Marshall County Independent, Volume 1, Number 4, Plymouth, Marshall County, 9 November 1894 — Page 2
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CLfyc3nbepenbent A. R. ZIMMERMAN, Publisher. FLYWO JTH. - - INI 3 ANa.
DEATH COMES TO SIX. BALTIMORE AND OHIO TRAIN WRECKED. Schooner and Crpw Lost in Sight of Hallfax Crowds -1 in I its Welken at the Last Moment Predicament of Morocco Governors llioler. lliots. Crash 1 Intt : Freight. Train No. Ö. Baltimore and Ohio limited, ran into tho iirt section of Xo. t'4, a fast cattle train, at Kcsonstcel siding, two mile east, of Iloekvood, Fa., atö:4o Wo Ine.-day evening. Six men wo.c killed in tho collision ard several otheis badly hurt Tho railroad otticia's say no passengers were hurt, Both trains were going at the rate of forty miles an hour, and came t; getlier while rounding a curve. Neither -rew had time to jump or round a warning. The mail car was reduce I to kindling wood. Only tho heavy vestibules of the passenger ears saved thorn from a similar f;ite. Fully a dozen cattle ia:'s were piled up in the wie -k, killing and maiming many cf the dumb brutes. All in Itoard At Drowned. Thk schooner Annie- M. Prilc, Capt. James (I. Pride, bound to Halifax from Mabou, C. B., was driven ashore near Herring Cove at the entrance to Halifax harl or Wo dncsd ly, and all on shore perislud. Fisho.men watched the c-sel from tho dill's as it drifted to its doom, but were powerless to.-a.e tho crew, resides a crew of four hands the Captain's liites-on, 10 years oil, cnl two female passengers were on board. Train IJol'ers I.oe Their Nerve. Burei.vgton passenger train No. 41 was held up ahmt one mile east of Hyannis, Xeb., at 5 o'clock Wednesday morning bv two men wh boarded tho tr ain at hitman, covered tho engi- ! neer with V inchciters, and told him to stop tho train when ordered. Whjn the train was st pi ed tho men got oil and ra l, taking nothing with them. It is sup osed tho bandits lost thoir ne:vo j at tue last moment. BREVITIES. Tin: Minister of the Interior and tho Minister of War in Argentino havo resigned. Bookkeeim: Boris II. Ryers, of tho Brooklyn Club, is missing; and $';,500 of the organization's money cannot bo found. Tho club is one of Brooklyn's swell organizations. Mayor VILI.EXKUVE, of Montreal, ha3 received a letter postmarked Buffalo. X'. Y., anm uncing that a plan is on f ot to break into the Mercie: vault and steal tho late ex-Premier s body. Captain William O Toolk, of the Leonard Street Station, who was accused before tho I exow Committee in Xew York of taking bribes, has asked to bo retired from tho joiice department. M. E. Moorehkad indorsed a noto of 150,000 for tho iron tirm of Moorehead & Mexican, Pittsburg, Pa., three years ago, thus enabling tho business "to continue. The noto has just gone to protest. Thk body of David Goodsell, of Butternut Lake, Wis., a victim of tho Hinckley forest tire, wus found and fu'lv identified after a searc'i of several weeks, during which a largo numler of unknown bodies were disinter red. Thk Missouri, Kansas and Texas jia senge r train, St. Louis to San Antonio, was wieckod near Luling, Tex. The engine struck a hor.-c. and the engine and mail car, with tho passenger coaches, wero derailtd. Sovcra' passengers were injured. a ( hoeera riot has o. curreü in t Iluszth, a village of Hungary, at tho junction of tho Theirs with tho Xagy A'r, arising from the popular anger at an edict declaring that all r arsons who die of cholera must bo buried in a Ecparato cemetery. I'ondarraos fired upon tho mob, killing four jxjrsons and wounding many others. Sixty arrests wero made. TllK London Telegraph says that Japan will demand as the terms of peaco the cession to her of tho Island of Kormosa and the payment of an indemnity of 410,0 H,(MM)' or .C40,OU),MM). F reigr.crs who have arrived at Che Foo from Port Arthur say tho Japanese arc attacking the latter place Ireland and by sea. A Chinese feet lies inside tho harbor. Thk survey of the Ohio canal to ascertain its practicability as a ship cinal will begin in Akron, Ohio, by the corps of (.'ovcrnnv nt engineers appoint d for tho purpose. This will bo the fir-tof the routes ti bo surveyed, tho other 1 ing tho Eric Canal, a route from Brio, Pa., to Pittsburg. Tho engineers will work north to Cleveland. Tho car al is to bo "0 feet wide and 7 feet deep. TllK governors of tho southern provinces of Morocco, pressed by the roUds in their respective district, havo sought refuge in Morocco City, fleeing fr ra the outraged Kabylos, their longsuffering, oppressed and despoiled sub"ects. The Miltan ha ordered them aek to their districts. To oltoy means death at tho hands of thoso people, who have laid siege to tho southern capital and pi undo red the surrounding country. The Choctaw, Oklahoma and Gulf Railway Company will build 122 miles of railway from South McAlister to Oklahoma City at a est of $1,200.000. Sami-kl Mckk-ay, Jr., special messenger to President Cleveland, married Miss Mau l F. Arnott in tho African M. 11 Church at Wilkesbarrc, Pa. AN express train on tho Heading Koad struck ast.oet car at Nicjto.vn, Pa. Tho car was thrown fifty feet from tho tr. ck. Two passengers ar j reported killed outright an I soveral Others in.urcd.
