Pike County Democrat, Volume 29, Number 25, Petersburg, Pike County, 28 October 1898 — Page 6

WEST HAS MOVED. la New York Objects to r OMfMfUeal CtM* •tkeatloa, **Wa of the east,” said a New York man, ■“do not appreciate how the country has spread, as a result of the war with Spain, as «ear fellow-citizens in the .west appreciate it I was in the office of my hotel, near the -counter, when a new arrival wrote his name and town and said he wanted a front room with a private hath. My business keeps me on the alert for people who live beyond the Mississippi, and as soon as I coufd do so with propriety I looked at the register and saw that the new arrival was from Helena, Mont. Then I made my advances by asking him how business was in the west. At that be flared and asked: “ ‘How do you know where I am from— •what makes you think I am from the west?*; “I explained that I had looked at the register, and in order to appease any suspicion wo his part that I had a gold brick to diagnose of I handed him my card and a polo* gwed, for when you have done that to a western man he is yours. . “ ‘But I am not from the west,’ he protested. “ ‘You are from Montana** I asked. “ ‘That’s what; but you don’t call Montana the west, I reckon,' he replied, with a -combination of southern and western accent, “I said as mildly as I could that it was so -classified in the geography I knew and so regarded by people in the east. “ ‘Not since the war,’ he replied. “For a moment I did not know where 1 •was ‘at.* But he came to mv relief: “ *1 reckon you know we ve recently took the-Sandwich islands in out of the wet?” “I acquiesced with proper American pride. ** ‘I reckon you know about that other island, Luzon, or whatever they call it? That’s hut az good as ours as long as Dewey’s there.* “I followed him in his enthusiasm, for it -was infectious, and I assented. “ ‘Well, then,’ he asserted as a clincher, *if you want to know how business is in the west. you had better call up Honolulu or Manila. Strikes me, if there was no mistake made by Dewey—and I drn’t think there was—that Helena. Mont., comes pretty nigh being in the middle of the United States a* they lay at the present writing.*" —N. Y. Sun. , - PITYING THE POOR. A Tramp Who Would Hot Take the Croat from a Needy Woman's Mouth.

Sometimes the tramp gets the better of the thrifty housewife. The mistress of a pretty tittle cottage at Sausalito—she onl v inherited -about fcJU.UOU, and so is obliged to be frugal— is the object of a little criticism from her friends because of her reputed parsimony. Last Saturday, as she was sitting on her pi.asara, overlooking the water, and waiting tor Ted to come home, a passing knight of the Ctwd humldy solicited a bite. The young wroman couldTioCwithstand the petition, so she went herself to the bread box, which w as filled with freshly-baked loaves, and brought oat to the waiting vagrant two slices of boardlike consistency which had been baked •many days earlier. As she presented her bounty she felt just a trifle ashamed of it. "We are very poor ourselves," she said, in nattered apology. The outcast received the crust with a courteous “Thank you," and turned away. A moment later he returned and handed the young heiress the crusts and aiao a nickel. "I am very sorry for you.” he said, in gentle tones of genuine sympathy .—San Francisco News Letter. CSsghisg Leads to Consumption. Kc ap’s Balsam will stop the Cough at s Go to your druggist to-day and get a ■ ■ample bottle free. J^arge bottles 33 and 5C cents. Go at once ; delays arc dangerous. The Value of Experience. "With what a gracefully sweeping motioi she handles a fan.” “Yes; she used to keep the flies off the table in her father’s Omaha lunchroom.”—Cleveland Plain Dealer. Why suffer so with Neuralgia? St. Jacobi Oil will drive it all away. A man imagines before marriage that h« > ■will he his wife’s cup of joy, but finds out afterwards that he is only a tiy in it.—Atcht•on Globe. 80 many people become silly in trying tc • funny.—Atchison Globe.

