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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 4 Oct 1893, p. 2

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McHENBY. HUPP ILLINOIS, fEADE LACKS LIFE. RECOVERY SLOWER THAN WAS ANTICIPATED. %-r ffetaraed .'*• * Funeral nd • ri Ism To HUBW Niagara"# Stapewtom Pwwisr-- tov*ge llonew Attacks Her afextcwi Stete Storm-Swept. ; r ' ___ S Caw of «Hope Def f f R G. DUN & Co.'s Wee! Of Trade says: A complete statement of failures for the quarter which closed on Friday is not pos­ sible, but the number thus far reported ia •bout 4,000, and the aggregate of liabilities ;i about S150.000.000. ereatlv lunmssinir the record of any previous quarter. For the week the failures have been 329 in the United States, against 177 last year, and In Canada 34, against 31 last year. "Hope i deferred," explains the week in part, and . It Is doqbtless true thft many indulged in ' reasonable hopes, but bus in ell has not en- *"v!j •j-poctwt.ioy.'i Mfiny «ork= ; which have resumed operations do not find orders as large or the demand from Cus­ tomers as vigorous as they anticipated, / aad with come it Is a question whether : they will not close attain. While money on call has been abundant and cheap, and about S4,500,000 clearing-house cer­ tificates have been retired, there is per­ ceptible greater caution ia making com­ mercial loans at New York and at some Western points. Confidence, proverbially of slow growth, has been somewhat dimin­ ished. in part because advancing exchange , suggests the possibility of gold exports. Turbine Wheels for Niagara Falls. THREE of the turbine water wheels, with their auxiliary mechanism, which , were built in Philadelphia at a cost of AAAA AAA V t ..Ail <P4W;WV iUl tiiC pui^vr-Q vi Uiii" izing the Stupendous power of Niagara Falls for industrial- purposes, will shortly be placed in position. Each wheel is expected to develop 5,000 horse power. The turbine proper is but six : inches in diameter with two faces, each - eighteen inches. A feed pipe seven and a'half feet in diameter will carry the water to the turbines, and the lit­ ter, in revolving, will transmit power to an electric dynamo at the surface through a shaft of tubular steel 3J feet in diameter and ten feet in depth. j&reatod at His ^Brother's Funeral. MOFFAT NELSON was arrested at Ealo^Ia., at the grave of his brother, Nelson. The Masonic burial _ was in progress and the first [hdfuls of clay were being thrown e coffin as the officer touched n on the shoulder and showed him the° warrant. The arrested man was permitted to remain with the offi­ cer at his side until the burial was over. The trouble originated two years ago in a political quarrel, during which Nelson struck James Porter in the eye, causing the loss of that organ. He left the State at the time. Porter, knowing Nelson would attend his brother s funeral, caused the warrant to be reissued a£d served. Hhm funds of the company. Mr. WaA> burn is 75 years old and has bfeeb Thsaeurer of the Old Ooloay Railroad for thirty years. He has'also been Treasurer of the Old Colony Steamboat Company almost from the time it start­ ed He is also Treasurer of the Union Freight Line. The lose to the road is at least $1*6.100 and some put it as high as $150,000. President Choate refuses to say whether or not criminal pro­ ceedings will be instituted against Mr. Washburn. WESTERN. >/ .*' ' Wion*d by the Bite of a Btonw, * ' AT St. Louis, Mo., William Hooper, an'employe of Hall's show, is hovering iU *, between life and death from blood- , poisoning, caused by the bites of a lioness. Hooper was feeding the ani- « ~ ••• mal at the time the affair happened, pv The animal caught his arm,'and suc- |r»- * oeeded in chewing his hand and wrist before help came. Hooper's wound lf!i? was attended to by a neighboring doc- M ^ . tor, but a dozen hours after being bit* ten Hooper's arm swelled up to a fright- > ful size. In all probability his entire arm will have to be amputated in order ; . to cave his life. -f# §)fr „ »qr of the Shamrock. >&; §£* IRISH day at the fair was character- , ' <** ?