The Greencastle Democrat, Greencastle, Putnam County, 2 March 1895 — Page 2
THE DEMOCRAT.
G REEXCASTLE, : INDIANA.
The News Condensed.
Important Intelligence From All Parts. CONGRESSIONAL. Proceed I nun of the Second SchhIoh. In *11; senate on the IPth an effort to secure * final vote on the Jones stiver bill was defeated. Senator Vilas defended the bond contract In a four-hour speech In the house bills ■were passed to retire Don Carlos Buell. I'. S. A as a brigadier general; to authorize the ■Wisconsin & Duluth Hndtre company to construct a bridtre across the St. Louis river between the states of Minnesota and Wisconsin Kcsolutlons were Introduced for amendments to the constitution prohibiting the liquor traffic in the United States, and prohibiting the states from granting the right of franchise to nny person not a citizen of tho United States The naval appropriation bill was further considered. On the 20th Senator Wolcott's amendment to the silver bill was discussed In the senate and the Indian appropriation bill was considered Tim house bill was passed authorizing a bridge ■cross the Missouri river at Sioux City. la. . In the house the time was occupied in discussing the naval appropriation bill and it watt finally passed. In the senate on the 21st the conference report on th" pension appropriation bill was ■greed to It retains the provision making sit drtllars the minimum for pensions. It also retalns the repeal of the present law suspending the pensions of persons living outside of th-o country. The Indian appropriation bill was further discussed. Adjourned to the 2H I In the 1 ■ was defeated by a vote of IT>'; to 11 1. The general dellclency bill was considered. On the 22d the time in the senate was occupied in discussing the Indian appropriation bill. St nal >r Mil t gave notice of an amt. dmont to the sundry civil appropriation bill which provides that all laws which authorlzt the secretary of tho treasury to sell bonds of the ' pealed In the house u bill was introduced to extend the provisions of ihc Interstate eointnereeact to include expre s companies act: ij ns common carriers An amendment w as offered to the sundry civil appropriation bill appropriating .1 PJM) for the purchase of seed for th< inhabitants of the drought stricken districts Tho general defloieney bill wan considered. The night session was devoted to private pension bills. ON the 2.1d an effort in the senate to tako up the r;,:: w;. v i ling bill was deleatt d by of 42 to 24. The Indian appropriation bill was further consider! 1 and the nomination of Mail W Hansom, senator from North Carolina, for minister to Mexico ceed th< Isaac 1* lirav. wus confirmed In the house a proposition to pav an extra monthly salary to all the employes of the house and senate wus carried. The rending of the deficiency bill wnis completed with the exception of a few amendments. DOMESTIC. IIahold O. Ili.NDEit.soN, of Mason, lilk'h., who suffered imprisonment for burglary in preference to brinffinff dishonor on a woman, has been pardoned hy the irovernor. The attorney general of Illinois has rendered an opinion that women are eligible to appointment as members of hoards of directors in town or city libraries. .John C. \\ ahni u. a wood chopper, mid his wife and three children were found frozen to death in their cabin near Irondale, Mo. I’. ilooDANOKF, tirst secretary of the Russian legation at Was.liinffton, killed himself while despondent from illness. Lakoe quantities of liquor have been shipped into South ( arolina in cans branded tomatoes. The state const a biliary were raiding 1 the country stores. The new issue of I'nited States bonds was heavily oversubscribed in both London and New York. In the latter city the books were open but twenty minutes. Skeletons of three men and sixteen horses were found in a five-chambered cave on a farm in Sandusky county, <>. Coiima.ia Hill, of Uippon, \V. Va., killed her father. Robert Hill. He was unmercifully chastising one of his sons. The house of .laeoh (laukel near Star City, Mich., burned during the absence of Mrs. liaukcl and her two children, aged 5 and 2 years, were burned to death. The American Publishers' association met in ninth annual convention in New York-, with 1 .Ml delegates in attendance. The business portion of the village of Hamilton, N. Y.. was almost wiped out by lire. The loss was estimated at $400,000. The village of Lindsey, ()., in the western part of Sandusky county, was partially destroyed by fire. Com