People's Pilot, Volume 4, Number 5, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 20 July 1894 — Page 2
The People’s Pilot RENSSELAER, t t t INDIANA.
The News Condensed.
Important Intelligence From All Part*. CONGRESSIONAL. Regular Session. ©N the 11th the senate adopted Senator Daniel's resolution commending the course of the president In the railway strike and denouncing as treason the acts of the men who were practically levying war against the United States. An amendment favoring arbitration was defeated by a vote of 11 to 35. The diplomatic and consular, the invalid pension and the military academy appropriation bills were passed. ....In the house the land grant forfeiture bill arss passed. The measure will restore 54,000,•800 aores to the public domain. Ik the senate the army and the fortifications j»ppropriation bills were passed on the 12th «hd some progress was made on the river and harbor bi 11.... In the house the senate amendments to the bill for the admission of Utah as a state were agreed to. This passes the bill and it goes to the president. On the 18th the river and harbor appropriation bill and a bill for the construction of a Thridge across the Mississippi river at Dubuque, jla., were passed In the senate.... In the house ♦he report of the conferrees on the pension appropriation bill was agreed to. The evening aession was devoted to the consideration of private pension bills. In the senate on the 14th the time was occupied in discussing the legislative, executive and Judicial appropriation bi 11.... In the house a bill was introduced providing for a national ■board of arbitration to be appointed by the president to settle disputes. A bill to create a retired list for officers of the revenue marine service was discussed and eulogies of the late G. W. Houk, of Ohio, we e pronounced. On the 16th the legislative, executive and judicial and the District of Columbia appropriation bills were passed In the senate and •the agricultural appropriation bill was considered .... In the house a resolution was adopted indorsing the action of the president and the administration in suppressing lawlessness In connection with the railway strike. The Bailey bankruptcy bill was considered.
DOMESTIC. Publishers of tlie city directory for 1894, which was being distributed, estimated Chicag'o’s population at 1,685,©OO persons. At Brazil, Ind., four men and boys were found guilty of murdering Engineer Barr and were sentenced to two years’ imprisonment each. At a meeting of laboring men in ■New York Henry George made a bitter attack on President Cleveland for sending federal troops into Illinois. Winfred Smith, a wealthy young man, cut the throat of Western B. Thomas, a prominent man of Anderson, Ind., at Brighton Beach, a resort near Indianapolis. President Cleveland, it was said, would appoint a committee to inquire Into the railway strike and recommend Snethods for settling it. Mike Stapleton, aged 30 years, committed suicide at Lenoir, N. C., by drinking seventeen bottles of Jamaica ginger. Railroad managers report an unusually large corn crop everywhere. It will require two years to move it to market.
At New Haven, Conn., Frank A. Dame, a painter, shot Miss Mary G. Perry because she refused to marry turn and then killed himself. Chicago workmen were slow to respond to the order fora general strike, less than 16,000 in all having quit work. Alien miners near Uniontown, Pa., ■threatened to kill the imported negro laborers and a general uprising was feared. At Asbury Park. N. J., the National Educational association elected Prof. Nicholas Murray Butler, professor of philosophy in Columbia college, as president. The cost to the United States of putting down the railway strike in the west was estimated by government officials at fully 81,000,000. L. D. Alexander & Co., commission merchants in New York, failed, with liabilities of §200,000 and assets of $50,©OO less. Thirty evangelical denominations were represented in the Christian Endeavor convention in Cleveland, O. The attendance was very large. It was estimated that thousands of acres of grain in Minnesota and the Dakotas had been ruined by excessive beat. In a collision of freight trains near Chicago two deputy United States marshals were killed and two others seriously hurt.