• ,teed by the worst possible weather. §gi,. . {lain fell nearly all day, and of course ' prevented thousands from turning out. j&£'But fully ten thousand sons of Erin were " In the procession that splashed through the mud at Jackson Park, and % • they were headed by Dublin's Lord Mayor and Chicago's chief executive. f:" They were watched by fully a hundred thousand people, and, altogether, what k the celebration lacked in nuxn&gr&W&s {£, atoned for by enthusiasm. ' HEWS NUGQBTA^ AT Caton, N. Y., Pottsville, Pa., and Pittefield, Mas«., snow fell on Friday. MARION HEDGHPITH, the Glendale train robber, has been sentenced' to twenty-five years in prison. JOHN M. EAICGSTON. the colored Vir­ ginia politician, is reported to have joined the Democratic party. * JOHN TURPIE, brother of Senator David Turpie, has returned to Indian­ apolis after having been mourned as dead for twenty-five years. THE palatial residence of William A. Lawson, of the New York Exchange, near Port Chester, N. Y., was burned, entailing a loss of $200,000. THE town of Jalapa, in the northern part of the State of Quererato, Mexi­ co, was visited tojy a terrible storm a few days ago. Scores of houses were demolished and many people killed and injured. The crops in the path of the storm were destroyed, ana there is much suffering among the people. MARTIN E. BO LAND. President of the Grand Rapids^ Typographical Union, committed suicide at Gfand Rapids, Mien., by taking morphine. At one time he owned and edited a newspaper in Kansas and was once a member of the Kansas Legislature. He had been cured of the dHnking habit, but fell from grace, an$ shame caused him to commit the act. BEADING lumbermen of the North- West have organized an insurance com­ pany at Eau Claire, Wis., patterned after the old English Lloyd's plan. Its operations will extend over several States. JT. A. Smith is the attorney for all subscribers. A. Lamb, of Clin­ ton* Iowa, is president. , S. DRYFUS, who claims to be a Chi­ cago liquor dealer, was arrested at Sioux City, Iowa, charged with swin­ dling people in towns in Iowa and South Dakota. It is said he has procured in small loans on valuable f rings $Ia000 from people in the trade,, %'=' B1BTD0M * " "'X. - .fr - f * . . THE steamship State, of Nebraska arrived at New York from Glasgow with two shipwrecked sailors on board. They were Fred Abbott and\ Joseph Porter, Newfoundlanders and part of the crew of, the schooner Snippey, which sailed for the fishing banks on Aug. 13. A SENSATION was sprung at Boston, at the meeting of the stockholders of thfe Old Colony Railroad when it was announced that Treasurer John M. Washburn had been misappropriating JOHN H. MCBRIDE has begun suit in the United States Court at Des Mcines, Iowa, to recover royalties aggregating $500,000 on an attachment to a sulky plow, for which, he says, he was grant­ ed a patent in 1^75. A BAD accident occurred on the Chi­ cago and Grand Trunk Railroad at the Bellevue, Mich., station at 2 o'clock Wednesday morning, by which two lives were lost and five persons injured, one of them fatally. FRANK a MCBETH of Indianapolis, against whom there is a shortaere of $10,01)0due the Grand Lodge of Knights of Ladies of H< nor, after being miss­ ing for two weeks, was found bv hip son at Decatur, 111. He had been drinking hard. , THE Rev. W. D. Thomas, Presbyter­ ian Secretary for Wisconsin, has been indicted in the United States Court at La Crosse for writing a postal card to the Rev. C. Lesch. formerly Presby­ terian pastor at Eau Claire, in anything but complimentary terms. THE Rev. Edward D. Neill, the first resident Protestant minister of St. Paul, Minn., died there Tuesday at the age of 70 yeaf*s. He was one of the most brilliant men in the West, having written many books, among them a history of Minnesota, which has run through seven volumes. THE First National Bank of Ham­ mond, Ind.. and the Milwaukee Na­ tional Bank of Wisconsin, which re centlv suspended payment, having fully complied with the conditions imposed by the Comptroller of the Currency, and their capital stock being unim­ paired, have received permission to re­ open their dodrs for business. JOHN HOWARD CONRAD, a wealthy resident of Helena, $Iont., has sued his wife for divorce. The latter is a daugh­ ter of Mrs. Josephine Barnaby, for whose murder Dr. Graves was'tried. Three corespondents are named: Will­ iam S. Hopkins, of St. Clair, Mich.; Richard Bishop, of Denver, and Joseph A. Baker, who married Conrad's sister. BIG ANTELOPE, with 300 braves, is now camped between Pine Ridge1 Agency and Wounded Knee and the braves are beginning to indulge in ghost dancing. The friendly Indians at Pine Ridge are a good deal worried over the outlook, fearing serious trouble, but the agencv people say there is no danger ofkfah outbreak. Still Big Antelope's '"band is being closely watched and there may be ex­ citing times in store for people in those parts. WITH murder in his heart Cassius Belden, a carriage painter at 366 La Salle avenue, Chicago, went down to the Board of Trade a little before noon Wednesday. He got a place in the south gallery and just at the moment when the trading crowd o» the floor was the thickest he fired five revolver shots iiitd'the tangle of men beneath him. Three innocent persons fell vic­ tims of the hand of the madman. It is said he had speculated and lost money on the Board. JAMES