law. The Hawaiian resolution went over until Monday. The bill to repeal the federal elections law was then taken up, and Mr. Chandler's motion to postpone it until next December was voted down In the house, after an unsuccessful attempt of the New York members to filibuster against the introduction of the income tax bill and the transaction of routine business, the tariff bill war, taken up in committee of the whole. Tun khedive of Egypt has yielded to the demand of Lord Cramer, the Rritish diplomatic agent in Cairo, that he publish a formal retraction of the strictures he recently passed upon the army and issue an order praising its condition and the efiicionev of the llritish and Egyptian officers. Malier Pasha, assistant minister of war, who vw. charged with inciting the khedive to make his hostile criticisms, has been transferred by the khedive. Michael Walsh, 2S years old, who in 1WW was sentenced to life imprisonment for shooting a constable in Galwny, Ireland, has been released from the Mount joy prison. Walsh is ill and will be taken to a hospital for treat ment. Lorts C.EiiSTON. a wealthy stock dealer of .McKeesport. I'a who was a passenger on the limited express en route from Chicago to Pittsburgh, was found dead m his berth when the train reached Pittsburgh on the 20th. 1 HE postmaster-general has ntpointed commissioners to make a thorough Investigation and report on the needs of the .New ork nnd Chicago post offices. The commissioners enter at once upon their work. Ai.heuman" Jehuy M t l.yiHii.i,, a Chi cago saloon-keeper, who was shot in H ttsfcy s saloon the previous night by Mike Fewer, an intoxicated saloon keeper, died at the Presbyterian hospital on the 20th. The Cauca valley, in Colombia, is inundated. The fiood is the most destructive of the century. All of the crops have been swept away, and the damage in other respects is beyond computation. FtiisT Lir.fT. Joseph S. Ovsteh, Fourth artillery, him leen relieved, at his own request, as professor of military science and tactics at the Lclatul Stanford, Jr., university, I'alo Alto, Cml

INDIANA STATE NEWS.

A fatal assault was made on Mrs. E. Williams, residing south of lirazil. by a yearling calf. The animal knocked her down and gored and stumped her fearfully. Hri:oi.Ai:5 entered the post office and five retail stores at Star City, a small village near Winamac, and carried off about $500 in cash and merchandise. A wall of one of the. Starr Piano factory buildings, Riehmoud, recently destroyed by fire, was blown down by the wind, and Klisha Mote, a workman, was caught in the debris He was badly injured, his head being cut, shoulder fractured and body bruised generally. TiiEiti: was a terrific gas explosion at the Indiana Iron mill. Mitneie, which imperiled hundreds of lives ami caused a damage of Sö,5Q0. Indiana has eighteen special pension examiners. I). R.woiiEit has been appointed receiver of the Adams Electrical Co., Elkhart. A YOt'NO lady of New Albany has collected 411,000 of the 50,000 canceled stamps necessary to get an invalid chair. L. A. Vonr.HEKEN was nominated for mayor by the republicans of Marion. He represents the younger clement. IIakhy Kehn, the 7-year-old son of Allie Kern, of Muncie, is .suffering from blood poison contracted from the bito of a rat on his hand. Joseph Mahtixpale, who stole the horse of Frank Mo&stnan at Treaty. Wabash county, pleaded jruilty before Judge Shively at Wabash, and was sentenced to two years in the penitentiary, fined S150 and disfranchised for two years. Joseph Jones, of Rush county, was arrested at Kokomo by a Itushville officer, being wanted for the shooting of John Harlow, Januarj".J, in the town of Morrow, Rush county. While workmen were engaged placing an old house upon a new site, at Edinburg, the building careened catching and