PILLS will give you prompt reiki and certain cure. ^Ifyou have neglected your case a loaf time, you bad better take alee. It will remove all Impurities that have been accumulating in your Mood and will greatly strengthen your nerves. Am wti ~“wsyr,

— — - MI ML Eight Subordinate Chiefs of the Kwangski Rebellion Beheaded at Wu Chow, China. TIE EXECUTION HADE A SAU OCCASION. , Disastrous Typhoons, Sand Storms and Floods, Accompanied by Tearful Ixms of Ufa, la Japan—Ufa Insurant* la Aha Uttar Country Proving Disastrous to Xnsurar and Insured. Vancouver, B. C., Oct. 31.—According to the latest mail advices from. China, eight subordinate leaders of the Kwangski rebellion have been beheaded at Wu Chow.’ They were carried in baskets through the principal streets as a warning spectacle, amidst the laughter and jeers of men, women and children. Tan Thousand Witness as. Ten thousand people witnessed the decapitation, and made it a gUa day. Little children copied their parents, who joked at the dying rebels a second ' before the ax fell. When all was over the children played among the headless, bleeding corpses, and made sport with the black, disfigured heads. Cb lid ran Rout pod Among tba Ghastly Remates. Mandarins and headmen improvised a sort of Maypole, and the heads of the rebels were placed on top in tiers, the cnildren dancing around them. The governor advised the mandarins to make the beheading as festive as possible. so as to inspire disgust for the rebels in the hearts of the people. A banquet was afterwards spread. Disastrous Typhoons In Jspan. Vancouver, B. Oct. 21.—Disastrous typhoons, sand storms and floods have caused a fearful loss of life and property in the orient. In the district watered by the River Ki ng, in Japan, hundreds of villages have been swept away, aud 2,000 people have been drowned.

* Another report says 230 towns are tinder water. Thousands of refugees are flocking to the cities. Overt* I hvnwnd Pwtpt*' Drowned. The Ishikari river has also overflowed, drowning over 1,000 people. Seven prefectures were destroyed. In a terrible typhoon off Formosa, happening the same time as the floods,, great damage to shipping was done. At Temani eight junks were wrecked aud 100 lives lost. Twelve junks were driven to sea and lost. The steamer Kensi Xlaru was piled up on shore. Inprotitable life iMunnro In Japan. Vancouver, 11. €., Oct. 21.—The ,Hyogo (Japan) News says that with the excepfion of the Meiji Teikuku and llyosai Life Insurance Co., every life insurance company in Japan is in difficulties owing to basing their actuary tables too closely on British and Americans lines. None of them can even pay their bills. Every two or three months, owing to the enormous disaster- involving great loss of life, an insurance company suspends paving. As there is no system of deposit* ing guarantees with the government, holders or heirs lose the benefit, and extensive frauds are suggested. SITUATION AT MANILA. Ballnln Ported by the War Department Giving Portions of n Dlspateli Received by Gen. Miles. Washington, Oct. 21.—The war department has posted the following bulletin: .

L nuer ante or Wednesday, uen. uus cabled the war department the “situation in Luzon somewhat improved. Influence of Filipinos of education and property not desiring independent government, but hostile to Spain, gaining ascendancy in revolutionary councils. Promising nothing, but enforceing the law. Complications seriously affect inter-island commerce and diminish revenue. Affairs progressing favorably, though sick report increasing, owing mostly to carelessness of enlisted men. Health of officers good. Condition of city and facilities for quartering troops improving. Fertr decreasing. Intestinal troubles about the same. Many slight ailments; small-pox apparently arrested. During the month SS deaths—eight small-pox; eight typhoid fever; five malaria) and intestinal complaints; three accidental.” Gen. Otis cabled* considerably more than the above, but the department does not deem it advisable to make the other portions of the dispatch public, because of its bearing upon the peace negotiations. It contains suggestions by Geg. Otis regarding the disposition of the Philippines, and also information about the insurgents. ItlfcofMvd Acting as a Spjr ud Ftcd. Vancouver, IL C., Oct. 21.—Ivan Kraus, an officer of the Uussian army at Port Arthur, China, who arrived here on board of the Empress of Japan as a stowaway, has ■- been arrested. Kraus was discovered making maps sad plans and fortifications at Port Arthur and fled. MASSACRED B t CHINESE. A Freach HlulMWjr and Several Chinee* Cet hoik* Maaeeered or ttorned to Death at fat-L*a(. • Paric, Oct. 21.—At the cabinet meetJi| the minister of foreign affairs, SL Dcica&se, read a dispatch from the French minister at Pekin. M. Gerard, announcing that a French missionary and several Chinese Catholics have been massacred or burned to death in a chapel at Pak Lung by a riotous mob. M. Gerard immediately demand jd reparation.

