Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 38, Number 6, Jasper, Dubois County, 18 October 1895 — Page 6
WEEKLY COURIER,
C. J30AXIC, luhUher. JASPEIl. INDIANA. JLI liK.v. Miles took possessio of nrmy headquarters in 'nshinirtun on the 7th. A dispatch from Trebizonde says Sfl'lmii. emittii.t,. tmitr ii1;w. tin-re oil the Sth, between Turks anil Armeninns in which killed. many of the latter were Mus, Sa kau V. Km tun, the wellknown lecturer and writer on woman Mittrage, died at iter homo in Lansing, Mich., on the 10th. of cancer, after several months' painful illness. Tjibiu: was a sale of American npp'os in London, on the Oth, at which S.ssg barrels were disposed of. Haidwins brought 10; greenings, lis to 12s. an. i'anadinus from t.Vs to lus. run Uerlin, on the Wth, iieti has received a dist that the cnrowlt7. ;.. y worse. His eondi- ; 1 to alarming. sn Prof. I . p.. U- i to the t js rrwing m t. II Is I I JKVtv rniTisit an : Vreronn consuls repi i te.l, on t.ie '':. that everything hn i been thne t obtain an inquiry hit the ou'ra-. njviu the ml&Monnrlot at Ku-C short of using force. The heart of Kosciusko, the Polish patriot and getiernl under Washington, will be transferred on the Kith, from Vesia to the Polish museum in the Chateau J'aperswiji, near Zurich. On the Oth the governor of Wisconsin appointed commissioners to confer with commissioners from Minnesota about carving n new state from terri tory- now embodied m tne two out Males. Thk returns issued by the London board of trade for September show an increase in imports of JL'UTS.OOO and an increase in exports of i3,000, as coinpared with those for the corresponding month last year. Thk government of San Domingo has ordered the construction, in a Clyde shipyard, of a war ship with twin screws capable of steaming fourteen knots per hour and carrying nine quick-tirini- guns. Thk Antwerp Matin says that 0,000 mon are being enlisted in the Congo state for a great expedition, which is to be headed by Huron Dlianis. The objective point and purpose of the expedition are kept secret. Gen. William Ma honk, ex-United States senator from Virginia, died in Washington, on the sth, after a brief illness, from paralpsis, aged 09. His remains were taken to Petersburg, Va., on the 0th, for interment. The tenth annual convention of the Christian Endeavor societies of New York state opened in the Hrooklyn academy of music on the Sth. It is estimated that l.,000 persons took an active part in the proceedings. En Pakpiudoe, the Chicago board of trade plunger, has sold to 11. 11. Kohlsaat for $775,000 the property at 112 to 110 State street, nt tile rate of 12,100 afoot. Not long ago Mr. Pardridge refused S300.000 for this property. A dispatch from Shnnghai. on the 10th. said that Admiral Duller, commanding the British tleet, would return to Poo-Chow on board the dispatch boat Alacrity, the viceroy having assumed an attitude of defiance. Ministeu Tkkiikll, who represents the United States in the Turkish capital, was denounced at a meeting of the Armenian National union, held in Chicago on the Oth. The union passed resolutions demanding TerriH's recall. Thk Hritish vice-consul started from Foo-Chow, on the 0th, on his way to . Pekiti with dispatches to Sir Nicholas O'Connor explaining the hopelessness of the prosecution and the futility of continuing the farce of inquiring into the Ku Cheng massacre. Owen Jones, a lunatic from New York state, called at the White House, on the Sth, to see the president He presented a newspaper poem, the burden of which was that a boy was wanted by the executive family, and in all seriousness offered himself for adoption or employment in some capacity. George Henton, n lluck Creek (Ind.) farmer, started to walk to Lafayette, a distance of live miles, on the Sth. Hu had several dollars In his pocket, but wished to save car fare by walking. On the road he was met by two tramps, who took his money and clothing, leaving him standing nude by the wayside. Mas. Hallinoton Hootii, wife of Commander Month of the Salvation Army, left New York city, on the 10th, for a six weeks' tor.r of the cities on thu Pacific coast Great preparations are being made to receive Mrs. booth in San Francisco. She will address Salvation Army meetings in all of the cities on the Pacific coast JUPOE Wooii, of St. Louis, decided the Joties-Pulitzer-Post-Dispatch suit in favor of Col. Jones on the loth, granting a temporary injunction. Ti suit was brought by (ol. Jones to enjoin the board of directors of the Pulitzer Publishing Co. to oust Col. Jones from the managing editorship of the St. Louis Post Dispatch. CHIEF IIahius of the Cherokee nation is in Washington to urge the secretary of the interior to get ready to rush the intruders out of the Cherokee country soon after January 1 next Within a month he says that all in - truders will be paid for their improvements according to the appraisement made by thu commission appointed to An the work.