EASTERN.
TilEbo-t speech-making record during tho campaign ha Won made by Chauncey De pew thirty-fivo speeches in two days. A New York paper prints a story to the effect that Ceorgc M. Pullman's daughter is ab ut to man y King Alexander of So r via. John H. En'geeheet. an engineer, manager of a Tennessee in n company, was killed at Hi'e. Pa., by a boy whom he attempted to frighten. William Cin ps, who murdered his aged mother and terribly wounded his father at Buffalo, X. Y., has been cajvtured. Ho is a raving man'a T. M. LviiMKR, of Al cgheny, Fa, dry go ds merchant, has a-signod. Judgments aggregating ,0 were con f esse .1. The asset i amount to about $ ICO, Ol. Burglars entered the bank at West Wir.lic d, Herkimer Cou t . X. V.. and blew t e door of tho vault off with dynamite. Toey seen i cd about 1,000 in mo. icy. Preparations for the formation of a cell ro'lcd st d t us', aiv under way aga'n among t' o larger manufacturer , whoa'c meeti'ig at tl.o Holland House in X- w York. Joseph HosixzKi was arrested at Pittsburg ai d h 11 in 8 :,0 o 1 ail o:i the charge of co ispiracy to do fraud a m ml er of pcrs rs who su' s nibed to a co-oj eratie land scheme. A suu kssitl tes: of tho German anti-t'xine remedy for diphtheria, used as a p eventive, has been mado in tho hospital at Philadeli hia on a little girl who had been sul'Ctcd to di htheria infcctio.i. Luigi Hevelli. son of a rii h widow in Purin, Italy. c mmitted sui ido in the ollice of a Xew Vork Italian newspaper immediately aftr an editorial declination ti u c somo manuscript ho had submitted g ving reasons why he proporcd to kill himself. WESTERN. Miss Ellen Stuhulefield, who claimed to be 110 years old, died at Atchison. Kan. Citizens o" Cushing, Ok., have jailed Joseph and Patsy Beck, identified as lied Hock trarn robbers. Hotel Bhlyiderf, a family hotel at 11th street and Wa-hington avenue, St. Louis.was almost entirely destroyed by lire. L ss between $" ,(.hj ) and $7;",t(H). All guests escaped. The body of Horace Clark, a T-y earold Peoria loy for whom searching parties havo been looking in the belief that ho had been ablucted, was found in the Illinois river. Jealousy cause! Ccorgo Kirt of Chicago to shoot Mrs. Florence Schultz and then put a bullet into his own brain. He was instantly killed, but Mrs. Schultz may recover. Dr. George W. Phinney, Husband of Mrs. Phinney, who is President of the National Non-Partisan Woman's Christian Temperaneo Union, died at his residence in Cleveland of heart disease. West J. Robinson, prominent in Atchison, Kas.. has just been found at Benton Harbor. Mich. Ho was boarding there c'ictly, and kept his whereabouts dorn his relatives just to satisfy a whim. A mail pouch supposed to havo contained a large amount of money in registered letters was stolen from tho mail carrier's wagon while en route from tho depot to tho posto'lico in Grand Forks, X. P. Dr. C. F. Simmons, President of the Simmons Medicine Company and Superintendent of the Centennarv Methodist Sunday-school, St. Louis, Mo., was convicted of assault to kill John McPane, a clerk in his employ. Tho punishment was fixed at three years in the penitentiary. Thomas H. Wickes Second Yieo President of Pullman's Palace Car Company, is defendant in a bill for divorce, Jilel in the Circuit. Court at Chicago by Laura M. Wieke Tho ground on which the decree is asked is cruelty, tho formal charge only lieing made, and no specific acts set forth in the bill. Pr i sidi:nt Angell, of the Michigan State University, has been prominently mentioned as Professor Swing's successor in the irre at People's Church at Chicago. He v.s asked to picach a sermon. The Pi evident, however, will remain in Ann Arbor. He has declined to pre ch even once. Tliis is not my vocation," said he. "anl, as for tho rumor thai I am t take his place for good, it is utterly unfounded, and I would not do so under any circumstances." A telegram from