— CUBAN EVACUATION. (ft Kay Not bn Brought About mm Early a* Hoped for Owing to tho Enormity of the Task. Washington. Oct. 22.—It is now cer* tain that the complete evacuation of Cuba will be delayed beyond the period originally fixed by the administration. This will follow entirely without reference to anything that has occurred in Paris before the Paris peace commission. The war department haa about satisfied itself that the task imposed upon the Spanish authorities, namely, the removal and transportation to a great distance by sea of about 120,000 soldiers, sick and well, with their accoutrements was beyond the ability of the Spaniards, The magnitude of the task is shown by the fact that the great trans-atlantic steam lines crossing the Atlantic from New York, all combined, in prosperous seasons, transport only about 50,000 persons in one year—less than half the number that the Spanish officials, with their poor facilities were expected to transport in about ten weeks. Delay in the evacuation of Cuba will cause a delay in the relinquishment of sovereignty by the Spaniards over the , entire island, which was set for Decern- j ber 1. It is hardly deemed prudent to undertake to assume to take charge of the municipal affairs of Havana so long as the city contains a strong garrison of Spanish troops, and it Is felt that law and order could be better maintained in such centers by allowing them to remain under Spanish j jurisdiction until they are evacuated | by the troops and reoccupied by .UnitI ed States troths. BIG HOOSIER FAMILIES. --- i UtoroTrrin Marie by the Howard County (Ind.) Truant OBcer While Hunting for ••Hooklea.” ' I Kokomo, Ind., Oct. 22.—This week I Truancy Officer J. W. Parsons, while j out skirmishing for “hookies” under i the new compulsory education law, I discovered three remarkably large families in Liberty township. One | family of 16 children of school age 1 was discovered in a small hovel, all of ; the barefooted and almost naked j andgstarved. They were equipped by

xinr irusiw auu wui w muuui. iuc family of John Trover is the largest on record, comprising 40 children of school age, Mr. Trover being the father of 32 and the stepfather of S. He has been three times married, and there are five sets of children in the family, the last two wives being widows with four children each by former husbands. The Troyers comprise the entire school district. Another large family is that of David Jones, president of the board of trustees of Greentown, he having 20 children. There are 79 souls in the three families. A VERDICT FOR GAGE. 4d Attempt to Compel the Secretary of the Treasury to Uraut Certatu Subscrip, ttoue Felled Judicially. Washington, Oct. 22.—Judge Cox, in the district supreme court, decided the cases of George B. Wight man and of Wm, H. Wharton, against Secretary Gage, in favor of the Secretary of the treasury. One suit sought an ini junction, and the other a mandamus, the basis of complaint in each being the rejection by the secretary of the treasury of bids submitted for the recent war loan oond issue by the complainants. Secretary Gage rejected the bids, believeing the bidders really represented certain institutions. Judge Cox held that, under the act of congress, the secretary of the treasury had discretion in the award of the bonds, and that the intent of congress was that they should go to individuals to the exclusion of banks and corporations.

A TELEGRAM FROM DEWEY. No Mention of the Capture of More Ship#, Iuorfent or Sp«nUh. by the Admiral. Washington, Oct. 22.—A telegram Mas received by the secretary of the navy yesterday from Admiral Dewey at Manila saying that the collier Nero arrived at Taku, on the 16th, with her coal on fire, and suggesting that *as he has no further use for the vessel, she be sent home. Admiral Dewey said nothing with regard to the political situation in the Philippines,or the capture of any more ships belonging either to the Spaniards or to the in* vurgents. A SOLDIER MURDEkED. Sergeant-Major Catrto Mel on of the Third Alabama. Murdered aad Robbed at Montgomery, Ala. . Nashville, Tenn., Oct. 22.—A special to the Danner from Montgomery, Ala^ says; About three o’clock this morning Calvin McCou, sergeant-major bf the Third Alabama regiment, was found dead on Jackson street, lie had been shot, the ball entering the left ear. He was seen Thursday with considerable money on his person, and when found his pockets had been cut out and the money was gone. The coroner is investigating. Aa AmnK*uiMl Kracked Botweoa Franc* aad Kaclaad la th* Fashed* Matter Paris, Oct. 22.—While the newspapers here—and, judging from the English dispatches, the London journals as well—are full of the most sensational stories about preparations on both sides of the channel for war about this wretched Fsshoda business, the fact remains that an arrangement has been reached between the two countries in connection with the matter, in xm sequence of which there was a very sharp rally on the money market, both here and in London, before business sJoscd for the dav vMterday