4fr44Wl
1
OCTOBER-1895. iy ifJ2df21 j Jli J ,2S!20 j TTTtTTTftTTfTTTTTVTTTTTT1 C Ulf KENT TOPICS. THE NEWS IN BRIEF. PERSONAL AND GENERAL. Maj. Au.m:s was, on the 10th, discharged froai custody by Judge Kradley, of thu District of Columbia supreme court, who characterized the action of (Sen. eliofield, under whoso orders Armes was held, as "unwarranted, illegal, unjust and tyrannical. " Thk A merkst u fUhimr tug Grace, which was sol 20 J by the Dominion oruit-er Dolphin, in Lake Erie, in April. for illegal fishing and condemned by the admiralty court at Toronto, was (old at public auction, on the nth, for St.-'tiO to satisfy tin judgment against her. JlAiutv Himijl, mnnager of a Chicago shoe company, sakl to be one of four heirs to an English estate valued at 8100,000,000. The tirst of the new battle-ships will shortly go into commission. The Indiana is ready for its trial trip, which is elated to take place October 15. A 32-mile course oil tiie Massachusetts coast between Cape Ann and Cape Porpoise has been selected. To meet the requirements tue iiutinnr must maintain a speed of 15 knots for four hours. Judge Gun-ox Ci.ai:k, United States attorney for Wyoming, has received formal instructions from the attorneygeneral to apply for a writ of habeas! corpus for the release of the two Han nock Indians arrested at Evanston for violation of the state game Jaws, thus making a test case. Kähmens in Eaton county, Mich., will not make any cider this year, unless, they take their apples outside of the county, Prosecuting Attorney Maynard has looked up the local option law ot the county, and finds that it precludes the manufacture of cider. After a chase extending over thousands of miles Detective John IJ. Savilie, of the Pinkerton agency in Philadelphia, on the Oth caught John Don Karden, alias J. T. Franklin, the cashier who robbed the Adams Express Co. in Ter re Haute, Ind., of SIG.O00, at Haltimore, Md. On the evening of the 0th, by a collision between an engine and a crowded passenger train near Wavre. Helgium, ten persons were killed and forty injured, several of them seriously. It will interest the non-commissioned oflicers of the army to learn that several of the members of the new congress have expressed themselves in favor of the proposed effort to secure to them an increase of monthly pay. The proposition Is to make the pay o first sergeants S45, sergeants S35and corporals S25, which, it is contended, will be more commen surate with the duties they have to perform. The Northern Steamship Co. will re move its headquarters from Huffalo, N. Y., to Duluth. Minn., at the close of this season's navigation. The Ohio River Improvement con vention opened in Cincinnati, on the sth, promising to be one of the largest ever held in that city. r im: at Green Hay, Wis., on the 7th, destroyed the docks of the Murphy Lumber Co., together with millions of feet of logs an"d lumber and a number of buildings. Loss, 5100,000; insurance, $07,000. The fire was caused by a I spark from a tug. ; A tekkific explosion occurred in the Dorrenee mine, at Wilkesbarre, Pa., on the 7th. Of nine men in the mino at the time five were hoisted out "". the carriage, one of them fatally wounded. The fate of the other four remained unknown. Two heavilv-ladex trains, a freight and a passenger, collided between Wxtvre and Ottignies, about 18 miles from Krüssels, on the tith. and most of the cars of both trains were wrecked. Eighteen persons were killed outright and fully 100 were injured, probably twenty-five of them fatally. A liA.vn of robbers attempted