Fire almost entirely destroyed the Tillage of Edon, an Ohio town of 800 inhabitants. Eighty buildings were burned. There were 237 business failures in the United States in the seven days «nded on the 18th, against 164 the week previous and 374 in the corresponding time in 1893. The Great Northern Express company was robbed of $511,600 at Wickes, Mont. The exchanges at the leading clearing houses in the United States during the week ended on the 13th aggregated <885,545,777, against $852,566,087 the previous week. The decrease, compared with the corresponding week in 1898, was 11.7. The Kentucky state treasury was announced to be bankrupt and payment was refused on all warrants. Patrick Eugene Prendergast was banged in Chicago for the murder of Carter H. Harrison on the night of October 28 last; Tom and Calvin Corley, -brothers, who slew a Jewish peddler! were hanged at Louisburg, N. C.; Richard Pierce, a wife murderer, paid the extreme penalty at Cape May. N. J.; Jim Galloway and Joe Woodley, who billed Ed Grant, were executed at Montgomery, Ala.; Robert A. Anderson was hanged at Livingston, Mont., for murdering Emanuel Fleming, and John H. Osneswas hanged at Fort Renton, Mont., for the murder of Ole Lilledall. Herbert and Arthur Rudd, young m>ns of J. J. Budd, were drowned while swimming in the river at Burlington, la. Masked men took a negro named "William Bell, alias Drew, from his borne near Clarksville, Tenn., and rid4!ed him with bullets for burning <barns.
The executive committee of the American Federation of Labor and the representatives of other national organizations in session in Chicago decided against ordering a general strike in support of the American Railway union. The conference also decided against local sympathetic strikes by the trades unions, and requested the members of the organizations already out to return to their places. George M. Pullman raa ie public a statement in New York in which he explained his refusal to arbitrate difficulties with his employes, fie said he was running his shops at a loss and merely for the benefit of his men, and because they were refused more money they struck. E. V. Debs, president of the American Railway union, addressed to the General Managers’ association in Chicago a proposition that he would declare the strike off if the roads would take back into their employ the men on strike, except those who engaged in violations of the law. The railway managers decided that as they had never recognized Debs they could not take any notice of his communication. They also announced that they would manage their properties hereafter independent of labor unions. Thirteen men, including an aiderman and superintendent of the waterworks, were arrested at Ladd, 111., for conspiracy and burglary. New Berlin, a thrifty Illinois village, was almost destroyed by fire, which was attributed to burglars.
Agitator Phelan, who interfered with trains at Cincinnati, was sentenced to six months' imprisonment by a federal judge. Judge Barrett, of New York, granted an order admitting Erastus Wiraan to $30,000 bail. The percentages of the baseball clubs in the national league for the week ended or the 14th were: Baltimore, .672; Boston, .667; New York, .597: Pittsburgh, .565; Brooklyn, .556; Philadelphia, .548; Cleveland, .538; Cincinnati, .470; St. Louis, .429; Chicago, .373; Louisville. .328: Washington, .275. Two children of Charles Carlston, one 6 and the other 4 years old, were killed by a passenger train at Bordentovvn, N. J. Prairie fires in South Dakota on the ceded lands burned over a tract 50 by 90 miles and the Russian settlement on Yellow Medicine creek was wiped out.
The wife and four children of William Trusty were drowned at Lead Hill. Ark. Satisfied that the strike was over the General Managers’ association adjourned sine die in Chicago after auditing a number of bills. It was estimated that the strike cost the railroad companies in Chicago alone from $5,000,000 to $8,000,000. The president of the American Railway union declared that the strike was still on and that soon the railways would be tied up again. In her trial trip at Boston the cruiser Minneapolis made 28.05 knots an hour, breaking all records and earning a premium of $400,000 for her builders. Forest fires did great damage in the vicinity of Bradford, Pa., several million feet of hemlock being burned. A marshal’s posse overtook Longview bank robbers at Eagle Town, I. T., and three of the band were killed. The safe, containing $12,000, stolen from the Great Northern Express company was found in the bed of a mountain creek near Wickes, Mont. The exports of merchandise for the year ended June 30 were $892,111,280 and the imports were $654,835,873. At Waltham, Mass., Julian P. Bliss lowered the mile bicycle record to 1:54 4-5 with flying start, and 2:00 with standing start. The homes of James Butler and John Carter at Steelton, Pa., were wrecked by dynamite. They had taken the places of men on strike. Mail from the east which had been delayed for seven days reached San Francisco by way of Seattle. Animated by jealousy Robert Logan shot and killed Dan Lordock and Fred Sullivan in a stage coach in Nevada, and was in turn killed by his wife, whose life he had threatened. Commonweal b:rs encamped in the vicinity of Washington were in dire straits for food and desertions were daily taking place. An area of more than 5,000 acres in the vicinity of Egg Ilarbor, N. J., was swept by forest fires. It was believed that congress would adjourn not later than August 11. All important legislation, with the exception of the tariff, was out of the way. S. M. Walker and his two sons were drowned near Burlington, la., while bathing. Twenty dwellings were destroyed by fire in San Francisco and two little sons of E. Leidecker were burned to death.
