St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 19, Number 9, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 16 September 1893 — Page 6

Reston iwepe». * • • - INDIANA A TOWN AT UCTION. QUEER vXa H I 0F A p ^nsyl. VANIA EOROUGH. Ohio Canvass Is „

t ‘ 8 Wido Open—Col. Ilughes, a. t ; Bu,,, ™ n : z in a cui <ie s—- "»•«<»*« 7^, houses, hotels, postoffice ~ 1 S everything to bo di\>> > . i ^ actories > auction block—is th?, at tlle jtinction now enj v d >le dU a town of 2^ pules from Readme twelve the place for 159 v ’ , owned to settle the est tJ th ' d ? d and will be sc Id In 17 - -/ph " domains chased fortv-nine ac'U P u; - now tho .-1 h-’ot land where is

me town that i • v died last spring '’ cc / !1 The v years old. Neither " as about <0 children. Seth*^ trator of Anna ls will. He i- also aCl ' who made no Wily X feT ° f

Sheriff’s tale to th? highest bidder to close up the estate. Chicago Is Soaked. Until Tuesday night the memory of the last shower at Chicago wa , but a dream. The just and the unjust were dry as the Congressional Record. For 108 days the skies had been as brass. The parks and gras; plats 1 oked like the lots so? salting sheep, and the surrounding prairie yawned with creva- es cavernous in depth and appalling in width. But on Tuesday, the Weather Bureau announced that there would be no rain until October, and this was just what was needed. The rains descended, the floods came, and the parched citizens' facos absorbed moisture enough towear a smile rivaling that a simian. In the Ohio Canvass. Governor McKinley o >ened the Republican campaign of Ohio with a big meeting at Akron. Tuesday. Delegates were present from Cleveland, Canton, Youngstown. Massillon, and other cities in Eastern Ohio, and a large number of Republicans came also from Pittsburg. There was a street parade at 1:30 o'clock, the procession marching to Grace Park, where the meeting was held. NEWS NUGGETS. Judge W. H. McHenry, a pioneer and first Mayor of Des Moines, is dead. A FIRE at Coon Rapids, lowa, destroyed the opera house block and three other buildings: loss, $30,000. The William Grossman Company, wholesale grocers at Milwaukee, wore burned out. causing a loss of SOO,OOO. Harry Baker, aged 8, walked to the house of a neighbor near Gallipolis. Ohio, in his sleep. He was mistaken for a burglar and shot to death. The small estate left by Schuyler Colfax of Indiana, is wholly lost in the wreck of the bank conducted by his friend, Theodore P. Haughey of Indianapolis. Eva Mann, otherwise Mrs. Robert Ray Hamilton, is married again. Her husband is Edward Hilton, and the couple are running a theatrical board-ing-house in New York. News is received of the murder of Iwo persons in a hotel at Brighton, a suburb of Rochester, N. Y. It is also stated that the hotel was set on fire and two persons burned to death. Obituary: At Alta Craig. England, Surgeon Parke, who accompanied Stanley to Africa. —At Paris, Adolphe Yvon, the French painter, aged 75. — At Des Moines, lowa, William L. Harlan. Angus McSwean and his wife, Mary, were robbed and murdered at their country home four miles from Newton, Ala. There was evidence of a hard struggle, a sledge hammer being used. Ginners in the northern part of Waller County, Texas, having paid no attention to a notice to discontinue ginning cotton until the prices for the staple was advanced, have lost seven

houses i nis is . unable to leave the harbor because the tro^ d b V° rts “anned by a suburb of Ri o hot *'^neoij. wounded^ 8 anTlhlrty Colonel Hughes, who was found martLl a ? by the court - inaitial at Topeka and dishonorable f /° m the Kansa s State militia, intends to sue the State for SU Win He claims that this amount of nav is due him, as he has neve? been reeved

pn^^T/^MH' the 1 ’ legislation by ConS n C;e Y eland has called a Halt in the execution of the Gearv law against unregistered Chinese y mamJa? a Lan ' io ^Wh , m,anufa-turer, hanged himself while ■ pendent over business troubles

at' Beudling/ & riOt twenty-eight were arre t'd Solomon Wilt rAMe r Hazelwood, [nd w , / 1 aimc? of by a horse ’in 3 tO death