MCGRATH, thief,. murderer and all-around tough and crook, Chi­ cago. came to his natural end at the hands of the Chicago police Thursday. He died revolver in hand and with his face to the front. Officer Michael Flemming and Officer William Butler put two bullets into his breast and he fell dead. McGrath put a bullet into Officer Flemming and shot a passer-by. This encounter came about from the fact that a few hours earlier McGrath had shot a companion in a quarrel over a can of beer. EUGENE KIRSCH was among the pris­ oners in Woodlawn (111.) police court the other day. His arrest was caused by certain attractions not in the bill at the Hotel Endeavor, near the World's Fair grounds. He and William Simp­ son, both employee of the hotel, quar­ reled about the results of a game of draw poker. Hotel Endeavor was .founded to take care of religiously in­ clined men and women who feared con- tamujafcipn by le.-idence in the more ^worldly quarters of the citv. But the game of cards insinuated iteelf and a £ tabbing affray resulted. Kirsch cut Simpson in tHe right side, but the TiVouad.ift as aiot dangerous. , , FIRE on * Monday destroyed three solid blacks of the finest retail houses in St. Joseph, Mo., entailing a loss of $1,000,000. Five persons were injured, one probably fatally. A stiff breeze aided the flames. Lack of water impeded the fire department early in the day, and the fire gained such head­ way that the department was powerless to check it. Many casualties were re­ ported at first. It was rumored that five persons had been killed by the falling walls of the Commercial Bank Building, but investigation showed this to be groundless. There were many narrow escapes. In the Seven- story building occupied by Townsend & Wyatt over one hundred persons were at work when the flames were discovered. They spread with such rapidity that the escape of many was cut off, and they were forced to wait for help from the department. The fire is the most disastrous that ever visited St. Joeeph. Two CRAZED Chinamen ran amuck in a crowd at Chicago Tuesday even­ ing and wounded five men, one of them mortally. The Chinamen, John Sam and King Ling.are locked up. The row was precipitated by a remark by Israel Weinberg. He went into the laun­ dry at No. 500 Jefferson street, con­ ducted by the Chinamen, and called for his linen. It was not ready and he criticised the delay. Immediately King Ling grabbed a hatchet and made for him. As Weinberg went out the door the Chinaman st.iuck him in the back. He ran yelling ipto the street and a crowd gathered about. The Chinaman turned on the crowd striking right and left with the hatchet. The people scat­ tered and then turning on the Chinaman sent a volley of stones at him. He retreated to his laundry and breaking the glass out of the windows threw it at the crowd of men and boys. The tumult raised drew a crowd of 500 per­ sons about the place. As they gathered near thp door John Sam, another Chinamaftilh the place, ran out and drawing a long-blnded, two-edged knife ran into the crowd, cutting and slash ing everybody in reach. "PEACE on earth and good will to­ ward men!" With these sublime words, pronounced by nearly 5,000 voices, the /¥& -rp \//V * wonderful parliament of religions dis­ solved Wednesday evening in the Hall of Columbus, at Chicago. Ft was a rtoble and inspiring scene that which marked the dispersing of the creeds in the great gray Palace of Art on the "shores of Lake Michigan. Never „ «*• ooufutiqn - My at DEATH'S SCYTHt! B^el hav* so mam religions, soitt&ny creed*. • stood side by lido, hand in hand, and almost heart to heart, as in that groat amphitheater. Hover since written history began ha& va­ ried mankind been so bound abottt |flth golden chain's love. The nattonff of the earth, the creeds of Chri$tpn4©m, Buddhism and Baptist, Mohammedan and Methodist, Catholic and Confu­ cian, Brahmin and Unitarian, Shinto jiand Episcopalian, Presbyterian and Pantheist, Monrtheist and Poly- theist, .representing all shades of thought and. conditions of men, have at last Jpet togther ift the common bond of sympathy, humanity and respect. On the great platform of Columbus Hall sat the representatives of creeds and sects that in bygone days hated one another with a hatred that knew no modei ation. And now they have gone their many ways: back to tfa»-Ckieat-^nd to their peoples?