to hold up the Grand Kupido & Indiana northbound train near Kalamazoo, Mich.. on the 7th, but the engineer opened the throttle and did not heed the sigil to stop, dashing through a fu sillade of bullets. The headlight was shot out and the cab riddled. A oano of five nrmed and masked men held up an electric car near the Herwin-aveniie crossinir of Evanston avenue on the outskirts of Chicago, on the evening of the 7th, and robbed the sixteen male passengers, one of whom was shot through the leg by his own revolver which was discharged when one of the robbers struck his arm with his pistol. The robbers gallantly refrained from molesting the two lady passengers. The wrecking steamer Lord Stanley returned to Quebec. Can., from the steamer Mariposa at, Helle Isle, on the 7th, and reported the vessel a complete wreck. A portion of her cargo had been saved and taken to St. John. Miss Aha CvvENDtsH, the actress, died in London on the 7th. Mx men were Roriously injured by the explosion of a boiler in the Wharton Iron Co. initio in Hibernia, N. J., on the 8th. The town was shaken art by an earthquake, and scarcely a window in any of the Xrumc houses remained unbroken. Tin: Darling hotel, the largest hos telry in Lorain, 0., was burned early ' tl"-' morning of the 8th, l orty g nests escaped in their nightclothes, losing all their effects. Nothing was saved from the burning building but a piano aud one chest
lsDii.llnn.lTnfi.taJTliii.lMlSat.
a L-hrhrhrhrl iu-
... ... i k: i
I I I . I I I b
4 O I O . JUU i. IS Ii.
i.
Ii .-r i n t 1 o n n
JH. J. X I XO Xijfc 22 23!2i25 26'
;jo 31 ... ... ff
J. Don Fahdkn. treasurer or Hi
Ailains Express Co., who absconded from Torre Ilaute, Ind.. three weeks a Co with a lanre sum of uioiun'. ami who was arrested in Baltimore, Mil., ailed guilty befor the Un. ted State commissioner at IudlanaHlis on the sth, and was placed under .",000 bonds. Tin: bodies of Win. Jones, Win. Cahill, Llewellyn Owens and Daniel Davis, who wore entombed by the explosion at the Dorrauce colliery at Wilkesbr.rre. Pa., wore recovered and brought to the surface on the sth. Two l-Eitsoxs wore fatally and two seriou-ly injured by thu fall of an ole- ' vat or in Chicago on the sth. Ttie ue- . cident was caused by the breaking of 1 the cable, the elevator falling 100 feet. I News was received in Mo-cow, on j the sth, of the capsizing of a raft on the Itiver Oka near O.ory. resulting in the drowuing of 100 persons. IMnha Fink, aged 103, died in Detroit, Midi. . on the sth. She was born in Suhwendt, Poland, In 170.', and eatne un this country fourteen years ago. She had been a widow for fortj -four .wars, ami was remarkably active up to within three months, when she began to fail. To tvon arrest and eanvSetion for being the head of the "traiisfr gang of thieve-.. whoe peeiilntbii had recently been uncovered by the polier of Kau-as City. Mo.. II. C. Litchfield. um linger of the railroad transfer company in that city, committed suicido on the Ulh. EaiTH"1'AKE shocks, accompanied by subterranean noi-es, were felt at Laibach, thirty-tivo miles east of Trieste, at midnight, and repeated tremors of the earth were again felt toward the morning of the 0th. Eighteen hours after her apparent death from paralysis, Mary Kunze, wife of a farmer living near Logansport. Ind., arose in her collin. on the Hth, and asked for a drink of water. She is now rapidly recovering. Eap.i.y on the morning of the 9th thirty houses were destroyed by lire ami many poor families were rendered homeless in the town of Itavard, W. Va. Gov. Ci.oroH of Minnesota