Pike County Democrat, Volume 24, Number 35, Petersburg, Pike County, 12 January 1894 — Page 2
M- McC. STOOPS, Editor and ProprietorPETERSB UKG. - - INDIANA. • Frederick: Teqiu 6 Gpxehhaigi was inaugurated governor of the commonwealth of Massachusetts on the 4th. The Pit||burgh, Shenango «fc Lake Erie Railroad Co. has orde|ed a 10 per cent reduction in wages of employes. Granulated sugar reached the lowest point ever known on the 2d—four i cents less a rebate of one-sixteenth and { S per cent discount to cash buyers. The department of state was | formed by cable, on the 3d, of death of George W. Savage, United States consul at Dundee, Scotland. Sib Samuel White Baker, the distinguished African explorer, died at f "'1 his residence at Newton Abbott, DevIonshire, England, on the 30th, aged 72 years. ■ Sig. ColaJansi, a member of . the Italian chamber of deputies, Who has visited Sicily, says it is not politics, but real famine that has induced the masses to revolt. It was reported in Tangier, on the 8d, that the sultan of Morocco will etart two months hence from' the city of Morocco for Melilla. He will be accompanied by a large number of troops.
Much suffering- has been caused among the poor of Rome and vicinity by the extremely cold weather prevailing there. The ground, on the 2d, was covered with snow to the depth of several inches. V Three masked men robbed the station agent and the night operator of the Missouri Pacific at Paola, Kas., on the evening of the Sd. They secured two watches and $60 in cash. The safe was not touched. Th* municipal authorities of St. Petersburg propose to hold an international exhibition in that city in 1903, upon the two-hundredth anniversary of the founding of the city, in 1703, by ^*eter the Great. The London Investors’ Review says that unless a change is made in the Rank - of England’s methods of business a financial crisis will be brought about compared with which the recent Raring failuie will be as of small importance. A number of old and very poor people in Paris have been frozen to death ‘.t in their miserable lodgings. Others, \ despairing of finding relief from their sufferings, have killed themselves, and several have been picked up lifeless in the streets. J ‘ t *' ■ •— -- The available cash balance in the . United State^treasury, on the 4th, was $90,164,909; national bank notes received for redemption, $428,479. Government receipts—internal revenue, $404,771; customs, $634,209; miscellaneous, $332,330. On the 5th Secretary Carlisle appointed C. E. Kemper, clerk of the architect’s office; F. T. Bickford, secretary of the departmental board, and J. C. McGuire, of the architect’s office, a commission to appraise the World’s fair buildings at Chicago.
The revenue cutter Corwin arrived at San Francisco, on the 5th, direct from Honolulu, and immediately after entering the harbor landed a boat with cipher dispatches for the government, and again, put to sea without giving out any reliable information as to the situation of affairs in the Hawaiian islands. R. K. Eii.bf.ck. of Kingston, Ont., has enlisted a company of capitalists from St. Louis to work anthracite coal lands in Sonora, Mexico. The capital will be $10,000,000. The territory which the company win acquire consists of S.009,000 acres, and embraces all the coal property on the Pacific coast, and the only property which contains anthracite coal. The story of the wholesale slaughter of Roman Catholics who were attempting to defend their church in Kohno, the capital of the Russian province of that name, by Cossacks, is confirmed. Men, women and children were indiscriminately put to the sword or impaled upon spears, and those who attempted to escape were chased into the river and drowned. Dispatches received, on the 2d, by mercantile firms in Liverpool from the Cameroons say that peace had been restored in the colonies and the German officials had restored to the owners all the buildings captured by the native mutineers. German marines drove. ~ the natives from the .English factories, which had been seized during the mutiny. Trade on the Cameroons river is proceeding as usual. A robbers’ roost, rich with plunder, was found, on the Sd, beneath the floor of the great Agricultural building at the World’s fair grounds. The thieves escaped, but much valuable property was recovered. The den was sumptuously furnished with Turkish