The president of the American Railway union said on the 16th that he would not concede that the strike was lost at Chicago, and that it would be carried on with renewed vigor at points west of the Mississippi river. The railway managers announced that all trains w’ere running on schedule time. By an explosion in Chicago of an ammunition chest belonging to battery F of the Second artillery from Fort Riley, Kan., four soldiers were instantly killed, eighteen other people. soldiers, and spectators, were wounded and nine artillery horses were killed. Edwin Tkaughbeb (colored) was lynched by a mob near Adairville, Ky. The cause was unknown. Rkckiveus were appointed for the umbrella trust by Judge Gildersleeve, of New York, the liabilities being estimated at $1,200,000. Sevi,n men Were killed and a score wounded as the result of an attack by strikers on colored miners at Pratt's. Ala. Miscreants loosened a rail on the Grand Trunk at Battle Creek, Mich., wrecking the Atlantic express, and the fireman was killed aud fourteen persons were injured. Richard W. Woodward, of Marshalltown, Pa., claims to be heir to property in the heart of New York city worth $400,000,000.^
Count Rybtlowski's 1 oli ,h commonwealers were expelled from Toledo, 0., by the authorities, aud on returning were put in jail. Mbs. Polly Hoch, aged 82, was burned to death while smoking a pipe at her home in Winamac, Ind. The Chippewa Indians at a grand pow-wow held near Fond du Lac, Wis., chose Aunimosson to be head chief of all the Chippewas. A bolt of lightning struck the steamship Mexico at Algiers, La., and injured twelve persons besides killing Peter Thompson. Steamship agents in New York say the steerage rate war now on has created a rush of foreigners to their homes and the labor market will thus be relieved. PERSONAL AND POLITICAL. Nominations for congress were made as follows: Ohio, Fifth district, J. L. Snook (dem.); Sixth, J. L. Stevens (dem.); Twentieth, C. B. Beach (rep.). Indiana, Third district, S. M. Stockslager (dem.). Georgia, Third district, Charles F. Crisp (dem.), renominated. Mississippi, Third district, T. C. Catchings (dem.), renominated. George R. Graham, founder of Graham’s Magazine, died at Orange, N. J., at the age of 81 years. John Comby Birdsell, Sr., of South Bend, Ind., inventor of the clover huller, died at New Carlisle, Ind., where he was visiting, aged 79 years. Col. V. W. Warner, of Clinton, was nominated for congress by the republicans of the Thirteenth Illinois district on the 620th ballot. Tiie prohibitionists in state convention at Weirs, N. H., nominated Rev. D. C. Knowles,' treasurer of Tilton seminary, for governor, and Dr. Edgar L. Carr, of Pittsfield, and David fieald, of Milford, for congress. Nathaniel D. Wallace, of New Orleans, a member of congress in 1886-’B7 from the Second Louisiana district, died at Asheville, N. C., aged 48 years. South Dakota prohibitionists put a ticket in the field headed by M. D, Alexander for governor.