mission i:it Sei mouu's report shows 20,80.1 patents were granted and 12,020 expired ay limitation (hiring 1804. Horn branches of the Missouri legislature adopted a resolution to remove the state capital to Sedalia. Tim: North Carol in a legislature passed a 6 per cent, interest bill. < ai.ii ohm v s assembly passed a bill to prohibit the wearing of huts or bonnets at theaters or other places of amusement. All the .'iO.OOO men in the building trades in New York were ordered to strike to aid the electrical workers to carry their point. Dissatisf action with his father's will led Albert Wallace, of Dillon township, 111., to shoot his sister, her husband and a farm hand. The former would die. Gov. Rh hahds, of Wyoming, vetoed the bill providing for a board of arbitration to settle labor disputes in Cheyenne. He says it is unconstitutional. Sami el Yoiwo. an aged resident of Wilshire, ().. fatally stabbed his young wife and then hanged himself. Jealousy was the cause. John Gekikh, a pioneer resident of Norfolk, Neb., has lieeomo possessed of a fortune of f l.. r >00.(NKi through the death of a brother in New York. The congress of the Daughters of the American Revolution in session in Washington elected Mrs. Mary MeP. Foster, wife of the ex-secretary of state, as president. Hkcaubk of family trouble Charles Matthews shot his wife at <hmiha, Neb., end then killed himself. The people of Montgomery and neighboring counties in Kansas were eating horseflesh, not being able to get other food. Foit the first time in its history Mississippi has a surplus of corn and it was being shipped to the west.
Font hunters were found frozen to Minister Willis was Instructed to indeath in the woods 1U miles from New sist on postponement of the execution
< irleans, The liquor distillers of the I'nited States met in Chicago and formed an association which includes every distillery in the country of any importance except one. Wasninot*>n s birthday was generally observed throughout the country. Recent violent snowstorms have rendered citizens of eastern Colorado destitute and they have appealed for immediate aid. Thebe were .'102 business failures in the I'nited States in the seven days ended on the 22d, against 270 the week previous and 288 in the corresponding time in 18!i4. Charles NI. Figoat, for twenty-nine years cashier of the Rank of Lexington, Va., absconded, leaving a deficit of #150.000. Gov. Morton approved the act to prohibit the display of foreign flags upon public buildings in the state of New York. Six persons were burned to death in a tire which destroyed four and a half blocks of the best residence and business portion of Hot Springs, Ark. C. W. Kn ait. of the St. Louis Republic, was elected president of the American Newspaper Publisher's association at the session in New York. Three unknown men blew the vaults of the savings bank at Thomnston, Conn., with dynamite and secured a small amount. Wilmam Walsh, an aged man at St. Joseph. Mo., was terribly tortured by robbers who thought he was hoarding money. A west-hound'Frisco train was held up by three robbers near Aurora. Mo., who failed to open the safe in the express car. Police raided a secret society hall in Chicago where a prize fight was in progress and captured 150 men. Emanuel Hahkkk. an expressman in Chicago, shot and killed his wife and fatally shot her brother, Harry Bonner, and escaped. William Dorhins, a penurious old market gardener at Birmingham, Ala., was the victim of the gold brick sharper to the extent of .stl.OOO. Senators Mills and Pease, of the Colorado legislature, came to blows during a session over a trivial matter. Officers at San Francisco captured a gang of pirates which had been operating on a large scale for months. Enos Randeli., a farmer (IS years old, died of heart disease at La Grange, Ind. One hour later his wife, aged 115, died of the same complaint. Brio. Gen. John 11. Broach, who had squandered a fortune of STlO.OiM), was sent to jail in New York fordmnkenness. Investigation of the condition of Ohio miners in the Hooking valley showed that great distress generally prevailed. John L. Sullivan entered upon a protracted debauch at Jacksonville, Fla., and his theatrical company deserted him. Icaria, the community established near Corning. In. by French socialists a century ago, has passed into a receiver's hands. Mas. Minerva C. Taylor, a seamstress at Guthrie. O. T., shot and killed William Henry Harrison, who had annoyed her. Three men were kilted