EASTERN. I Two MEMBERS of a NT r testis on the nigh t of Aug” 1 ??. Square > V., Herbert f a M

sr®* «ss ■, a ^0 four other pagers le “■abeßook Island Road I SSeiSS the coal him blto P loazloß . gondola was beino- ,

injSS. W&S dead Andr ose feta^y I H °- n ‘ Fish died Thurs । W to™ l„ vLTi Fish

-WM#’ 11 111 IVAW \ npb- * I'S.W.tbosenoPclhLlNilKffiAj, l ! I Si4,‘2'” P "*«P d offioor ot the R0v01,,. arm s- I^ose Wife, Miss StuyVl\vfißsaaXi_^La descendant of the Dutch

Colonial Governor of New Amsterdam. Colonel Fish had been in military life and politics the associate and intimate friend of Alexander Hamilton, for whom his son was named. He was Secretary of State and was Grant's most trusted friend. WESTERN. J. A. Jenkins, the defaulting treasurer of Clark County, Indiana, has been arrested at Louisville. Jenkins’ shortage amounts to $23,000. Six German Lutheran Churches officially withdrew from the convention of the church at Bellaire, Ohio, because the synod had forbidden members to belong to secret societies. Scranton, lowa, now has the summer snake The reptile is reported to be 40 feet long. 10 inches in diameter, with a head like a calf and a whistle which terrorizes every one wb - hears it. The National Convention of Brewery’ Employes, in session at Milwau 1 kee, has declared that hereafter no member of the union could join the national guard, and those who were now guardsmen must resign. Louis Sherwood, a railroad grader, was arrested at Yankton. S. D., charged with murdering Minnie Sawyer, who was found dead in her led Monday. He bad become insane and minutely’ described the murder. Philip Scheig, the absconding paying teller of the Bank of Minneapolis, robbed the bank of $15.( (D, taking that sum at the close of business on Saturday. and as Sunday and Labor Day follAud. he had forty-eight hours to make good his escape. Cashier A. T. Blackly, of the Delta. Colo., Farmers and Merchants' Bank, was shot while defending his trust, by three robbers. Two of the robbers are dead and the third will soon be in the hands of the officers of the law, who are in hot pursuit. JOHN Hart, a young farmer living near Rockford, pounded his sister Mary to death and bey Chis sister Nellie insensible and thin poured paris green down her throat. He is believed to have been crazy. Physicians fear that th^ paris green will prove fatal to Nellie. J. M. Fisher, cashier of the First National Bank of Geneva. Neb., has gone, placing the time leek of the bank vault ^seventy-two hours ahead. In- I vestigatu n shows that he took with him $14,400. besides borrowing $3,500 from a neighboring town and putting up his bank stock as collateral. Three men held up a St. Louis and San Francisco express near Pacific. Mo., and blew open the door of the express car with dynamite. Unfortunately’ for them they met with such resistance that two of the desperadoes ran away’ and the third was captured. He gave his name as Lenox, the son of a farmer at Newburg. The posse in pursuit of the two Mexicans who killed William T. Walsh, a young Englishman from Washington, D. C., Monday’ night, met them at Stonewall, N. r M. Five men of the

° alter Ralston, an erstwhile acrobat, who for the last season his delrnorrs for bourl Ai Bay City, Mich.. the saw mill and salt block of Eddy, Avery & F ld . JX 'XT' by . » is “» i b ""“ ■> bad tan' in.Mc “Yu. Tl ‘° half an hen.. 1 S ted b ^ a watchman Xoveied n T ? e dame:s w ^e saved The mill ance, $55,000. ®JW,uoo, insurNearly SB,OOO in cash was stolen from the countinp--r + . .