issued a proclamation, on the 9th, forbidding the fight which had been announced to take place between Needham and Moore on the night of the 12th. A costly rear-end collision occurred on the Pittsburgh t Lake Erie railroad at Heaver Falls, Pa., on the 9th. due to an unusually dense fog. Fif-' teen freight cars and one engine were wrecked, causing a loss of S"0.000. Anhkkw J. Stkhlino, a swindler and confidence man, wn arrested in Hnffalo, N. Y., on the 10th, for swindling girls by promising1 them positions in a Pasadena (Cal.) hotel, aud requiring a deposit from them. Nk.vh East haven. Conn., on the ICtli, Domiuick I'raun and Kobert Cirillo, while out gunning attempted to crawl through a hedge. Hraun'sgnn was discharged, seriously wounding him and killing Cirillo. At Snider station, 30 miles north of Tweed, Ont,, the dwelling-house occupied by Thomas Lindsay and family was destroyed by fire, on the loth, and six of the occupants were cremated. Pa et of a large building used as a spinning mill in Hocholt, Westphalia, collapsed, on the 10th, burying twentjworkmen in the ruins. Several dead bodies were taken out. The will of Harry Wright, the baseball manager, was admitted to probat in Philadelphia on the 10th. lie left an estate valued at SI 3, .100. LATE NEWS ITEMS. TiiEofiicersof the Western Paper Co., Thilmany Pulp and Paper Co., Kankuuna Electric Light Co., Kaukanna Lumber Manufacturing Co. and Uussell Hros. flouring mill, all of Kankunna, Wis., have lteeu arrested for drawing water from the canal at that place belonging to the United States. Prosecutions v. ill follow. Ciuctit JfPOK A. M. Ut'FFlE called the sheriff of Garland county. Ark., before him, on the 11th, and informed him that it was Iiis duty to take proper measures to prevent the Corbett-r itzsimmons contest from taking place in that county, and advised him of his powers in the premises. A PIsrATCH from Madrid, on the 11th,. said the United States government iiad pointed out to the Spanish minister at Washington the necessity that Spain should take prompt action to crush the relellion in Cuba. This statement created a sensation in political circles in Madrid. Failukes throughout the United States for tiie wecke mied on the 11th, as reported by It. G. Dun .t Co., were 20S, against 'MM for the corresponding week last year. For Canada the fail ures wore .V2, against 4'J last year. A i'assenoek train on the Grand Junction line plunged into the Ontonabee river near Peterboro, Ont., on the 11th, through an open lock bridge. Several persons were badly injured but no fatalities were reported. Gov. CLot on of Minnesoth has pardoned the Floyd boys, who were sentenced to the penitentiary several years ago for complicity in the robbery of the bank of Minneapolis be Paying Teller Schoig. The socialist congress at Hreslnu, by ä vote of Ifo to 0", approved a resolution olTored by Herr Kautsky which is tantamount to rejection by the congress of the proposed agrarian programme. Uev. W. 11. Evans, supply at Christ's i church In Warwick, N. Y., has fallen heir to an estate worth between 10,000 and S'AOOrt per annum, and to the Irish title of Lord Corbury. The Holland radiator works at liremen, Ind., were entirely consumed by an incendi ary fire on the 11th. Loss. . estimated at Sl.10,000, with practically I no Insurance. j Mux. llAitlUET UvA.v, aged 0.1 and deitucntcd. set fire to her night clothes at Wilton, N. Y., on the 11th, ran into the field and was burned to a crisp. It is reported that the carl of Elgin, viceroy of India, has resigned for peri sonal reasons.