and a fourth mortally wounded in a fight between the Smith and Cox factions near Osborn's Gap, Vii. Three Italians who were believed to be the western agents of the Adams counterfeiting gang were arrested in St. Louis. six thousand French-Canadians were said to be willing to return to Canada from Michigan if furnished free transportation and a bonus. Gladys Brooks, who had been working- us a waitress for the hist three years in various northwestern cities, has come into the possession of a fortune amounting to §140.000 in Philadelphia. The Congressional Temperance society held its sixty-first annual meeting in Washington and elected Nelson Dingley. Jr., of Maine, as president. Geokoe McLellan Whitney, a commercial traveler for a Boston shoe house, and Miss Grace Seavening Grant, of Indianapolis. Ind., were married at Providence. R. L, after an acquaintance of only twenty minutes. Cait. Henry IV. Howoatk was acquitted at Washington of the charge of embezzling 811.800 from the government while holding the position of disbursing officer in the United States signal service. III.LA and Fred Brooks (brother and sister) were run down by a Baltimore »V Ohio train near Mansfield, O., and killed. A Louisville & Nashville train was wrecked near Greenville, Ala., one man being killed and a score injured. The college at Beaver Fulls, Pa., was destroyed by fire. The fifty students escaped, but lost their effects. Fires throughout the country during the week ended on the 211(1 caused a total loss of *2,1122,210. Two convicts and twenty-three mules were suffocated by a fire in a mine near Birmingham, Ala., which was set by incendiaries. James and William Toole, brothers, who for twenty years had been estranged. were reconciled at the bedside ot their dying mother at English,
i nd.
Paul Jones, one of the wealthiest and most widely-known distillers in Kentucky, died suddenly in an infirmary at Louisville. James W. Lawrence, senior member of a Minneapolis law firm, failed for
§100.000.
While temporarily insane A. G. Walker, a prominent business man of Terre Haute. Ind., shot at his wife and then killed himself. Walter G. Ham.nhr, for twenty years the trusted teller of the First national bank at Lynchburg, Va., was arrested on the charge of embezzling §22,000 of the bank's funds. Mrs. Henry Scott, of Eureka. 111., sought out her husband, who had deserted her, and killed herself in his
presence.
of American citizens in Hawaii until the charges aftd evidence could be
looked into.
Frank Wood (colored) confessed just before his death at Halsey. Ky., to tho murder of five men. and said that in one case an innocent man was hanged
for the crime.
liOIWEl) A BASK.
Burglnrs Uso Dynamite in an Iowa Institution.
J
PERSONAL AND POLITICAL. Frederick Douglass, the noted freedman, orator and diplomat, died suddenly on the 20th at his residence in Anucostia, a suburb of Washington, of heart failure. His death was entirely unexpected, as he had been enjoying the bestof herath. He was78 years old. William ('. M raniY. aged 75. the last of Gen. Sam Houston's army in the war for independence for Texas, died in Philadelphia. The republicans in convention at Detroit. Mich., nominated Judge Joseph P. Moore, of Lupere, for justice of tho supreme court, and Roger W. Butterfield, of Grand Rapids, and Charles II. Haekley, of Muskegon, for regents of tlie university. The Michigan prohibitionists met at Lansing and nominated Myron 11. Walker, of Grand Rapids, for justice of the supreme court, and 1). B. Reed, of Hillsdale, and Noah W. Cheever, of Ypsilanti, for regents of the univer-
sity.
Frank Constantine Victorato died in Salem, Mass., aged '.is. When ii young man he took part in the Greek rebellion which resulted in the independence of that country. Prohibitionists of Rhode Island in state convention at Providence mnni* i*ited Smith Guimby, of Warren, as their candidate for governor. The, funeral of Isaac P. Gray, late minister to Mexico, took place at Union City, Ind. Absalom Stubble field, who had lived on a farm near Bloomington, ill., since 1812, died from pneumonia. Gen. Joseph 1!. Carr, u war veteran, and three times elected secretary of state of New York, died at his home in Troy, aged (Mi years. George W. MrBuiue, ex-secretary of state, was elected by the Oregon legislature on the thirtieth ballot as United States senator to succeed John
Dolph.
Samuel Dana Horton, the distinguished writer on financial topics, died in a hospital at Washington, aged 57
years.