^ 5 H ' - S O U T H E R N T N. W. CUNEY (colored), the Collector, of Customs at Houston, Texas, has be­ gun suit for $5,000 damages against the Pullmnn Palace Car (Jempanv for refusing to give him a berth in a sleep­ ing car. . COLONEL H. C&AY KINO, serving a life sentence for the murder of • David H. Posten at Memphis, has written a letter charging that his conviction was the result of a conspiracy between Judge Dobose and Posten's family. WILLIAM MCCOOMBS killed himself in a hotel at Wheeling, W. Va. He had been drinking. No other cause is known. David F. Williams, of San Francisco was found dead in his room at the Coolidge house, Boston. Proba* ble suicide. s WASHINGTON. ' SENATOR DON CAMERON surprised the Senate by making a speech, the first he has delivered during his six­ teen years' service. He spoke for free A WASHINGTON paper says that ex- Representative George H. Durand, of Michigan, has been selected by the At­ torney General to assist in the prosecu­ tion of Federal officials and others im­ plicated in charges of opium and Chi­ nese smuggling at Puget Sound, Wash­ ington, and vicinity. IN GENERAL MME. JANE HADING, M. Coquelin and his son Jean have arrhred at New York en route for Chicago. THE rebel fleet under Admiral Mello, has again bombarded Rio Janeiro. Several women and children are re­ ported killed. FIRE at Alexandria Bay, on the St. Lawrence, destroyed the St. Lawrence Hotel, postoffice and other property. Less, $30,000. PRESIDENT GANNON has withdrawn the call for a convention of the Irish National League in Chicago. Thio meeting is postponed indefinitely. - JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER is negotiat­ ing for the purchase of 500 acres of land at Tarrytown, N. Y. The price is about $750,000, and it is said that Mr. Rockefeller intends to build a $1,000,- 000 residence on the property* JUDGE JENKINS, at Milwaukee, has appointed Henry F, Whitcomb and Howard Morris as„ receivers for the Wisconsin Central Railroad. The ac­ tion is the result of the cancellation.of the lease to the Northern Pacific, WILLIAM C. WHITNEY has written a letter denying that any bargain was made with J. J. Van Alenby which the latter was to be made Ambassador to Italy in return for his $50,000 contribu­ tion to the Democrati6 campaign fund. THE railroads played the. hog com­ pletely in the early stages of the World's Fair, thinking people would go anyway. Later they made slight reductions, and travel inci-eased. Still further reductions resulted in still heavier traffic, and now they are breaking their necks in an attempt to gain a longer time in which to reap their harvest. They are about to take steps to offer still further reductions for the first two weeks in November: This is to be done on the hypothesis that the Fair will remain open for that period. A World's Fair director, who did not wish to be named, said: "The rail­ roads acted in the beginning the policy of the dog in the manger to a discouraging perfection. Some weeks ago they concluded to try the policy of decency, and they have been making money hancT over fist ever since. They now see the seriousne99 of the mis­ take they made in the begin­ ning. They fancy that by mak­ ing a specious plea to the stock­ holders they can secure an extension of the Fair. Well, they oan do no 6uch thing. The Fair will be closed Oct. 32. When cold weather comes on there is not a building on the ground that will be habitable, and what few people might be attracted by low rail­ road rates would be disappointed, even if the impossibility would DQ performed of retaining exhibits and exhibitors after the pericd irrevocably get for their departure." MARKET REPORTS. CHICAGO, / CATTLE--Common to Prime.... (3 so @ 8 TO HOGS--Shipping Grades A 00 & 1 00 BHEEP--Fair to Choice 2 SS @ 4 50 THE RAILROA© FL&0 AND LANTERN. -v j*;' *, v! * 1 r Vy. v v*»** * ^vv,4 W"' ^ $ *5 • % •my V " frK; m --From the Chicago Timet. g1 • *. awro APPARENTLY AUTHENTIC #»OR8 SO DECLARE. OariBjMUi Qntot In the teds or the Alleged Program--Getting Keadjr toXfcctte A Masterly Inaetlrtt^ Wwhln|toa correspondence: IONGRBB8 WHEAT--No. 2 Hprimr COBS--So. 2 OATS--So. 2 RYE--So. 2 B U TT EK--Choice Creamery..... EGGS--Freuh. . . POTATOES--New. per bo .'. INDIANAPOLIS, CATTLE--Shipping 8 00 HOGS--Choice Light 4 00 SHEEP--Common to Prime..... WHEAT--So. 2 Red.. . .. CORN--S A 2 White " OATS--So. 2 White " 6T. LOUI&' TTLE .>08 ^ HEAT--So. 2 Bed.! COBK--So. 2 OATS--No. 2 ' """ RTE--So. 2 CATTLE CINCINNATL HOGS M si as & 27*@ 19 <9 67 41 29 47 28* 20 70 8 00 a 40 so §* < I 00 T to 00 & 02 & 41 & 31 8 00 S 00 Ss 00 « 75 IS & 68 S7K# 38* tt 9 11 W H E A T^-NA' 2 Bed! * COBN--No. 2.,. * OATS-NO. 2 Mixed. ...!!!!!!*"!! It IE--No. 2..-.. DETROIT.'" CATTLE HOGS.,,. BHEEP WHEAT--No. 2 Bed COB.V--So. 2 Yellow OATS-SO. 2 White TOLEDO. WHEAT-NO. 2 Bed COHN--No. 2 Yellow OATH--No. 2 White IIYE--No. z „ BUFFALO." WHEAT--No. 1 Bprins COBN--NA 2 OATS-NO. 2 White... RYE--No. 2....... MILWAUKEE. WHEAT-NO. 2 Spring COBN--So. 3 . . . . OATS-NO. 2 White.,.../..!!.'.!'. RYE--So. 1 BABLEY--No. 2 POBK--New Ideas !! NEW YOBK. CATTLE HOGS SHEEP.......... WHEAT---No. 2 Bed.