INDIANA STATE NEWS. When the Pinkerton detective who was bringing Ikui Karden, the agent who robbed the Adams Express Co. at Torre haute, from ISalthnore to Torre Haute, he was confronted on he train by a federal deputy marshal with a warrant for Farden, and the pri-soner was put in jail at Indianapolis. Ttie ShUHK) stolen by Karden at Torre Haute was money deinisited by an internal revenue collector, and the government will prosecute him.
The alarming spread of diphtheria in liammoud hns compelled the authorities to take measures to eioe all the schools to cheek the ravages of the disease. Kroni one to three deaths have occurred daily for several days. The Chase memorial fund has been completed. Trustee Atkinson has received S.10. in cash. A homo in Wa basil costing 2. ICO has been bought for Mrs. Chase. Natfuai. gas ignited at Mundo and two buildings were wrecked. "iVilliaiu Teverliangh was badly burned stud two ladies wore slightly burned Jt'DOK ISakee, of the federal court at Indianapolis, overruled the motion for a now trial in the case of Francis A. Collin, convicted of complicity in j the wreck of the Indianapolis national ', bank. , A town not far from Kokomo has a. t unique method of circumventing the i Nicholson temoerance law. A big Newfoundland dog belonging to the villago baker acts as purveyor, ear- j rying ouekets of oeer from tne saloon at all hours to the thirsty waiting guzzlers about the all-night restaurant. The law does not forbid selling liquor to dogs, and the animal does a land-olllce business. Alheet Dhavtox. a prominent business man of Holling Prairie, near Laporte, forged a large number of notes, which he attempted to negotiate. His forgeries threatened to convict him, and the other night he shot and instantly killed himself. He leaves a wife aud family. Haheison county is SO3.O0O in debt Forty thousand dollars of this is bonded. At Waldron Dr. It. II. Washburn was perhaps fatally shot by James Thompson. The next annual reunion of the Nineteenth Indiana battery will be held in Ehvood next September. The Good Citizens league of Indianpolis has elected S. E. Nicholson, president: M. E. Shiel, secretary, and Kenneth Heid, treasurer. At the state W, C. T. U. convention, at Vincennos, Miss Laura Newlin, of llloomingdale. won the diamond Detnorest oratorical medal. Keank I Sex nett, living near Ilelmer, I who was terribly bitten by dogs while gathering nuts, died of blood-poison- i ins'- j A mo gas well has been struck eight miles north of Karmland. It is said to be the best well in Randolph county. While out hunting, Samuel Cromwell, a fanner, living near Hrazil, was attacked by a ferocious wildcat. Mr. Cromwell succeeded in killing the animal, which measured three feet from the tip of the nose to the root of the tail. Thk corner-stone of Grace M. E. church, Kokomo, was laid. Church will cost StO.OOO. TiiEin: are a lot of California quail near Goshen. They were released sev- . eral years ago. John Com kn, aged 17, accidentally shot himself in the head at Anderson und is temporarily insane. He was fooling with a revolver. Hofoii Notes, an insurance paper, says the citizens of Indianapolis pay S1Ö0.O00 a year that would not be needed if the fire department was properly equipped. The paper wants a water tower purchased for the department JSEN4AMIN Wilson, a rich farmer, living near Peru, was approached by card hharpers, one of whom showed a game of cards, and, after allowing Wilson to win once, proposed that he go to the city and get S10.000 to continue the game. Wilson dispersed the fellows with his revolver. Rev. Sevmouu Gueiinskv, a pioneer of Clarke county, died at Henryville the other night, aged S2 years. John Ei.pkii, aged S7, an old pioneer of South I '.end. died the other morning. Heniiv Milljian, of Tippecanoe county, met death in a well the other forenoon from noxious gases. Two ball clubs at Warsaw placd for the benefit of the poor and took in 5133.25. Gov. Matthews will make eight or ten speeches, during four or five days, in Ohio, in the latter part of October. D. Cauvek. a boot and shoe merchant of Columbia City, assigned, with liabilities of S5.000 and assets 57,000. James Ki-eoksox was crushed to death in one of the furnaces at the new steel mill at Alexandria. The police chiefs of Indiana, at Terre Haute, the other day decided to hold the next state convention at Indianapolis at some date in lS0t when the criminal courts are not in session. At Montpeltcr David Caines and William Grose were killed by the explosion of a nitroglycerin can. They had built a lire over it while coon hunting. At Madison, Harry "I'cd" King, who shot and killed Hasil Angull. last May. was found guilty of manslaughter and senteuccd to the penitentiary for three years. 'Soeiee Paiikeii's team was being driven across the L fc V. railroad, near I'enterton, by two men in a wagon, when a special freight train dashed on them, killing both horses and wrecking the wagon. The men escaped. An Elkhart woman had Alonzo Hulce arrested for trespass because he persisted in visiting her after she told him to stay awa5. A jury dismissed him. Thk state appropription for 1S90 will be available on and after November I. The present year will leave probably $50,000 on hand, and to this will be added the portions of money which come ia from counties and arc attached to various funds.