rugs, fabrics from foreign looms, rich draperies and comfortable divans. Fine brandies, high-priced wines and imr ported cigars were scattered about the place in great profusion. fc _... The anti-tax riots in Sicily are assuming such proportions as to give much concern to the Italian government. The over-burdened populace have taken a determined stand against the octroi, and in several cities have /enforced their demands by applying the torch to all public buildings, caus- ; ing destructive conflagrations in many | places. The soldiers called out to quell the riots have shown remarkable pa- - tience and forbearance, but in some {places have fired upon the people with Idead y effect
CURRENT TOPICS THE HEWS DT BRIEF. FIFTY-THIRD CONGRESS. , Ih the senate, on the Sd, Ml Hen ton (V a.) ■was sworn in Some remonstrances aixi resolutions again st the Wilson tariff bill were preSrated. A special hill to relieve David B- Golals from the penalties of (the act prohibiting ^aliens from owning real estate in the District :'ot Columbia was called up npd passed. An ex■ecutive session was held, after which the senate adjourned.In the house the credentials of Mr. Adams, to succeed the late Representative O'Neill, from the second Pennsylvania district, were presented and laid on the table. Before any business of importance was transacted. Mr. Boutelle cai led up his Hawaiian resolution and asked its immediate consideration. which resulted in a piotracted fight, ending only with adjournment. In the senate, on the 4th. numerous petitions and remonstrances against the passage of the Wilson tariff bill were presented. House bill to repeal all statutes relating to supervisors of 'elections and special deputy marshals was taken up and made the special order for the »th. After n short executive session the senate adjourned until the 8th.In the house Mr. Boutelle called up his resolution reciting that the executive had invaded the rights and privileges of congress, and asked for its immediate consideration, but the entire session was exhausted by the democrats in filibustering against the motion. Thx senate was not io session on the 5th..,. In the house, a fight made upon the report of the commitjtee on rules‘gave another remarkable demonstration of its inability to transact public business against the will of an active and hostile minority. After a session of nealry four hours in an attempt to reach a vote it was realized th u in the absence of some forty or fifty democratic members, and with the republicans to a man delining to vote, it was impossible to make any progress, and that there was nothing left to do but adjourn.
PERSONAL AND GENERAL. The Chinese government has decided that it Will attempt no further obstruction of the amended Geary law. It is now possible that coolies failing hr refusing to register can be deported from the United States. We may accordingly expect to see a wholesale registration, for It is not at nil likely that many of the Chinese will forego the privilege of money making which this country affords out of any sentiment of patriotism. Fbascie’s swoop on the anarchists in’ her dornain would be more effective if the other European nations should take like action. All those nations are more or less afflicted with the anarchist pest, apd all have a vital interest in rooting it out. Concerted action against this evil, therefore, should be had. If the anarchists be allowed to flit from one country to another unmolested they can afford to laugh at the authorities of all of them. The aggregate loss on the principal speculative stocks dealt in at the New York stock exchange during the year 1S93, is figured at over $285,000,000. Or in other1 words, the market value of these securities is upwards of $235,000,000 less to-day than a year ago. Perhaps somebody ought to get up a relief committee for the poor speculators and investors. The duchess of Marlborough, formerly Mrs. Hammersley, of New York, has leased for twenty-one years the Deepdene estate of Lord Hope at Dorking, 29 miles southwest of London, the yearly rental being £1,500. The commissioner of pensions has decided, in view of the passage of the act of December 21, 1893, declaring pensions to be a vested right, that he no longer has the right to withhold the pension of Judge Long, of Michigan, apd has accordingly ordered that the suspension of his pension be removed.