instantly killing Wilbur Oakes, 15-year-old boy, who had crawled under to adjust a foundation stone. A hawk was shot by Albert Newlin, of Lawrenceburg, the other day. When he went to pick the body up the bird's mate attacked him with beak and wing, and finally bore off the body of its dead mate in triumph. Mack Dixon, a colored desperado from Louisville, went to Columbus, the other daj and was arrested for drawing a razor on Howard Hill. An effort was made to apply the handcuffs, when the Negro knocked the constable and his deputy down, raised a window and jumped to the pavement, fifteen feet below, and escaped. James Leafoi:, an employe of exSheriff E. J. Pierce, of Orange county, living five miles north of French Lick, met with an accident the other day that is thought to be fatal. While cutting logs a large limb fell, striking him on the head, fracturing his skull and breaking his leg. The arrest of Miss Lulu Yan Slyke, the only daughter of ex-State Senator Yan Slyke. a retired Methodist preacher, has caused a big sensation at Goshen. Miss Yan Slyke is charged with the theft of a valuable ring, which was found in the possession of her lover. Yernon Young. Young swears he will go to prison before he reveals anything as to how it came into his possession. Miss Yan Slyke is IS years of age, of rare beauty and possessed of a mind unusually well cultivated. She is a daring horsewoman, and her skill has made ker known throughout Northern Indiana. Mns. J. Wyatt, of Rowling Green, Clay county, met with a horrible accident that will result in her death. While preparing supper, Mrs. W'yatt's apron caught on fire in some manner and in a short time she was enshrouded in flames. Her cries soon brought assistance, but not until her body was burned to a crisp. Gov. Matthews the other day appointed J. II. Tomlin, of Rockport, a member of the board of trustees of the Torre Haute state normal school to succeed I. II. C. Royce, of Terro Haute. Mr. Tomlin is about thirty-five years of age and is superintendent of the pub!'" schools of Rockport. The following fourth-class postmasters were commissioned a few days ago: J. W. Spear, Alert, vice O. P. McClain, removed, and J. M. Case. Forest Hill, vice (ieo. Asians, removed, both in Decatur county. The republicans of Indiana held their district conventions for the election of members of the state committee. The committee elected is as follows: First district W. C. Mason, Rockport; SecondT. .1. Rrooks, liedford; Third E. 11. Trapp, North Yernon; Fourth A. Ii Newton. Lawrenceburg: Fifth "W, L. W. Lambert, Columbus; Sixth (lea V. Cromer, Muncie; Seventh J. W. Fessler, Indianapolis; Kighth Nicholas Filbeck. lerre Haute; Ninth S. C Shirley. Kokomo; Tenth Charles Ilarley, Delphi; Eleventh -Geo. A. Osbom, Marion; Twelfth S. O. Wood, Angola; Thirteenth F. 15. Oglesbee, Flymouth. Two musicians' unions arc at war in Richmond. At Warsaw Christian Raucher was found guilty of criminal assault upon a fifteen-year-old girl, who resides near his home, in Kosciusko county, and was given one year in the state prison. It was asserted by the defense that the prosecution was inspired by personal enemies, hence the short sentence. County Slm-kiiinteniient Avehv A. Wim.ia.mh, of Wabash, died at his home at a late hour the other night, of a chronic disease of the liver. Mr. Williams was thirty years old. Du. J. K. SiEW.urr, of Fairland, niado a postmortem examination the other day during which he inflicted a slight wound upon hiimclf. Rlood poisoning has sot in and ho may not recover. The city of Indianapolis contend.? that the charter of the Citizen's Street Railway Co. liar, expired by limitation, and at the meeting of the city council the mayor recommended that the hoard of public works serve notieo oa tho company to that effect

DEATH IN OKLAHOMA.

