Pike County Democrat, Volume 27, Number 6, Petersburg, Pike County, 19 June 1896 — Page 2
----— I Shrgifct Count jjgjrmomt ft XCeC. STOOPS, Editor ud PMprM» * PETERSBURG. *- - - INDIANA. Ik response to ft resolution, th% secretary of state, on the 8th, informed the senate that there We re no aliens employed in the state department. Fostxaster-Gkkxral Wilsok has denied the privileges of the mails to R. A. Clack <fc Co., of Kansas City, Mo., and Chicago. The firm sold devices for cheating at card playing. Judge Collier, of Albnqnerque, N. 11., on the 12th, ordered the receiver of the Atlantic 4 Pacific railroad, hereafter not to blacklist any member of the American Railway anion. TstxMormon colonists in the Mexican states of Chihuahua and Sonora desire to buy American goods instead of the English, French and German supplies which they get from neighboring Mexican towns.
The battleship Massachusetts was put Into commission on the 12th. She will be commanded by Capt. Frederick Rogers, and will be assigned to the Atlantic squadron. She will be manned by 170 seamen and 60 marines. Failckks throughout the United States for the week ended on the 12th, as reported by R. G. Dun A Co., were *46. against 241 for the corresponding week last year. For Canada the failures were 28, against 24 last year. A dispatch from Bombay says it is reported there that the British war ship Bonaventure, while making a passage from Colomba, Ceylon,«to Pondicherry, capital of the French settlements in India,lost "0 men by sunstroke. Th* movements of the Spanish columns in Pinar del Riohaye again been placed under the immediate direction of Gen. Ochando, the chief of the staff, ; instead of acting independently-under the direction of their immediate commanders. A xkw society, known as the American Order of United Cat holics, was organized in New York city four months ago, the primary object of which is tc fight the A. P. A. There are already nine councils of the new order in New York city. Ok the 11th Secretary of State Olnej received a cablegram from ConsulGeneral Kpight at Cape Town saying that JohjPHays Hammond and the other reform leaders had been released. They were fined £25,000, without banis hment. It was rumored in Havana, on the 9th, that the insurgents intended to blow up the gas works and cut off the water supply of that city. This rumor caused considerable excitement, because it is known that the insurgents have hithert<£ accomplished everything they have said they would ia The president, on the 8th, signed an order granting permission to the Chickasaw tribe of Indians in the Indian territory to draw upon the United Stites treasury for 8100,000 out of their fund of *1,300,000 to pay the current and national expenses of that tribe. The consent of the senate remained to i be obtained. Cai*t. Am.km V. Rekd, U. S. N., has | been detached from the command of the navy yard at Portsmouth, X. H., and ordered to his home, preliminary to his retirement. Capt. Reed is the ] officer to whom President Cleveland refused promotion,on the recommendation of an examining board, and he was obliged to retire. . Among the passengers on the steamer City of Washington, which arrived at New York, on the 10th, from Havana, were J. D. Delgado and his son M. M. ! Delgado. Both gentlemen have suffered many indignities, at the hands of Spanish officials in Cuba, and were on their way wo Washington to lay their grievances before the president and Secretary Olney.
President Cleveland was a busy man. on the 11th. considering and signing bills rushed to the White House from both houses of congress. His cabinet officers were with him tc give advice on measures connected with their several departments, and Private Secretary Thurber was also railed in to the hasty consultation? necessary in each easy. r ■ 1; -I I A PETITION for the pan Ion of Capt», J. H. S. Wiborg of the steamer Hors*, recently convicted for his connection with a filibustering expedition to Cuba, was presented to the president on the 10th. The petitiou was indorsed, by nearly all the members of the senate and house, irrespective of party, and by newspaper men and shipowners along the Atlantic coast. The Tennessee Coal. Iron £ Hail road Co., the moat extensive producers in the south. haTe ctlhciuded negotiations with an Italian steel making concern at Genoa, Italy, to supply them annually for a term of years with *0,000 tons of Alabama pig. The sale was made in competit ion with English iron makers, who hare heretofore been supplying the Genoa parties. The funeral of Frank Mayo, the well-known actor, took place in Philadelphia, on the 12th, from Holy Trinity P. EL church, where services wers conducted by Bev. Dr. Wm. Neil son McViekar, assisted by Bev. Levi B. Edwards. The floral offerings wers Handsome and. the edifice was filled with relatives and friends of the deceased. Interment was privately asada at Wart Laurel Hill cemetery.