FOREIGN. Fire destroyed 400 houses at Lovete, Hungary, and six persons perished. The Palais d’Ete theater, recently opened in Brussels, was destroyed by fire, the loss being 1,000,000 francs. Miss Marie Schroeder, daughter of an American millionaire, was married to Count Pompeo Fieri at Rome. Twenty Spanish fishing boats out during a recent storm were missing, and seventeen men were known to have perished. Fears were entertained that Explorer Wellman and his polar expedition party had been lost in the ice above Spitzbergen. Thirteen men and women working in a field at Delno, Prussia, were killed by lightning. The spread of cholera was causing alarm in Germany and strict measures were being taken at the frontiers to keep out the pest. The recent earthquake shocks near Constantinople killed over 200 persons and damaged property to the extentof $25,000,000 Two Mexicans so fiercely resisted arrest at El Paso, Tex., that Sheriff T. A Bendy was compelled to kill them. Viceroy Chang Ghismung’s new gun factory at Ilansan. China, was destroyed by fire, involving a loss of over j a million taels. | The cholera epidemic was assuming alarming proportions in Russia, the present visitation being of a much more intense and fatal character than were the outbreaks of the two previi ous years. LATER. Senator George introduced a joint resolution in the United States senate on the 17th for an amendment to the constitution providing that eight hours shall constitute a legal day’s work for persons doing manual labor. The agricultural appropriation bill was discussed and an amendment appropriating $1,000,000 for the destruction of the Russian thistle was adopted. In the house the Bailey voluntary banki ruptcy bill was passed and the remainder of the day was devoted to business reported from the judiciary : committee. j The New York constitute ' convention decided by a vote of , to to let the present jury system sta ~d. j A Northern Pacific locomotive attached to a passenger train was j wrecked near Missoula, Mont., by dynamite, which had been placed on the track. Three railroad bridges were also burned. | Crops were in need of rain throughout the northern states. In lowa and Wisconsin corn was in a critical condition.
| Three sisters, Emma Faber, aged 20; Mary Faber, aged 18, and Dorothy Faber, aged 4, were drowned while bathing near Nananimo, B. C. Forest fires in New Jersey obliterated the village of Greenbush. The residents, aware of their danger, had driven their stock to a place of safety. Oscar E. Varda man, a Chicago stock yards engineer, was attacked by strikers and fired into their midst, fatally wounding Albert Miles. Dynamite, which was being dealt out in a mine at Stockton, Pa., exploded, tearing eight men to pieces. President Debs, Vice President Howard and Director Rogers, of the A. R. U., were arrainged for contempt in violating an injunction of the federal court in Chicago and committed to jail in default of bail. A break in the ranks of the Pullman strikers was reported, 150 track graders being put to work at their request. I The following' congressional nominations were reported: Illinois, Eleventh district, R. R. Gibbons (dem.) Fourteenth, J. V. Graff (rep.). Fifteenth, Col. B. F. Marsh (rep.), renominated; Twentieth, Rev, W. C. Willey (pro.). Ohio. Twelfth district, D. K. Watson (rep.); Seventeenth, A. S. McClure (rep.). Kansas, Fourth district, T. J. O’Neal (dem.) Missouri, Fourth district, W. S Messener (pop.). Indiana. Tenth district, William Johnson (rep.). Georgia, ‘ First district, R. E. Lester (dem.)
DEBS GOES TO JAIL
With Three of His Lieutenants the Labor Leader Is Locked Up. They Are Held to Answer to the Charges of Contempt of Coart—Declining to furnish Bail They Are Sent to Prison. BEHIND THE BABS. Chicago, July 18. —Four of the principal officers of the American Railway union are in the county jail, where they will probably remain until next Monday. They were in the United States circuit Tuesday charged' with contempt in refusing to obey the injunction restraining interference with interstate commerce traffic, and elected to be locked up rather than give $3,000 bail for appearance. The ’prisoners are:
Eugene V. Debs, president of the American Railway union. George W. Howard, vice president of the American Railway union. Sylvester Keliher, secretary of the American Railway union. L. W. Rogers, director of the American Railway union.
Before they were committed there was a legal controversy in court. Information against them had been filed by United States District Attorney Milchrist charging them with violations of the orders of the court, and producing telegrams and copies of orders by Mr. Debs to show that he and his associates had openly and repeatedly violated the injunction, and that they were, therefore, guilty of contempt and liable to punishment for their acts. The bill of information first reviewed the character of the American Railway union, alleging that it was an organization formed in such manner that one of its objects was by united strikes to cripple and paralyze commerce by rail. After the issuance of the federal injunction, so runs the bill, the association continued the organization of branch assemblies for the purpose of accomplishing what had been forbidden by the United States court. Further, the union had issued orders to employes of the Illinois Central and those of other roads with the object of hindering trains engaged in interstate commerce and the transportation of United States mails.