Paulding, Ohio, reports tho murder of a b y, aged 7, and his sistor, aged .", tho children of Samuel Good, a prosperous farmer living about two niilas lioni town. The children started to school, but not returning at dark searching parties wont out. At daylight the little bodies wo: o found in a brush heap. The boy's throat was cut, the girl wasdocapitated and disemboweled, the weapon lcing an ax. An attempt had leen mado to burn tho brush heap, but it was too wet. The tears of pretty Maude Cullen wero tho causo of a strike of 2.VJ girls employed a pickers in tho Detroit pearl button factory Friday aftcrnorn. Tho factory has been having trouble with its employes, about 10 ) of its men now biing out on strike. An elTort to get tho girls to striko failed until the foreman ordered Maude to pack some buttons that had been linishcl by nonunion hands. Sho routed, who'eupon ho ordered her to unit w rk altogether. She donned her wraps and then sat down at her place and had a good cry. Over 20 girl workers immediately surrounded her, and alter a brief indignation meeting walkod out of tho factory. Another 00 girls joined them in tho morning Tho primary cause of tho trouble is tho dbchargoof a foreman whom all tho employes likod. Early Kriday morning fi -o broko out in Hammond's big packing plant at South Omaha, and by 1 o'clock had gained such headway that it soemed nothing short of a mirarlo could keep tho flames from sweeping all tho buildInes away, and it was also fearr.J the tiro wouid reach tho iramenso Cudahy
plant. Tho entire department of tho J city wero called to the scene of tho 1
lire and made such a determined fight that the Hames wero confined to what is known as ho '"Kef house," a fourstory brick building .00 by :0 ) leet. This building cast .:'ih,000 and with tho contents will prcbiidy bring the total loss to .oo, 00. There is l.."o ,- o o insurance on the whole i !ant. 'force firemen wero caught under falling walls and instantly k He 1. SlLAN Lewis, the condem ed Choctaw murderer, was shot at Wil burton, I. T., Monday morning, by Sheriff Pur.-ley. The b.dlet from the sheriff's "Winchester missed tho condemned mans heart. It went c can through the mu deror's body, and Lewis, throwing b;ck his head, t-ank gra 1ing to the ground. To end the hor. ible work the sheriff was fi tally compelled to take hold of the mans noso and smother him to death. He lived thirty minutes after being shot. Tventy-six other Indians are under indictment lor the same murder fo which Lewis was oxected. When they come to trial trouble is anticipated as their sympathy crs aro aroused. Lewis was years old. He had been given freouent chances to scape because of the She: i!T's dread of car yingout tho law. but rofvred to take advantage of them. SOUTHERN. TilE tweuty-.-econd ant.ual congress ( the A.-sociatitn for tho Advancement of W men, Mrs. Julia Ward lb Ave pre-iding. was in session at Knoxville Tenn. Paul Grant and Morris Eerriter lecame involved in a political discussion at Kichmond. Va., when Ferriter struck Grant two blows with his list, causing death. Goethe L- i :r Knights of Pythias, the largest German hdgein Maryland, which has been in existence sixteen years, has surrendered its charter and rituals and withdrawn from the order. Five cf tho leaders of the Sa u tilied Band on Chi ocote.'g o Island, Maryland, have boe.i indicted for conspiracy in separating wives f n m thoir husbai.ds, and for bei ig a publi nuisance. Major Clint MuClarty, founder of tho Louisvillo, Ky., clearing houe, died, ag.d ':?. He served in tho Confederate army under Colonel Breckinridge, and later with the famous Orphan Brigade. A HURRK ANE, accompanied by hail and lightning, passed over Brcnham, Tex., from the northeast. Dwellings, barns, fencing, and trees wero blown away. A number of peopL wero badly injured. Shrevcport, La, was visited by u disastrous storm. Much loss has been sustained, but as