luimmmw JUNE—1896. te. Mm.-Tit. Wed. Dm FrL Sit a to u 12 14 15 16 17 18 19 21 22 23 24 25 26 28 29 30 13 20 27 ^:tfTfrHtTtf¥TtTffffTTV< CURRENT TOPICS. THE HEWS IN BBIEP. LIV. CONGRESS.
(First Session.) IK the senate, on the 8th, the new general deficiency bill was passed without amendment. A final conference report on the post office appropriation bill was agreed to. Partial conference reports on the Indian appropriation bill and the district of Columbia appropriation bill were made and agreed to and further conferences ordered. The immigration bill was taken up. and Mr. Morgan (Ala.) made another long speech upon the war in Cuba......In the house. In continuation of the session of the 8th. a large number of bills were passed under suspension ofi the rules and conference reports were presented aad agreed to Ion the post office (final). Indian and District of Colombia appropriation bills. The sergeant-at-arms was directed to telegraph to absent members that their presence was necessary to tbe transaction of public business. Ik tbe senate, on the 9th. final conference reports on the naval appropriation bill and the Indian appropriation bill were received and agreed to. The question of contract Indian schools was compromised by allowing them (when there are no other schools to take their place) an appropriation during the fiscal year 189!>. Other measures of no general importance occupied the remainder of the session......In the house the contestedelection case of Aldrich Crep.) against Underwood (dem.). from the Ninth Alabama district. was decided in favor of the contestant, and Mr. Aldrich was sworn in. The final conference reports on the Indian and naval appropriation bills were agreed to. The conference report on the sundry civil appropriations bill, except the public buildings appropriation, was agreed to. Some bills of minor importance were passed. IS tbe senate, on the JOth. the contempt of Cvurt bPl was discussed at length and passed. The difference between the two houses on the District of Columbia appropriation bill was ooropromised by. continuing the appropriation to sec Uriah charities, but declaring that no further appropriations for this purpose shall be made after June 10. 1W7. A number of bills were passed and a concurrent resolution was agreed to for final adjournment on the 11th at four o'clock .'... In the house, under suspension of the rules, a large number of bills were passed. The house concurred in senate amend * meet to the sundry civil appropriations bills thus ending the dead-lock on tbe last of tbl appropriation bills, and passed the senate concurrent resolution for final adjournment on tbs ltth at four o'clock. Ik tbe senate, on the 11th. the principal business of the day was awaiting tbe hour of final adjournment at four o’clock. Meantime the District of Columbia appropriation bill was received an^signed by tbe vice-president, thus disposing of the last of the general appropriation bills. A bill was passed granting a pension to the widow of Gen. W. H. Gibson, of Ohio. A committee was appointed to wait upon the president and inform him that con(gresS was ready to adjourn. The usual resolutions of thanks were passed. At four o'clock the fall of the gavel announced the close of the session ... ..In the house a number of private pension and relief bills were passed. Messrs. Pitney. Blue and Dockery were appointed house members of the joint committee to sit during the summer and investigate the charities of the District of Columbia. A resolution thanking Speaker Reed for the •‘ability, faithfulness and impartiality" with which he had discharged his duties was adopted, and the first session of the Fifty-fourth congress passed into history. PERSONAL AND GENERAL. Frank Mato, the celebrated actor, tied very suddenly of paralysis of the heart, on the 8th, while on board a Union Pacific fast mail, going east, near Grand Island, Xeb. The president, on the 8th. signed the revised general deficiency appropriation bill, which had been amended to meet liis objections. The senate committee on finance decided, on the 9th, to conduct their investigation of the sale of bonds in public. The democratic primaries a*. Hamilton, ti„ on the 8th, resulted in thfteleetiou of 66 silver and two gold delegates t-o the Democratic state convention at Columbus, June ?3.