*.".*.!!!!!!"" COBN-So. 2 ^ OATS--Mixed Western?"..?!!!! BCTTEB--Creamery POBK--New Mess S 00 & 4 SO 8 00 <$ 7 00 8 00 • uu 66% BANDITS WERE FOlLEOi' . Met by Bine Costa and Loaded Berohtra on an Express Car. Joy reins unconfined in railroad circles at St. Joseph, Mo., over the clever ruse of the Kansas City, St. Joe and Council Bluffs Railroad of­ ficials, which resulted in the death of two and capture of three express train robbers a mile and a half from that city. Information came to the officials late kit night that train No. 3 would be held tip near Francis, a village in the midst of a desolate waste. Action was im­ mediately taken and a dummy train ex­ actly like No. 3 was made up. The thief of police and sixteen officers were put aboard and the train pulled out. (When two miles out the engineer saw a lantern signalling the train to stop. He immediately slowed up and when the train was brought to a stand­ still a masked man jumped aboard the engine and held revolvers at the heads* of the engineer and fireman. Five others ran to the express car and de­ manded admittance. The door was opened and, two guarding without, three of the bandits jumped into tho car with revolvers drawn. When fair«\ ly within the police stepped out of concealment and called upon the robbers to surrender. They were taken by $urnrise but opened fire. A fusillade of shots was exchanged and when the timoke cleared away Ed Kohler and Higo Indall were lying dead upon the floor of the car. Fredericks, Hersh, and Harvey were placed under arrest and a posse started in pursuit of the robber who was in the engine. Not an officer was hurt, and the train (returned at once to the, city, where the Ithree prisoners were locked up and the jtwo dead men taken to the undertak­ er's. It was the most successful rout the officers have ever given a band of rob­ bers, and there is great rejoicing over the result. All of the train robbers lived in St. Joseph. . ."M. SHOT THE ROBBER DEAQI Masked Wen Attempt to Bob the Valpb* rmisti, Ind., Normal School. The sensational attempt at robbery at the banking department of the 'Northern Indiana Normal School a£ Valparaiso by two masked men, which resulted in the killing of Frank Robin­ son, one of the robbers, and the wound­ ing of his companion. Claire Moody, as ihe gavo his name, is still the main |topie of talk in the vicinity. It was one of the boldest acts ever attempted in the northern part of the State, and *vas in a place surrounded by hundreds of boarding houses, where over 2.500 Btudents were within a stone's throw. Two masked men armed to the teeth came into the banking office of the college shortly after 3 o'clock in the afternoon. The only occupants of the room were the Secretary, Miss Kate Cor boy, and her assistant, Miss Emma Jones. The women, although covered by the robbers' revolvers, screamed and fled. One of the men fired point blank at Miss Jones, the bullet missing the girl by only a few inches. Realis­ ing that their plans were frustrated and •that any efforts to force the huge safe (would now be useless, with the alarm given, the two desperadoes walked coolly out of the office and down the steps, revolvers in either hand. They were confronted by Mail Carrier Ar­ nold, whom they covered with theif weapons. Unabashed the latter began to yell fire ill a stentorian voice, while students poured out of the college buildings and the big boarding houses and dormitories, which cluster all about. At the first shout the burglars wheeled without firing and ran to the fence, which they leaped. They ran weeks ago and again registered from Cincinnati. Claire arrived a few days ago and inquired for Frank, and is now believed to be his brother. In an interview Claire said they expected to get about $30,000, as they supposed Brown & Kinney kept all their monev in the safe. Howe, who brought the robbers down, was released on bail and is the hero of the city. His entire load of peaches were sold on the streets and over $1,000 was realized. BANKS THAT HAVE SUSPENDED. Of the 66O Institutions Which Failed Sev­ enty-two Have Resumed. Statistics compiled from official data show that from January to September this year 560 State ana private banks in the United States failed, and that seventy-two have resumed business. In the same time 155 national banks failed, seventy of which have resumed. The following table gives the number of failures, etc., of State and private banks since Jan. 1,1893: 00 | F oc e m s r •TATK8. 5 H' «VA<sa oc e m s s a. 1 a p p- s a. Alabama 6 New Jersey 1 Arkansas 4 New Mexico.... 1 California, 23 'is New York 2d '*2 Colorado ae 1 North Carolina. 4 Delaware 1 1 North Dakota.». 6 DiBt. of Cola'bla 2 Ohio 82 "i Florida 6 "i Oklahoma.... . 