far as known nobody wai killed. Passenger train Xo. 1!, of tho Kansas City, Memphis and Birmingham Railroad, was held up Thursday morning a few miles east of Xew Albany, Miss., by three masked men and the express car looted of its contents. Otliccrs of the Southern Express Company give it out that only a lot of cheap jewelry and vouchors constituted tho robbers booty. It is suspected, however, that tho exj ress officials aro lying low on this subject for their own reasons. The general belief is that the robbers wort? amateurs, although the3 did thinirs up in shape. Thero is not tho slightest clew f.o their identity. Developments in the Xew Orleans, La., labor troubles show the desj elation of the white men who work along tho levee. Sunday alternom the torch was applied to the wharf of the West India and Pacific Steamship Company on tho leveo at the foot of Nun street, and boforo tho famo wero subdued thero was a loss of 2 0.000 in merchandise, cotton, ai:d damage to nie cf thoir steamships. About half was insured. The tr ub!e is a race war between tho white and colored screwmen and longshoremen. It resulted Saturday in a riot, in which one i.egro was killed and several wounded. The police are almost powo -less, and it is likely the Governor will order out troops. WASHINGTON. Therm: are good reasons tolclievo the removal of tho President's family from the White House to their eountrv place was uudoubto Uy duo to tho smallpox scare prevalent throughout Washington. Mrs. Cleveland and the ! children have been vaccinated. AN abstract of tho resources and liabilities of the national banks in tho United States on Oct. L', ls!4. as shown by their reports to tho Comptroller of tho Currency, .shows that the aggregate am, int. of individual deposits on that dat was I,72",rlf,v'l,., against $L4."d.l2i.:'::o on Oct. ::, IWl. The h ans and discounts hao increased during that time over SH'.l.O io.OOO. Tho amount of st ecie in national I auks on Oct. 2, 1114, was 2 ITJ.'O.C,.,!, and legal tenders l20.r4 Lo.'iS. Reports to tho Director of iho Mint show coinage for the month of October as follows: Gold, 'oll,S(.0; silver, $1, 217,000. of which :oo.noo was standard dollars: minor coin. $2.'',0iio. The amount of national bank notes received for redemption during tho last month was i."',7i 0, and the amount of deposits received to retire national bank notes was sl,,S2S,.lo, lea. ing tho balanco of such deposits on the lKoks of the Treasury 10 ', 47.". The Indian office is finding it a very di:f cult matter to prevent tho sale of liquor to the Indians. The most diflicult problem has leen presented in recent court decisions in which it is declared that Indians who ha.o taken their lands in severalty are citizens of tho United States and that it is no longer contrary to law to sell liquor to them. Two or three decisions havo already l'en made to that effect, and tho notice of .ludgo I'gorton of South Dakota to tho Fnited States (hand Jury, topiosent no more indictments agaii st 1KM3 ns selling liquor to Indians oi al'otted lands, looks as if tho courts wero going to take the view of tho case that no rostrict'ons sho old be placed on Indian citiens. In reports submitted by various Indian agents to tho Commissioner of Indian Affairs, tho fa-'t is pointed out that it is very difficult to prevent the sale of li nor to Indians. Not only on account of the fact that tho courts havo recognized Indians, having takoo allotments, as citbons, but for other tauses. Tho agent of tho Southern Ftes in Colorado expresses his o duion of tho whisky tiallio in tho following: "When tho dd-
t