Amid the booming' o: cannon, me playing of bands, the shrieks of factory whistles, ami the shouts of a east concourse of people the McKinley decorated corn train began its journey, on the 8tb, from Wichita,«Kas., to the St. Louis convention. Herman Kecks diamond merchant of Cincinnati, recently convicted in the United State* district court at Philadelphia of attempting to smuggle diamonds valued at $7,000 into port from Antwerp, was sentenced, on the 0th, to one year's imprisonment in the Eastern Pennsylvania penitentiary and fined $700. Carr. A. G. Him. died at Decatnr, IniL. on the 9th, aged 64. He was captain of a company in the Eighty-ninth Indiana regiment. When Lincoln i called for volunteers he closed the Eagle office, of which he was publisher, and eulUted with his entire foroe, I taking his office boy as drummer. • The Newport tPa.\ spoke and handle works owned by John McNeat. were destroyed by fire, on the 9th, together I with about 120,000 finished spokes, j The machinery is damaged beyond rt»- ! pair. Word reached Washington, on the | 9th, that Mr. Hannis Taylor, United | States minister to Spain, had been ; taken ill in Paris. He was on his rej turn to Madrid from England, after 1 sending his family home. Delegate Catron, of New Mexico, | has reported to the house from the ter- ! rilories committee the bill for the admission of that territory to the--sister-hood of states. ; The Nuehtfeld Sc Haynes Piano Co. of New York made An assignment on the 10th, Liabilities, $35,000; nominal assets, $31,000. The company was incorpora ted in 1895 with a capital stock of $60,000. Ox the 10th, the esar, in commemoration of his coronation, subscribed the aggregate sum ef 250,000 rubles to various charities.
Ox the 10th Archbishop Elder of Cincinnati celebrated his golden jubilee. Hox. Alexander Tirreix, minister to Tnrltey, sailed from New York, on the 10th, on the steamer St Paul for Southampton, on his way to Constantinople. The president, on the 10th, approved the act amending the act providing for the protection of the Alaska salmon fisheries. ' The Grand Rapids A Indiana railroad was sold, on the 10th, to the Pennsylvania Railroad Co. for $500,000, subject to first and second mortgage bonds. Hox. D. A. McDonald, ex-lieuten-ant-governor of the provience of Quebec, Can., died in the city of Montreal on the 10th.
The National samgerfest at Cittsburgh. Pa., closed on the llth. From artistic and financial points of view it proved more of a success than was anticipated by the most sanguine. Hon. Matt W. Ransom, United States minister to Mexico, who is in Washington on leave of absence, talks encouragingly of affairsf in the Mexican republic. Sylvester Ryan, 28 years of age, his brother Albert, aged 24, and Patrick Scigh, aged 40 years, all single and employes of the Philadelphia Natural Gas Co. at New Kensington, Pa., were drowned in the Allegheny river at Logan's ferry on the llth. John Wood and Ben McCalls, workmen engaged in removing the scaffolding from the interior of the new big chimney of the Grand Rapids (Mich.) street railway company's powerhouse, fell 75 feet, on the llth, and were fatally injured.5 Both were men of family. The First national bank of Lamed, Kas., capital $50,000, closet^ its doors on the llth. ) P. C. Jones, who was minister of finance under the Hawaiian monarchy and is a member of a leading Honolulu banking house, is Jon his way to New York to interest Capitalists in the refunding of the Hawaiian bonded debt of '$3,096,000, drawing six per cent. It is proposed tp take up these bonds and issue instead four per cent, bonds. Bill West, a noted Indian territory desperado and murderer of United States Marshal Lincoln Kinney, who recently escaped from the county jail at Topeka, Kas., was killed in Illinois City, I. T.. on the night of the llth. by Thomas Carlisle, while resisting arrest. Wladyslav Stolzman, charged with the murder of Vincent Stezeleckis, on October 5, 18^5, in -the town of Sedleiman, near Warsaw, in Russian Poland, was arrested in Cleveland, O,, on the 12th. The prisonei claimed it is for political reasons he is arrested. The resignation is announced ol Prof. Egbert G. Smith as president of Andover (Mass.) Theological seminary, after a service of 18 years. George Harris Abbott, professor of theology, wilt succeed him. Reports received from Canea, Crete, say that the Turks have pillaged and burned 20 hamlets in the interior of the island. Isaac H. Maynard, ex-judge of the New York court of appeals, dropped dead, on the 12th, in the Hotel Ken4nore at Albany, N. Y. Heart disease was the cause. The Spanish prisons at Ceuta ttre filled with prisoners to their utmost capacity, and all the prisoners deported from Cuba will hereafter be' sent to the island of Fernando Po.