(XU ID OmCIALS. The Civil Service Commission Sends Out a Hint to Members Examining Boards. INSTRUCTIONS OF 1886 STILL HOLD. The Commission Believes that the Best Interests of the Service will be Promoted by Non-Participation of All Members ot Its Boards of Examiners in Conven. tlons or Other Political Work. Washington, Oct. 22.—The civil service commission has issued a circular which is being sent to the 700 boards of examiners throughout the country on the “political activity ol i federal officers and employes.” InstmeUnas of <)alr 1*. 1986. . It calls attention to extracts fron. the executive instructions of July 14, 1S96, which, the circular says, are stui j in force and which are republished ; for the information and guidance of j all officers and employes in the executive civil service. The circular then says: Nelthmr Revoked Nor Modified. “The postmaster general, in a letter ! dated August S, 1S98, stated that the j order of the president, above quoted, has neither been revoker or modified, j “Those who enter the classified service upon the ground of ascertained j merit, as established by the civil serv- j ice rules, and are protected therein, ] should be quick to recognize the j reciprocal regulations thereby im- j posed and avoid any action which now, or at any future time, could reasonably be subject to adverse criticism. A Broad Hint. “The commission believes that the best interests of the service will be j promoted by the non-participation of j all members of its boards of examin- | ers in political conventions or in the j work of political committees. “While attendance at a political convention as a delegate, or membership j upon a political committee, is not in ! itself a violation of the civil service j rules, the commission holds that all j partisan activity if sufficient to im- j p\*r usefulness as a representative of j the civil service commission, is sufti-' cient to cause removal from membership on any of its boards of examin- ] ers.

Another section y^otco. “Section 2 of the civil service act oi January 16, 1SS3, provides that no person in the public service ‘has any right to use his official authority or influence to coerce the political action oi any person or body.* ’* THE PUBLIC LANDS. Statement Showing the Present Area ot Unappropriated and Unreserved Public Lau<ls largely lu the Desert. Washington, Oct. 22.—A statement prepared at the general land office shows that at the present time there are 579,368,374 acres of unappropriated and unreserved land in the United States, exclusive of Alaska. Of this area, 546,549,655 acres, or more than 94 per cent.,are in the 13 so-called desert land states and territories. Of the vacant lands in these states and territories it is estimated that 332,176,000 acres are of a character that may be denominated as “desert,” under the law providing for the disposal of desert lands; that is, lands that do not produce native grasses in sufficient quantities to make an ordinary crop of hay in usual seasons if unfed by grazing animals, and lands, which, without irrigation, do not contain sufficient moisture to produce a natural ! growth of trees, or make an agricultural crop of any kind in amount to make the cultivation thereof reasonably remunerative.

THE BATTLE OF TRAFALGAR. I ?- Exceptional Interact Taken In the Celebration of the AnnlTerenrr of Kelaon'i Great Victory In London. London, Oct. 22.—Exceptional interest was taken in the celebration of the anniversary’of the battle of Trafalgar, on October 21, 1S05, when the British fleets under Admiral Nelson, gained a brilliant victory over the .fleets of France and Spain, commadded by Admiral Villeneuve. The cause of this inj creased outburst of patriotism here is the dispute with France over the Fashoda question, which, in some quarters is looked upon as a matter that may possibly bring about war between the two countries. The Nelson column on Trafalgar square was profusely decorated and entwined with a chain of laurel leaves, while laurel festoons hung froin each corner of the capital to the lions at the base, which was elaborately embellished with’anchors, wreaths, flags and evergreens, with a background of crimson ! cloth. There were also floral shields in ! each corner, inscribed with Nelson’s great victories. “St. Vincent." “Camperj down." “The Nile” and “Trafalgar.” The morning was showery and misj ty. but many hundreds of people were t present to cheer the hoisting of the Union Jack on the top of the pedestal it eight o’clock. Secured Additional Space. Paris, Oct. 22.—When Ferdinand W. j Peck, the United States commissioner to the exhibition of 1900, arrived in 1 this city, the space allotted to the I United States at the exposition grounds was 175,000 feet. Mr. Peck’s first gain was 6,000 square feet, and ha has just secured 23,000 square feet , more, by means of a direct order from ! the French government on the director of the exposition, making the present total 203,000 squareTect. Germany has 150.000 square feet. It is not known yet how much space has been allotted to England or Russia