Awful i:ff,Tl of tl llrcrnt il!lad ,Mmi FHlulltl- IteliiK lU'iuirU-d -Frw or tlu rM.pli I.UIiii; I" llnur tnd Num. of Tin-in Trrpired for Kucli lllust -fiillle und I'omI lVrUli. GtmiiilE, Okla., Jan. 27. All over the territory the suffering caused by Tuesday's blizzard has been great, and many fatalities are being reported. Early in the night two tramps were pulled off the blind baggage of an express train at Peiry, frozen stiff and nearly dead. It was only with tho greatest effort that they were revived, und had they been discovered a few minutes later they would have been dead. An unknown man was reported found dead near Red Rock, and in the extreme eastern end of the strip a woman named Morrison perished with her little daughter. Two are reported frozen west of El Reno and one near Arapahoe.and an old negro, whose name Is unknown, was found nearly dead In a tent in thu outskirts of this city. He will probably die. A freight brakeman en route from Orlando to Perry came near losing his life, and his hands are so badly frozen as to necessitate amputation. Near Round Point a child is reported to have perished. Hundreds of settlers on thu Cherokee strip are still living in tents or mere shanties, and those who havo houses do not have them plastered, ami the wonder is that five times as 11111113 have not perished. It is feared that there are many more fatalities in the isolated sections of the strip further west, where fuel is scarcer than in the eastern part where timber abounds. Scores of people-arc down sick from the effects of the exposure, and many a person is minus an ear, fingers or toes, as the result of those members being frozen. Live stock, accustomed to the mild weather of this section, suffered as much as the people, and hundreds of head of cattle perished on the ranges, while ninny chickens and wild fowls were frozen. GOOD CITY GOVERNMENT. The N'lttliuuii Conference Iiinuciiriited for Hie l'urpoM' of Seeurlii It. Philadelphia, Jan. 27- The second das session of the National Conference for Good City Government was attended l3 a representative assemblage which niimlered several hundred. James C. Carter, of New York, the chairman of the conference, etil led the gathering to order at 10:10 a.m., and introduced Rev, Washington Chidden, D. D., of Columbus, O.. who read an address entitled "The Inllucnee Upon Officials in Office." Dr. Gladden's remarks were liberall applauded, and when he had coneluded Mr. Charles Richardson, of Philadelphia, offered the following resolution, which was adopted unanimously: Wheukas, Tho elements brought together, in thl:s conference should not bo allowed to separate without provirtlnz soui" permanent asency for continuing its work and promoting the comparison of vlow, tha cx -hansc of esperience.s. the discussion of metho ln. anil that mutual contl-lence anil sympathv which nnd to much to th-? sirensth anil c nthustasnt of fellow-workers in u treat cause: It is. therefore. L'trolvnl. That tho president of this conference Is requested to nppuinl 11 representative committee of seven to prepare a plan for -So orttnnlzjt'oü of a national municipal lencrue, which shall be composed of associations formed In American cities and bavin as an object the improvement of taunlclpjl govern m?nt. Upon the completion of it approval b such associations, or as many of them as the said committee may deem necessary, the committee shall declare the proposed league to be fully organized nnd prepared to enter upon its work." Horace E. Demming, of New York, then presented the following, which was also adopted: I'.ccoirf'l, That It Is the scne of lhis conference that tho committee, when :ipiointed by tho chairman, snoulil provide for a Mtullnr conference iti New York In order to brim; influence to bear upon the npproaehlns constitutional convention ia that stale. THE BOND INJUNCTION. Chairman MrCuIre to A stint in t!ie Sup Against Secretary CitrlUlr. Washington, Jan. 27. T. 15. MeGuire, chairman of the executive committee of the knights of labor arrived in Washington 3-estertlay afternoon, to assist in the prosecution of tin suit to be brought by the order In the effort to enjoin the issuing of bonds contemplated b- Secretary Cat lisle. He was soon in conference with Senator Allen, who transferred to dim tho petit.)ii drawn by Judge Cole. or Iowa, for the purpose of submitting il. to local counsel. Mr. McGnire hoped to have had the suit txgun yesterday afternoon, but in that h was disappointed. He lias secured the si'rvievs. of Shellaberger v Wilson, of this city, who will have charge of the ease. Secretary Hayes of the Knights of Labor reached the city on another train, and will remain for a day or two. Mr. J. Warner Willis, of Denver, v. ho is in the cit3. will also be retained w counsel, and it is thought that the hearing will take place in n few days. The papers will be filed in the supreme court, of the district this morning. Tins document is a very long one, and recites the alleged unlawful acts that the secretary of the treasur3 is about to commit, nnd pras for an injunction restraining him from issuing the bonds complained of. A eonfprenc of the attorneys iu this case was held at Senator Allen's ro'iin last evening. Serl:in Affairs. Helohaiii:, Jan. 27. King Alexander has ordered the discontinuance of the notion instituted by the radical cabinet last summer to Impeach M. Avakumovic's liberal cabinet, which fell imni'jdiutely after the abolition of the regency. A radical manifesto, Issued Thursday n'ght. protests against the precnee of ex-King Milan, who. it says, hi to 1 feres with the government und cli ti Ices the people's confidence in the ntabillty of the throne. "The radicals, it adds, "arc eager to serve tin bintr faithfully."