LATE NEWS ITEMS. Thoigji the smoke of burning vil «age> can be seen from the European cruisers along leagues of the Cretan roast, the porte has sent official communications to the various embassies declaring that perfect order and peace prevail throughout the island, Rus-sia-has again beeame a dead weight on any action by the Powers in connection with Crete, opposing anything beyond diplomatic protests, which would, of I lourse, be a-, futile as they were fn the rase of Armenia. It was announced in London, on the | 14th, that negotiations between Bus sia and Japan were on the verge of I conclusion looking to a practica. | joint protectorate over Corea. For ! the purpose of maintaining order, each I power may keep 500 troops in Seoul, and in case of emergency may laud additional men. i The weekly statement of the New } York city associated banks for the j week ending on the 12th, showed the j following changes: Reserve, increase. | $2,190,750; loans, decrease, S2;540,S00; specie, increase, $586,400; legal tenders ! increase, SI.516,700; deposits, decrease ! $350,600; circulation, decrease, $214,400. lx the fire which destroyed ware house A of the White Mills Distilling j Co., in the southwestern portion of Louisville, Ky., on the I4th, 7,300 barrels of whisky were burned; loss, | $125,000. Val Schwatz, a fireman, was . fatally burned by falling into a stream | of blazing whisky. Thomas Daw let, the correspondent of Harper's Weekly, who was arrested in Cuba some time ago on the charge of being in communication with the reb-' els, was released, on the 14th, from Morro castle, where he bad been confined since he was taken into custody. John Heard, of Danville. Ill, and Henry Miller, of Mount Joy, Pa., Appointed postmasters by President Cleveland and not confirmed by the sen- ’ ate, have been reappointed. Dekixq a severe storm, cn the 34th. a rowboat containing five persons was capsized in the Delaware river, near Gloucester City, X. J., and three of the occupants were drowned. | Ex-Gov. Alpuevs Felch, of Michigan. died at Ann Arbor, on the 13th, aged 90. He was a native of Maine, and filled many positions of trust during his long life. Toon as Axtoixe Fkreiro Ribeibo. a well-known Portuguese statesman and litterateur died in Lisbon, on the; 14th. He was well knows both U » poet and a prose writer*
INDIANA STATE NEWS. Dcmixo a rain storm at EmnsrlTla* the other evening, lightning struck the amphitheater at the fair grounds and It was burned. Loss $15,000. Much other damage resulted throughout the city. • ». j Richard, aged 13, and Eddie, aged eight, sons of Mail Clerk J. E. Jones, running between Cincinnati and‘Louisville, on the B. & O. S. W., were drowned in the city reservoir, North Vernou. while attempting to fish floating drift from the water. Both the bodies were recovered late the other j evening. John George, in trying to drive bees | from a tree near Fayetteville, fell j out and was set upon and stung so j badly by the swarm that he will likely J lie. [ ,, Chas. Williams, aged ten, while j bathing in the Wabash river at Mur- j ray, ventured out too far and drowned j in eight feet of waiter. A sew Methodist church at Wheeler j was dedicated a few days ago by Rev. ; Dr. Traveller, of Chicago. Joseph Clark, a young man of near i Ft. Wayne, stepped on a rusty nail, j | which penetrated! his foot. Lockjaw 1 I followed and Clark died, after suffering ; most dreadful agony. At Muncie Ethel and Yirlfe Cates j and Effie Houck, small children, were I poisoned by eating impure ice cream, ! the other afternoon. Ethel Cates is ex- | pected to die. and' the condition of the j i other two is critical. , A lamp in the. hands of Mrs. Mary Huffman, of Boswell, exploded. She received burns which caused her death. A Row occurred in the prohibition j county convention in Huntington oyer j the money question. All the nomiha- | tions were tabled and the county chair- | man resigned. j
