The Greencastle Democrat, Greencastle, Putnam County, 1 July 1893 — Page 2

THE DEMOCRAT. GREENCASTLE. : INDIANA

The News Condensed. Important Intelligence From All Parts.

DOMESTIC. Chari.es Kkli.kh and his wife and •lolin Steinhauph were killed by the cars at a railway crossing near Lima, O. The national convention of Women's Amateur Musical clubs met in Chicago. Near Phalanx, O., Preston Osborn, his wife and two of their children and a man named Heintzslman were fatally poisoned by some ingredient that had been mixed with their cotTee. The affair was shrouded in mystery. Chaki.es P. Whai.en was sentenced at Janesville. W is., to twenty-five years' imprisonment for the murder of Gerald Spaulding. A number of exhibitors at the world's fair met and recorded themselves as being unalterably opposed to the opening of the world's fair gates on Sunday, not only on moral grounds but from u financial standpoint as well, and decided to enter suit for an injunction to have the gates closed on Sunday. The Methodists have decided not to withdraw their world’s fair exhibit on account of Sunday opening, but it will be covered up on the Sabbath. The church committee adopted resolutions in which they declare that the act of the directory in turning aside from keeping its pledge of honor to the congress and people of the United States will be conspicuous in the future as an act of perfidy beclouding the business integrity of the citizens of Chicago which years of shame will not remove. Five men were instantly killed by an explosion of gas in a mine at Nanticoke. Pa. The Columbia liberty bell, the tribute of many to the shrine of independence, which will ring in Chicago for the first time July 4, was successfully cast at the Clinton & Mencely bell foundry in Troy, N. Y. Baird <fc Bradley, real estate dealers in Chicago, made a voluntary assignment with assets estimated at $b00,000 and liabilities at f400,000. Superior Judge Grant decided in favor of Sacramento and against San Jose in the California capital removal case. Forest fires in the western part of Pueblo, Col., were doing enormous damage. Banks closed their doors at Santa Anna, Cal., San Diego, Cal., Pomona] Cal., Ontario, Cal., Greenville, Mich, and Ridgeway, Me. Jacob Hajaneki, of Akron. O., fatally shot his wife and then stabbed himself fatally. No cause was known. Three men who were put in jail the evening before a fire at Virginia, Minn., were burned to death. The big armored cruiser Maine, which has been building for nearly four years at the Brooklyn navy yard, was successfully launched. Dave Kexdai.t, and Frank Tempelman while working in a well near Morehead, Ky.. were overcome by gas and both were killed. The National Association of Master Mechanics in session at Jamestown, N. Y., elected as president John Hickey, of St. Paul. B. T. Rhea & Son, grain dealers at Nashville. Tenn.. failed for $100,000. There were 287 business failures reported in the United States during the seven days ended on the 23d. In the week preceding there were 313, and during the corresponding time in 1892 the number was 190. During the weekended on the the 23d leading clearing houses in the United States reported exchanges amounting to $1,033,309,822, against $1,031,364,527 the previous week. As compared with the corresponding week of 1892 the decrease was 6.0. Attorney General Olney says the controversy over the opening and closing of the world's fair on Sunday is ended so far as his department is concerned. Mr. and Mrs. Peter Boili.ot were fatally injured at Beatrice, Neb., bj’ being thrown from their carriage. Baltimore police claim to have discovered an organized band of anarchists whose purpose was to levy blackmail. A lone robber boarded the express car of a Rock Island train at Virginia, Neb., bound the messenger and robbed the safe of $550. B. J. Doran, a pugilist, killed his little bo}- at Rochester, N. Y., with poison and then took his own life by throwing himself in front of a train of cars. A cyclone swept for fifty miles across the counties above Atlanta. Ga., wrecking many buildings and ruining crops. Failures were reported of the Columbia bank at New Whatcom, Wash., State bank at Minneapolis, Minn., First national bank at San Bernardino, Cal., People's home savings bank at San Francisco and the Cataract bank at Niagara Falls, N. Y. The business part of the village of Mount Sterling, O., was destroyed by fire. Leroy Payne, one of Chicago's oldest liverymen, fulled for $250,000. The maple sugar crop of Vermont the past season was 5,759,763 pounds, and the bounty will be $70,000. The new directory of Brooklyn, N. Y., gives that city a population of over 1,000,000. Princess Eulalia sailed from New York on the steamer La Touraine for Spain. The business portion of Leonardsville, Kan., was destroyed by fire. The well-known stallion Arrival, record 2:24bj, for whom his owners refused $15,000, died at Gardiner, Me. Thirteen contract laborers who arrived in New York from Germany were told that they must return on the same steamer. The supreme council of the order of United Commercial Travelers met in sixteenth annual session at Columbus, O.