FOREIGN. Two thousand Chinese soldiers were killed and many injured by the explosion of a magazine in the forts of
Takao.
Five Paris newspaper men convicted of levying blackmail were lined and sentenced to imprisonment for from one to five years. Twenty-two French soldiers were killed and thirty-four wounded in collisions with pirates inTonquin. The attempt in the British house of commons to overthrow the Rosebery ministry on the question of the Indian cotton duties was an inglorious failure. Five grown members of a family at Brampton. Out., became insane and were sent to an asylum for assaulting their mother. Twenty-five of the leaders of the recent black flag riots in Formosa were beheaded by order of the emperor. The town of Koutehal, near Astrahad. Persia, was swallowed up by an earthquake and several thousand persons perished. Lkhei.s entered and looted the city of Morocco, many persons being killed and hundreds wo.inded in the lighting. LATER. In the United States senate on the 25th the time \v:is occupied in working upon the appropriation hills. An item in the sundry civil bill appropriating §150,000 for purchasing the historic property of the lute James G. Blaine in order to prevent its use for theater purposes was agreed to. In the house the deficiency appropriation bill was passed after an amendment to pay Great Britain § 125.00') m settlement of tlie Behring sea award had been de-
feated.
John W. Show alter, of Chicago, was named by the president for judge of the Seventh judicial circuit. An explosion of natural gas wrecked the residence of John Aston at Sharon, Pa., and injured its six inmates, one fatally. George Weaver and his wife, living alone on it farm near Trotw 1. <)., were burned to death in their dwelling. IIeii.zri'.rg it t'o.'s packing house at St. Louis was entered, tlie watchman bound and the safe rifled of upward of §1,000. Five hundred men were imprisoned in a mine at Normanton, Lngland, through an accident in the cages. Fen krai, services, attended by many distinguished persons, were held over the remains of F rederick Douglass at Washington. An earthquake shock was felt at St. Louis and in other towns in the vieitity. It lasted about fifteen seconds. The reported damage to the orange crop of California by frost w»s denied. Cordelia Hill, the colored child who shot and killed her father in defense of her mother at Charlestown, W. Va., wus acquitted. Kmi’eror Menklkk killed 7,000 Gallaa and captured 14,000 slaves in a battle ut Vulluino. Me h-.t 1,000 men. Two ok the three men who robbed a bank at Griswold, la., were captured by Council Bluffs officers after a fight, in w hich one on each side was wounded. David A. Brown, a veteran of the Mexican war, died at Springfield, 111., aged 71 years. Bkadhtukkt's revised record shows the business failures for 1804 aggregated 12,724, with assets of *83,215,000 and liabilities of *151,548,(Mill. Tiio.mah Cav anagh and his wife were burned to death near Middle Haddum,
Conn.
Judge Henry L. Kdmondh, of the St. Louis criminal court, adopted a rule requiring that all foreigners who wish to be naturalized in his court must be able to intelligently speak and uader-
mil the English language.
They Secure I.ittlc liuoty —Suftppctg Fight Demperately on llcing Arrested in Council ItinfTs—One Officer uml a Thief Shot.