WEEKLY REVIEW.

The C'oHiHirrifHl unit Flnmi, - t'omllu of 111.- Country h liidliMt.-.l i,r .. in cw. uv-uiy u,.,ir,r (inlii .Mure lIHInltr. Ilm Itetlurtlo., v v...,, ........ . .:" '"

lurro. l-i. New Yoitk-, Jan. 27. R, o. um Co.'s weekly review of trade, issued tolay says: Secretary Carlisle's I'.oclslon to Is and tho early reports of larc hid fur shr--hcljwd to arcclt-r.it re-overy of indu.tr AT. trade as was honed last week Sal n. ' 'naif. amouiit offered will check nuxioty ab....t teiiaucis of note redemption, reaiove u. in next for further Jssuft of paper, and It,.! i;l a olld l asts for unattr contUr efrJItij; ihc CintKlnl futur Tho rcven.;o Is still small; from . m, !a January thin far ild.Kft rM. asaiast i ' ..r.a hmyO'ir: nnd from Int.-rnal taxes fj -; $. against f l.Wvl'J. mid tlm volunn of . ,a) 1 trade is still mnall The increase In I( ..y. or Hands employed nd Is to tu jMir, h,Vpow'T of the pooplo. nnd tlealf rs" t k Jtl. 1 reduced that any slim of laruer oi. ,t,: quickly Ivos mills more ordert. In s-jort tfe. conditions are such that, if not latrrru; J adverse- forces, they would mttaratly i;,'tl steady revival of business. industrial caln Is more dc3 itt tin-, a UK". r-w catabllshmoni-s luve stopi-. v. I while many have resumed or lncjW-.. ' dut.-t.oti. and though the.se aro not vs .-.., ploying thousands each, thenar. jm m. is coa.slderade. Inductions Iu wa . .0. tluue. nnd alsiut a quarter of th-ui ar- jf-j percent, the rest ranalng from 7 t 1? . cent In no directions are quotations -f ttj.,.1 ufnetured products hhrlier. but -3l.4 some havo actually doclinod. thj gen -r.;! t tjt Is somewhat monger Thus distinct uir -w ment Is sssn In tho dcuianl fur iro'i i.n. am at Philadelphia, though some of whi. 1. .t tlK.Uiiht could not go lowr. quoutlo-s w been reduced. Sal"s of pUare lar.'r" . -$10 äo is the open quot.it. on for lies, ti .-aaj Pittsburgh, nnd stout hern forg Is .t - 4. iü.75 at Birmingham, tho lower pri-. .'jj. graphed last week having been, it i .:ei for a lot of inferior quality. TheT. :, . .'.' Coal and Iron Co. has made coain.-f. ore which rcdues tho cost of p-.; tion 22a cents iicr ton. an 1 loxv-r . if., for oro and freights ar' also rluc 1 1 19 t ost to consumers of lae ore. Com ".nie coke is quoted at f I per ton. with the 1. r.Mof ovens in opcratloa practically um-i..-iyeX The increase la demand for Iron pnd- :4 mainly In .structural forms, cast pip-, wir roJs.larbcd wire and wire nails, while U, nVj and other railway Iron business Is r.rr. ir" ,:r small. For the fourth quarter of 5 -to 1 1- rt. Itorted cost of now buildings in N.-vr Y..-'; tl Hrooklyu was Ö.22I.770. nsalust I3 U- .: -thesamo quarter of te'Ji. Textile Industries havo Increased twrisitr force mainly in Unit coo Is, underwear a . f r;-. pets, though several woolen mills have nnd other are reported about to .start Sai of wool are larger, amounting at to- a:! markets to I fB'J.w) pounds against 5 V! T.i 'is thesamo week lat year, but prices a! I'M.-, tlelphla aro one-half cent lower, whip- a; xw York there Is more Inquiry from cari-e! as I other miils. Trading was checked lr fjs. 1 ointment regarding the date at which .h..n-i of duty are to take clfect, and there is ..!; dedre to placo or accept orders until Iii : .tan Is more clear. In overcojtlngs samples of som r.