1 "i Georgia. « 1 Oregon 16 Idaho .. 8 . . . Pennsylvania... 14 "z Illinois 41 1 Rhode Island... 1 "z Indiana 86 7 8outh Carolina. 4 "i Indian Terrify 1 South Dakota.. 12 Iowa Kansas 88 "3 Tennessee 16 Iowa Kansas 46 4 Texas 1 "i Kentucky V Utah 2 Louisiana. 1 Vermont 8 Maine 1 Virginia 9 "i Massachusetts,. s Washington 14 1 Michigan 16 "4 West Virginia.. Minnesota...... 81 8 Wisconsin 82 "5 Missouri Montana 24 6 8 Wyoming. 4 Nebraska 25 "i Total . 560 72 New Hampshire 6 Total . 560 72 BOMBS IN BARCELONA. An Anarpliist Hnrls a Deadly Missile Aawmsr SpanUh Soldiers, / An anarchist tried to kill Captain General Martinez de Campos at Bar­ celona with a bomb. Thero had been a review of all the troops in the district early in the morning. Shortly before noon tho captain general and his staff took their places on one side of the large square near the middle of the city and the march past began. The head of the column had hardly passed the captain general when a bomb was thrown from the crowd. It 6truck among the staff officers and exploded almost directly under the captain general's horse. The captain general was thrown to the ground and his horse, with its legs shattered, rolled over be­ side him. 'General Castellvi, chief of staff, also fell wounded from his horse. A soldier of the civic guard was killed instantly, and five others were injured so severely by piedes of shell that they probably will die. The name of the anarchist who threw the bomb is Pal­ las. He glories in his deed. He says he intended to kill Martinez de Campos and his whole staff. He will be court- martialed at once. In his house the police found, that night, a great quan­ tity of the most violent revolutionary literature. & i 60 @ 6 00 m s a® 17 00 17 SO @ 6 25 <9 7 2J through the campus, and started down the track of the Fort Wayne Road to­ ward the east, while behind them fol­ lowed a yelling and constantly growing mob of students. The crowd of pur­ suers most have numbered 1,000. • The students were generally un­ armed as to fire arms, but carried clubh­ and stones which they had picked up On the way. The robbers answered -With shots. The other pursuing party now came near enough to open fire, Sid a regular fusillade followed. Na-an O. Howe, of Michigan City, Ind., was driving along the road with a wagon load of poaches, and was fired at Dy one of the twain. He alighted from his vehicle, deliberately sighted his Winchester across the fence, and brought Robinson to the ground with a horrible wound in the breast. The man expired instantly. His companion knelt over him and took his revolver, throwing away his empty weapons. But before he could use it he was shot by Howe from the roadside. He was tfien captured and locked up, Frank Robinson entered the school Nov. 8, 1892, registering from Cincin- 'J*tL He returned there about three _ -.Ui" ..v:.-,. . :*>0J HUNDRED AND SIXTY DROWNED, Russian War Ship Pousalka Founders In the Gulf of Finland. Fragments of woodwork, coats and other wreckage have floated ashore in the Gulf of Finland, showing that the Russian war ship Pousalka, with ten officers and 150 seamen, has foundered, and that ail hands uro xost. She sailed from Revel, in the Gulf of Finland, for Helingsport, in tl|3 same gulf, and has not been heard from since. The Pousalka had four and one-half inches of armor, car­ ried four nine-inch guns, was of 2,000 tons displacement, nad 786 indi­ cated horse-power, and was classed as having a speed of twenty-eight knots. She was built in 1867. The bodv of a sailor who is supposed to have belonged to the crew has been washet^ ashore in the Gulf of Finland. It is known that ales swept over those waters gales swept soon after she left port. There is no doubt, as the admiralty states, that the Pousalka has foundered. ~ -i Statement of the Pension OStoel̂ -?., The weekly statement of the Pension Office shows that the total number of claims now pending is 700,279, divided as follows: Act of June 27, 1890, 141,- 45J; Indian wars, 4,047; old wars, 3,922; service since March 1, 1861, 205,006; additional to prior applications. 