DriuiNG a chanty carnival on the Volga river, in Russia, on the 30th, the ice broke and twenty-eight persons | were drowned, and it is thought that some of the rescued will die from the effects of the shock and exposure. Imports of specie at the port of New York for the week ended on the 30th, were $37,358, of which $28,888 was gold and $8,470 silver.. Ox the 2d 15,000 people in addition to the 20,000 living in Leavenworth, Kas., celebrated the formal opening of the new steel drawbridge across the Missouri river at that point The parade was over a mile long. Empress Frederick, mother of Emperor William, gavd an audience, on the 2d, to Hon. Theo. Runyon, the American ambassador, at Berlin, and Mrs. Runyon. ■ f Ox the 2d the Roumanian senate ratified the Roumania-German commercial treaty, already ratified by the German reichstag. . The Standard Plate Glass Co. of Butler, Pa., reduced the wages of all employes 25 per cent, on the 2d. The New York legislature met on the 2d. ! The net balance in the treasury, on on the 2d, as shown by the public debt statement, was $90,375,555. Ox ther 2d H. L. Marbach, of the Marbach Machine Co., Cleveland, O., was arrested, charged with arson. Fire oceur:ri*d.inH3*e building occupied by the machine company at an early hour in the morning.' The police say waste was placed about the room under drip parts, and claim there was a deliberate attempt by Marbach to burn the building. ; mbs. Augusta Schmidt, indicted for murder in the first degree, for killing heir tenant, Oscar Walton, October 20 last, was denied tail on habeas corpus proceedings at Kokomo, Ind., on the 2d. She will appeal to the supreme court. The murderess is a wealthy German lady 45 years old and the daughter of a baroness. The court-martial at Mare Island, Cal., in the case of Richard Ashbridge, passed assistant surgeon of the United States navy, it is understood, has recommended his dismissal from the service. The charges against him were forging the signature of the secretary of the natvy to a telegraphic message. , lx the ease of McAfee and Parkers, the two negroes under sentence to be hsinged at Indianapolis, Ind., on the 5th, for the murder of Charles Eyster, the supreme court, on the 2d, reversed the decision of the trial court and granted a new trial for the men., Orlaxdo B. Potter, the multi-mil-lionaire and ex-congressman, died suddenly, on the night of the 2d, on the street in New .York, from'apop'exy. a,
It set as probable that Superintendent By ies’ suggestion that the members of the police and other public departure ts of New York city give onehalf of j ne per cent, of all salaries to a fnnd for the unemployed will be acted upon. . / Bt a reak in the ice on the River Spree, a t Cottbus, Brandenburg, bn the 3d, tw> aty-five of a large party of youthf l skaters fell into the water, and de; ]>ite the heroic efforts of rescuers f >m ice and shore, five of them were drowned. Gen. John L. Stevenson died at his residen e in Boston on the 3d. The teamer Egyptian Monarch, of the Wilson line, arrived ait New York, on the 3d, ten days overdue, having been t renty-four days out from London. Mr. Ascrew Carnegie, accompanied by Mrs Carnegie, left * New York for Alexan ria, Egypt, on the 4th, on the steamer Columbia. The renerable Elizabeth Peabody died, e;:i the 4th, at her home in Jamaica Plain, Mass., in her ninetyfourth ear; Harist Kennedy, the well-known ventriloquist, died, at midnight of the 2d, at l.is home in Brooklyn. A long-distance telephone is about to be put in operation between Berlin and Stockholm, Sweden, i
Aroi >uke Salvator} of Anstria has perfected an automatic mitrailleuse t hat will fire from 450 to 480 shots a minute. Smokeless powder can be used it all weathers. Forty thousand rounds have been fired from one barrel of one of the new guns; without the barrel .showing- any defect. The weapons cost 1,000 florins each. ; The Victoria Park hospital for consumpti i. es, in London, caught fire from a defective flue in one of the attics on the 5th. Sixty patients Were hastily removed to another ward. The fire was extinguished before it had done, serious, damage. The Cunard Steamship Co. has ordered the laying down of two new steamers, each vessel to be of 6,000 tons burden. They will be bnilt by the London and Glasgow Engineering and Iron Ship Building Co. Aiivioes from Apia, capital of Samoa, via Auckland, N. Z., show that since the departure of the war ships from the islands the natives have again become restless, and further trouble is feared. Autograph letters on the religious situation have been exchanged by the czar a td the pope. The disposition on the part of both to re-establish a religious entente is apparently firmer than ever. Secrjstary Hoke Smith has disbarred Wesley Flanagan, of Jamestown, Kv.. from practice as attorney before the interior department for demanding an illegal pension fee. The sultan of Turkey has conferred the grand eross of the imperial order of the Medjidie upon Mr; Maxim, the inventor of the quick-firing gun bearing his name. , On the Isle of Wight the mercury, on the- >th, registered 9 degs. above zero (Fahrenheit), which is the lowest point reached there in 100 years. Dr. I bmer, the new German governor of the Marshall islands, will sail for his pest at Jaluit on February 26. At 1 o’clock on the morning of the 5th three masked men bound and Delavah, Wis., and thenjblew open the post-c tfice safe, taking 5600. mostly in stamps. They then went to Hollister & Calkins’ livery stable, ordered a doable rig, bound and gagged the stableman and drove away. The rig was found four miles from town. gagge 1 Village Marshal