Atlantic, Ta., Feb. 26.—The F’irst national bank of Griswold, Cass county, was entered by burglars about midnight Sunday, entrance being gained j by prying open a back window. The ] robbers blew open the vault door | and then drilled into the front door of the locked safe, put in I a heavy charge of explosive, lit a fuse and closed the vault doors. The charge wrecked the vault, doing more | than *3.500 damage to the safe, to the vault and building. The noise of the explosion was so great that the burglars made a hasty departure. Over *4(K) worth of stamps belonging to the postmaster and *120 in nickels inside the vault are known to have been taken. A posse of men is scouring the country for traces of the thieves, w 10 are evidently professionals. Council Bluffs, la., FYb. 26.—A shooting affray took place Monday evening on the courthouse steps iu which a bank-robber was dangerously | hurt, Nick O'Brien, a deputy sheriff, was wounded so that he may die. and Motormun Stallard received a flesh wound from a big bullet. During the day u telegram was received by j the authorities notifying them that the First national bank at Griswold hud been robbed during the night and *125 in nickels and *400 in postage stamps | taken. The burglars were supposed to have come this way, and there were four in the gang. Late ^ in the afternoon Deputy Sheriffs O’Brien and Hooker visited Kiel's hotel and there found two men answering the descriptions given them ■ over the wires. The strangers were reading newspapers in tlie hotel office. The officers stepped up to them and told them to come along, which they did without? parley. A third man who i was seated in the office arose at tlie same time and followed, i They walked along F'iftli avenue un- ! til they reached the south steps of the j courthouse, w hen O'Brien, who had been walking ahead, stepped back and ordered the men to go on. At this moi niiMit the man who had been j walking behind, whose name is : thought to be .1. Riley, dodged behind a tree and exclaiming: ' ‘Tin not going any farther,” w hipped out a revolver and commenced shooting. At the same instant the other captive and the third stranger pulled out their revolvers and got ready to shoot. The first bullet from Riley's revolver struck O'Brien in tlie abdomen, a little to the left side. . O'Brien drew his revolver and shot at the man just in front of him, who also hud his weapon in his hand. The man fell to the ground and was picked up and carried into the jail. Jailer ! I'eterson heard the shooting anil run to the spot, but before he arrived Riley and the other man, who was uninjured, had fled. They went dowu | Fifth avenue, with Deputy Sheriff Hooker uml I’olieemen Weir and Uovalt in hot pursuit. Another shooting af- | fray took place m front of the woman's hospital, but none of these shots I took effect. About half an hour after the shooting Officer Weir "got a drop” on one of the fugitives. J. B. White, alias Wilson, and brought him back to the county jail. Riley got away. The robber who was wounded gives his name as William J. Smith, which was the name under which he regis tered at the hotel in the morning. The bullet from O'Brien’s revolver entered his left leg near the groin and w as taken out by tlie physicians. Deputy Sheriff O'Brien is in a very precarious condition and may die a.>j the result of
his wounds.
During tlie fusillade an electric motoriiiiiu named Slutturd was struck by a stray bullet in the forehead between the eyes, but was not seriously hurt. The bullets from the promiscuous firing flew wildly and there were many narrow escapes. Miss Ellen Aylesworth was walking along the sidewalk opposite the Catholic school, and for u.iew seconds was in direct line with the course that the bullets were taking in the fusillade. One of them cut the sleeve of her dress and another whistled so close to her ear it almost
stunned her.
HAD A RICH UNCLE .A Mlrliiaau Woman tall* Into a Uortuoe of Nearly Sil.OOO.OOO. Blissfield, Mich.. Feb. 26.—Mrs. Isaac Hope, of this town, has fallen heir to nearly Sl.lMMl.OOO by the death of an uncle in Africa. When only 16 years of age. the uncle, William McKay, run away from Scotland and located iu the gold fields of Africa. His parents both died and everybody lost track of the boy. He died some time ago, leaving an estate of *15,000,001). There are sixteen heirs living iu Ohio, Michigan and Illinois, among whom the estate will be divided. NmiihmI for tlu<l|ge. Washington, F’eb. 26. — The president Monday sent to tlie senate the following nominations: John W. Showalter, of Illinois, to be United States circuit judge for the Seventh judicial circuit (act approved February 8, 1805). Olin Wellborn, of California, to be United States district judge for the southern district of California. .llillloiiM for Pensions. IV a suing ton. Feb. 26. The secretary of the interior has made a requisition on the secretary of the treasury for I *10,850,000 for the quarterly payments j of pensions to he distributed to the pension agencies ns follows: Boston, *1,800.000; San Francisco, Cal., #750.000; Washington, 1). *1,050.000; Augusta, Me.. #800.000; Columbus. <>., *3,850,000; Detroit, Mich., -i KcviNril Kfionl of EitOuri'H. New York. Feb. 26. — Bradst.reet's revised record shows the failures for 1804 aggregated 12,724. with assets of 832,#15,Oik) and liabilities of *151,548,000.
Tier Kacort. [A true tnciiicnt.l Ml' hnl not mourned like us of riper years: Tier day- had l>een for louirhter. not for tears. Few were her kindred In the better land. Yet death was drawing near, witn outstretched
hand.