ÄÄ1 irj subjo.'tcd t) tho lawless deeds of a very te ugh class of whites and Mexicans, th task of regulating the tra'lic in villainous co rpo.mds called 'whisk .-'i'iian easily lo estimated. However, by o:lering rewards, which I a.rreo to pa out of my own f inds, p ha e at least since :ded in c.irbing tho j evil to a commendab e extent. Tho j standing reward is 2Ö. money to be ! 1 aid upon c miction." Eia.ENE Hsi'KRANiv. OuniN, an opc ratic singer opular in this country, died in London. T.IK arre-t of Capt. Alfred Dreyfus, of the gene'-a' staff, on tho cha re of treason and e pionage on behalf of the triple allianco is the sensation of the hour at I 'aris. The Car tf Kussia died at .". o'clock Thursday afternoon at Livadia A conspiracy against the life f the Carowit. has l)..-en discovered at St. Petersburg. It is said that for several days past tho p lice have ben active'y engaged in arresting nihilists. Though momentarily expected in all Europe, news of the death created consternation in all continental nuancial and governmental centers. IN GENERAL Dean Samuel Heynolus Hole, D. I)., of Hoehotor 'England Cathedral, an intimate of Dicken- and Tennvson, lias arrived in this count! y. where he will speaK in tho iniore-ts of his cathedrrd. Ex-Senator Thomas W. Palmer, President of the World's Fair, is il! of nervous prostration, at the Btttle Creek Sanitarium. Mr. Palm r attributes his pro cut condition to campaign worry and his hard work in connection with the Columbian Expo-ition. Tirei of waiting for dividends that never came, while their offcers were reveling in sumptuous ralaries, stockholders of the Xational 1 insoed .il Company have at lat relclle 1 against the management and asked to have t! c giant corporation dissolved under the anti-trut law and its 2.0)OJ 00 of assets distributed among the owners. HoitEMT Fulfori', of Xew York, the theatrical manager, arriw-d at London. (' nt., with tho ashes of his wife Annio Pixley, tho actress, who died in England last w inter. They will bo placed in the lot with the remains of her only son, Thomas, and a handsome m mumont will cover both. Mrs. Fulford visited London every summer to renew the flowers on the grave of her child, whom she adored. The barkentino White Wings sailed from Ealtimo o for Bio do Janeiro Wo Inesday with a cargo valued at 42.oO i, inc uding 0,20 'barrels of Hour. Light barks have departed for Brazilian ports from Baltimore in OctolxT, besides three steamers. These vessels took out cargoes mado up of Hour, lard, cottonseod oil, canned goods and turpentine. Tho shipments in Hour alono will aggregate moro than .11,0. 0 barrels and the value of all the cargoes will exceed $L"(,0S7. 11 G. Dun k Co. 's Weekly Heview of Trade says: n.- la-t week, with the excitement of an election, coul l not iiulicat much of the true coiiditi n of business. In sumo tradetho season is too fur advanced for Kreat activity and in oti.ets the supposed effects of the voting hinder operations. But it is satisfactory that the volume of production is well maintained and In one or two I. ranches increased; that no monetary dithculUes disturh; that breadstuff's are u little higher; and that no material decline appeals during tho week in manufactured products. At present tho volume of business transacted i3 on tho whole smaller than last year, and muea smaller than in lv.2. 1 hough a Presidential electl.n was then cloe :it. hand. Tili: lumber fch oner Fanny Dutard, Capt. Peterson, just arrived at Port Blakcly, Wash., reports the missing Ivanhee. with Frederick .1. Grant, exMinister to Bolivia, on board, probably sank tho afternoon of Sept. ,J0. "Wo left Port Blakcly." said apt. Peterson, "Sept. 20, hound for Santa Barbara with lumb-r. We sailed out under light wind and arrived at tho Capo the 2' th. Wo saw a tug towing out a ship the same evening and drop it off the Cape. That night a storm came up and the mo tiing of the ,'ioth moderated. Ti e ship was i i company with us, but too far away for us tb n.ako out its name or cargo. It ajpeared to havo a terrib'o list to starl)oard. We could ca that something was w-cng, for tho list was in the wrc ng direction. That night the ves sel disapA eared from sight.'' MARKET REPORTS. CHIUAOO.
