People's Pilot, Volume 4, Number 29, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 4 January 1895 — Page 2

The People’s Pilci RENSSELAER. t : INDIANA.

The News Condensed.

Important Intelligence From All Parts. DOMESTIC. THE state normal college for girls at Livingstone, one of the most prosperous institutions in Alabama, was burned. A HEAVY snowstorm raged from Nebraska to the Atlantic coast. EDWARD R. CARTER, for twenty-nine years a clerk in the National bank of commerce of New York, confessed to embezzling $30,000. WILLIAM S. WHITMAN, of Winooski, Vt., shot and killed his wife and two boys and then committed suicide. Domestic trouble was the cause. A. W. ALTON, of New Jerusalem, Tex., when arrested in New Orleans upon the charge of insanity said he was on the way to Washington to kill the president. EIGHTEEN persons were seriously injured in a collision between passenger trains at Waxahachie, Tex. ALIX failed in an effort to lower her record at Los Angeles, trotting a mile in 2:05½. The 2-year-old Directly paced a mile in 2:08. THE largest single mail ever brought across the Atlantic arrived in New York on the steamer Majestic. It was in 1,672 bags. ANNIE FREEZE, a 15-year-old girl, was abducted from the home of her grandfather near Hicksville, O., by unknown persons. EX-CAPT. STEPHENSON, of New York the first of the police officials convicted as a result of the Lexow investigation, was sentenced to three years and nine months imprisonment and fined $1,000. A MAIL pouch destined for Hartford and containing 600 letters was stolen from the depot platform at New Haven, Conn. DAN McDONALD and Will Carter (colered were lynched by a mob near Meridian, Miss., for killing Jacob Copp, aged 75 years. THE visible supply of grain in the United States on the 26th was: Wheat, 89,071,000 bushels; corn, 8,838,000 bushels; oats, 9,000,000 bushels; rye, 452,000 bushels; barley, 3,306,000 bushels. FIVE white boys were fatally burned in a suburb of Richmond, Va., by an explosion of gunpowder. WILLIAM BLAKESLEY, of Sacramento, Cal., supposed by his parents to be dead for thirty years, gladdened their hearts at Trenton, N. J., by letting them know he is alive.

Madeline Pollard’s attorneys propose to follow Breckinridge on his lecture tour and attach the receipts. State teachers' associations of Illinois, Wisconsin, lowa, Michigan, Indiana, Nebraska, South Dakota and Kansas held their annual meetings. A prairie fire swept over a large area in the southern part of “N" county, O. T., and a number of farmers lost everything they owned and barely escaped with their families. The old capitol building at Atlanta, Ga., was burned, the loss beingsloo,ooo. Alex VVilliambon and Will Perry, two young men living at Coalburg, Ala., fought for the hand of Nannie Bell and both were killed. The worst blizzard in years swept over the western and eastern states. Along the Massachusetts coast many ships were wrecked, causing great loss of life, and in the cities of Boston and New York much damage was done by the storm.

Burglars broke into -the home of Henry Fecker, at Piqua, 0., and carried off his saving's, amounting to $4,750. John W. Foster, ex-secretary of state, has consented to go to Japan to aid the Chinese representatives in bringing about peace. Farmers and robbers engaged in a desperate fight near Salem, 0., and two of the former were shot and one of the latter. The bank at Somonauk, 111., was entered by burglars, who robbed the safe of SB,IOO and a large amount of valuables. Joseph Bidwell and William Find, ley, farmers of Union county, were killed near Columbus, 0., by a PanHandle train. College presidents of Indiana and lowa decided to forbid intercollegiate football games. August Permontir shot and fatally wounded Miss Meister, the daughter of his landlady at New Castle, Pa., and Robert Charles, another boarder, and then blew out his own brains. He was insane. lowa attorneys met in Des Moines and organized a state bar association, A. J. McCreary, of Keokuk, was elected president.

