Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 38, Number 44, Jasper, Dubois County, 10 July 1896 — Page 6
WEEKLY COURIER C. IWAXK, r.itdUBBMk mm, .... ixni.wA.
k 1 'I'WowHrf.wtii! INDIANA STATK XKWS.
- . , , , , ' Mill I 'I I '111"--' ' 'II I III!
Mm I! ami Km Bkechee Htowe, Um Mithor of "i bbss Toms Oabia,' died at her h ouie in Hartford, I ouu., on the 1:
Tm liertuan minister of war hau forwarded to the MMMM u report favoring the hiippresvi.nl of dueling- in the GarMBO ariuy.
t nnv a
1 Can. Mon. Tue. ftsd. Thür fri. Sat. f 1 X I 2 3 4,1 I 5 6 7 6 9 10 11 ! j 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 j I 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 j
Vi. i -I'lusti'i N r mkvivwiv arrived in Chicaco. on the 1st. from Washing
ton en route to Iiis home in lllooiuilur
ton. His wife ami family IfliiMM ieil
In m
4 s I j "V t- J .... J
T il k debt statement, issued on th lat. showed ;i net increase in the pith lie .lebt, less eash in t lie trcusu r v. d ur
Ittff . I une. of f l.e'.'u.s'iJ. Total cash m
the treasury, 9H.i3,i)ä.rta.V
Ti KKisn trooos en route for Sauran.
i Syria, revolted at Jidduh. on the 1st.
in.', refused to (jo anv further until
their arrears of pav due. from !st to
the present time, was received.
Kx-t 'dXliREMMAX .loll W KlIU.NOKK
died at his home in Lebanon. Fa.. on the night of the 90th, frm the effects of a carbuncle, lie was a wellkiu.wn repuhlioan. and spent many years in congress.
In the I'.ritish house of common, on the 10th) Wm. St. J. Hroderick. parliamentary secretary to the war ofhee, statel. in reply to a question on the subject, that the total of the british forces now in South Africa was 5,V:.'o men.
Farm newa from the MM of the mine disaster at HlttatoB, Fn.. on the -.'st h. stated that water was pouring into the shaft, and that if t he men had not leeii killed by the falling of the mine roof, they had certainly been drowned.
.1 1 im.k ii i.Mi. in the court of genera s c ,ss j i us. Neu York city, on the LM."th. sentenced William Turner and William Robert Funiop to nine years each in state prison on their plea of guilty f stealing S'Hi.0Ofi worth of jewelry from 1. Totvnsend Kurden.
CÜBBENT TOPICS. THE NEW8 IN BRIEF. PERSONAL AND GENERAL.
'.".th, l iioir-master Itra.'kett and four
choir Ih s of St. John s Kpiscopal church. Charlcstown. Mass., who hud gone there for a weeks recreation, were drow ned. 'l'wo ot her boss who were in the boat were saved. li ,s stated thut t ten. Jacques Nicolas Leger has been appointed minister to the UniMd M.itcs from llayti to succeed Mr. CUbMI liietjaeiis. resigned. The ne-.v minister is expected to arrive il tiring duly. I'm ti.uMiry deficit for the liscul c.ir ended on the ;illth finita up ISO, 100,000; lor the past three years the dcticit agglQnjilM 1197.500,000. I iiki i.. I'imcv, a niciuber of the tu ban junta and chairman of the C hail Fair comiiiit tee. called upon lieu. Tom MO Kstrnda Palma in New York on the 10th, and handed him a check
for S:..lKUi. the first installment of the pro, reds of the Cuban fair. "This is not all," said Mr. Ferra. "Ass i as MJ settle up coiupletel v, I expect to give you another check." A Mtl.: ATtoN of citizens of NewYork and lbookl n called on Cov. Morton, on the )0th, and uracil executive clemency in behalf of .loliu Y. McKane, the former (iravesend boss. A personal letter from McKane to the m.
ernor was presenteil by the delegation
FROM THE ORIENT.
At St. Louia, it is said, "the choice of a candidate was settled in advance and the question was one of platform
At I IMfO the platform is settled and
the question is the man. hut the
MM MIMMl U"w needs and all
that it needs is aggressive manage
ment.
A new political party was organized a . n a a a.
in lacoma. vtush.. on the 1st. imme
diately after the adjournment of the
bimetallic league of that state. The new organization is to lie called the
Free-t oinaife Kenuhiican narlv ami it.