Cattle-Common to Prime $' 75 ft. . 5) Iloi.s- Shippinj; (iradt-H 4 i0 (it 5 i SMEEl'-l'air to Choice 2 3 M Whka t-No. 2 Red C3 s Cokn No. J M i-l ßi Oils-No. 2 vs ( 2. llYE-No.J 47 (' 4S Ruti ek Choice Creamery 2i'j Eotis Kresii is e roxATOEs-Car-lotrt. per lu 53 ai 6ö IMHANAI'OLIS. Cattle Shippimr 3 03 ft. 5 7" Hogs Choice Liclit 4 M $ 4 73 Sheet Common to I'rime 2 tu et a 00 Wheat No. 2 lied 4S ( 4s'.i Coux No. 2 White .. 52 d$ f.i Oats -No. 2 White ai?a ? a2'a ST. LOUIS. Cattle 3 no c 5 75 Hogs 3 00 c 4 73 Wheat-No. - Ked i) fC fu Corn No. 2 47 c9 4S Oath No. 2 2S ??. 2'.)-ltYE-No. 2 4'J (3 IM CINCINNATI. Cattle 3 r.o & a co Hogs 4M ta 4 75 Sheet- 2 o ft 3 no Wheat-No. 2 Ked blet r.i'j Cokn-No. 2 Mixed 62 fl Pa oats No. 2 Mixed :il (& 32 IlYE No. 2 60 fj bi HETKU1T. Cattle 2W 8 r.i Hoos 4 t ft 4 75 Sheep 2 00 (H 2 75 Wheat No. 1 White tivA M Corn-No. 2 Yellow f4 f 64l3 Oats No. 2 White 33 (tf 33S TOLEDO. Wheat-No. 2 Ited P3 C9 C4 Conx No. 2 Yellow 63 (?ö 6:4 Oats-No. 2 White 32 c 24 lltE No. 2 4S aß ti IICIFALO. WliEAT-No. 1 White 67 No. 2 Hed P4t59 f,5 j Cons No. 2 Yellow r.cvfl 67'ü Oats-No. 2 W hite 34 3S M Hi WALK EE. Wheat No. 2 Spring 65 ( M Corn No. 3 61 ? tl'i Oats-No. 2 W hite J2 c- 'M ItAllLEY No. 2 63 f 65 It Y E No. I M fi M l'OBK Mcfs 11 25 (j'll 75 NEW YOKK. CATILE 3(0 vJ, 6 60 Ho;s II M 4 7 SHE EI 2 00 ft, 3 75 Wheat No. 2 Ked. tvsty t'J'i Corn -No. 2 ry'a Oath White Western 35 ft 40 IUJttek-Creamery 23' 24'j tuos Weeteru 21. 22
ARTISTIC BANK NOTES
BEST DEFENSE AGAINST THE WILY COUNTERFEITER. New Dcsijjr.s for Silver Certificate : to l?e the I'in.st Ker I'ro;l ueetl In j This Country Chinese Ani'-r Is I'anir- j i Stricken. Things of Reiuty. Clauhe M. Johnson-. hief of the Bureau of Kngraving an 1 Printing, has s bmitted his annual rep rt ioti.o Secretary oi the Trea-ury. l)icu sing the printing of bank notes, lie aays: "Arti-tie skill, applicable to the production of bank notes, bonds, etc.." has not advanced with tim Bank notes prepared twenty-live years aijo are as finely engraved as tho e of to-day. The i auk notes produced by this burea i a:;d by the bank note companies oi the country app ar to have rcacho Ith highe.-t standardof crirravin ii and pri:.t hl:, bat the designs, as a rule, are weai-c and meaninle -. The c nventii rial design for lank notes, which has been used for many years, appears tobe wholly lucking in artistie merit, consisting, as it de es, o a patchwork of engraving, including a portrait, tho title and the lathewerk counters, having no connection with each other, and a vast improvement can be irade in designing the future issues of the Government. I consider tho artistic beauty of a de-ign ft r a bank note to boas essential to irotcetion against tounterfeiting as t!.o manner in which either the engraving or printing is execute.!. Jn fact. they must all lo of the hi hc-t standard of cxcell nee to afford perfect protection. To attain this standar 1 of exeedence I have secured the services of some of the lt engravers and printers, an 1 hae received aid from some of the mo-t talented artists in the country in preparing designs for a new issue o' silver certiiieates, and tho result, in my opinion, will not only be a creditable work from an artistic standpoint, but a tcries of notes which will be bo.or.d tho skill of counterfeiter. t imitate in a way to be at all dangerous to commerce." Drive V sse's from Milwaukee. The high rate oT ta .ation on vessel property in Milwaukee. Wis., will result in an