WITHOUT FOUNDATION, Rot Believed In Faria that the Faahoda Dispute W ill Lead to an Open Kept ere. Paris. Oct. 24.—A semi-official not* issued last evening says: “There is no foundation for the alarmist rumors regarding the relations, between France and Great Britain. It is equally incorrect to say that extraordinary measures have been taken at any of our naval ports.” The Fashoda yellow book is voluminous, but it does not include Maj. Marchdnd’s report, which will be published later. The dispatches were lai-gely anticipated by the English Fashoda blue book. A Carious Kntlpttvor on the French Side The diplomatic conversations recorded show a curious endeavor on the French side to represent that Marchand’s mission was quite as important as Gen. Kitchener’s, on the ground that the struggle was against the khalifa and barbarism. Did Not Retard Bnglnad’s Claim as Apply 1 up to Fashoda. On September 18 M. Delcasse, the foreign minister, informed the British ambassador to France, Sir Edmond Monson, in explicit language, that France did not regard Lord Salisbury's claim to the Soudan by virtue of conquest as applying to Fashoda, on the ground that the Marchand expedition went to the relief of the French expedition under Capt. Licotard, which dated from a period long ; before the declaration in the house of I commons by Sir Edward Gray, under , secretary of state for foreign affairs in Lord Rosebery’s cabinet, as to the policy of the British government to- ; ward the Soudan and at a time when I the equatorial provinces were lost to j civilization. In fact, M. Delcasse ar- | gued, unless Great Britain possessed ! the sultan's mandate as well as the khedive’s to acquire all former Egyp- ! tian provinces. France considered her- ! self equally entitled with England to possession of any point occupied by French officers.’ Marchand K«*ched Fashoda Flr*t.. I Judging from the yellow book patches the foregoing represents the French standpoint, ■atul M. Delcasse contends that as Marchand reached Fashoda first, England has no right to demand an evacuation of Fashoda priar to negotiations.

Demand Equivalent to an Fltliuatum. { On September 30 M. Delcasse declared to Sir Edmond Monson that such a demand should be equivalent to an ultimatum, and while he could afford to sacrifice France’s material interests so long as her honor was intact, for the sake of Anglo-French entente, no one could doubt what .would be the reply of France to such a demand. The Captor* of Khartoum. Entities' Egypt to AU the Stahdrs Dominion. The subsequent dispatches appearing in the yellow book relate to conversations between Baron de Courcel, French ambassador in London, and Lord Salisbury, the latter contending that the capture of Khartoum entitled Egyqt to possession3 of allthe madi's dominions, and the Freneh ambassador arguing that Maj. Marchand had captured Fashoda before Gen. Kitchener took Khartoum, and that France had for a long time held several posts in the Bahr-El-Gazal. French Force Too Weak to Constitute on Effective Occupation. Lord Salisbury retorted that the French forces in the regions referred to were too weak to constitute effective occupation. A final dispatch, dated October 12, fiom Baron de Courcel to M. Delcasse records a conversation with Lord Salisbury, in which the French ambassador claimed access to the Nile through the Bahr-El-Gazal, and asked an equitable delimitation of the respective spheres of interests of the two powers, to which Lord Salisbury indicated that it would be necessary for him to consult his colleagues.