Brewim/uo U 01 th e Pabst Chi^o^ house at the cashX and The police .are without any tamable So? he! iS a' 'lb® a ' ; Barrett Scott tn. i , , . m..... .. . C the defaulting

t ^mmrer of l lo l t County, Nebraska 1 810? in his accounts . and is now in jaV^at’"h? Mt his home at O'Neill e-i-L-u ♦ c - IS SZT .earned of scwt6 whereabouts and

_ 1 ^SI h ua.‘ a SaX!' n ab ^ 6669 f lC \’ ^^ve Barrett wUI betinil^ Q to Nebraska. ^™"*aoned Bear's Ears « 1 since | r ' Se “ nd ‘S I ’’“4 **'" flor's a farmin- tok^Ti BrUCe re P°r-0 11 bad been stet in d hlm Indi f 2J missfarm near the fortran^ l ° ns at ? some been shot Tt A I cne of An ing Bear's Fars^ no . w . thou /ht t’Mb fired I ravinouhX . Lfe’ HS^

the shot is not ® e — A»<»)ress Indian bore a good name he un " At Akron, Ohio, the Adam's Company’s safe was left Xt-W A ^ locked Thursday night and of nioney belorLiuXt. ti d . a l^- was non containing ^ss X citv of w g ed s3,(so of the •. and XV Gtaken. Harry La^Jh 0 ^ 8 ^nejbune; niemm of > t t n f head > a a bs^4te. a Miller,Editor J ih WleveBrank X Brehm kn Akr ° n M’Hnter; and F £ iT™. land, Ohio, sprinter L n-?' e Richard m. Hootw ,< at CMoago theatrical mLL,Ui’S .??

|^ a thiBhome. 8 home. t’oth Mdes onhe^ ^^-Pan ing placers ti Atlant lc, andAwhose .. " as always their friendMJTKSy ursewas as open as his v. hose bounty went

' bls fbree score years and one

society which he graced. Heavy losses in collapsar vJFyM*" Fair hotels and inabilfLi/tosecujLp^j ments from others not collapsed‘T^J hl Nelson, Matter A Co., one of th Kpids. furniture houses in Grand a .^l Mich., to give chattel mortgav^^fQ. gregating $17!>,382.74. Rea! tLj f or mortgages to the same partie- f^hese a like amount were also filed. j’ (> papers were executed to Fecu^ an k< cal creditors and Michigan ^dnesH The amount of unsettled inde' 'ng the will foot up about $200,000, ma! 1 $400,company's total liabilities abo exceed 000. The assets will probably I Vorld's that sum. Ever sir.ee the Lmpanv Fair hotels furnished by this cl it has began tumbling right and leftncially. been in a critical condition finis over. It was hoped that the’worst wato puli and that it would manage ■ ample through. A few days ago T ^hpany line <>f goods carried by the c M ] this in New York was attached. 1 “'astern precipitated a raid by worried creditors.^ ^t. who

Capt. Eiermann, the aeroi tj^ av afieft Milwaukee in a balloon Si iMich ternoon, arrived at St. Ignace, hooner Wednesday afternoon on the sc*im up Ellen Williams, which picked h theast : in the lake twenty-five miles not n had ' of Milwaukee. Capt. E'ierma 1 half I been in the water an hour and Server before rescued, and to a life-pros droj>he owes his safety. Previous to n- and ‘ ping into the water he left the Cl - bal- ! climbed into the netting of tin e, he loon, where he hung for his lit g time ; says, for thirty minutes. All thi- '• the the balloon was skimming ove -e a' surface of the lake bMq ""Hie heavy wind. UccuslGfSßßy j^Then car caught on a wj.ve. his he would be nearly dislodged fro Ay ex- i precarious holding. When near*'him uausted one of these jerks t >rt -> the fr« m his holding and be fell in ei ver