Tire common council of South Bend made a decided: departure from precedent by electing Miss Katharine Esmay a member Of the school board to succeed Henry |F. Elbe!, democrat. Miss Esmay's candidacy w as backed by the Progress club. Gas was struck at Tipton the other morning at the Innis brickyards, within four squares of the courthouse. The pressure is 2jfd pounds, at a depth of 900 feet. One of the largest oil wells ever drilled in the 111 jack ford oil field was the one op t he—Richard Dick farm, six miles north of , Hartford City. It is making one hundred barrels a day at a natural flow, without being shot. E. C. Storms, of Dundee, holds the lease on the farm and will put down a number of wells. Mr. and Mrs^ Jacob Shell. an aged couple, were removed to the county infirmary at Portland, the other day on account of their impoverished condition. They had been there but a short time when Mrs. Shull, overcome by excitement and grief, dropped dead. It is supposed heart disease had been brought on by her woe. The new M. E; chureh at Macy was dedicated a few days ago. Rev. C. U. Wade, of Bfuflftcjn. officiating. The indebtedness was $2,500, and in 30 minutes S3,200 was raised. The manager of the Anderson Cathedral Glass company has received an order for 250.000 feet of skylight plate glass for use in one of the United States buildings at Washington. Charles Moody,*22-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. jTlale Moody, residing three miles from Somerset, Wabash county, was drowned in the Salamonie j river at Warren. Rev. Dr Charles Little, of the Wabash Presbyterian church, the other afternoon delivered the baccalaureate address to the members of the graduating class of the Wabash High school. ; _ A few days ago, at their home in Richmond. Mr. and Mrs. Calvin R. 1 Johnson celebrated their golden wedding anniversary. They were married j June 7, 1 $46, at Cincinnati.' Four gen- ; erations were represented at the dinner. The death of John Bennett; residing i two miles west of Lewisville, occurred a few days ago. Mr. Bennett was born and raised on the farm where his death occurred, at the age of *>5. In compliance with ViChonstranees the board of Knox county commissioners rejected seven applications for liquor licenses the other day, making 14 , saloons closed in the county on aei count of the Nicholson law. P. J. Klino&r, of Rose Polytechnic, j Torre Haute, made a new bicycle track ! record the other afternoon in 1:59 2-5. It is considered a very fast mile for a ! ‘'four-cornered’" horse track. The Knickerbocker special on the Big Four ran over and instantly killed I Mrs. Ella Greenlee between Reno and Hadley. She was walking oh the track ] and failed to hear the engineer's warn- | tog.
I here seems 10 oe an orgamzea nar.u ! of train thieves operating from Ft. Wayne. .The last victim is Mrs. Delia Hartrum, of Canton, O., who was aboard of a Pittsburgh, Ft. Wayne aud Chicago train en route to Wasepi, Mich. She wai relieved of her money and satchel. E. U. of Tipton, merchant I tailor, assigned to J. A. Gleason, i Liabilities, $3,100; assets about the < same. The Terre Haute Y. M. C.^A. basket ! ball team defeated Crawfordsville by a I score of 4 to Sj, 'making ten games the ! home team has won without a defeat, j This settles the state championship for this year. Cap. Baku ore, of the Madison shipyard, has con/racted with the Missisp sippi Valley Transportation Co. to rebuild the Harvester and Exporter and to build an entire new towboat in place of the Jay Gould, recently destroyed at St Louis. The boiler at E. M. Taylors sawmill Farmland, burst into a thousand pieces the other day. As it was the noon hour and all the men were at dinner, go cue was injured, although the mill was a total wreck. Chester, a son of W. S. Hiatt, a prominent farmer, was instantly killed by being thrown from a horse near Farmin'*1* He was 11 years of age.