Six horses and two mules were killed in Philadelphia by coming in contact with electric light wires blown down by a storm. The Illinois Teachers’ association will urge the legislature to erect another normal school in the northern part of the state. The women’s council of the Nine-, teenth Century’ club of Memphis,Tenn., voted to boycott Congressman Breckinridge’s lecture. There were 850 business failures in the United States in the seven days ended on the 28th, against 349 the week previous and 511 in the corresponding time in 1893. Nearly 2,000,000 feet of lumber and twenty loaded railway cars were destroyed by fire at Burlington, Vt, the loss being $150,000. Many farmers and merchants were financially ruined by the failure of the Citizens’ stock bank and Slater pavings bank at Slater. Mo. While eating Christmas dinner at the home of a friend in Rockford, 111., Henry R. Evans was taken ill and died within a few hours. The bddy of ex-Sheriff James R. Carry, who had died from some peculiar d isease. waa stolen from its grave »\ Greenwood, IndL

The dry goods and millinery firm of J. Lichtenstein Sc Sons, New York, failed for 8450,000. The president has approved the act to establish a national military park at the battlefield of Shiloh. Five men were killed and a number of others badly scalded by the explosion of a sawmill boiler at Bonayr, Ky. August Sieverding was stricken with paralysis at Galena, IIL, and fell across a buzz saw and his head and arm were severed. Jacob Shane, aged 55 years, a wealthy real estate man, was robbed by two highwaymen at Des Moines of 816.000. The Spokane (Wash.) Commercial savings bank, with a capital of $50,000, suspended payment. Exchanges at the leading clearing houses in the United States during the week ended on the 28th aggregated $836,401,764, against $1,020,040,544 the previous week. The increase, compared with the corresponding week in 1893, was 9.1.

The county treasury at Santa Rosa, Cal., was robbed by a burglar of SB,OOO. Michigan teachers in session at Lansing declared in favor of free text books and against teachers using tobacco. Temperance societies in Indiana were preparing to make a determined fight on the saloons before the legislature. At Wellington, Mich., Matthew Palmer cut his wife’s throat and then cut his own. Both were dead. Twenty-five bakers in Cincinnati reduced the price of bread from five to three cents. Leei.er’s hotel and other buildings in Waterbury, Conn., were destroyed by fire, entailing a loss of 8100,000. Coal miners at Massillon, 0., decided to reject the award of the arbitration committee and will not resume work. It was stated at Akron, 0., that there was a project on foot to combine all of the larger printing houses of the country. Fire in Louisville, Ky., caused $300,000 damage to the immense auction house of Stucky, Brent a Co. Gilbert Jameson, an old resident of Norwalk, 0., was blown from a railroad bridge into the river and drowned. At Silver Lake, Ore., during a Christmas celebration a lamp exploded and forty-one persons were burned to death and fifteen injured. Two Sticks, the Sioux Indian who murdered four cowboys February 2, 1898, was hanged at Deadwood, S. D., protesting his innocence. Secretary Smith has notified all Indian agents t 9 see that the red men are kent employed hereafter. The annual report of superintendents of Indian schools show that great good is accomplished by educating government wards. Flames swept away a business block in Buffalo, N. Y., the loss being SBOO,000.

Outlaws, supposed to belong to the Dalton gang, burned the courthouse at Stillwater, O. T., with all its records. Doss Hatts murdered his fiancee, Lizzie Smith, at Hunter Hill, Ala., and then killed himself. Officers searching for a stolen body in Indianapolis found twenty bodies of various ages in Jin empty house. Peter Murdoch, a New Orleans motorman, shot his wife and then blew out his own brains with a revolver. John Smith and his bride of a week were asphhyxiated by gas in a San Francisco hotel. Three children of Mrs. Viola Kemp, left alone in their home near Rome, Ga., wtere burned to death. Nearly all the officers of Bay City, Mich, were indicted for malfeasance in office by a grand jury. Ex-Congressman Walt H. Butler, who disappeared from Oelwein, la., two months ago, was seen in Indiana. William Nault, who prevented a runaway horse dashing into a cable train in Chicago, fell and was kicked to death. Government receipts in December amounted to $21,122,962 and the disbursements to $27;082,753, leaving a deficit for the month of $5,959,821 and for the six months of the fiscal year $28,254,963. A lighted cigar stump started a fire which destroyed the city hall, post office, public liberary and opera house at Biddeford, Me. An elevator containing 625,000 bushels of wheat was burned at Toledo, 0., causing a loss of $506,000. Chris Dandelion, an employe, lost his life. The First bank of Fort Pierre, S. D., assigned to its creditors. Superintendent Byrnes and Inspector McLaughlin were examined at the closing session of the Lexow committee in New York. The former said he had sent his resignation to the mayor-elect.