U coin jw.se d of republicans w ho favor
the free coinage of silver. Hi .a M h candidacy is said to have in
terfered with the clever! vlaid plans of
any iiumkr of democratic leaders. Whether they BE silver, gold or compromise leaders, the men addicted to the management habit arc shy of liiand. The political management w ant nunebody else, anybody else. TU committee appointed by the National Republican convention at St. Uuii to notify Mr. McK i ey of UM nomination to the presidency if t'.ie I'nitetl States, performed that duty, at the home of the nominee in i'anton. (.. on the L'iith. in the presence of a large assemblage of citizens.
Tnr. National Sunday School convention closed its first annual term of three weeks at .lackson. Term., on t he ttth. 1 he convention proved a decided success. Ir. L I. Simmons, the or. ginator. says tl at he has aln ady made arrangements witli some of the best 'ecturers in the country for next year. The duly estimate of a Chicago statIstican makes condition of winter wheat Tl s. airainst 74 . dune 1. and the condition in the six surplus states . against 60.4 last month; the average condition of spring wheat is estimated
at i.4, against a mouth lie;... Keaervea of wheat put at 44,non,oon bushi is about the same a a ear ago. A pm;i of MISMMM MM nsisting of representatives of the National Association of M i nufaeturers of the I'nited States, aailed from New York on the steamer St. Paul for Southampton, on the 1st, for a three-months trip thro-.gh Arrentinn. I rnguay and HraBii. for the express purpose of cultivating closer trade relation with those countries.
Co. at Cleveland, Ok, involving MM Men
has Ih'cii in progress five weeks, and BO settlement is ;u sight. The brutal
treatment bv the strikers of those
who have returned to work has alien
ated al, public sympathy for the men.
Martin Schmitz, one of the men who
returned to work, was set upon as he left the worlas. n the '.".ah, and beaten so t hat he will die.
Tm trial of .lohn 1. Hart. Emile
Nunc, (apt. John 1. O'Brieo and Mate Edward Murohv. aceeaed of aid
ing a military Spedition to Cuba la the steamship Iturmuda. came up in the I'nited States circuit court uf New
York citv on the 99th.
MoM than 1.4iu.iNMi spindles ut Full
River. Mass.. are nledmd to shut Atom m
for four weeks, either consecutively or
alternately, during inly and August. and it is considered n: nimble that evcrc
plain cotton goods and print cloth fae-
tory in that citv will enter the mmwrnm
Mil to curtail production by a suspension "f operations.
A I.K I im received bjr Superintendent Wishon o the county intirmary at Portsmouth. . on the Mjfh, froin an
UMO man in the Cuban army, stated that his s(,n. apt. Kalph Wishon, was killed in a light with the Spaniards.
Me went to t uba a vear ago. AtriPAvrrs were filed in Justice Tancey s curt at Fort Wayne, lud., on the -".th, against the players of the Fort Wayne and Saginaw baseball clubs, charging them with engaging la a game of baseball on Sunday in violation of the Indiana state law. The complaining witness was Kev. .1. S. Ainslle, of the Congregational church. Kev. Mr. Ainslie is backed by the Ministerial association. A NOTK l was posted in the IVnibcrton mills, at Lawrence. Mass.. m the 3th, informing 900 operative the.1 the plant iron Id shut down OB I'ridav.Julv ;s. and remain closed until September t). Agent F. Clark explained that It
'im Pinkrrtoa egencj has endet taken the tusk of running dow n Clma. (ire'n, the defaulting nioncy order ;dcrk of the I ' nitassl States KirvsCo. ,
nt 1 nili:inapolis. w ho iisappcu-ed wit h fu mis iiggi i gat ing SLftWO. Mm Sami ki. Haioh, aged 57 years, dropped dead of heart disea'M at Muiiie. he had not tu en ill and her death was a great surprise. .she was the it,.o Uer of U children. 'I in last legislature appropriated PHO.onu to the Indiana university 100 to I'unlue university ami tT.MO to the State normal institute, and it provided for u one-sixth ot a mill tax lew to furnish permanent fMUU fOV theee institutions The presidents of these
several institutions claimed that the institutions should gel the several appropriations as well as the funds arising from the tax. but the attorney general held that the educational institutions could not draw on the appropriations after the state tax bca me a vailhiev Thia ruling cuts materially into the funds f these institutions, and the several faculties are very much disturbed over tin- decision reached by tin- attorney geuei al. At l.ickskillet church, eight miles north of Winchester, fnhlt JemMOO. Lon Strahnn and William Fiaker rot
had his left j
TH fishing crew employed by the C. Asa Francis i 'o., pound fishery, at Spriug Fake. N J iiKn lifting their nets. OU the 17th, tliscovered the MMMO of two drowned men. The crew attempted to put the men in their hoet, but the undertow was too strong and they were washed to sea. The drowned men were Swedish lish-
,i iiien. ,i,i., .is ,i ,s.im-u uv i lie iieiee-ii wo I. ,.n sir., , I n:n:
1 , ,- , ' ' nil,, I, .111,1 tl mi Mil strike at the Hrow a Moisting -rei that McKane hail fully atoned int.. u tight . ami Fisliei .'1 . !..-. 1 f , f , a., .. I . . 1.1. . u i ... . . .....1 .1 A .1 , . I -
. a i ' levetaiiti. ' . in vol inr oo men. n inn"', ,iiiu i n ; im i r l'i'i h slice I i i , ; . .. .