The supreme court of Ohio, in the Deshlcr will case, has decided that brothers and sisters of full blood inherit before half brothers or sisters. This adds nearly a milliondolliU's to the wealth of William (». Deshler. The percentages of the baseball clubs in the National league for the week ended on the 24th were as follows: Philadelphia, 638; Boston, .638; Brooklyn, .609; Cleveland, .548; Pittsburgh, .521; New York. .490; Baltimore.. 4S9; Washington, .4.4; Cincinnati, .4.58; Chicago, .422; St. Louis, .422; Louisville, .237. A freight train on the Eastern Minnesota was wrecked by a cow near Partridge, Wis., and Engineer Ingersoll and Brakeman McNanny were killed and Fireman Reilly and Conductor Hall were fatally injured. The property li>ss was $100,000. Forty-one persons have been accidentally killed on the world's fair grounds since the construction of the buildings commenced. Because of its editor's attacks on lawbreakers the office of the Now Albany (Miss.) Gazette was broken into and its plant destroyed. Mbs. P. T. Harris and a daughter 10 years of age were drowned in the Rio Grande river near Del Norte, Col. A monument in memory of the executed anarchists was unveiled in Waldheim cemetery in Chicago in the presence of 5,000 persons. J. S. Newmyeb, a coke operator at Dawson, Pa., failed for $200,000. Near Denison. Tex., three brothers named Early were united in marriage to three sisters named Parker, and the event wound up with the mother of the girls marrying the father of the boys. Patriotic songs by a choir of 100,000 voices Is to be one of the features of the Fourth of July celebration at the world's fair. An engine left the rails on a trestle near Mount Washington, O., and Conductor David Homan and Fireman Philip King were fatally injured. By the breaking of a levee near Ascension, La., some fifteen sugar plantations were ruined, the loss being $1,000.000. Ax attempt to hold up a train on the Missouri, Kansas &. Texas road near Strinstown was frustrated by the engineer pulling the throttle wide open. The enraged would-be robbers riddled the coaches with bullets. An explosion of gasoline caused the destruction of five business establishments in Huron, S. D., and Alderman Feary was burned to death. In a fight between revenue officers and moonshiners in Tennessee one of each party was killed and Marshal Brown mortally wounded. A CARRIAGE was struck by a train at Avondale. N. J., and Mrs. Williams and three children were killed. The American Derby, worth $50,000 to the winner, was captured in Chicago by Boundless, owned by J. E. Cushing, of St. PauL The time was 2:36. Seven men were injured by a rearend collision between two Central Hudson freight trains near Rochester, N. Y. Fire destroyed John M. Wakefield’s lumber yards at Omaha, Neb., causing a loss of $300,000. The Red River Elevator company of St. Paul, haring a line of elevators through Minnesota and North Dakota failed for $494,000. The factory of Turner' A Seymour, manufacturers of small hardware, was partly destroyed by fire at Torrington, Conn., the loss being'$100,000. A raid was made on the Utah sheep herds in the plateau country in Colorado, several hundred sheep were killed by bombs, and the cattlemen and settlers have once more started on a warfare The New Y*rk Central Railroad Company will pay Mrs. Homer R. Baldwin, of New York. $50,000 for injuries she received in a railway disaster at Hastings Christmas evening, 1S91. The Bank of New England at Minneapolis, Minn., the Sabina (O.) bank, the Bank of Ness City, Kan., and the Queen City bank at Buffalo, N. Y., closed their doors. The liabilities of the latter bank were $2,328,754. S. & G. Gump, dealers in art goods at San Francisco, made an assignment with liabilities of $140,000. John Fitzthum was executed by electricity at Auburn, N. Y. He killed a young man named Rachl in Buffalo April 7, 1892. The firm of Mann Bros., clothing dealers at New York, failed for §250,000. The visible supply of grain in the United States on the 26th was: Wheat, 63,082,000 bushels; corn, 7,325,000 bushels; oats, 3.114,000 bushels; rye, 397,000 oushels; barley, 445,000 bushels. Robert Burns was instantly killed and Louis Johnson fatally injured by the falling of the stone coping of a Minneapolis bunk building. The Tremont hotel at Fort Scott, Kan., a four-story brick structure, collapsed, and though 100 persons were In the house no lives were lost as far as known. James Stephenson was killed and his son fatally injured by a mad bull at their farm near West Union, O. Gov. Altgkld, of Illinois, has pardoned Schwab. Fielden and Neebe, the anarchists sentenced to state's prison on the charge of complicity in the Haymarket massacre May 4, 1886. Fielden and Schwab were sentenced to prison for life and Neebe for fifteen years. The New Hampshire state building at the world'* fair grounds was dedicated, the principal address being delivered by Gov. J. B. Smith. Frank Hayes, aged 20 years, was found guilty of murder at I>etroit and senteneed to imprisonment for life. Soviih Carolina's liquor dispensary has begun business and all sakxjns would soon be closed. A masked man entered the Merchants’ national bank at Moorhead, Minn., and covering the teller with a revolver secured $2,600. Kozink and Moneypenny (Indians) were found guilty at Madison, Wis., of the murder of Boaeash and his aqaaw last fall. The Crum Greek Iron A Steel Company at Chester, I’a., failed for $120,000.