water. A common life preW. As around his chest k< pt him afioaAj the soon as relieved of the weight O^fand aeronaut the balloon righted its<JlifUTwent off like a shot and was not^fc the ward seen. ( apt. Eh rmann was i Ncued water ninety minutes. When r<A| was he was well nigh xhausted and |)| He some time before he recovered dons, has made about SM) balloon aseeil/* mirbut this, he says, was the mosj^ aeulous escape he ever had. SOUTHERN. Cave, I OBBEKS made a raid on Horse ! K... and looted live stores. *^jps a Five children of Henry Phil^Lrk., farmer living near Silver Hill, W were burned to death. 1 Ben Jackson, colored, was lyr oison at Quincy, Miss., for throwing ■ two in a well and causing the death children. ^feiss.. Sheriff Brooks, oi Jackson, J ”gro was shot by John Williams, a prisoner, and will probably die. V su ; iams escaped. - — j m . Capt. C. C. Hewitt claimed the^Sing munity of an army officer in resisti^jga. an order of court at Chattan<J^a U go Tenn., but gave it up rathe” jail. the "Doc” Taylor, who murder^ Deen

- TdwT — v ‘ “ termon on theefs sz - r PI4 P \lnk - 3d 31 r is no furtiKr i-em? remold and* 'ur stliction * hie heials discharged ' qUa an tinelfSouth west VirginA, Mr b '“ A a fought a duel from horseback in a 1 a >hcrcad. which resulted in the Go ’ wounding of the former \ n old f tai llv feud evi\to<l mJ AU Old f am . Hawks had' threat^ anc ’ '

i Hawks fe ß . James O'Neal and wife, colored ’ was pamfuby burned, and saved hg w ndV’W” g ” U a second-story known Phe ori ^n of the fire is urn WASHINGTON. ! <f ^P^^ntatives at ‘ V ashington has adopted the new c de] i 1 I

: * / o? d id 8 readj to P^ceed’ ana 'O^^eration of general busiiS I Breckinridge has 7^ - domurrer in the breach of prom ^ e 1 SU f\?r° Ug - ht by Ma d*line V? PoL declaktion'uSiiyfln^ lme “d that second. It i 3 a g-i..] n J e! ^nd ter wn ■mV g Bab y Huth’s Htstci « ah born at noon Satmdnv r?..,,. .

K® !<1 a ?'o‘doing fiist-^ from an was tot ^ 8 "^ The Httle WaS fir ? f conv eyed to him. birth, was lustv^and^tm 11 P 0 ” 11 ^ 8 at already broken a record d n IS named her Dorothy 1 a feady POLITICAL. in2ed R T^ A ^pendents have nom- ; Btokenß gG r ‘ S R ' Hal COmb, of • oken Bow, for associate justice of ‘ the supreme court. J ° f 1

I he Colorado Republican State ComrmbHn hasd ® c,ded to act with the Roters sty? party I°,gani2a«on l ° ,gani2a «on in all maG teis saie the silver question. Massachusetts PonubLr^ 1 tfciS Governor, Georg^^^^ffH^Bßli^^ynn: Lieut’nant Governor. Joseph K. Har-~ ris, Haverhill: Secretary of State Isaac W. Skinner. Waltham: Treasurer and Receiver General. Thomnc

attorney Genet ■Maiirico W. l anders, Pittsfield. IN GENERAL F*NANCIAL aid from Presbyterian Church funds is n >w withdrawn from students at Lane Seminary. The officers of the Brazilian navy have demanded the resignation of President Peixoto. Ti;e port of Rio Janeiro has been blockaded and all cable communication is suspended. Following is the standing of the clubs of the National League: W. L. Pc.; W. L. pc. Bostons. ...Hl 33 .717 Cinclnnatis.M 59 .<7B Pittsbursrs. .68 <5 .«)’Baltimores..: 1 62 .151 Phlladelp’ia.67 <7 588 St. Louis... .47 67 412 Clevelands. .62 48 .584 Chicaaos .. 47 67 413 New Yorlta. .Cl 63 :555 Loutevilleß..4l 66 883 Brooklyns. .59 53 .527 Waslirttfns.o" 76 .32, Peary’s steamer Falcon has reached St. Jolin. N. 8.. having left tin- explorer and his party at lalcon Harbor, Greenland, thirty miles north of the । former stopping place. Lieutenant