. wuHiBwuiTiii oe.si,u-.s neing sianiK'u
Tn Confederate Vetera na' revBion opened at R iehmoiii I. Ya.. on the Kith, w Ith charming went her, clear and cud. An immense throng of people was present, and exposition grounds, where the reunion was held in a large auditorium erected for the purpose, was crowded. The auditorium was handsomely decorated. 1 1 le considered probable, at Havanna, that Cen. Bradley JohEeoa, who has be n acting as the correspondent of a New York newspaper, will hare to leave t uba on account . if the reports which he has sent to the United States regarding i iilmn affairs. TliK Che ven lie Indians in Montana
have dawned t heir war ain t u nd are
bidding ptw-wows, preparatory to a general uprising. Several troop, ol the Tenth cavalry have been ordered from Fort Custer to the Cheyenne agency at Fame I leer. Custer county, Mont. The Chcyenues have been unusually indolent this spring. I II Mil I s Y. 1 I. A Kit. son of W. A. ( lark, the millionaire mine ow ner, banker and politician, and Miss Catherine Q, Roberta, Of Helena, a young stenographer, were married at Hatte, Mont., on the 30th, The groom s father presented him with a cheek for 100,000,
111 an explosion of aiiuniinit ion during a tire in the arsenal near Port Moselle, in the German amdnmi ..I
. - - r.. l i... ..:..!. . .i - - ... i 1
.,'1 1 OK, OU Uli" llllll oi me .nun. is i j men were killed and 1(H) others badly Slv,'r',' ;n ! J WW, I rank
t , . , . .
Di an explosion Ol gas ig u manhole of the Kdison Electric Co , at Wabash avenue and South Water street, Chicago, on the 1st, two men were fatally burned and two seriously in j li red. A DttPATCE from Kobe. Japan, rtated June 1"., received on the 1st, said the steamer h'awanoura Main had cvdlid-
ed with and sank the llozui Maru off lliroshiiiiaduriiigastorin, and that ITlives were lost. Tin: Bed star packet Uahmanieh bound from Suakiin for Sue., broke her shaft, on the 90th, and drifted i up..;i a reef, where she founilered, and 00 persons, mostly iJreeks, were drow ned.
ItTinta! tplaein 9allai f 4Mjeeaa9Mta
' All Hie il orlil MruolUi-, .,i,J siainihiK unit Meit Maaat Wall laj im i afaMa Net mm tm laaalnattaa Hi,, i .. Vamucvkii 11. CJuly 2. The following oriental advices were received here per steam, r Finpres, of China, wd.i. h arrived yesterday morning: The Hong Kong Telegraph has published the startling telegram that Uiishas Intimated to Japan thai wio
must withdraw from Formosa. hol her t his be true or not, it is a remarkable fact that Kussia has named at Vladivostok t strong licet, and 100. 0 hi men and vast stores of war material. Kussia s course is alluded to Mtfcsi.-.tieally in the Japanese press ai U splendid policy of aggression. 1 lie Fllstern World snvs thi.f l.'-iu.
sia has practically turned .lap: n out of Core and publishes a long article under the heading of "It ia Political Hyp t is:u, " declaring that anything short of hy MtisQ of the most powciful order absolutely fails to explain why all the world stands with folded hands and in helpless apathy wutehes the development of the gigantic plans
ut luissia tor the dominion ,,f t,(. , ;ist. The guard of sailors at the RoaaiaE
legation in Corea has just been relieved by a detaehMeat of Koaeina infantry, it is reported that Uussi: has built a fort on UetaU-FitO island, and that a gun is anted on the Kassian legation pointed toward the Japanese consulate. This makes the ignorant Cm-cans afraid of Kussia and contemptuous of Japan. Fieut. Thurston, of the United Slates cruiser Detroit, died of typhoid fccr at the American naval hospital, Yokohama. June 10, and was hurled
there with full naval honor?,.