District Attorney Milchrist was accompanied in court by Edwin Walker, who made the original presentation to the court as to the facts alleged by the government, and the district attorney read the text of the information. Judge Seaman, of Milwaukee, presided,and E. S. Gregor}' and W. W. Erwin represented the defendants, all of whom appeared in court in the afternoon and listened to the arguments on the question of their commitment.
Mr. Debs’ attorneys asked for a continuance of the hearing for ten days in order to allow them time to prepare a proper answer to the information and oossibly to test the question of jurisdiction. Mr. Gregory called attention to the fact that the defendants are already under bonds for appearance in court, and declared that it would be a hardship for them to give additional security’ for appearance. Mr. Walker desired a prompt hearing of the case upon its merits. Judge Seaman said he would set the hearing for Monday. Upon th • question of bail he added that the court was disposed to fix only a limited sum in view of the fact that the defendants are under bonds, and he said that he would make the bond $3,000 in each case. Mr. Debs and Mr. Rogers were holding a whispered consultation when the clerk of the court addressed the president and asked him if he was prepared to give bail for himself and his companions. Mr. Debs’ reply was that they had decided not to give bail but to go to jail and await the advice of attorneys as to future action. Their declination to furnish bail was based on the ground that they were already under bonds of SIO,OOO each to answer to an indictment charging them with conspiracy, and that their bondsmen in the other cases had been so bitterly attacked by the press that they felt a great deal of hesitancy in asking any more citizens to go additional bail for them. Going up to the group in company with two of his deputies Marshal Arnold greeted the prisoners and arranged to take them from the government building to the county jail. At the jail there was the formality of a search of the prisoners, and then they were assigned to cells. Mr. Debs said he and his brother officers would remain in custody until Monday, and would not make any effort to secure release o ; habeas corpus. The court directed that all necessary opportunity be given for conference between the men and their attorneys, and the marshal was instructed not to deprive them of any of the privileges o| ordinary prisoners. Mr. Debs was surrounded by his friends in the lawyers’ cage in the county jail and said:
“This means a few days of rest and quiet, ■which I have not had for over a month and which I need. We are not posing as martyrs, nor are we asking for sympathy. We will remain in jail, while others outside will look after the strike. All I have to say about our arrest to-day is that matters have come to a point in this free country when it is held to be a crime to advise a man what to do when he seeks your advice. We are guilty of no crime unless the simple expression of an" opinion is a cr me. We are not responsible for this strike, neither is the American Railway union as a body responsible for it. George M, Pullman, by his absolute refusal to in any way arbitrate or have anything to do with the committee appointed by his oppressed employes, brought all this trouble upon himself and others. Down in Pullman were 4.200 persons living in slavery. They cried out for help: we investigated their cause and found it just and took it up. Pullman, by his obstinacy, did the rest.” Mr. Debs denied that the strike was over or that the strikers at Pullman or elsewhere were disposed to return to work. He said the people of Pullman would not agree to any terms without consulting the officers of the American Railway union. Then he said: ’‘As for Grover Cleveland, his name will go down in the annals of history as infamous. There will be a quiet revolution in tjiis country before long. It will be at the ballot box and the people will thea secure their rights.”
EIGHT TORN TO PIECES.