The Colorado Farmers’ alliance declared for free silver and a currency issued by the government alone. Van Alen’s nail mill at Northumberland, Pa., was burned, the loss being SIOO,OOO. Freezing weather in Florida, the coldest in sixty years, destroyed half the orange crop. The Labelle Wagon company of West Superior, Wis., made an assignment with liabilities of $136,000. Dora Williams, of Atlanta, Ga., locked her three children in her home and went visiting. The home and all the children were burned. ,_The Delavan house at Albany, N. Y., one of the most famous hotels in the United States, was burned, the loss beiug ®3<jo,ooo. It was said that 100.000 negroes would leave the southern states for Mexico this winter. Mrs. L. E. Castle,'of Callender, la., qualified for justice of the peace, to which office she was elected by mistake. A. H. Webber and wife, of Sacramento, Cal., were beaten to death with an ax and their home plundered. The N. B. Carlstein Co., gener&l merchants at Bay City, Mich., failed for f loo.ooa ;

The will of James G. Fair was filed at San Francisco. The $40,000,000 estate is left to relatives with the exception of $125,000. PERSONAL AND POLITICAL. Charles Edward Duffee, the ball player, better known as “Home Ron Duffee,” died at Mobile, Ala., from consumption. Abram Van Fleet, vice chancellor of New Jersey, died from heart disease at his home in Newark. Miss Celeste -Stauffer, who was' engaged to Samuel J. Tilden at the time of his death, was married in New Orleans to George S. Eastwick. Coi,. Michael Frank, the father of the free school system of Wisconsin, died at Kenosha at the age of 90years. “Sim” Coy. for many years a picturesque figure in Indiana politics, died at his home in Indianapolis, aged 44 years. The national executive committee of the populist party met in SL Louis to lay plans for 1896. Ex-Senator J ames G. Fair, the bonanza millionaire, died 'at the Lick bouse in San Francisco of asthma, aged 63 years. Mrs. Amelia J. Bloomer, the wellknown advocate of dress reform for women, died at Council Bluffs, la., aged 76 years. John Fitzgerald, ex-president of the Irish National League of America, died at Lincoln, Neb., aged 66 years. The populist conference at St Louis adjourned after adopting an address and a plan for an educational campaign.

FOREIGN. Actino under American advice, China decided to send a new mission to Japan to sue for terms of peace direct. The original manuscript of “America” was sent to the pope by David Pells Secor for deposit in the Vatican library. Brazilian troops burned a house at San Gabriel used as a hospital and 120 rebels perished. The Mohammedan inhabitants of Turfan, Kashgar, were in open rebellion, desiring to shake off the yoke of China and found an independent government under Russian suzerainty. The British steamer Abydos was lost off Port Erin in a gale and twenty-two persons were drowned. Austria, it was said, proposed to join Germany in retaliating on the United States if the sugar duties were not modified. A band of marauding Yaqui Indians in the western part of Guaymas, Mexico, visited the ranch of Julio Cardenas and massacred the latter and his entire family, consisting of wife and two children. Francis 11., ex-king of Naples, died at Arco, in the Austrian Tyrol, at the age of 59. Another rebellion was threatened in Brazil. The army, which is devoted to Peixoto, refused to obey President Moraes’ orders, and 200 officers were imprisoned. * Dr. Jose Ellauiu, twice president of Uruguay, died at Montevideo. The British steamer Yoxford sunk the French bark Marie Louise and five of the bark’s crew were drowned. The bark Osseo was wrecked on Holyhead breakwater and the twentyfour persons on board were drowned. Ex-Premier Gladstone celebrated his 85th birthday. During a storm in Colombia the village of Gaira was washed away by heavy floods and about fifty persons were drowned. In Santa Maria between forty and fifty houses were destroyed.