THE TRUTH OF IT.
At - meeting of democratic business men of IndhtnopoUe, Ind.. on the ;wth, 4;' of those present pledged themselves to go to hicago on a special train and remain until after the IVmocratie National con vent i ,n to work for sound nn ney. A committee was dispatched to Chicago to secure headquarters, and a general invitation was extended to sound money democrats of the state to Join them.
was intended to make important re
pairs, and advantage is taken of the
times to do this.
At New port. Ky., on the 90th, Judge Helm overruled the motion for a new
trial for Alooso Wallin. eonvieteit .,s
an accomplice of Scott JaektKM, in the
munlerof I'earl Krvan. I he :ir,i. . s
of Walling and Jackson can not be heard by the appellate court at i'rankfort before the September term.
Is Judge Hau -y's court m Chieairn.
on the .".th. a decree was entered pro
viding for the sale to the highest bi.l.
der f the I hi. ago V Honth Side Papid
transit railroad, better known as
the 'Alley I.. ' under foreclosure of
mortgage
iOHE Mi IttXKEB and John O'Hr Ian.
both men of many aliases and both BO torious bank robbers, were capturetl in Vancouver. II. C.. on the Mth tu- n
Portland (Ore.) detective, and were
Incised in the ,ark county j,,il. A man giving his name as Fred Martin, who was with the pair, was also ar-
! . - ed
In hue unkiii.TMi men near M.ksii-
key, I. T, . carlv on the Mnrnlns tin.
90th, stole a work train engine, and
ran it to ChoetOW City, where they abandon,., I the engine ami took to the to,,ds. The railroad company has offered a reward for the capture of tin rob bei - A 1'Aiiiv of berry pickers OOUalatlnff of Alexander Anger, aged to. his
cousin Gene Fa Forme ami two nieces
LATE NEWS ITEMS. Tm. prof rata of the antnVf 1 denv oust rut ion growing out of the strike at the BroWE hoisting works in ( leveland. (.. was marked, on the Jd. by further bloodshed, wm Rettgnff, a young striker, w ho w as purssifif a BOB uriiou w o: lonan, was shot deed be the latter, who was himself ulmoit killed before being rescued by the poll e. The police, while escorting the workmen totln-ir homes, were followed and attacked by a mob numbering thoU samls. At the l ourth police district station they were ordered to charge Od disperse the crowd, which they nd. from SO to loo of the Intter being seriously injured by the offlmH1
clubs.
I- J. (LOOSY) Hai.pwis. the mi. liona n e horseman, had a uarrow eaOEM from assassination, on the -. I. at the hands of Miss Finma A. Ashley, the sister of Miss Fillian Ashley, w hose suit (ur S;-. for alleged 'betrayal was Ie prOfTOM before Judge slack in BOB Fraueise. . A bull..) fr,.,., m..
Liza and Annie Anger, three girls of I w "inan' revolver plowed thronirh
Jai.iwin s hair and bur, e.l itself in
Dr. Ma mi. oa Apkm.i; Waltkr. W. IF Jrmu.ett. father of Mrs Walter. Ralph I rcese. Walter Creese and Adam Miller. OOEBtnefeHorS, were arreste.l in St. Louia on the 1st. At the BOMB of Mrs Walter a complete counterfeiting outfit was captured, consisting of phot., engravings of a 90 bill, some of the bids, the copper plates and all the necessary paraphernalia fur etching the plates. At the tirst convention of the Socialist Trade and Fab.,r Alltance of the I nited Mates and 1 ana, la. held, on the - Eh, iE the Labor Fv.eum New York eit. DelOfBM harlcs Wilson described the manner of working mines In Pennsylvania, anil said that the late disaster at I'ittston was due to the 'greed of the mine owners." ho. he aaul. failed to provide proper safeguards for their workmen.