LATE NEWS ITEMS. The senate was not In session on the 6th.In the house another day was consumed in the struggle between the minority, led by Mr. Bontelle, who in* sisteci upon being heard upor. his Hawaiian resolution as a question of high privilege, and the majority, aided by the speaker, in the endeavor to get a vote on the report of the committee on rules fixing the progi-amme for the debate and vote on the Wilson tariff bill. W. Bowse Moore, a pension attorney of Buffalo, N. ¥., has been arrested on the charge of defrauding the United States government through the pension department. Special examiners lave investigated the case, and the s rrest was based on their report. It is said that the investigation has brought out the most stupendous frauds ever perpetrated on the pension department, aggregating $150,000. Tins old ducal castle of Bernburg, Germany, which had recently been used for the offices of the district author ties, was completely gutted by fire on the 6th. The*’ district director and coachman were burned to death In the building, and a number of valuable documents and a considerable sum of money were destroyed. A cable message h as been received by Secretary Herbert, informing him tha the insurrection in San Domingo is ]: -actically ended, and that the shooting of sailors from the American schocner Henry P., Crosby, by San ! Dor ingan soldiers was a mistake. Tax Globe Iron Co., of Cleveland, O., | has decided to build a freight steamer I an<: keep its workmen employed. It i will be one of the largest on the lakes. I Unless a buyer is found the boat will | be pnt into commission by her builders as soon as completed. A proposal to hold in St. Petersburg, in an international exhibition to celebrate the two hundredth anniversary off th 3 founding at that capital, has- met with much approval, and it is pr<: >able that eueh an exhibition will be held. ’ 2E animal meeting of the. National Farmers’ Alliance ahd Industrial union w: be held in Topeka, Kas., February 6. This will be the first time the organization has everl held a meeting wc t of the Mississippi. Mrs. Cockrell, wife of Senator Co: krell, of Missouri, died in Washington, on the 6th, after a short illness, of pn union ia. j i n the 6th the New York associated bti ks held $S3,796,650 in excess of the re airemen tsof the 25-per-cent. rule.
INDIANA STATE NEWS. Frederick Teacher is io jail a t South Bend charged with securing po son for' Lilie Lloyd, an abandoned voman, that she might commit suicide. By strenaous efforts her life was saved. Tescher is the son of a well-kno tarn and eminently respectable parents who have used every effort to make a man of him. At Fortrille, the other night, fire destroyed the four-story business block of Joseph Bims A Sonst, general merchant and the saloon of Charles Shaffer, and wrecked a residence of Luna Hudson. Loss, 910,000, par tially insured. The fire was caused by a natural gas M ’ Russell., the 16-year-old son of S. N. Davidson, a Jefferson merchant, while out hunting, was instantly killed by the accidental discharge of a gun. George W. Patchkll, editor of the Union City Times, and Postmaster Schuyler had words anti came to blows in the post officeAt Madison, in charging the grand jury, Judge Friendly specially instructed them to investigate the recent bloody prize fight between Stapp, of Madison, and Essler, of Lawrencebqrg, with a view of indicting all concerned. “Hugh Holmes, former well-known traveling salesman, died the other eve
nmg at tne w imams nouse, ©aiem, oi aneurism. Mr. Holmes was on the road for over forty years, but for the past two years, owing1 to declining1 health, he had been living on his farm near Livonia. At Kokomo Mrs. August Schmidt, indicted for murder in the first degree in the killing of her te nant, Oscar Walton,'October 20, was denied bail the other morning on ha beas corpus proceedings. She will appeal to the supreme court The murderess is a wealthy German widow, 45 years old, and the daughter of a baroness. Harry Hoover, Ira Eads, Charles Shoemaker and Lee I>avis, four prisoners, escaped from jail at Fowler. The first was in for stealin g a knife, and the: Others for the theft at a little money. Sheriff Manzy had locked them in the corridor upstairs, and they succeeded in unlocking a door which admitted them to the room nex€ to the windows. Then they sawed off one of the heavy two-inch, bars from the window, tied two blankets together, attached one end to the window grating, and let themselves down into freedom. The sheriff offers a reward of flOO for their capture, but as yet no trace of them is reported. No blame is attached to the sheriff. Lawrence L Lotherman. a promjn-, ent young republican, of Valparaiso, received his commission as post office inspector of Indiana, Kentucky and Ohio. He was appointed by Postmas-ter-General Wanamaker nearly three years ago, and was recommissioned by Postmaster-General Bissell. He has been in the postal service for fifteen years, commencing as a postal clerk. The other night a fourteen-year-old named Armstrong went into the stable of John Hogeman. near Prescott, Shelby county, to feed a stallion, when the animal rushed on him and tore through one cheek with his teeth and otherwise injured him. Prompt assistance saved the boy’s life. L. Rodgers & Son’s carriage factory in New Castle was totally destroyed by fire the other night, the stock in the Warehouses and the warehouses themselves, alone being saved. Its origin is unknown.