123,- 864; increased and accrued widows, 7,057; increased claims, 214,220; •" r. • K mi* 703. The total nuaiuai ui cases rejected during the week was 2.317. and those allowed' 1,771. Government Officials Bribed. Bogota is greatly excited over the discovery of bribery and general cor­ ruption among some of the highest dig­ nitaries of the United States of Colom­ bia. The Antloquai Railroad Company, it is said, purchased favors from th§ Government at a cost of $500,000. < i Burned with Sixty on Board. "the Northern Pacific steamer on ar­ riving at Victoria, B. C., brought word of the burning of the Russian steamer Alphonse ^eevecke with the loss of sixty lives. . How the World Wags. THE'Armour strike at Kansas City is ended. THERE are now 102 cases of smallpox at Muncie, Idd. ALL the Chinese have been driven cut of Burbank, Cal. THE big iron mills in the Pittsburg district are resuming. THE factions of the Iron." Hall are nearing a compromise. YELLOW fever now pervades every part of Brunswick, Ga. * A WATERSPOUT in Madison County, Virginia, did considerable damage. THE Huckleberry stamp mill near Leadville, Colo., burned. Loss $20,000. FRANK MURPHY has been indicted at Winona, Minn., for the murder of T. Rich. THROUGH freight trains west-bound from Chicago are in a demoralized con­ dition. AN effort lis being made to arrange another fight between Fitzsimmons and Jim Hall. THE Rocky Mountain Dime and Dol­ lar, Savings bank, Denver, Colo., has resumed. THE im[>erial army maneuvers are being continued on a grand seale in Hungary. A DAILY steamship line is to be es­ tablished between Southampton and New York. THE Pope has expressed himself as satisfied with the work of Mgr. Satolli in America. Gov. LEWELLING, of Kansas, has de­ cided not to call ah extra session of the Legislature. AT New Orleans Johnny Van Heest knocked out Napier in the twenty- eighth round. ^ JAMES HALLIDAY, a miner at Pitts­ burg, Kan., fell down a shaft and was instantly killed. A HEAVY rain, hail and thunder storm struck St. Paul. Two men were killed by lightning. PICKPOCKETS have been reaping a harvest at the World's Parliament of Religions at Chicago. THE big glass works at Hartford City, Ind., have started up giving em­ ployment to 500 men. SUCCESS is attending the insurrection in Brazil. A monarchy will probably follow the final victory. LITTLE business is being transacted on the New York stock market and the outlook is not bright. ROBERT PHILIPS, of Coalburg, Ala., aged 80, committed suicide by hanging. Domestic troubles the cause. THE Louisville & Nashville shopmen at Louisville are still out on a strike against a reduction of wages. ARTHUR HAZEL, of Philadelphia, was bunkoed out of all his money oy Ta man he met in Galveston, Tex. AT Fort Scott, Kan., Mrs. Virgie Wood in attempting to save her child from burning to death, was fatally burned. LAKE lines have not carried 50 per cent, of their usual coal tonnage, and rail lines will be unable to make up the shortage. E. S. SIMPSON, said to be expert bank robber and confidence man, has been arrested at Chicago on a charge of forgery. COLLECTOR-OF-THE-PORT WISE, OF San Francisco has refused to appoint twenty deputies without pay to enforce the Geary law. FIVE prisoners escaped from jail at Litchfield, Ky.. by cutting through a brick wall and letting themselves down with a blanket rope. ANOTHER dispute has arisen between th« Italian Government and the Roman Church authorities. It may result in the Pope leaving Rome. IN the^Circuit Court atMoberly, Mo., George Halliburton, who had his toes mashed, was awarded $1,500 damages against the Wabash road. lias been dull as a gar­ den hoe forseveral days. Nobody has been fihting, no warwhoops have alarmed the shiv­ ering air, no blood has flown and no scalps have been t a k e n . S e n a t o r Stewart is resting^, from , his labors, while others in iuv CDuabu aj/pcai willing to be at peace. But while the Senate is in­ active there are all sorts of opin- ionj expressed and many rumors are afloat as to what will be the final outcome. One of these is that the unconditional repeal of the Sherman law is beaten, and this, ac­ cording to the opinion of many, beyond •a doubt. It is likely that a vote will • be taken soon, within a week or so at" least, but it will be on the passage of a compromise measure. Strong denials are advanced in some quarters that a compromise has been agreed on, but in the face of these it is generally under­ stood that the most poworful influences are now arrayed in favor of compro­ mise legislation. The program, as your correspondent sees it, contemplates , the passage of a bill through the Senate. The con- CUfftsiicB of ihe House in that bill is to be had, and then a recess taken for the i period of three weeks in order that " tariff legislation may bs formulated. The Ways and Means Committee has its bill much further under way than is publicly admitted. If a three weeks' recess be given it is believed the House itself can be at work On the tariff bill early in December. On reassembling in November some other legislation, probably the bankruptcv bill, is to be taken up until the tariff is ready. If the compromise financial measure be passed by common consent Federal elections will be permitted to lie over till the regular session. • • ,' - • Routine Proceedings. When the Senate met Tuesday monrtug there was.no quorum, and a stay of pro­ ceedings was necessary until