The Bank of Commerce at Sar. Diego. Cal., and the Savings bank at Fresno, Cal., which suspended recently, have resumed business. William Kansdeli. was bitten by a tarantula at Lebanon, Ind., while hand_ing bananas. I n the bunch of bananas a nest of 200 young tarantulas was | found. Ransdall may recover.

PERSONAL AND POLITICAL William McCoy, American minister j to Liberia, died at Monrovia. He was | from Indiana and appointed by Mr. Harrison, and was the fourth minister resident to die at Monrovia during the last twelve years. Rev. Dr. Samuel Hart, of Burlington. has been elected bishop of the Episcopal church of Vermont. Mrs. Angemne Demakrik died at Chippewa Falls, Wis., aged 121 years. William Mutuhi.kr, democratic member of congress from the Eighth Pennsylvania district, died suddenly of heart disease at his home in Easton. The 80th anniversary of the birth of Henry Ward Beecher was commemorated at Association hull in Brooklyn. The funeral services of Senator Leland Stanford were held on the grounds of Stanford university at Palo Alto, j Cal., and the remains were placed in the family mausoleum. John C. Koch, the republican candidate for mayor of Milwaukee, defeated Garret Dunde. democrat, by 3,500 votes. Rev. W. W. Kone, aged 90 years, died at Denison. Tex. He was the oldest Baptist minister in the United States, ! having entered the ministry at the age of 18. The Pennsylvania democratic state convention will be held at Harrisburg September 19. FOREIGN. Sarah Bernhardt was robbed of jewels of the value of 300,000 francs in | Rio Janeiro. Edward Kelly and J. N. Clothier I law students, and Edward Rivard and i Camille Maguan, medical students, were drowned by the upsetting of a boat at Toronto, Gnu Investigation of the bomb explosion at Madrid has developed a plot embracing anarchists in several European countries. Reports received from Mecca show that in five days there were 830 deaths from cholera in that city. It was said the scourge was decreasing rapidly throughout Russia. Her majesty’s groat twin screw battleship Victoria, flying the flag «f Vice Admiral George C. Tryon, K. C. B., commander of the Mediterranean station, was run into by Hie battleship Camperdown and sunk in 18 fathoms of water off Tripoli, and at least 400 of her officers and crew, including the vice admiral, went to the bottom with her. Twenty men were killed and scores wounded as the result of refusal by a British magistrate to permit the celebration of a Mohammedan festival at Rangoon. Goldsbrough, Mort A Co., bankers at Melbourne, Australia, suspended [ payment with liabilities of £2.500,600. Returns from the bye elections in ! Germany indicate that the government will probably have a majority of one in the reichstag. An explosion of molten iron in Rohig’s iron works at Madgeburg, Saxony, killed six workmen and seven others were terribly burned. Thr body of a woman of the unfortunate class was found in a suburb London with her throat cut in the manner affected by Jack the Ripper. INDIA has stopped the free coinage of silver and decided to make gold the money standard of the country. LATER. A tornado at Oakley, Kan., de- 1 stroyed thousands of dollars’ worth of property. A strip of country 1 mile j wide and 6 miles long was swept clean, j every building in its path being torn into kindling wood. The business portion of Union City, Jnd., was destroyed by tire. Jacob Lyons, a farmer at Ottawa, O., fatally shot his wife because she refused to live with him and then killed himself. John Hudson, a pioneer of southern Michigan, died near Battle Creek, aged 101 years. Thomas McMullen, 8 years old, and his brother Joseph, 12 years old, were drowned in the Genesee river at Rochester, N. Y., while in swimming. II. II. W'yllie made the 1.000 miles from New York to Chicago on a bicycle in ten days and four hours. The Bedford (Ind.) Stone Quarries company, the largest producers of oolitic limestone in the world, made an assignment. The Broadway bank at Los Angeles, Cal., that failed recently, has resumed business. The Illinois Fuel company in Chicago, with assets of $150,000 and liabilities of $100,000, has been driven to the wall. Mbs. Catherine Neumann and her three ehildren, aged 20, 15 and 12 years respectively, perished in flames that destroyed their home in Saginaw, Mich. At tlic annual meeting in Boston of the Society of the Army of the Potomac Gen. Nelson II. Miles, U. S. A., was elected president. The principal part of the town of Lexington, O. T.. was destroyed by fire and two men perished in the flames. The Second national bank of Ashland, Ky., and the American exchange bank of Minneapolis, Minn., closed their doors. Three convicts were shot dead by guards while attempting to escape from the prison ut Folsom, Oul. Julia Fshue, on trial at Atlanta, Ga., for the murder of her two sisters, w as declared not guilty and will be confined in an insane asylum. The Sagamore hotel at Lake George, N. Y., was destroyed by tire, the loss being $200,000. The deaths from cholera at Mecca. Egypt, were averaging 600 a day. The cowboy race to Chicago which was begun at Chadron, Neb., June 13 and pursued 1.040 miles through three states, was won by Berry, who made the distance in 13 days. 15 hours and 35 minutes—an average of 77 miles daily.

PRISON DOORS OPEN, And Convicts Fielden, Schwab and Neebo Walk Forth Free Men.

(ior. Altgclri IftHurs a Portion to the Noted Auaruhtiit* — A Lengthy Document lairing the KeaHoim for HU Action.