LATER. The loss of life from various disasters in the United States in 1894 w’as: Brownings, 3,443; fires, 1,677; explosions, 789; falling buildings, etc., 778; mines, 475; cyclones and storms, 517; lightning, 867. Three brothers named Masco were drowned in the Allegheny river near Olean, N. Y. Charles Brooks, aged 60 years; his daughter Ada, aged 25, and Louis Bergeron, aged 15, were killed by the cars at Keene, N. H. The wife and five children of Michael O’Connell were burned to death in their home near Waverly, Wis. Embezzlers, defaulters, swindlers and bank wreckers in the United States succeeded in stealing $25,234,112 of other people’s money in 1894, against $19,929,692 last year. The inauguration of Gov. Rich and the other state officers took place at ; Lansing, Mich. The loss of life by railroad disasters | in the United States in 1894 was 3,648, against 4,603 in 1893. The number of seriously injured was 2,397, against 4,864 in 1893. Levi P. Morton was inaugurated as governor of New York at Albany. The number of legal executions in the United States in 1894 was 132, against 126 in 1893 and 107 in 1892 Judge Lynch executed 190 persons, 187 men and three women, during 1894, ten less than last year. Five of the seven children of Jacob K. Levan, of Oley, Pa,, died within twenty-four hours of diphtheria. Pennsylvania’s legislature convened in biennial session at Harrisburg. William L. Strong took the oath as mayor df New York. He is the first executive not a democrat in twentytwo years. A letter received in Bosten, Mass., placed the number of Armenians slaughtered by the Kurds at 15,000. A train struck a sleigh a half-mile east of Willard, N. Y., containing Mrs. Hughes, her son, and Miss Larkin, and all the occupants were killed. Sixteen servants and one guest lost their lives by the burning of the Delavan house at Albany, N. Y. The Miller hotel at Lancaster, Ky., was burned and Edward A. Pascoe and his child and mother lost their lives. The total number of persons who committed suicide inthe.United States during 1894, as reported by mail and telegraph,.was 4,312, against 4,436 [n 1898, 3,869 in 1892, 2,831 in 1891, 2,640 in 1690 and 2,224 in 1869.

THE POPULIST CONFERENCE.

Outcome of the Meeting in St. Loola— View* Aired In an Address. St. Louis, Jan. L—The work of the conference of the national committee of the people’s party with the leading members of the rank and file came to a fruition Saturday night when that committee submitted to the conference as the result of its consideration of the discussions of the conference an address to the people. Its presentation was met by the gathering with a shout that rang through the hall, and the indorsement of the conference was given with vigorous viva voce vote. The address follows: ‘•The rapid increase of our vote in every part of the union and the startling events of the last two years vividly justify both the existence of and necessity for the people’s party. The contention of the party that one of the great needs of this country has been and is an enlarged volume of circulating medium Is now practically conceded by ail parties and by the government. The gold power and banking interests are insisting through the president and his secretary that the enlarged issue of our money supply shall be given exclusively into the hands of the banks; that silver shall be excluded, all treasury notes retired and gold alone should be a legal tender, thus making the monetary question an issue which must be met at once. "Within the present year the corporations, grown arrogant because of the vast possessions of wealth and the exercise of unconstitutional powers, have made war upon the people and Induced the federal courts to exercise in their interest unusual and arbitrary, powers; induced the Invasion of the states by federal troops without the request of either the executives of said states or the legislatures thereof, and arc at this time, through a recreant administration and a truculent congress, attempting to clothe the railroad corporations by means of a pooling bill with power to further and more systematically rob, oppress and plunder the people; and having -already deprived the people of access (o the silver mines of the country as an independent source of money supply are now, in the interest of a banking oligarchy,’ endeavoring to ‘deprive them of the right to have their government, in the exercise of its constitutional power, issue the money of the nation and control its volume. “In the opinion of your committee these events are startling, subversive of the liberties of the citizens and destructive of business and social security; and, adhering to the Omaha platform in all its integrity, your committee lnlslsts upon the restoration of the coinage of gold and silver as it existed prior to 1873—at the ratio of 16 to I—without regard to the action of any other nation, and that all paper money shall be issued by the general government without the intervention of banks of issue, the same to be a full legal tender. “We also declare our implacable hostility to the further issue of intorest-bearing bonds. "We denounce the pooling bill as a move toward completing the*, monopoly of; transportation and demand that instead congress proceed to bring the railroads under government ownership. "The, power given to congress by the constitution ‘to provide for the calling forth of the militia to execute the laws of the union to suppress insurrections, to repel invasions,’ does noPwarrant the government in making use of a standing army in aiding monopolies in the oppression of the public and their employes. When free men unsheathe the sword It should be to strike for liberty, not for despotism nor to uphold privileged monopolies in the oppression of the poor. "We ask the people to forget all past political differences and unite with us in the common purpose to rescue the government from the control of monopolists and concentrated wealth, to limit the powers of perpetuation by curtailing their privileges, and to secure the rights of free speech, a free press, and trial by jury—all rules, regulations, and judicial dicta in derogation of either of which are arbitrary, unconstitutional, and not to be tolerated by a free people. “We recommend the immediate organization of an educational campaign by the national, state and local committees." In addition to this address the national committee adopted the followingl resolution: “In view ot the fact that the state of Alabama and other southern states are without a republican form of government because of the rule of a political oligarchy which is perpetuated by monstrous frauds at the .ballot-box, the imperative necessity of a free ballot and an honest count is a constitutional right, and we demand that it be given and move that the chairman of the national executive committee appoint a committee of three to submit evidence to the press of the country and to congress to substantiate this alarming and revolutionary condition that they may be awakened to the peril caused by this existing autocratic anarchy in the south.” , The following were appointed: J. €. . Manning, Alabama, chairman; Henry D. Lloyd, Illinois; Lee Crandall, Alabama.