CONSTANT FIGHTING, ui Whlrli Ilm ImiirjteiiU Mm In IIhIii Iii AiUmhOisi. I IiiiiikIi Without li llnttit ltMill Nrtrriov lrit,iii nf Urn. Cuiii'IIm MHItiirr MiK-iltitl HHl wllli S.iIiIIitk MilTr nut f rum Yrlltiur fr, Wlileti (Irarriitl) I'ruvr, I-hIiiI. S vntiaoo he Ci'iia, Oct 1. Via Key West, l'la., Del. II. Last week several eiieou liters took place between Spaniards and Cubans in the Manzanillo und Guautaiiaino districts. In Gtiniituiiatun tho Spanish columns of Colonels Zogura and Uuiz and Commanders liarrido and Lopez, met the insurgents near Monte Libaiio, on the '.".th ult. They fought bravely, and the official report says that two olllcer.s 01 tho guerilllas wore killed anil forty soldiers wounded. Thu rebels had three men killed and two won tided, among tho forinerbeiug Commander (iabiuo VasqiieZ. On the evening of September -'3 Gun. Ca noil as narrowly escaped drowning while attempting to cross the Hlver Ciiscy (Gunntauaiuo). On September i!7 (Son. Go u Kalos .Muni arrived at Mananillo aftor being five days in the field. Ills force" consists of s&O infantry, 150 mounted guerrillas, a company of artillery and another of engineers. This column mot tho rebelh in iLHVrent places between Veguita and Hueyoita. Tho Spaniards were carrying a largo convoy, which thev nearlv lost. Thu In
surgents attacked the Spaniards vigorously after filling the road-, whore the column had to pass with trunks of large trees. It was with great dirticulty that the Spaniards forced their way to Hueycito. Tiie codec plantation of La Alegria was the scene of another attack on the same column after it had delivered the convoy. This rebel party was commanded by Juan Massa Parra. At Sabana de Tara, the attacks of the insurgents on the troops were so terrible that the Spaniards had to fight altogether, infantry, artillery and engineers. In this encounter, according to the otliciul report, the Spaniards had fifteen killed and seventy Wounded. Private information is to the elTect that there were many wounded. Gen. Garcia Gucrrio, with 200 men, left to-day to attack La Granpiedra, fifteen miles from Daiguir:, where Jose Maceo has had his camp since the beginning of the war. This morning eighteen volunteers of the second batall ion of this city were ordered to the field for active service. The sanitary condition here is very bad. The military hospital is filled with soldiers, the greater number suffering from yellow fever, which generally proves fatal. FOR CUBAN INDEPENDENCE. t'clc-limtloii of tin .iiiilvrnry uf Ihn I I rut Firllnji In Culm. Jacksonville, Fin-, Oct. 11 A caolegrain from Key West, Fla., says: Never in the history of this city has there been such enthusiasm as was displayed yesterday, the twenty-ninth anniversary of the first attempt for Cuban independence. From one end of the city to the other business houses and private residences were gaily decorated with American and Cuban ilags. Many vessels in the harbor were also decorated with all the bunting available. Promptly at 0 o'clock in the morning the booming of cannon began, and at the same hour the American aud Cuban flags were hoisted over the city hall. Speeches were made from the balcony by Messrs. Hen McLendon and and Fraucisco Gonzales. The band played the national airs aud the spectators cheered themselves hoarse, llotti American and Cuban flags were also hoisted over the county courthouse. The various Cuban clubs met at the San Carlos hull in the afternoon, and were joined by the several fire companies, G. A. IL corps and Sons of Veterans. They' formed a procession, headed by the Key West cornet band, and marched to the cemetery, where