breathe freedom'* air once more. Spring field, 111., June 27.—Gov. Altgeld on Monday issued an absolute pardon to Oscar Neebe, Michael Schwab and Samuel Fielden, who were convicted of complicity in the anarchist Haymarket riot iu Chicago in May, 1886. The governoi’s statement accompanying the pard >n contains 17,090 words. The announcement of the pardons was made shortly after noon, but the papers were not filed with the secretary o* state until 3 o’clock in the afternoon. T he greatest secrecy was observed regarding the governor's proposed action, and even the newspaper men were kept in ignorance until the last minute. Even Banker Dreyer, of Chicago, who hail been an active worker in the interest of the condemned men since their incarceration, and who had been notified to be here, did not know until he arrived here why he was sent for, and his surprise can well be imagined. The action of the governor is variously criticised, being sharply condemned by many and by others as warmly indorsed. The lengthy and elaborate review of the case tiled with the pardon shows that the governor has spent much time over the matter and that his decision was deliberate. The fight waged by the friends of the condemned men has been a long and determined one, and Govs. Oglesby and Fifer were besieged during their terms of office with constant appeals for their release. The case is one of the most remark able in the history of the government and has attracted the attention of the civilized world On the night of May 4, 1886, a meeting was held in a hall in Haymarket oquare, Chicago, to protest regarding the killing of two laboring men in trouble which had taken place in an effort to introduce a rule for an eight-hour day for the laboring classes. The meeting was attended by about 1,600 persons, good order being maintained until just as the last were leaving the hall when a detachment of police were called in to quell a disturbance. cAs they approached the hall an unknown person threw a bomb into the crowd which killed several policemen and wounded many persons. A number of people were arrested and August Spies, Albert Parsons, Louis Lingg, Michael Schwab, Samuel Fielden, George Engle, Samuel Fischer and Oscar Neebe were indicted. Popular excitement was intense, the press, pulpit and public clamor demanded conviction, and after a long and bitterly contested trial the defendants were found guiltj'. Neebe received a fifteen years' sentence and the rest were to be hanged. The case went to the supreme court and was affirmed. Finally the sentence of Schwab and Fielden were commuted to life sentences. Lingg blew the top of his head off with a bomb in his cell and Parsons, Fischer, Engle and Spies were hanged. Ft was alleged at the time that conviction was due to public clamor, rather than to the evidence, and ever since there has been a strong element at work for the pardon of the condemned. Following is a synopsis of the principal points in Gov. Altgeld's statement of 17,000 words giving his reasons for granting the pardon: Tbs governor reviews the history of the Huymurkei meeting of May t, 1880, In detail, and says the basis of thr appeal for pardon was the petition signed by several thousand merchants, bankers, judges, lawyers aud other prominent citizens of Chicago, which, assuming the prisoners to be guilty, stated the belief that the prisoners have been punished enough; but a number of them who have examined the case more carefully base their appeal on entirely different grounds and assert: 1. That the Jury which tried thC case was a packed jury selected to convict. 