exodus of all tho large vessels which hail from that city to C hicao, Det.oit and other ) orts wl ore they will bo treated more favorably. Among the lleets which aro" to go a-o the Inter Ocean Transportation Company, to Chicago; the Milwaukee Steamship C mpany. to Detroit, and the K. P. Fitgeia;d V Co. licet. These remova's wid take from Milwaukee S -o i.o.mj of vessel property. The Milwaukee Steamship Com any has issued a cii u!ar to its stockholders proposing to dissolve tho pio ent conn any and organ' zo a new corporation in some other State whe o it will bo ermitted to exist without being taxed to death. tVI nrler-l for Knowlni; Too Mnrli. The lifeless body of Matthew A. Bartlett was found on a Tacoma, Wiish., sidowalk ly a newsboy. His right ear was bruised and his noso i bleeding. Ho bore no other marks of j violence, though papers from his j pockets wero scattered about. His ; watch was untouched. Tne theory j generally advanced is that Bartlett ; was murdered for knowing too much j ab nit tho mysterious death of Ac- I countant Joseph Shadle at tho Stall acoom Asylum last March. NEWS NUGGETS. 8. .1. Dunlap, Postmaster at Bed Forks, fifty miles east of Stillwater, Okla., was shot to pieces by the Cook gamr. Dunlap owned the store and the gang o dercd him to unlock the postoHieo safe. He refused. They robbed the store and posto . ce. Fmeuy C;rLsON, a watchman erai'oyed at the plant of the G. II. Hammond Packing Company, at Omaha, confessed to having set lire to the baiidiug. He said he did it that ho might win promoti n by discovering t ho fa 1 es before they did material damage. T.iE Chineso army has been thrown into a panic by tho Japanese victories and is still Hoeing before tho . Japaneso. The ( hine-o troops in Manchuria are robbing the natives and committing horrible atrocities wherever thoy pass. The Japane e. on tho ether hand, aro treating the Chine.-c well, and are consequently received with open arms by tho natives, who are furnishing them with supplies of various kinds. i croy Li Hung Chang has been ordered to Pekin. Joseph Lynch, W. .1. Chandler and Mrs. Sarah 11 Collins have been convicted at Ac.-oinac Court Bouse. Va , of lasciviousness in carrying out their so-called ieligiou beliefs. Lynch, a Delaware ma, and tho heal of tho band, was sentenced to eight months in jail and to pay a line o; $J."0. Chandler was scut to jail for six months and lined $150. Tho woman Collirs was sentenced to four months' imprisonment a id to pay a line of $100. The trial of those peop e has :.ttracted widespread attention. Their doctrines wero that all marriages weio unholy in divinj sight Tho san tilled ones lived and carri I i n their meetings on tho b autiful little isl-.nd oi Chiucotcag.e, in tho Chesapeake Bay. Seven British cotton ships were set on lire at Savannah, Ga., and 4,0 0 bales of cotton damaged, causing a loss of $.V.u0. M J ik Genekal Olivek (). HowAUl has lM3en tetired from tho Fnited States army, having rea ehod tho statutory age limit. A 15-ykak-oli son of Milton Barman, colored, living in Ouachita Township, Ark., enterol his father's lodroom while his parent was asleep and shot him dead. His excuse was that his father hail whipped him. James McCosit. ox-President of Princeton University, is critically ill. The finish iig department of tho l'dgar Thompson steel works at Bradford, l'a , is id', owing to a refu al of the rail straigh tenors to work without helpers, tho latter having all lccn discharged.
CHINA MUST SETTLE.