patriotic speeches were delivered. The ceremonies finished. they inarched back to the San Carlos hull, where they dispersed. Just as the procession arrived at the San Carlos and us the last gun was tired, it burst, instantly killing oiu; colored man named John Frazier, literally tearing off tho top of his head. SPANISH FEARS t'auic- Srrloui ComMllrntliina In llcitllng with AII'Cil Fllllnintcr. Washinoton, Oct. 11. Secretary Carlisle called on Attorney-General Harmon yesterday and handed him several telegrams received by him from collectors of customs aud others regarding the movement of alleged filibustering parlies along the gulf coast The two ca Iii net officers discussed the situation at some length. It was agreed that no proper means should be left untried to prevent tho violation of the neutrality laws. The fact that so far all attempts to detain alleged filibustering expeditions have been thrown out of United States courts inclines thu administration to be cautious and thus avoid thu possibility of suits for damages. It is said that the Spanish agents along the Florida coast, in their zeal to secure information, seize upon rutüors us facts and many of these alleged facts being forwarded to federal ollicials have been ascertained upon investigation to bo unfounded and Incorrect RESOLUTIONS Adoptri! Uy tli Iniliium Trai!ii anil I.nlior tlutoii. Four Wayne, Ind., Oct 11. At thu afternoon session of tho Indiana Trades and Labor unions yesterday, resolutions were adopted favoring tho tree coinage of silver at the ratio of 10 tol; one declaring in favor of thu Cuban insurgents, and another extendtig a vote of thanks to JIou. John P. Altgcld, governor of Illinois, for the noble, manly and patriotic utterance! recently mndu on the battlefield oi Chiukumutiira,
THE LONDON PRESS. I'emnifiil Kfvrrt'ly mi l.uril Km-li vllli-'t l'iniiililrll milikii, Ill.TliiH-.l, ll. Mini, iiiri O mill I nil ir TliniiKlitliii llllii.r. iik.h t'imiii tlir of lli iroliii'lliiit - Mr. Ilnyitril lir-inlfil mill III Cimiii. ul Ainli.tMiiilnr in I'liKluiiil I'mlm-il. Lonihin, Oct. PJ. Tho Dally Telegraph, in an urtlclo commenting, upon Lord Sackville's issuance of the painpnlet in which lie makes an attack upon United Slates Ambassador Hay. ard, says: "A very foolish, ill-iiiaiiuercd, illtimed and ilbmiido pamphlet has been issued by Lord Sackville with the purpose of Injuring the reputation of Mr. Hayurd, now the United Stute. Ambassador, charging mm with being u political trickster and consistent and determined enemy of England. The whole thing is so full of thoughtless bitterness that it is not worth while to reproduce any part of the brochure. Wo only hope that tho . moit sense and practical good judg. meat of the English and Amem-un public will trout Ihis iineullud-nir iVt-tm-k with contemptuous disdain. Those concerned with diplomat!. hUtory will bo tho tir-t tu assure Mr. P.nyard that no ellWt whatever is like to ho produced by such a .series of charges, so utterly unworthy of attention or consideration. During his sojourn here. Mr. Hayard bus earned gulden opinions for his urbsyj. ity and his keen judgifiont of affairs and above nil has made sttnlioiis ef. forts to cultivate amicable fooling between Kuglutiduud America. Through him the English are learnin 'u fuller appreciation of and a higher admiration for the groat republic"