2. That according to tho law as laid down by the supreme court, both prior to and again since the trial of this case tne jurors, according to their own answers, were not competent jurors and the trial was therefore not a legal trial. 3. That the defendants were not proven to be guilty of the crime charged in the indictment. 4 That as to the defendant. Neebe, the Slate's attorney had declared at the close of the evidence that there was no case against him, and yet he lias been kept in prison all these years a That the trial Judge was either so prejudiced against the defendants, or else so determined io win the applause of a certain class in the community that he could not and did not grant a fair trial The governor sustains the five points specified, and refers to the fact that a number of the jurymen declared candidly that they were so prejudiced that they could not try the case fairly, "but each when examined by the court,” lie observes, "was Induced to say that he believed he could try the case fairly upon the evidence. Upon the whole," says the governor, “considering facts brought to light since the trial. Bailiff Ryee summoned a prejudiced jury, which ho believed would hung the defendants." Tho governor asserts that Judge Gary knew of this, but refused te take any action. (Quoting the recent decision In the Cronin case, the governor declares that it is difficult to see how, after a juror has avowed a fixed ami settled opinion as to a prisoner's guilt, a court can be legally satisfied of tho truth of his answer that he can render a fair and Impartial verdict The governor says that applying the rule laid down to the Cronin decision most of the jurors were incompetent because they were prejudiced and the mere fact that the Judge succeeded by a "singularly suggestive examination'' in getting them to slate that they believed they could try the case fairly did not make them competent. The pardon relates that the thrower of the bomb has never been discovered, nor anything to connect the prisoners with ihe throwing The governor believes that the bomb was thrown by some one seeking personal revenge. He says that laboring rm n guilty of no offense had Iwen shot dow n in cold blood by 1'inkerton men and none of the murderers had been brought to justice; that In a number of cases the police, without any authority, have Invaded aud broken up peaceful meetings and clubbed people guilty of no ofTense whatever In some cases certain policemen under ('apt. Uonlleld indulged in brutalities never eriualed belore, and It was impossible for laboring people to get Justice for these outrages. The governor believes the bomb throw Ing was tho direct result of a feeling on the part of some one who had suffered at the hands of the police and had come to the conclusion that he could get satisfaction In no other way. Bpeaking- of .Incite Gary, the trial judge, the governor says: "It is further charged with much bitterness by tho.i - «ho speak for the prisoners that the