THREATENS TO RESIGN. Turbulent Scene* In th* Capital of Cuba —Tendered Ills Kcatenation—Complaint Against Chinchilla. Madrid. Oct. 24.—Lieut.-Gen. Correa* minister of war, threatens to resign unless the government upholds the action of Gen. Chinchilla* captain-gen-eral of Madrid, who last week imprisoned Senor Figuerea, editor of El National, for publishing an article not previously submitted to the censor— the imprisonment being resented in certain quarters as an infringement of Figuerea’s alleged immunity from arrest as a member of the chamber of deputies. Senor Gamazo, on Friday last, tendered his resignation as minister of public instructions and public works’ as a protest against the arrest of Senor Figuerea. His recognition, taken with the threat of Gen. Correa, indicates a radical division of sentiment in the Sagasta ministry on the subject. The Madrid newspapers, according to a cabinet dispatch of Friday, have oddressed a complaint to the supreme court of Madrid against Gen. Chinchilla’s action. The captain-general, on the appe^ance of the uhcensored article, ordered the suppression of El Nacional, but the suspension order was eventually annulled. U*«eTat«c of Uw U«rman Emperor mad Kiuprem by tb« Saltan. Constantinople, Oct. 34.—Emperor William has designed a marble fountain which he proposes to erect in Constantinople as a gift to commemorate his visit and that of Empress Victoria to the sultan’s capital. The departure of their German snajesties Saturday evening was marked with great ceremony. The sultan took a most cordial leave of his imperial guests on the steps of the palace. All the Turkish vessels were dressed and manned, and the Germans exchanged salutes with the shore fort*.

Beware of Ointment* to* CatanB That Coatalm M«rcwr> as.mercury will surely destroy the sense <4 smell and completely derange the whole eye* tern when entering it through the mucou* surfaces. Such articles should never be used except on prescriptions from reputabie K physicians, as the damage they will do is often ten fold to the good you can possibly derive from than. Hall’s Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo 0.. contains no mercury, and is taken inter* Bally, acting directly upon the blood and mucous surtaces of the system. In buying Hall’s Catarrh Cure be sure you get thegen uine. It is taken internally, and made in Toledo, Ohio, by F. J. Cheney & Co. Test* Oonials free. Sold by Druggists, price 75c per bottle. Hall’s Family Pills are the best. Advice Quickly Taken. Physician—You are living too high. Patient—That’s soj I’ve got to get a cheaper doctor.—N. Y. Vim. Free Homes in Western Florid*. There are about 1,000,000 acres of Government land in Northwest Florida, subject to homestead entry, and about half as much cagain of railroad lands for sale at very low rates. These lands are on or near the line of the Louisville & Nashville Railroad, anq Mr. R. J. Wemyss, General Land Commissioner, Penihfeola, will be glad to write yoq all about them. If you wish .to go down and look at them, the Louisville « Nashville Railroad provides the wav and the opportunity on the first and third Tuesday of each month, with excursions at only $2 over one fare, for round-trip tickets. Write Mr. C. P. Atmore, General Passeager Agent. Louisville, Ky., for particulars. Woman. Lovely Woman. Matti^-yThat Idiotic young Softleigh had the audacity to propose to me last night! Helen—Did he, really! I always thought he was a 'ittle off in the upper story, but I had no idea he was as bad as that.—Chicago Evening News. A mixed pain has bruise and sprain. St. Jacobs Oil cures the twain. Beauty is like a cooking stove—no good it the fuel gives out.—Chicago Daily News. Scrofula Cured Sore on Hlo Limb Had Troubled Him for Years. “I had a bad case of scrofula, and there was a sore on one of my limbs which troubled me for three or four years. I saw Hood's Sarsaparilla so highly recommended for scrofula that I began taking it, and it has completely cured me. 1 am sound and well.’* Clares as L. Delaney, Waller, 11L Hood’s Sarsaparilla ; Is America's Greatest Medicine, ft; six for gk Hood’s Pills euro sick headacha 25c.

You’d rather have an Estey Organ of course, but you only have so much money. How much ? Write and tell us. Estey Organ Co., Brattle boro, Vt. TAPE WORMS MA tape worn eighteen feet lone d least came on the scene after my taking two CASCAKETS. This I am sure has caused nay had health for the past three years. 1 am still taking Cascarets. the only cathartic worthy of notice by sensible people ’* Gso w. Botrus, Baird. Maaa CANDY r m. ^ CATHARTIC

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