Terrible Result of an Explosion of Gian* Powder In a Mine. Hazelton, Pa., July 18 —Two hundred sticks of giant powder exploded in the midst ot a gang of miners at Stockton colliery No. 8, and not enough of the mens’ bodies was left for identification. On account of the distance of the Stockton colliery from the main breaker it has been customary to send the dynamite and other explosives in boxes to No. 8 and distribute them to the workmen at the bottom of the second shaft as they appear in the morning on their way to work. It was Charles O’DonnefiJs duty to distribute the dynamite and caps. The first men to go down into the shaft today were the drivers, and these were the only ones to return alive from the opening. How many men or who they were who followed in the next boat will not be known until a list of the living is taken. The drivers went into the stables to harness their mules, and it was while they were thus engaged that the explosion took place. Charles Shugert says he saw about a dozen men standing about O’Donnell receiving their powder a moment before the explosion took place. The drivers were hurled about promiscously. The men were paralyzed with fright, and, fearing that an explosion of gas had taken place and that a collapse of the entire mine was about to follow, they waited for death as though paralyzed. It was in this position that they were found by some miners from No. 2 who hastened through the subterranean passageways to No. 3. As soon as lights were seen the demoralized drivers hastened to the bottom of the shaft. There the terrible sight met their gaze. Strewn over the twisted and torn .timbers were fragments of human flesh and bones and limbs of the unfortunate miners. The men were too much affected to attempt to remove the remains of the dead.
Rescuing parties were quickly formed, and, headed by Superintendent Roderick, a corps of miners descended into the mine. The work of recovering the bodies was at once begun, but it was a difficult task. Fragments of human flesh were found some distance up the slope clinging to the rails and ties and sticking to the roof, while everywhere were bones and limbs. It is believed that at least a dozen men were blown to pieces.
The names of the victims as far as known are: Charles O’Donnell, aged 25, married; Andrew Jabol. aged 38, married: John Primbone, aged 22. single; John Koehleda aged 23, single; Anthony Morcaritz, aged 25, single: John Krinock. aged 28, married: John Motefeski, aged 44, married; John Brizzon, aged 25, single. After surveying the work of destruction Foreman Shugart emerged from the pit and instituted preparations for bringing the remains of the victims to the surface. The dismembered fragments were put together as well as possible at the bottom of the slope. After all had been arranged the hoisting to the surface commenced. In order that the feelings of the relatives might be spared it was arranged to hoist each box to the top of the tower and from there take them to their several homes. As each box appeared on the surface an agonizing wail went up from the multitude in waiting. Women tore their hair and shrieks of agony rent the air. The officials did everything possible to assuage their grief, but very little could be done.
FIRES IN THE FORESTS.
Northwestern Towns Threatened with Complete Destruction. Duluth, Minn., July 18.—Forest fires again threaten the destruction of thousands of dollars in pine and other property in northern Wisconsin and Minnesota. The long drought of the summer has produced its usual effect of forest and brush fires. In every direction dozens of villages are threatened. Duluth and Superior are enveloped in a cloud of smoke, and the fog whistles at the harbor entrance are kept blowing. All trains entering Duluth report fires all along the lines. Back of St. Louis, New. Duluth and FoDd du Lac the fires are unusually severe, and all these villages are threatened, though no destruction of life or property is as yet reported. Along the south shore of the lake in Wisconsin the fires can be seen rolling up great clouds of smoke. The damage there will be to-standing pine, as there are only a few scattered settlers. The suburbs of Superior also are threatened and serious trouble is expected there if rain does not fall soon. All along the Mesaba range, from the towns which were practically wiped out a little moie than a year ago when conditions were much as they are now, fires are reported, and also along the line of the Duluth & Winnipeg. There are about fifteen villages in this district and a sudden change of the wind to an unfavorable direction would leave them practically helpless. The loss so far reported is in damage done to the improvements of settlers and to standing pine. This last will be heavy but cannot yet be estimated. From Carlton and the adjacent villages on the liue of the Northern Pacific there are similar reports. The forest is burning all about them, but no great damage has been done. Hinckley on the line of the St. Paul & Duluth, which has been threatened for three days, is still in great danger.
BURNED A TOWN.
| Forest Fires Wipe Out the Village of Greenbush, N. J. New York, July 18. —Every previous fire in the history of the southern part of the state of New Jersey has been outdone by the ola'ze which is at present sweeping through the vine belt. There seems but little hope of stopping the liaines as yet. Early Tuesday morning the flames reached a point near the little hamlet of Greenbush. The village stood in a little , clearing in the pine belt, and the stacks of hay and the dry wooden , buildings proved even better food for j the elements than the woods around.
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