Peary lias secured all the dogs needed, but will return home next summer instead of staying two years as originally proposed. The Columbian Catholic Congress was inaugurated in Chicago with sol- ■ emu pontifical mass in St. Mary'- i Church. The opening exercise.- were | held in the Hall of Columbus, at the Art Palace. Hundred- of eminent prelates, priests and laymen were present, including Cardinal Giboons. Archbishop Redwood of New Zealand, and Archbishops Ireland. Uvune=s;. uud LLvam BicLo plumy and a large delegation from Deli’i H and ■ Michigan. includingC mgressmen ea- ! deck and T. E. Tarsney. The addiess of welcome was delivered bv Archbishop Feehan of Chicago. This was followed by addresse- by President Bonnev of the W orld - ( ongres- Aux-

: iliarv and bv Thomas B. Bryan of the j Columbian ‘Exposition. The opening ' address to the e ingress was delivered l by ( ardinal Gibbons. R. G. DUN a Co.'S Weekly Review of Trade says: Improvement has extended from the banks to the mills. The condition of great industr.ei has distinctly mended, though still seriously depressed- More im; ortant by far than any rGe in stocks Is the Lie । that more works have resumed daring the | lust week than have stopped ororatiom so , that the moducing force of the country ( alter months ot constant decline has be- ! -un to increase. Dispatches mention ) twenty-eight textile and thirty metal works which have resumed, some only wim • put force, while twenty-five textile and . nine iron works have stopped It h exI pected that most of the lall River mills i will start soon, the hands assenting to reduced wages. The money market is more ‘ : healthy, the premium on currency has al- ’ most vanished, the embarrassments in doj mestic exchanges have well-ni-h d.sap--1 peared. and while little m mey is yet ' i available for commercial or industrial 1 ' loans there is some relief in that respect • I also. MARKET REPORTS. f CHICAGO. . . Cat n.E—Common to I’rime.... 43 25 @5 50 . Hons—Shipping Grades 375 ®6 50 Sheep —Fair to Choice 3 <X> @ 4 25 Wheat— No. 2 Spring 65 & 6b , Corn— No. 2 40 ® 41 5 OATS-No. 2 28 @ 29 1 ■ । swot

'B6! I uop^ --I< oop r iHSiansiiw f? ; Gaigaaq —Cnoice Licht' t rj Sheep- Common to Prime f « 00 V Xo - 2 bed - 350 Cobn-No. 2 White C @ 58 Oats^o. 2 White •; 40 & ink 6atte E ST. Louis:- - 7 a 28 Hogs. 3 W @ 5 00 WHEAT-No. -yhej 5 ?, J ® 625 Coen—No. 2 61 ® 62 Oats— No. 2 «BV. hXE-N0.2... 20 & 27 Cattle ' WNCiNNATL' 41 @43 Hogs. . 3 00 @ 1 75 Sheep 3 00 c<? 6 00 Wheat— No. 2 Red jfc"' 300 @<2s Cobn-No. 2 d / •• 57 ^@ ss=i 2Mixed:••• « ® « KlE—^o. 2.. 20 @ 2/ CATTLE.... DErROIT: " 48 &51 Hogs 3 01 @4 75 Sheep 3 00 (it g 00 WHEATNNaaReH &-J 75 Corn—No. 2 ■ C2 ’2(^ 6.3^ oats-n 0.2 white.'oh.:.:::: ” r TI »T. I? Tm ’ ‘ C 9 25