A petition is m circulation at Columbus praying' Got. Matthews to pardon Wm Schreiber, teller of the First National bank, for robbing it of nearly $200,000 in cash and securities Thanksgiving night, 1.887, and fleeing to Canada. After two years he crossed over to Detroit, was captured, brought back to Columbus and sentenced to fourteen years in the state prison in 18S6. He is now in a dying condition with consumption. Louis Snyder, the mufderer of Mrs. Olive Cloud, was captured by Detective Wilson in Indianapolis a few days ago. He was found at the residence of his daughter, Mrs. McNaught, on East Ohio street, and was in the act of kissing his daughter good-bye when the officer found him. Snyder was unarmed and went along without any show of a disposition to resist. Wilson took his man to police headquarters, where he was slated for murder. The indictments against Cashier Foulks, of the Vincennes National bank, just made public, accuse him of making false entries and committing perjury. f At the town of Ilsen, six miles south of Bourbon, indignant citizens painted black Henry Meter; a white farmer who had married a Negress. William Whobton, of Hartford City, while on one of Muncie’s principal streets, was slugged, by highwaymen and rendered unconscious. When he recovered he discovered that he had been robbed of (40. Morris Gore, a son of Haymond Gore, at Shelbyville, had his eyes burned out by a cannon firecracker that exploded in front of his face. Sylvan Ballard, a-four-year-old grandson of contractor Elijah Ballard, of Shelbyville, was severely scalded on the back by falling m a kettle of boiling water. James B. Condbey, a well-known man about Indianapolis, died very suddenly the other night of symptoms indicating acute- poisoning, and there is a suspicion that he committed suicide. The coroner is investigating. An attempt to wreck a Pan-handle train near Logansport by removing a rail was discovered by the officials in time to prevent a terrible accident. A jiusic dealer of Anderson has come into possession of a violin that is supposed to have been made by Stradivarius in toe year 1632, at Mil* n. The instrument, it is said, was unearthed at Chesterfield a few days ago Judge Geuggs, at Martinsville, has refused Henry Myers a new trial and sen tenced him to the penitentiary for one year for stealing notes against him that were in the hands of an att >rney for collection.
HOLD UP YOUR HANDS! n>« Imperious Order Gtvn to ■ PaseeaIter Conductor by a I. ouple of Bold. Train Bobbers Oa a X staslppi Valley Passeneer Train—The C (press Car Saved by the, Pluck and Addr as of a Colored Porter. New Orleans, Jan. i—The Mississippi Valley passengei train that arrived here at 8:05 ye? :erday morning was held np at the crossing of the Vicksburg & Meridh.n railroad, just south of Vicksburg at 1:05 a. m. The train was stopping it the railroad crossing waiting for ;he Vicksburg & Meridian train to p: ss, when it was boarded by two masked men. A third man was standing gc ird on the tracks. Conductor Morris, in an interview, gave the ^following account of what happened on the trai l: “We were just a lew miles out* of Vicksburg station, and had reached the Vicksburg Jb Me ; idian road’s crossing, in the suburbs ■ f the city. The train always stops at this point and the engineer waits for isome one to come and flag the t ain. I was in the j I second car in the tr in. It is divided into two compartaents, the part in front of the partition being a passenger compartment and the rear a baggage room. I w; s standing in the front compartment with Mr. Dorsey, the baggagemastei when I heard a man veil: “Hold u.»your hands!”