txu'tiiii tu Tri'iit Ho SiTi-t-il uitii siiijut Cunt niit. London, Oct 12. The Chronicle today says it is expected when Ambassador Hayard returns to London that he will decline to be drawn into a controversy with Lord Sackville. The feeling existing in reference to the pamphlet is one of unqualilied regret. This finds its strongot expression in diplomatic circles, where the incident is'u matter of general comment. SECRETARY OLNEY Dci'IIiii-m to llUruoN tli ii Allt-i;i'l Nuiiri! la tili- SpiinUti .Milliliter Hint t In- CiiIkiii Kit. Im-IIIihi MliHt In- Sunn I'll t IIiiivii. 1'oston, Oct. 12. Secretary Ohiey, although several times questioned about 'tho matter to-day. declined to discuss the question that the administration has notified Ministor Dupuy de Lome "that there is a necessity that Spain should net promptly in her olforts to crush the insurrection m Cuba." The fact that the report was pubMidied immediately following an interview between the secretary and minister yesterday seems to give color of truth to the statement, but in view ol the near approach of the date of the meeting of congress, and of the fact fact that President Cleveland must, almost necessarily, refer to the subject in his annual message to that body, it is more than probable that there has been no communication made to Minister Dupuy de Lome importing any change of policy on the part of tiie administration to take ctTcct before the meeting of congress. Mr. Dnpuy de Lome makes weekly visits to Washington from Hryn Mawr, where he is spending October with hie family, to call upon Secretary Olney on the regular diplomatic day at the state department He was seen Thursday by a representative of the United Press, to whom hu stated that his presence in Washington at that time had no especial signifiunce. He returned to Philadelphia yesterday morning. DUN'S COMMERCIAL REVIEW. ImllcHt ion-i of tin- I'rlco IJurmiu-ti-r 'ol AllorthiT I'm urn lili-. Xew Yokk. Oct 12. H, G. Dun Co. in their weikly review of trade issued to-day say: The price barometer gives Indientions that arc not entirely favorable. Cotton goods go up with increasing evidence that the crop of cotton b short. Prices of other manufactured products, of wool, hides and leather, all show some decline. Money markets arc neither strained nor threatening, foreign exchange no longer raises apprehension, and all fears about the great northern crept are passed. There have been few advances in wages of labor within the past month and only a few works have been closed by strikes for an advance. In woolen manufactures a demand for dress goods and sonic specialties keeps many mills and men fully 011 ployed. It 5s too early for cotton movement to cast much light on the probabh yield. Atpresent prices, averaging S-tf cents in southern markets, against cents a year ago, 7,000,000 bales wonh' bring Sbt.OOO.OUO more than 9.'.00,OOC bales brought last year. Mr. Ellison, the financial European authority, shows that 2,1177,000 were held September I in ports and at mills here and abroad. Wheat receipts have been 7,:I51,I74 bushels, airuinst l.tl'iO.lSt last year; and Atlnntic exports only L707.IW9 bushels, Hour included, against I.IWS,7s0 last year. Failures for t'ie week have included two banis and several concerns of some size, und have been 2(3S in the United States, ngainst 231 hist year, and 5'J throughout Canada, against 43 last vcar. DREADFUL ACCIDENT. four Men KIIIimI unit Many Hiullr Injure by Hi" Colltipoi of 11 lliillilln-;. Cleveland, 0.. Oct 12. Four met were killed and seven others probabl fatally injured as the result of tin un explainable nccldont at the Cleveland Hol'iiig mills at o'clock hist night The furnaces were carrying ''cavj 11 res, und the casting department wni working a full force. Without warn ing, und in a manner wholly inexplicable the casting house, the larg est building of the plant, collapsed, burvu g several men In the debris.