o-ii oriwene years, were struck by a train on the Massachusetts Centra! road near Worcester. Mass . on the 30th. They saw the traiu ling and ran for their lives, and had almost reached a ice of safety when the engine struck them. The A Offer fftrla were Instantly killed, the FaForme girl's leg was broken am! the man s head was badly injured. Frank I .. the champion billiard player of the world, has made a will, in which he Le.pieaths his right arm to
bm pnjratetEn tor dlaeectioo. He doea this in rder that men ..f aeJoBM ME determine why he strikes a billiard ball harder than any other man living. I Sorbett, Fit.sitnmoiis. San. low and other athietes and strong men have
ol the court room near the
lim and he has not
Competed wit)
been beaten yet Work on the largest tire engine in the World was completed, on the 3(ith. at the shops of a i incinnati tire engine company. Tin- boiler is 70 inches long ami M inches in diameter. The two atoEM ey tin Oers End lero pnMpa an- eaen. respectively, in inches long and I in -lies in diameter. The stroke is : inch. s. At full speed the engine s capacity is 1,909 gallons par niiiiute. It was built for the (irand Bhpldt .Mich, i lire department. Tu kkk was no change in the situsMM in the Twin shaft mine at Pittston. Pa . on the 10th. The rescuers continued to work hard in thei- endeavor to reach the entombed miners, and rapid prog res w as being made.
the wail beach
Tm funeral of Mrs. Harriet BeochOf StoA. was held at her late home in Har.for.l. t onn., on the Jd. The services wer,. ,,f the simplest character. Tue remains were taken to Andovcr, Mass . for interineiit. I in: board of oMMra appointed by '.. Andrews. BMBMEBdBMt at Fort Niobrara. Neb., to invoatiffBt the killing of Private Wearer tnr m. aaml
ordersof Fieut. lark, rep irted to bond qunrtera, OB the td. that Lieut, r.ark was perfectly justiti.-d in his action. Tee Assoeleted bocietyof the u,d ! Voss of PnUi lelphla neetded, ob t m .'d.toappeal to the public to aid the M whtoWl and IM orphans who are left penniless by tue late mine diaaa- i ter at Pittstoll, P;i Col Jo-n il G m. KtEEEir, ti mcm ber of congress from C ilifornia, die, on the night of the 1st. at Marshall i Hall, a resort on the Potoume river ' nearly opposite Mount Vernon, ,,f which he was part owner. i.v A. K. F.wviov. ,,f Savannah. Ca., died (it the Clifton Springs (N. Y.) MnltsrlnM M the id. lie had a stroke
oi paralysis some days before, fr.nn Mhleh he did not rally. He was born in 1910, TBS Italian public revenue for the first lull f of the ISSnl year just expired was I 1,00 una li,-,. ri,rt, tj,ftn , revenue for th rrespouding period of IH'.i.V
m a number of nh s. Th..,-
about live hundred people in the ( hurt li. and the tight created a panic. M ii and women jumped from the windows, and u number wen- bruised and hurt. Chams CnAtron, living four and one-half miles southeast of Shelburn. became riolentlj insane the other evening, und attempted to kill his father und mother by tiring two shots from a revolver at them. Both went wide of the mark, and by the timely assistance af the neighbors Choston whs BBUffhl iad bound hasd and f.Mit i icfori any serious harm was done. Col. Nathasml B. I'ukmh. late ..f the Forty-s.eond Indiana volunteers. Md WU knOWB Ell over southern Iniiunn. died at Princeton a few days
: affo. Ar Fvansville John Stephens, aged 1 M years, was drowned in the river I Mrhile bathioff, Hcnsua itAncn shot and fntsUy i wounded Anurcw Hefries ut Defriea' ! hotel. Shelby. The trouble was the : result of a family quarrel. No arrests have been tBEdr, Mks. KATIE VYaoXXS, a domestic. was fatally pored by a cow while erossbiffs 1 tiehl in t lie outskirts of Evansville. The I cow tosse.l her ten feet in the air. and then attacked her again and tore off
her clothes. In a shooting affray at Pierce ton a few morninirs am. Wan Rswm i
WOBnded his brother-in-tiibfton. of Pari Wvn.. ,
I I '.. i! i ' ' .1., Int....!.. .... J J , ,
....... HiHnwsm, ana ipiarreieu over a fishing expedition. Tn case of Miss Marie Aurelius. of Klwood. against the Lette Krie A Western railway for 91,000 damuges w ns deetded the other day in favor of the plniutitf. The jury returned a verdict MT 81.1 'mi. Miss Aurelius was struck by a pBBMBMBr train while crossing the railroad at KIwoikI and was badly injured. Ki v. Jaime Bicasjm, Bgsd 91, died the other night at Muncie of llright's dis. as, . ll,. was for many years a minister in the Methodist church. He was born in Eaffland.