REPARATION DEMANDED FOR THE CHUNG KING AFFAIR. Gret Hritltn Ina'st that Taotil Sheng lie Iej;ralel himI that a Money Indemnity lie IiM for the Seizure of Jap aueso l'asm-nir. r. Chinese SoPUer Were Itruta?. The Erlti-h o'Veia's ii Shanghai have S-. nt an ultimatum to thoChine.-o icoioy demar.di g a se'.t enient of the Chung ! ir.g a air T:.e l.i iti h demands a o that Ta tai Sheng be dismissed an 1 degraded, th j Ciiung King is to )e tn: ted witd twvnty-o:.o guns from tlio T.iku forts. :nd a money indemni'y is to be aid to tho wners of the Chung Ling. If these demands are n t com: Ii d w'.tli within the s, ecilied time, i ejirisa s up n th part of tho British licet are threat MV.-d. The Ch. i.g iiug a: air is one of tho remar able im-i :ents of h ; war lotwo mi China ar.d Japan, and may havo serius results. On Aur. 4 las a Tico Tsin dispatrh announced that thirteen .lajianese s 1 1 i ts. who had been forcibly leinoyed by the Chinese fnm tl.o British s eyni-hip (. h; ng King, wero ret oa ed immediately upon tho ic -roy. Li lb nC; ang, b jii.g n -tilied, and it was a Uld tl a: ti e icoroy apologi ed to the British Cnsul. On Aug. "i. however, a dispveh from Shanghai tmnoiinccd Lo anival thereof tho steam-hip Ciiunir King, and tie Captain of that v s-el gave his versio.i of tho affair, v hicli gave it a more seri ors aspe- t. Tho Captain said that while hi-ship vvas at Tr.ngku on tho Gulf of J o Chi Li t bines.' soldiers went on hoard of her for the p irpo-o of jciz:ng tho ,1a panose pas org -rs. They found on b a-d that sC-; mship sixty Japanese, mostly women and children, and at once beran t hunt them down. Tho Ch ne-o pursued tho Japanese all over tho vessel, b und them hand and foot a - soon as caught and ilung them ovo on tho wha f. Li Hung Chang evontu il y, up on tho protects of the Uritish C nul, c mmanded tho .Japanese t bo returned en U ard the Chung King and rdcred tho Chir.e-o so'diors who had n.alo tho raid to be severely punished. DAY TO GIVE THANKS. lrellent leve!nn?t Set Apart Tlinrl.ay, Nor. 29, for I'r.i'ise and iratitiHi. The Froddjnt ha issued tho following. i he American people should gratefully render thanksgiving und praiso to the Supreme Kulcr of tho universe, who hut watched over them with kindness and fostering cure during tho your that has passed. They should also with humility and faith supplicate tho Father of All Mercies for continued blessings according to their needs and they should by deeds of charity seek the favor of the giver cf every gojii and perfect gift 'Jherefore 1, Crover Cleveland. President of the United Mates, do hereby ajtjioint and set apart Thursday, the t'Oth day of November, instant, as it day of thanksgiving and prayer, to be kept and uLsered by all tho icople of tho laud. On that day let our ordinary work and business to suspended, and let us meet in our accustomed places of worship and glvo thanks to Almighty UoJ for our preservation us a nation, for our immunity from disease and pest ilence, f.r the harvests that have rewarded our husbandry, for u renewal of national prosperity, and lor every advance in virtue and lntelligenco that has marked our growth as a people. And with our thanksgiving let us pray that thoso blessings mar be multiplied unto us, that our national conscience may bo quickened to a better recognition of tho pow-.-r and goodness f God. and that In our national lifo we may clearer see and closer follow tho path of riuhtoousm-ss. And in our laces of worship and praise, as well (is In the happy reunions of kindred and friends, on that day let us Invoke d'vlno approval by generously remembering tho poor and needy. Purely he who has given us comfort ar.d plenty will look upon our relief of the destttut and our ministrations of charity as tho work of hearts truly grateful and as proofs of tho sincerity of our thanksgiving. Witness my hand and the seal of th United Ftates, which I have caused tot hereto afllxed. Dono at tho city of Washington on the first day of November in tho year of oi;r Lord eighteen hundred and ninety-four, and of tho Independence of the I'n'.teJ Mates tho one hundred and nineteenth. (IitovKtt Cleveland. I?y th President: W. Q. Ckesham. Secretary of Hate, Teletjraphie f'llex. T ie Southwestern Association of Bailway Surgeons met at Memphis. Tenn. Samcet, Whisteer was killed at Koblosvillo, Ind., by a falling limb of a tree, S'AKE-CHARMER MATLOCK was bit ten by a cob a at Dallas, Tex. Ho cannot recover. The Whito Wings sailed from Haitimoro for Bio do Janeiro with a tariro valued at $4J.(KJ0. The force t o v at work on tho Cubebra branch of tho Panama canal will soon bo increaso 1 to $1,000 men. 1.. J, B. Charetov was shot at Clear Lako, Iowa, by robbers. Pockot instrument stopped tho bul'ot. Julius Cesar and William Shakespoaro aro tno na i os of two political speakers at Kalamazoo, Mich. For refusing to betray Outlaw Rill Goode, Fdd o Marlin was hangod by a mob in Crittenden County, Ky. Thirty-five case, of malarial fover aro reported among Wosloyan University students at Middloiowm, Conn. Mrs. HonF.RT Shepard, an aged and fcoblo w idow, was attacked at Jasper, Ala., by throo hogs and killed. Geoecr Coleier, a well-to-do citizen of Anderson, Ind., is nvssing, and U Is feared ho has met with fcul play
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