- a,ncist makes are not yt shown and pri 1 not nara?d. Worsteds appear to have a t- imposition and a better business in dr-ts s- SU generally reported for the we-U. Cott n are not .stimulated as was hoped by the re.li; -i . aunouwl. and the effect ha !een t r..at; buyer .'her goods hold off. so that tt market Is weik;r. Carpets report itr:;-r moment, and especially In lower grade- 1 orders to replenish stocks after month of :s activity aro nearly as larg-i as a year a.a Tit shoe and leather trades appear to caln a ". -1: i. t'iough shipment1, from Itoston for the wti are again 21 per cent, smaller than last y.ar Produce markets have l.e?a decldedlv dsZ though wheat for Ma' fell at one time t tu lowest point on re-ord. Western receipt !rr the week were 1.0Q7.9JI bushels against a?l last year, and of cotj 3.lä sj a 2.7."3.7X lau jear. V.'heat exjwrts arc :Jnitieant and the stocks In fright are too :arr for speculators or short crop prophets rrfi ;nd petroleum are a shade, lower ". after a ir';ii" nnu advanced a shade, ait-i;: receipts continue heavy. The stock market has but slightly !-: i-t though trusts were aff I byn breaUo i'?i rhare In sugar. Uallro.i-t earnings fort' -et weck show k s decline tVin for the fir-" l of January, tgrhaps !ccane the tnoreire-tt restore rates has om effect, but the at- ntt for th'i month thus fur In 11.7 per cent -i. i . thin last 'year, nnd east-hound torn... : greatly reduced. Atchison has t cen rM! JO per cent, or more, nnd other road '"si the d?i-!ifio created less favorable cMi !:ii tou4r.l the closfj. New York banks have again added v. the.? enormous stock of money, and off'r. made for a full year at I pr cent.. th 1 rate on record for that period, while r- - ; ' Joans 1 ier cent rules lemaraIIzat'.- - verwas caued bv at andontn-nt of t"1 poed Imnirl duty by the government o' and also of th I'xed nrlce for council' ItO-idon, but foreign exchange is not s tj altered. Domestic trade Is the k'w .' fa sltur.tlon. and learlngH oatslde N-' V aro 21.1 iter cent. nsller t.-. 1 1 yearn.ro. Tills is pirtly lnu th- ;- nrlce of ctimmodities Is US nor cent : ? than a year aio. having fallen 13 ts-r . st IneoO. tober I. while Itritlh prices, a - Ing ti tun Iindon Ikonomlst, fell 25 per n from October I to January I. Failures for the week hire I cn 1.1' L'nlted States, against -., last year, an 1 " e Canada ngilnst M last year. None are v'. .-rit manltudz. Tint Itlglit if Secretary Cnrllle to IlmiiN I ii 'In- Oiiptionett. lfSf Wasihsoton, Jan. 27. The judiciary -omrnittec of the house, by a '! Ii to 4, yesterday ordered a favorable report on Rt presentntive Itailey's r-sc lution questioning the right of secretary Carlisle to issue bonds. The was as follows: Ayes jiaiiey, Ray, Hroderiek. :"d night. ITpdegmff. Terry, DcArm n'AV. A. Stone and Childs. Total.. Nays Layton. Powers, StocV: la Wolverton; total, -I. Chairman Culbertson did not v. de. This disclosed that the voting ' "!- crats wore evenly divided, Railey. night nnd DeArmonil snstnini.i resolution, and Layton. Stoekdal-- atI WdverIon votinr t lav it on th'- w" hie. The six republican votes i m the scales in favor of the r"s..'.-.- "B otiestioninir the secretary's power This decision was reached ' :fT listening for two hours yesterday ,'- Secretary CV.rlisle's explauution views upon the legal right of th- f retary to issue bonds and appu jiroceeils to current expenses o. froverntnenl. The vote was taken after a brief "--cusslon, which was led by Mr. VvS in a snoech renlvinir to Secretary alisle's Ktateinent of his position ni-1 eX' plaining the intent of the resolut -n Chairman Cttllcr.son, who refr-- v from voting. Is understood to f the resolution. The four menil' w 'l opposed it based their opposltb-" ,J the ground that the resolution u & expedient, but intimated that t'rff considered it correct from a legai Representative Hailey reported 1...:.... I.,. tl.trin! e morning hour, and will call H W soon n.s possible after thu tariff bw acted upou

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