Tee gi aernl Mom of WinhuE McNamara, at PiercetoB, was robbed u few j days sine. ''. he oee is alMut 9000, ai d 1109 reward is offered for the . apt urc j of the t ha ves. j 'I' HE trial ..f lames F. McCoy, for t lie nvnd.w of Depety Marsha .Minibus Brown last Christmas, was beffUB at Paoli. the other day. The da.- was i-onsuiiied in getting a jury. There are 113 writ n atari si;muioued on the ceae. and the trial will likely occupy two weeks. Gmmoi sXVm,Ni a Batpenter, was killed the other afternoon. 'being run over by a freight trsie on the lTnion tmeks at BvEosville. li,. attempted t. climb tm the cars, bet f. 1 1 under the Mheels. BtooMtiEi i wsa vial ted by a destructive downpour of rain, the heavie-t ev.r witnessed there. Wash.ats a-e report. over the various railroieis and gravi i rosda near thore. A l0renrU son of .1. IF n'Neal EE! struck by lifftltainff during th- storm and was seriously sh, kei and burned. CfJUttarCR ROBBEI Ku k. a talented yo.ing violinist of ConnersriUe, urho lias had several music classes in Shelbyvllle. has been selected as the leading professor of violin instruction in the bliese of Music ntCuclBBEtL He ! is also a member of the Cincinnati orchestra. The unusual phenomenon of a lunar rainbo-.v of singular brilliancy was ob
served in Indianapolis a
ago. A heavy storm swecninc- tm fr,.m
the west, nith the moon rising in the east, caused the strangely beautiful specta.-!-'. which was observed bv thousandsol people. Thk I ndortn IlanU Knights of Pythias ha ve organized nt Bedford Bttd public InatsllntlotB of ofllcers took place the other Bight. Al I i')':oi,oi 1,1..
IndVBf isvcars. beeame ....! l , T -"rove with him t o I, is reside 0
EMM the .her afternoon ,1 attempted 9$f , ' '''k '" '''' Mr. Bo
luilmun herself in m. ..on. I she .. ' Mnjtj re vi reu for I
rescued after iniich trouble. She hud been a bright von mi- hnlv. -in. I t, s .
A LIVELY BATTLE .!"', ! Haar K....,, . M rttelll MUttla I r.o..,,,., , ,'' nm. ml s,ri..u, TraaMa m, tmm . ru.,i I'opuluot .tird. Ti.vKi.AM.. o julv 1,Xeb Mrik rtt the quarries of the I leveland St,,lin t o. to-day resulted i the shooting U h ath of Vinton Machusskl and tl J wounding of John Nsloekj, who ,. imt survive the night. Joseph a,,N
.tsiti aaii Antonie lotah sustain, ,1 " Is which are not serious. The battle between Sheriff I with 40 deputies and '.'iin strikers Burred si rVestrlew, three nlleofroai F--rea. The Blob had driven ,,ut th worküien, and when the slierifl' arrived he ordered the mob to dleperse rhsg refused, and a shot was lire. I ;it Depnty Carman. I he sheriff then len d his men to lire, and about siv , shots were exchange.! before the Bob led. Machusski was helped to lierea,
( wnere it u.,s roUBd he had been allot from the back through his left lang I Me died shortly afbar noon. While the slier. ff was fighting tbll battle the women assailed another party of deputies at t he scene of m .
ici'i.iy s noi, ami pin tiieiu to Bight. The ihertC early in the afternoon Mked for troops, and Co. P, of Cleve' land, and I), of Deren, weru called out, e.l. ICeaaaa of the Ffth regiment beiug now in charge. Henry Smith, the deputy who M:i. aheaski, in his tiiite-iuortein stuteu;ent, accused of firing the fatal sln.t, was arretted and brought to the Cleveland jail.