FEARS FOR HER LIFE.

One of America’s Richest Women Thinks She Is in Peril. New York, Dec. 28.—One of the most remarkable cases ever brought into the American courts promises to be that of Mrs. Hettj’ Green, one of the richest women in America, against the executors and trustees of her father’s estate involving millions of dollars. According to the story told by her lawyer, William H. Stayton, Mrs. Green is in fear of her life. A belief, firmly fixed, that a band of conspirators took the life of her father, Edward M. Robinson, and of her aunt, Sylvia J. Howland, of New Bedford years ago,and are now seeking her life and the life of her children continually haunts her. Glass, she declares, has been placed in her food not six months ago; blocks of wood and stones have been hurled at her from windows as she was passing on the sidewalks, and on numerous occasions her life has been threatened.

Hypnotist to Die.

Wellington, Kan., Dec. 31.—Anderson Gray has been given the death sentence by Judge Burnett, according to the verdict of the jury finding him guilty of murder in the first degree for the killing of Thomas Patton. Thomas McDonald, while under the hypnotic influence of Gray did the killing, but was discharged after trial. Gray is a well-to-do farmer. Patton had incurred his enmity and Gray hypnotized McDonald, a farm hand, and while the latter was in that condition compelled him to commit the murder.

Emigration from Great Britain.

London, Jan. I. — The emigration returns just issued by the board of trade show that during the eleven months ending November 80 217.512 persons left the United Kingdom for places out of Europe, as compared with 299278 in the corresponding period of last year. Of the total the United States received 152,987..

Three Indictments Against Howgate.

Washington, Jan* I.—Capt Henry W. Howgate, formerly chief - -of- the s gnal service, was arraigned in the criminal court Friday and three indictments were presented end rend.