WTTF4T A’ •» OJLEDO. H „ fiCxA 1 "''""- --:::::: Si CORN-No. 2 Yellow ~ 1 - h Oats-No.,fwi ts 46' Rye—No. 2 31 @ 32 Whpat v ' X ll -WAUKEE.' 47 ® 4J coBNeN O N r Sprlnff co & st Oats-No 2 White -’•J Rye—No. 1 2i> @ 27 Barley—No 2 43 ® 43 Pork—Mess ....’ K @ 52 NF W vhhk'” 74 @l4 75 Cattle.... YORK. Hogs 3 < 0 @ 5 25 Sheep .. 3 25 @ 6 75 ’S S‘%

Pl LIMAN’S HOT FIRE. mammoth lumber yards in flames. Twenty Masked Men Loot a La ke Shore Express Train-Guiteau’s Kemains-Find-C Court MartialWill l ace tJle m usic> Swept by n amcß . ER one-half of the wnt p,,n„„„

bimbo.. 7“ Vl.e great ru liman 3 ards at Pullman, 11l was Mondav 11 ?^ 11 ^ in " ide of an hou r from'a„ o^heate^M^’ 1 ’ 08 Ktarted d 7. kiln ta.uab.e lumber melted in the hea* ts a^ kfn^'^T ^ d “ ate ^ with incredible Sm fl t that the ^'W valiant department men who were working most single-handed fm ght tsh utmost difficultr <s™ 1 with the fell bXI M and bra " d s its of ♦i° n 11 tbe advancing limits of the blaze, and it was then tnac vdunteer help of the” num" ™ ntr ’ b ?ted valuable assist'- ‘ • I-arvey Middle ton. theSunerin 1 tendent of the yards, sta Ml

was S^OO (ion of 1 > tnat there Astounding Train Robbery. TWENTYmasked men held up a Lake .IM 0 ,":?' 1 ■Mill ^nighLMonda.v. and after wounding the enginedT’sm — the “KE?

mas vunrents. ihe express < nil, ^ b . be <] 'vas one u ed by 1 sum of money.' a ^'t J J^pany. t morning the Chicago officials oTTne road hi d not heard the details of the robbery. The only information had been ih ■ mere announcement that the train had been robbed. One of the Lake Shore officials hastened to the home of Manager Wvgant, who started at once for the train-dispatcher's office at the deem, whore a special tiain was being made up for the officials of the railroad. At 5 o’cl ok this train left the Twelfth -t’-eet depot to make a quick trip to Keniallville. Ind., the scene of the iobU-ry. Say Hußlics I’ Guilty. The Hugh- se nrt-martial at Topeka. Ka-., handed down a verdict of guilty. (\ 1. Hugiies is dishonorably discharged from the military service of the Stale. He i- found guilty on all charges but two. these 1 e ng -‘Carrying news to the encmv" an I ‘ Speaking words of <no uiraMin nt to the enemy,” the “enetnr ” mentioned in the e charges

bein r the lawful House of Represent®- j fives? The verdict of guilty L ba-ed - on the main charge of refusing to obey ; the G iverm r s order- to go to Repre- 1 sentative Hall ai.d eject the Republi-j ■ can Hou-e. The court set- up that 1 there would n< t be any discipline in I the nati< nal guard if < ffi ’ers were proteet< d in the open refmal to obey the orders oi the Ex- cutive Commander-in-chief. BREVITIES. ‘•Old Dill ' Saha'lL at'wudcu. Ark., negro, who murdered a man named Pierce la-t fall, was executed at Camden. Francis Bukdii k. a harness-maker. 5o years of age was murdered and robbed in ( Imaha. Hi- b. dy was found