Oh. for some dear one on the other side To lead her safely o'er the darksome tide! We watched her fading dally from our sight. Until, ut close of a long summer night. As the first rays of daybreak lit the gloom. Bhe asked: Who are these people In the room ■" Then on her features shone a brightening change. As If the faces were no longer strange: Soon as tho angels were familiar grown, Rejoicing she departed u ifA Arr oun. No aliens come to meet us when at Last The weary pilgrimage of life Is past: As tender logre as waits us ut our birth Attends the y a rung from our home on earth. —Frances l- Mace, In Youth's Companion.
Makes Pure Blood
And thus
Hood’s Sarsaparilla Gives Perfect Health. « X had been bothered with pimples on my face and body for five years. I hod tried many different remedies to get rid of them but the medicine did not do me any good. 1 read about Hood's Sarsaparilla and bought a bo ttle. Since then 1 have taken five bottles . and am glad to say ^ that the pimples
“ I.h Sh«»
Js she fair?—not the lily is fairer. Is she sweet?—or the rose has no scent. Is she kind?—»o her glances declare her. Is she pure?—as a flower dew-sprent. Some part of her beauty Is mortal; Time files, and youth cannot be stayed; But there glows In her eye. the soul’s portal, A luster that never shall fade. —Joseph li. Gilder, in N. Y. Independent. Tho Kuie of Footrary. How things do go by contraries In this sublunary sphere! And men’s names, of Fate’s vagaries, Are the queerest of tlie queer. Mr. Goodman Is a bad man. Mr. Wellman’s always 111; Mr. Joy. he Is a sad man; Mr. Wiseman's wisdom’s nil. Mr. Blackman is a white man, Mr. White, he is a black; Mr. Stout he Is a slight man, Mr. Neat is mighty slack. Mr. Winter s full of ardor, Mr. Summer is always cold; Mr Gamble ne’er a card or “Chip” was ever known to hold. Mr. Long he is a short man, Mr. Wildman he is meek: Mr. Learned s an untaught man; Mr. Meek has got the “cheek.” Mr. Tailor ne’er made breeches, Nor did Nullor drive a nail; Mr. Pitcher never pitches, Nor does Sailqr reef a saiL * Mr. Watt is always early, Mr. Early’s always late; Mr. Sweet is always surly. Mr. Crook is always straight M And so, thro' the categories! Oh, what is there that can lie Like men’s names—except the stories Told by tombstones when men die?
—Boston Globe.
Give some people the power to move mountains, and how quick they would spoil the country for everybody else.—Haul's
Horn.
Put a smile on your face when you go out for a walk, and somebody will be helped. Ram’s Horn. You often hoar a woman say: “It's no use talking,” hut she doesn’t think so all tin# same.—Texas Sittings.
are all gone. Hood's Sarsaparilla has purified my blood and built up my system. 1 gladly recommend Hood's Sarsaparilla. I feel very thankful for the benefit I received from Hood’s Sarsaparilla. In conclusion I would say that
Sarsaparilla
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LOGUE ’-.IlY' - V"’ w ■ Q (_» U Or I_ /Via. v..-, ER0CKTON..MAS3. Over One Mllllcn People wear the YV. L. Douglas $'!» & $4 Shoes Ail our shoes are equally sath,factory They zivc the best volue for the money. They e.)ual custom .hoes in style and tit. Their wearing qualities are unsurpassed. The prices are uniform,—stamped on sole. From $1 to $.4 saved over other makes. If your dealer cannot supply you we can.
oughs and Colds, Sore Throat, IJrouchitis, Weak Lungs, Gonoral Debility aud all forms of Emaciation are speedily cured by
Scott’s Emulsion Consumptives always find great relief by taking it, and consumption is often cured. No other nourishment restores strength so quickly and effectively. Weak Babies and Thin Children are made strong and robust by Scott’s Emulsion when other forms of food socm to do them >o good whatever. Tho only genuine Scott’s Emulsion is put up in sa/moncolored wrapper. Refuse cheap substitutes! Send J or pamphlet on Scott's Emulsion. FREE. Scott A. Bow no, N. Y. All Druggists. SO cents ond $|.