itioilNhr.l N.it (., j.ir Anl.i (o,,baaleS um r Cabaa a If a Ira. j Ni.w Vouk, Julv t Thomas L Dee ley. Jr. , EE artist fr.e.n IFirp.-r Pros., .sent to Cuba some five months ago, arrived here this morning on the steamer Oriuba. Mr. I a w ley. w hen seen by a United Press reporter said that the situation in CuLa MOS th same w hi n he left that it bad been lor the past six weeks. The insurgents Hill occupied n large portion of the island and seem to be e.pial in Mreugth to nay of the .Spanish troops yet sent there. The real war seems to be between lien. We.vlcraud the newspaper eorrospoodsBta on 'ne
11 nd, said Mr. !aw h-y. Beoeacribed llorro castle an being worse than any pris u he had ever seen, lie claims that a force sent again . any of Gen. IVeyler tr.iops with a few dollar-' Wortli of fireworks would nBptUM any fort in their possession, as the Spanlards Ore the greatest lot of coward ever sent on a field of battle. As I stands at the present time, it looks ai though neither of t lie forces are BBS ious to tight a declaim buttle. The ( n bans seem to be waiting in hopea of some favor., blc action on the part of the I'nited States. The battles which the Spaniards repoti BE having tahOB place b -twe-u Spanish troops and insurgents arc
nothing- more than attacks by t lit troopa upon BOMSMSlOM farmers, which OES afterward reported as victorious engagements with tho insur
gents. Mr. Daw'iey says that tin insurgent : have oSod, clothing and MBMuftloB Enough to last them a year, and fr..m present indications the Spanish w id never again hae entire OMttroiof the j w hole island. COUNTERFEITERS CAPTURED,
The streets are guar.l -d to-night by ib-put y sheriffs and the militia. The .-, .1.. ...... ...II. i ...:.i. . .. .
ui- on niwi ragw, ami it s feared serious trouble will occur tomorrow, as the company is determined to make an effort to start men to work. DEATH OF MRS. STOWE.
m Aatbat .f -i mm Teea'i Cabinrailed to 9kM BaOeX. BaBTVOKDi Conn., July 1. -Mrs. Harriet Feecher Sto ve continued DBCOn- ; sci.uis during the nightat her home on forest street, but to the anrprlae ol her physician, rallied a little dorine , 1 . . ... 1
mo iiigui, ami at IB a. in. bar Condi-
. : : r. v -v-
Mat s
I P
VlI'lM Hm-hrr St'trr. tion was slightly improved. The meinbersof her family MMBMBd by h-r bedside, all hope having been abandoned. 1 'he end came, and she passed jcaccfully u ay.
la. Kajaart Uaah n ite laaltolwa in th I oil at si. .i. St. Louis, July 1 United State se-cret-servic agnate, under the dlreo tloaof chief Uesen, thUMoraiBg naadS an Unportaat s.iies o! arreati in the. persons of i)r. Matilda A. I. IIa. Walter, w. n. Jem rue tt, father of Mrs. Walt.-r. Ralph Creese, Walter reeae and Adam Miller. t the BOMB of Mrs. Walter there MM captured a complete BBttnterfeittBg ontlt, consisting of photo eagra rings of a 930 bill, s .me of the bills, the , .p. per plates and all the BEOSSBErj paraphernalia for , -telling the plate a, This is the most iiiiportBBt counter-i feiters' capture that the MM ret service lias made in years, arid is the r.-sii.t of w eeks of hard w ork on the part of thl anlest detectives in the secret service of t he governincnt. Th gang is credited with having floated the most c.fcet imitation of a i0 hill that haa ever be n Bees, aonM of the ablest baEM eBShlsr and receiving tellers having been BBBSid by the in. M'KIN LEY AN D HOBA R T.
Sim. stwe CMrlBaMi ii. I I n f I , Urrlra Ute lEnlaeal l CiXUN.NAii. July 2. Harriet lleoehr's childhood and a portion of her
womanhood were spent here. It was In Cincinnati that she met and married Frof. Calvin F. Stowe. She was the da lighter of Lyman lleeelier, Aho came to Cincinnati t tnhs iliurge of Lane seminary. Harriet MM) then a young girl. The BOBM I 3t the lleechers is still standing. It is situated at the northeast ..Toner of Foraker and Cilbcrt aveinna. It is an unpretending but comfortable two-story brick ttruotEM, oil in elevation about ten feet higher than tho street. When the Bsechcri Used there, all about MM OfMB Bcld, 9XOCpt in 1 he rear w here there w a s a fores: of magnificent beches. The I sniy approach was a country road. rilB present occupant is Rev. Ir. Munford, editor of the llcra.d and Preabyter, After her marriage to Prof. Stowe they hull I and lived in a house BOBI the hseoher houieetendl Hern it was that their children were born, and where she inld the foundation for her (Teal Storr, probably the most widely read of ni; novels ever written. She had an. pie opportunity to study the slave Ufo. Ib-r family and friends were deeply interested j the can f freedom. Many of the scenes in "Flic:.. Tom s i abin were drawn from real life and described aim st at first, band AMERICAN BUSINESS MEN
Meeting ,,f MM HeeeMISBa Natlaaal an. ii.iaie mi aataw, . ('IT.iV II .lull. O A.