fl< ating in a lake. Sheriff E. A. Brooks, of Jackson, Tenn., was -hot and fatally wounded by a negro prisoner named John NY illiams. Tb.e negro escaped. TdE Hon. c. H. Tupp-r of Canada ha been knighted in recognition of his services in connection with the Behring Sea arbitration. Ten Chickasaw Ind an . living near St n -wall. I. T., were taken to Atoka. I. T.. charged with the murder of Joe Thomas, a negro. Aug. •>. Prince Bismarck's condition is again i ep§rted -eri< its. He is suffering f om sciatica, induced by exposure while ri cMving deputations. Ex-Chief of Police Harley, of rilcnver. is convinced ’.hat the Delta bank robbe.s are ’.he notorious Mc- । Carthy gang who have been operating in Oregon. , Charles Robinsox. of New York, one of the editors of the North American Review, is s lid 11 be s at-d 10 succeed Assistant Secretary Quincy in t ie State Department. Ex-United States senator Willis B. Matchen, of Eddyville. Ky.. has been adjudged insane and c nfined

566^ ■ fsanbuo} 9 6po Q 98

lornJoiTfoSp 566^^’ °J|x udssin 9g X° b Q iloor of the iah. ICd the ( ERIE But KLEY’, the blind mli^ioni - ^^Wdruu.b.. fled the hlS Way homc f: ‘ Om Kurf p'• He tafeaAhi to his homo in Bnlmi. v.. .‘.’..A "‘' “vd

. 4HE deal bank robbers at D e ’m Sh' ? Ve been iden tified as the _Vj Cai thy brothers, who have killed Jt AVyomfn a L^ah V J “ f ks 111 Col malo. 83Oinm< lev "wiH, o "'i'’ ' ° "ver valuabie- wmo J h ^ e " eh 'y ar.d other I 1 theiv indi r-v ♦ '* °mpt:y caught up n the pknden IWt e;<PeSUre < f 1

• NO VOTE FOR WEEKS. PRESIDENT CLEVELAND R E _ dECTS A COMPROMISE. Silvei- Senators Will r> - 1 ciay ,he 'ote a» wm Not AT sSb,c ~ Maj< ’ rity Senators Seek the Dcb ate— Washington ^Xuenc 10 '"^

1 I j A A I Sena; OXA IffliWiW

terms that “they are fil’J^ 0^! ng with anger, the sort of anger which finds vent in a determination Jo the repeat measure to death n 'T <"1“ - Senate^ u M Was made through latter w°hT an b and Bmith ’ the been a ™ has « f ten before ticn betw^The Wb^^o^' vhtt not in a

car mood when tTy* * A 1 & > r n P romis e a s d ll“ d ?’ uutb - Wit h the scent of viS? tion when the H passed. He absolutely declined to be a party to any compromise or to any concession. even the Faulkner amendment or any less important salve to the wounded pride of the silver advocates. When this decision was reported to the silver men thev became exceedingly wroth. Thev expressed their opinion of Mr. Cleveland in lurid words, and accused him of trying to bulldoze the whole party for his self-glorifica-tion. While they were willing to stop the flood of talk iw d permit the repeal bill to pass withfh a few days if any disposition were shown on the other side to concede a trifle to them, now ' that Mr. Cleveland had refused to I listen to their peaceful overtures, they would Im- before they would stop talking and clear the decks for a > vote. i I The last extremity of cloture is not jj to be invoked. A heavy majority of < ! the members are in favor of uncondii -i . tv iinritv has

tional repeal, but tnis ir ijori^ been carefully polled, and it has declared that the conditions are not such as to warrant the radical departure from the time-honored traditions of the Senate that would be necessary to secure a cloture of debate and force the repeal bill to the final vote, consequently the indications at the time this is written are that the talk will proceed. Senator Gorman will start within a few days for Chicago. Senator Palmer is going to Chicago also. Senator Smith has gone home. Other Stmators will leave the capital for a little rest. No one expects a vote before October now. Routine Proceedings. The Senate was addressed Thursday by Mr. Stewart, In favor of silver. The President sent the following nominations to the Senate Dallas B. Hayes, to be postmas-