CONTESTED seats tn the Republican National Convention— The Work of the National Committee In Decldlnr the Contests Preliminary to Maklot Up the Temporary Organisa-tion-Statement Given Out From the Ohio Headquarters. St. Louis, June 15.—The following1 statement is given out from Ohio headquarters to show that the national committee performed its duties in the matter of contested seats in a spirit of fairness to all concerned: An analysis of the work of the National committee in regard to the 16S contests which were originally filed with it shows that 136 cases were acted on; some of the original number having been- abandoned, while several, notably those of Delaware, and a portion of the Texas delegation were referred to the convention. In many cases both contestants and contestees were understood to be McKinley men, notably in all of the Mississippi and South Carolina districts, and in certain districts from Tennessee, Virginia and elsewhere. Of the 136 claimants rejected by the committee, 61 were avowed McKinley men. The impression which prevailed daring the consideration of these cases, that the committee was deciding a large majority of the cases in favor of McKinley, doubtless grew out of the fact that in nearly all of the states where there were a large number of contests, both contestants were avowed McKinley men, and as a natural result more McKinley men were, necessarily, given seats than were anti-McKinley men, since in so many of the cases, contestants and contestees were, according to their own statements, McKinley men. In New York three districts were contested, covering six delegates. Two of the contests were decided in favor of the McKinley delegates and in the other district both delegations were admitted, giving each delegate a half vote. «
in Pennsylvania tnere was a contest in the third district. The - contesting delegations were both admitted, each delegate having a half vote. - In Delaware the contest was refered to the convention. In Virginia there were contests in t^e second, third and eighth districts. In the third and eighth the contests were, 'withdrawn, and in the second district both delegations were admitted. each delegate being' given a half vote. In North Carolina there was a contest in ithe sixth district. Both delegations were admitted, each delegate with a half vote. In South Carolina there was a contest in each of the districts, and as to the delegates-at-large, covering 18 votes. Both the contestants and contestees were McKinley men. the contests turning on differences between local factions. All of the contests were decided in favor of the Webster faction. In Georgia there were contests in three of the districts and as to twobf the delegates-at-large, all of which were decided in favor of the McKinley delegates. 4 In Florida there were contests in the second district and as to the delegates-at-large. The McKinley delegates were accepted in the second district, also the delegates-at-large, the McKinley delegates in the first district being rejected. InAlabama there were contests in the first, third,' fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh, eighth and ninth districts and the delegates-at-large. The fifth and ninth districts were decided against the McKinley men, the others | seated were McKiulev men. In California there were contests in the third and fourth districts, both of which were decided in favor of the Melvinley men. „ . In Mississippi there were contests in the seven districts, and as to the dele-gates-at-large. All were a vowed Mei Kinley men, the fight being between local factions. The Hill faction was 1 successful, except in the second, third and sixth districts. In Louisiana there were contests in the first, second, third, fourth, fifth and sixth districts, the McKinley delegates being successful* except in the fourth district, where the decision was against the McKinley delegates. In Texas there were contests in eveiv district, and as to the delegatcs-at-large. None of the delegutes-afc* large were place l upon the temporary roll. In ten of the districts the contests were decided in favor of the MeKinley'delegates, while in the remaining, the seventh, tenth and twelfth, | the decision was agaiust the McKinley delegates. In Kentucky there was but one eon* | test, the fifth district, which was de- * cided in favor of the McKinley delei gates. In Tennessee there were contests in the sixth and ninth districts, contestants and contestees being McKinley men in one district, while in the other, the sixth, the anti-McKinley contestants were seated. Iri Arizona there was a contest as to the six delegates-at-large, all being admitted with a half vote each. The contest in Alaska was decided in the same manner. r In South Carolina, Louisiana and Texas there were organizations commonly known as the “Lily Whites * claiming seats in the convention, but in all of these cases the committee decided that the organizations were irregular and could not be recognized.
RODNEY FISKE, Ihm Spendthrift Millionaire, Djin* Penal* leM at Boston. Mit Yoks. June 14.—A Recorder special from Boston says: Rodney Fiske. the famous young millionaire from California who startled Wall street a few years ago by his wild speculations, anti who disappeared mysteriously a few years ago, after squandering his original legacy of $1,300,000 and. the millions he added to it, is dying In this city, penniless, and dependent upon the hospitality oj com carat ire strangers. %
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