POEMS OF THE DAY. My Littl* Maid. Looking into her clear gray eyes, My little maid, I watch their changeful lights arise. Not undismayed; For should I wrong her gentle trust. Serene, complete. What keenest loss forever must My future meet We walk through ways with danger fraught, Of naught afraid. Tn sweet exehange of inmost thought— My little maid. —Cora S. Wheeler, in S. S. Times. Unnecessary Sympathy. I always felt sorry when I met JimPoor fellow, he’s married now: And life is a serious thing to him. For he lives by the sweat of his brow. And the cares of a family weigh him down, And he slaves to run the house; Why, Jim was the gayest boy in town, And I'll bet he's as poor as a mouse! And because hw looked so worn and sad. I tried whenever we met To talk of the good times we’d had, In hopes that he might forget. Till I said I was living at tae club; Then I felt a deep chagrin; Lest he should think I was trying to rub , Hismisery further in. But he exclaimed: "That’s a horrible lifel No child to climb on your knee: No quiet home and the loving wife”— By Jove! He was pitying me!" —Harry Bomaine, in Life. ' Uncertainty. Sometimes I dream, with quiet thought in my own heart, _ If in her thoughts but one of me e'er taketh part? It may not be for me to know, f r And yet I pray it may be sa For in my heart she always is; each thought and every prayer That surely she must TnoW how she is enshrined there. It may not be that she does know; O that I could but tell her so! The Cheerful Man's Sermon. It's easy to smile and be cheerful When everything's pleasant and fair; We never complain of life’s'hardships When there are no burdens to bear. But as soon as the blue skies cloud over. And the way that was smooth has grown rough. We forge£ the blithe songs we were singing, And out laces are doleful enough. But some can be cheerful when shadows Are thick round the pathways they tread; They sing in their happiest measures With a faith in blue skies overhead. They face with a smile that’s like sunshine The trials that come in,their way. And they Slways ifnd’iauch to be glad f« In the ionesomest, dreariest day. Thank God for the man who is cheerful In spite of life’s troubles, I say— Who sjngs of a brighter to-morrow, ■» Because of the clouds of to-day. His life Is a beautiful sermon Ahd this is Its lesson to me: Meet trlaU with smiles, and they vanish, Face care, with a song, and they flee. -Kbeu E. Rexford, in Chicago Tribune, “See First Page.” Is the heart-a wayward one? Have the.feet gone far astray? ‘‘Read the prefac'e.” "see first page," Records of an early day. Oh, how fair that life began On the rosy natal morn— Oh, what budding hopes were rife When the little child was born. Was the sapling trained aright? Did it have the sun and air? Were its withered boughs removed And the dead leaves clipped with care? Were tne best impressions mado On the young and plastic mind? Know ye, “as the twig is bent So the tree shall be inclined?” Mind, then, what the preface tells, Doting mother, fond and fair; Let the first pure, spotless page Shew a record bright and rare. —N. Y. Weekly.

LOW-RATE EXCURSION January 15, 1895. On the above date the MISSOURI PACIFIC RAILWAY and IRON MOUNTAIN ROUTE will sell tickets at half rates (plus t!) from St, Louis, Cairo and Missouri iver gateways to all points on their lines in Arkansas, Louisiana, Including points on the K. C., W. & G.; to all points in Texas, Doming, N. M., and Pecos Valley points in New Mexico. Will also sell from and through St. Louis to points in Missouri south and west qf Harrisonville; from and through St. Louis, Kansas City, Leavenworth, Atchison, St. Joseph and Omaha to points in Kansas, Nebraska and Colorado. For particulars regarding limit, stop-over privileges and further information see nearest ticket agent. H. C. TOWNSEND, General Passenger Agent, St. Louis.

S HEALS RUNNING SORES CURES THE SERPENT’S STING W CONTAGIOUS ' completely eradicatBLOOO POISON * dbySSS obst i ■ vßwvi* nate sores an d ulcers yield to its healing powers. It removes the poison and builds up the system Valuable treatise on the disease and Its treatment mailed free. SWIFT SPECIFIC CO* Atlanta, Ga.

Blood Diseases such as Scrofula and Anaemia, Skin Eruptions wnr> Pale or Sallow Complexions, are speedily cuffed by Scott’s Emulsion the Cream of Cod-liver OiL No other remedy so quickly and effectively enriches and purifies the blood and gives nourishment to the whole system. It is pleasant to take and easy on the stomach. Thin, Emaciated Persons all suffering from Wasting Diseases are restored to health by Scott’s Emulsion. Be sure you get the bottle with our tuk«m. trade-mark on it. Refuse cheap substitutes! Send for pamphlet on Scott's Emulsion. EREE. Soott A Bowne, N. Y. All druggistSi 60 oents and sl.

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