ter at Crowley. La. : Lieutenant Commander Eugene W. Watson, to boa commander: Lieutenant R. M. G. Brown, to be a lieutenant commander: Lieutenant George W. Denfeld, junior grade, to be a lieutenant; Ensign Jame- G Drake, to be a lieutenant, junii r grade. The House transacted no business, the W ays and Means Committee not having reported. Mr. Faulkner addressed the Senate Friday upon the repeal bill, in favor of it. Senator Turpie f< Rowed in the same vein, and Mr. Jones oppo-ed it. Then a squabble over adjournment occurred, after which Mr. Aldrich spoke at length upon the bill The house has been adjourning from day to day to wait committee reports and the senators’ action in the Sherman Jaw repieal bill. But now it is proposed to take up ' bills to admit the Territories of Arizona. New Mexico and Utah, the bill to repeal the Federal election law. and possibly the bankruptcy bill. Saturday, Senator Teller addressed the upper house on the silver question, against repeal. The only bill of public importance introduced during the day was one by Mr. Morgan, of Alabama, to repeal sections 1 and 2 of the act of June 9. 18'9. concerning the exchange of coins for lawful money. The purpose of the bill is to keep silver in circulation and prevent its return to the treasury vaults. ’lhe Senate was azain occupied Monday in its silver discussion. The repeal bill was opposed by Senators Feller. Stewart. Jones and Pugh. In the House Mr. Murray a^ked ^r the immediate consideration of a joint resolution apuropriaylnw

....i-i m o-AaHj ZZ6I £ 818Z-9SZ 360SS0UJ 9A.09; « i--f

1 000 SZ omjaajs Mjoujoino job S 'OAON AA3HD FZ6I 5, fiiGa-.-no Aj/l . . n Myrna- - coast: referred to c? Quantic ; propriations. Mr Rich or ' :rn!,t ee on Ap- ; I Committee on Print in ?\f S ° n ' { POm resolution providing ba ck a and : books ordered "l y 'th J Fift°v CUlneil,s | Con-tress and remainin’ f, u-‘ ft ? ie '’°nd this time shall be ditribmed r:b ° ted at i members of the Fifw-ti rd co ar ’ JOng ,he resolution was adopted Coc?res * The house Tiip^^uir <„ routine business. A Rrer only master-general relative to the which have accumulated w.! rl^”' P a P ers special eommittea Mr H?nb f red ,0 a attempfed to secure cfnsideT.t 01 lo ' va ' resolution callin’ o , tbs “ on of a ' treasury for informal u . ' cretary of th o °f merchandise trn ” a ' tl3 e amount Cnited St a■ es pJrt -to frOm ono dian territory. M r G .?J e J °; er Canaobjected. and the re =ol nt A,', , '- allf °mia, The senate was prompt "ferred. debate on the repeal bil' T> ” *’ ’ ho nmrniner * uni. ine rnnf?««.

™°rntng business was unns. -.i V r ™tm e the Stewart reflation as ‘ Sma ! an<i fog Stock in national banks h ° ld " The bill was taken nn a- as laid ov er. began a long sp eec h P a ^ the Sherman act. s he .epeal of Notes of Current Events <0 aSS a P SX 0 -™ deddK ' " Ot denial discharged hi "^ a ^ e n, IN L PE r rORS wiH he stationed at Quebec by the United States Govern “^eHforce the alien coltr^ a fouud murdered in a bain a Middletown. N. Y have lieen identified a.- Mrs McOuinlao her daughter Mary. Uct - Ulnlan and

LL hopes of the 1 passage of the re^Peal bill in the L C during the nexttwo weeks seem to be at ar end. The situation is less satisfactory th an it has been for some time. The silver - men have made ^overtures to the President for a .compromise, or for ■some concession on the part of the adiministratioa and have been denied