“I looked throng .1 the door and saw two men, both ma rked, marching’ the porter down the aide toward us. They had ns covered with pistols and, of course, our hands went up. One fellow was a big man weighing, I judge, about 160 pounds He kept us covered while his partner, a small man, went through our pockets The little man was evidently new at the business. Dorsey was searched first. He had no gun and nothing was taken from him. Then they turned their attention to :ne. I had no weapon. He left a $10 bill in my vest pocket and other little articles which I had hi other pockets. They marched us to the express car an d ordered me to open the door. I told them tlie door was bolted. 'Then kiek it in,’ said the big man and 1 kickec ■ 1 was still kicking op the door wbt 1 the porter, finding njinself lor a mot ent uncovered by the men's guns, leaped from the train and rushed to the rear. The /two men jumped off and in a moment later disappeared in the d;irkness. “Just as the aen 4-got off the tram the express messenger opened the repress car. The -obbers evidently became frightened When they saw the porter jump off 1 nd run to the rear. All the time we were being searched the engineer kep : blowing his whistle for some one to c -me and flag the MississippiValley ert ;sing. It is the porter's business to do th s. The engineer said we were stopped eight minutes at the crossing. “When the rob >ers appeared I .was looking over a ircular, and wheji I heard the order-to hold uf) my hands I thought it was a joke of sqme fellows about the round house near by and did not hold up l oth my hands at first, but held up one h and, the other hanging dov n with the circular in it. I receive! a reminder that both hands must g: up in a very loud voice that meant usihess. I obeyed. The men held pistols to our heads all the time.” THE GALLCWS’ SHADOW
Growing' Darker Over the Stalwart Form at Kx-Detect!re tnujblln. Chicago, Jan. 8.—At the end of the fourth week of taking accusing testimony in the case of the people of Illinois against D. niel Coughlin and others, the chain of circumstantial evidence has beet formidably lengthened, until the puolie prosecutors and the friends of Dr. ’ronin assisting, as well as the police officers interested, express their confi dence that a conviction will, or at least should, follow the presentation of the case for the state. On the other hand, Daniel Coughlin and his two lawyers conceal their fears, if they have »ny, and make light of the testimony which is to. be given in court for the first time next week by Mrs. Horton and Frank Bardeen. A disinterested ant close observer of the famous conspiracy case is forced to the conclusion that the stalwart detective Stands closer to the shadow of the gallows to-day t han he did in 1889. It; is the opinion of the prosecution, and is based on the assumption that they have a conscientiously honest and intelligent jury to cieal with. Some of the busy assistants of the ‘ public prosecutors have pointed the finger of suspicion at certain members of the jury because they appear to betray indifference while witnesses are being examined and because a few are moved to ask witnesses questions which are interpreted by the prosecutors favorable to Coughlin- The lawyers and others; engaged in the ca«e rested from their labors most of the day as there was no trial, but this week promises to be as sensational as any since the trial began. The defense bitterly, denounce the police, alleging that they placed a threatening note under Bardeen’s door at the hotel, in order to make it appear that he was being hounded by Coughlin’s friends. The defense claim that Capt. Schuettler, by Bardeen’s own admission under examination,’was the 1 only person in Chicago Thursday night who knew of the witness’ presence in this city. He did not even register at the hotel. Bardeen moved to another hotel Saturday and detectives are guarding him from harm and intimidation. Palermo Filled with Disquieting Socialist Rumors. Rome, Jan. 8.—Palermo has been filled with rumors since yesterday morning that an attempt would be made to mob the prisons and release Deputy Guiseppe tie Felice, the - socialist leaded. Saturday i ight, therefore, the guard at the prison was increased, but there has been no sign of an approaching attack on the building. A renewal of the at tempt to cot the cable from Palermo to Italy has caused Gen. Morra di Lavriaro, co nmand-in-ehief in Sicily to pat mounted guards at the cable landing.
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