few nights i the republican candidate f..r president in' nit fr. ,i,i -i.i ...
ana uk- repBOItesn candidate for vi. e president met and shook hands. It was their tirst BMBSing, of course, since t ne St, Fouis convention, and was, in fact, their first real meeting, as theif previous encounters had BEBE of the most casual charact -r Maj. M.-Kiniey met Mr. Ilobari BB09 Iiis !.l-l.l .., 1... II ......
nt mi- i tn isy i van ia , , . ,M
private conference
Mr llobart left in the afternoon bj Cleveland, where b spent the night w Ith Marl, Uaunu,
junior in high scIkmiI
M VMIK Ol IM ii.i r. a . ir. lis tr:in..
performer, who 9ah)ted In hldnapini t, Mi.- Furl, Wilson girls, pi rfoi tners, I T HE TW,N SHAFT DISASTER
st. me viicks ao. aim who was overhauled at Bennos Ills 9 few days ago. was convicted in Indianapolis and s. n-ten.-ed to two years" re f.Kmatory work. As infant child of Mr and M PS. .Iii
Lnh.-y. of II irtford City, fell fmin Its ! Iturriiiir,. nr. I ..n,l, ;,. 1. l .1 . u
foi.ii Eeata --tt Iti friieiBls TraOS
Relettom Nkw YoitK, July 2. A party of 13 buainsM men consisting of rspteMntn lives of the National Association of Maiintactiirers of the F nited Statoa, vailed on the Oi Faul for Southampton J-ester.lav Aim.ng them were .1. M. Htndebaher, ..f nonlh Bead, ln.i.: .1. It. Jeffrsy, of Columbus. (.; gtnderieh Btenrns. of Hetroit; U . T. Adams, rep resenting the M Bipbll EfEDEfhOtUrlBg ;S letlonj S. K BeOon, representing 'the board of trad.-of Krie. I'n : J. A. J JohotOU, representing the Agricultural Implement ami Vehicle association, and J. k. Kil bourse, of OoIhm bus, (i.
The party are on a three montha' trio Lhrounh Arcrentlna I', -ilirii'i i' i i , s
lire ail, and are in eara of c. W. Plah-
H k, secietary of the American .eation nt BneuM Ayre, They sail (row tan dot on July 1 1
carriage nt -1 -'rirt its head .m the veranda. in diet nig injuries w hich MEOnd deth. Tin. Lebanon city council BM let the contract tor one-iiaif mile of brich pavement to I'ortcr. Kolin a ;d . . of l ipton. The contract price is about 110,000,
the Wet i f BjoeeatBO "if bsmmi um Oeved bj Aaetbse Css1bi Wii hiui:hk, F .. July v. - i 3 , m. anothec cave-in Been read la tk ,11.
fated Tw in .sinnt u ml i
' " ioc puny rescuers win. went i
o'clock
teatlon I ble to si
Lgp iJ
T. I.. .. : .-i- a .....
. ... mamj ingiu Willi t he inf penetrating as flir ;,s p e how far the LT! I ft if It'll i
l.-ar in the dlrecti m .f the MtOBthOSl men, were driven back to the loot OJ the EU. The faiiw-Bsan osteooloo me was nlBMls felt upon the sur Iac .
A NEW FIELD. HiKlin .it men nil I, t lnif n New I I. I.I la I hit IVImly Cttf, Cm. A(.o. July -,. The highsrn robbers of ChlOBgO entered a new Held leal night and made their tirst attack on the elevated railroad system. At OtM '' lock t hrc- in. ti with drawn revolvers compelled Hie ticket agent of the Metropolitan railroad at VBE Buren Ed CbbbI streets to turn over the MDUey in his cash din wer. Only S'.i '. was secured, for that hap MBBd to be all the ticket ugeiit had at the time The men eacaoed.