record of the case shows that the judge conducted the trial with malicious ferocity and forced eight men to be tried together: that In cross-examioing the state's witnesses he confined counsel for the defense to the specific points touched on by the state, and in the cross-examination of the defendants' witnesses be permitted the state's attorneys to go into all manner of subjects entirely foreign to the matters on which the witnesses were examined; also that every ruling throughout the long trial on any contested point was in favor of the state, and, further, that page after page of the record contains Insinuating remarks of the judge, marie in the hearing of the jury and w ith the evident intent of bringing the Jury to his way of thinking: that these speeches, coming from the court, were much more damaging than any speeches from the state's attorney could possibly have been; that the slate's attorney often took his cue from the judge's remarks: that the judge's magazine article recently published, although written nearly six years after the trial, is yet full of venom: that, pretending to simply review the case, he had to drag into his article a letter written by an excited woman to a newspaper after the trial was over, and which, therefore, had nothing whatever to do w ith the case and was put into the article aimply to create a prejudice against the woman, as well as against the dead and the living and that, not content with this, be in the same article makes an insinuating attack on one of the lawyers for the defense, not for anything done at tne trial, but because more than a year after the trial, when some of the defendants had been hung, he ventured to express a few kind, if erroneous, sentiments over the graves of his dead clients, whom he at least believed to b« innocent. It is urged that such ferocity or subserviency is without a parallel in all history, that even Jeffries In England contented himseif with hanging his victims, and did not stop to berate them after thev were dead. "These charges are of a personal character and while they seem to be sustained by the record of the trial and the papers before me and tend to show that the trial was not fair, I don't care to discuss this feature of the case any further, because it is not necessary. I am convinced that it is my duty to act in this case for the reasons already given, and therefore grant an absolute pardon to Samuel Fielden. Oscar Neebe and Michael Schwab this 26lh day of June, 1893.”

Removing a Source of Peril. Daneor is near when the kidneys grow inactlve The source of peril is removable with Hostetlers Stomach Bitters, whictt unquestionably averts Bright’s disease, diabetes, gravel and other ruinous nialadie* attributable, in Ihe first instance, to a dormant condition of the kidneys and bladder. A healthful Impulse to the performance of the functions of these organs is speedily communicated by the Bitters, which likewise removes constipotion, malaria, Irver trouble and dyspepsia. Fresh News. — Hhe —‘‘So she reached Paris yesterday! How wonderful it is that the news can be sent so safely over the ocean cable through so many miles of salt water." He—‘‘Yes; and be so fresh." — Yankee Blade.

AtuHtorfuni, “America” and the Schaffer family are attracting overwhelmingly large audiences. Matinees excepted, every square foot of standing and seating area in the mam moth theater is occupied at each performance. The great spectacle fully merits the phenomenal patronage it is receiving. Of the Schaffers, one cannot speak toohighly. The most lavish praise gives but meager justice to their astounding feats of acrobatic skill. Heals secured by mail. “Well!" said the plulosopbic fisherman, as he drew his fine out of the water, "I lost the fish, but I suppose I am entitled to a rebaiL”—Washington Slar. — ■ - —- ■—♦- — F J. Cheney & Co., Toledo. O , Proprs. of Bail’s Catarrh Cure, offer »100 reward for any case of catarrh Unit cannot be cured by taking Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for testimonials, free. Hold by Druggists, 75c. The telephone girl, no matter how charming she may seem to be, is always quite distant in her conversation.—Rochester Democrat. Old Homestead at MeVleker's. Denman Thompson’s engagement begins July 3. Special holiday uwitinee July 4. Heats can ne secured by mail. The saying that man wants but little here below doesn't apply to the card player. He always wants a good deal. Buffalo Courier.

THEY’VE HAD ENOUGH. Messrs. Fielden, Sehwab and Neebe I’roniIse to Itefram from Anarchistic Agitation in the Future How They deceived the News of Thoir I'ardou. Chicago, June 27.—Three men who for nearly six years have been known as Nos. 8,376, 8,520 and 8.527 emerged from tho stone portal of the penitentiary ut Joliet at 7 o’clock Monday evening and once more breathed the air of freedom. They were Oscar Neebe, Samuel Fielden and Michael Schwab, the anarchists who had been convicted of complicity in the Haymarket riot May 4, 1886, when seven policemen were killed by the explosion of a dynamite bomb. They owed their liberty to Gov. Altgeld's pardon. E. S. Dreyer, the real-estate man and banker, who has interested himself in behalf of the men. arrived ut the prison from Springfield at 3:15 o’clock in the afternoon with the pardons in his pocket, and also a copy of the governor's statement of his reasons for granting them. Mr. Dreyer was shown into the office of Warden Allen and presented his documents. The warden examined them, found them correct, and at once sent for tho three convicts, who were convicts no longer. Neebe, Schwab and Fieklen entered the warden's office dressetl in their prison stripes. They were stood up in line and in the presence of Warden Allen, Chaplain Roth, Clerk Miller aud Storekeeper Allen Mr. Dreyer informed them that Gov. Altgeld had signed a pardon for each of them on certain conditions. Tears stood in the eyes of the men to whom this unexpected news of freedom came. Their emotion was apparent, though they made strong efforts to conceal it. Mr. Dreyer made a short speech, in which he said executive clemency was extended to them on condition that they promised to behereafter honest, upright citizens, to go to work and earn a living, and forevermore to refrain from associating with men who preached the doctrines which had brought them within the prison walls, and to refrain themselves from again propagating anarchistic theories. He told them how they had been despised by the whole civilized world, and hoped that in view of the mercy that was shown them they would never give Gov. Altgeld nor himself cause to regret the action which set them free. All three of the men unhesitatingly made the promise required of them. The warden then presented each with his pardon, which was the usual form in such eases, with the governor's signature attached. Gov. Atgeld's review of the case was not read on account of its length. Samuel Fielden, replying for himself and comrades, assured Mr. Dreyer that neither he nor Gov. Altgeld would be given cause to repent their course in the matter. The liberated men then shook hands with Mr. Dreyer and were conducted back into the prison, where they took off their striped clothing and donned civilian suits. Then they were taken to the official dining-room where a dinner of roast beef, ham and eggs, strawberries and iced tea was served, Chaplain Roth, Clerk Miller, Mr. Dreyer, Mr. Allen, the warden's son, and the late prisoners being the guests. When the meal was finished it was nearly ■ time for the train to arrive which was to bear the three liberated anarchists back to Chicago. As they came out into the balmy air of a perfect June evening one who had known them in former days would scarcely have recognized any one of | them. Prison life hud left its mark on each. Mr. Dreyer walked down to the station with the ex-prisoners, and in a few minutes a Santa Fe train came along and all boarded the smoking car The men say they intend to keep tin premise made to the governor to abstain from anarchistic agitation Neither of them have formulated plain for the future. The party left the train at Twentythird street and boarding street ''ars went to their respective homes. Fielden to his wife and two children at I'll West Polk street, Schwab to his family a wife and two children, at 167 Wash tenaw avenue, and Neebe U> his brother's residence on Sheffield avenue Numerous friends called on them during the evening to offer their congratulation*.

Swellings in the Neck Or goitre, made my m-ck lully twice its natural size. For three years all my strength seemed to go into the swelling, and I was reduced from 185lo 8!) pounds. I took Hood’s Sarsaparilla, which gave me I strength, relieved dis-' tress in my stomach, and ' In t of all, entirely re- Mira Swinelord.' moved ■ lie goitre. I am now in the bestof health, weigh 193 pounds, and tell everyone'Vhnt wonders Hood’s Sarsaparilla has done for nu\” Mrs. H. C. Swine ford, Union County. MifTlinburg. Pa. Hood's Pills act easily, yet promptly ' “German Syrup” My niece, Emeline Hawley, was, taken with spitting blood, and she became very much alarmed, fearing, that dreaded disease, Consumption. She tried nearly all kinds of medicine but nothing did her any good. Finally she took German Syrup and she told me it did her more good than anything she ever tried. It stopped the blood, gave her strength and ease, and a good appetite. I had it from her own lips. Mrs. Mary A. Stacey, Trumbull, Conn. Honor to German Syrup. ® DIC. itll.TII It S SWAMP-ROOT CURED ME

D. H. BILUmt, Esq. Huliucville, Pa.

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Jan. 10th, 1«93.

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