members strolled In one by one to a sufficient num­ ber. Mr. Stewart then presented resolu­ tions adopted at a mass-meeting held In Cleveland, Ohio, favorinsr an investigation to ascertain whether Senators are inter­ ested in national banks, railroads, and other special Interests favored or fostered by legislation. The repeal bill was then taken up. Mr. Stewart, who was nized, said he would yield to Mr Dubois, who had given notice of an intention to speak, and Mr. Dubois In turn yleldod to Mr. Perkins, of California. After some un­ important routine business the House pro­ ceeded to the consideration of the federal election law repeal bill The Senate quarreled nearly all day- Wednesday over tbe Dubois resolution to postpone action, until January, upon finan­ cial, tariff, and federal election matter* Senators Dubois. Mitchell, Chandler, Hoar, Peffer. Butler. Woleott. Gorman. Teller, and Pasco were mixed up In it. and beyond the exhibtlon of some rather warm feeling, nothing of importance was accomplished. The storm center shifted from the Senate to the House, Thursday. The federal elec­ tions bill was the bone of contention. Mr. Fithlan. of Illinois, called Mr. Morse, of Massachusetts, a liar, and proceeded to prove It when the Speaker quelled the t«- mult by declaring both gentlemen out of or­ der. BeyonJ this nothing of importance was done, though Representatives Johnson, Breckinridge and Black joined In a debate that was decidedly acrimonious. The day in the Senate waa as calm as the proverb­ ial mill pond. The repeal of the Sherman law was the subject of debate. A number of appointments were confirmed, and the body adjourned. In the Senate, Friday. Mr. Cameron, of Pennsylvania, presented a petition signed, he said, by IW manufacturers of Philadel­ phia, in favor of legislation 10 preserve the protective character of the tarifT and the integrity of silver as a money metal. The petition favors the admission of American silver bullion to coinage upon tbe payment by the owner of a seigniorage absorbing three-fourths of the difference between the London price of bullion and its value when coined. It vas printed as a document. The repeal bill was then taken up. and Mr. Harris of Tennessee addressed the Senate. He favored the coinage of the entire Amer­ ican product of silver, at any ratio to be agreed upon, saying that that of 16 to 1 would be satisfactory. Tbe debate on the Tucker bill being resumed In the House, Mr. La coy of Iowa took tbe floor In oppo­ sition to the repeal of election laws, and laid great stress on the arguments in favor of the constliutlnnallty of these laws Mr. De Armond of Missouri followed in sup­ port of the repeal. Saturday closed the eighth week of fruit­ less debate In the Senate, and as before, the repeal of tbe shorman law was the sub­ ject of attention. But little other busi­ ness. and that unimportant, came up. The session of the House iasted only three hours. Mr. Sayer of Texas. Chairman of the Committee on Appropriations, presented for immediate consider­ ation a bill to extend the time fqr the com­ pletion of the work of the eleventh census until Juno 30, 1604 The bill was passed without objection. Debate on the bill to repeal the national election laws was then resumed. The feature of the de­ bate was the speech of Representative Patterson of Tennessee He ad-, mltted that violence and even fraud might have been used In the South, but as­ serted that the Anglo-Saxon race was In the nature of things certain to dominate eventually in a race contest. Ho main­ tained that President Lincoln went to bte grave never dreaming of universal negro suffrage; that not a soldier who followed tbe flag of the Union and fought its battle# dreamed of it during the war or Immedi­ ately after. "The greatest calamity," said he, "that ever happened to a free people was the assassination of Lincoln. Had he lived and been permitted to carry out hta policy there would have been peace ana prosperity in the South twenty-live year* aga» ' ; French Evepta. 160& Quebec, in Canada, founded, and the North American colonies be­ gun. . 1799. Bonaparte returned from Egypt, deposed the Council and declared him­ self First Consul. ^ 1800. Passage of the Alps by Bona­ parte and astonishing victory at Ma­ rengo. 1802. The Peace of Amiens between France, England, Spain and Holland concluded. 1803. The Bank of France established as a Government institution. 1804. The Empire declared^ oorona- tion of Napoleon in Notre Dame, the Pope assisting. 1805. Napoleon crowned King of Ttaly; another coalition; defeat of al­ lies at Austerlitz. 1806. Campaign against the Prussians 1807 Doleon at Eylau. he Russians defeated by Peace declared. Na- The ended by the victory of Jena. 1807. T; ~ " P° Milan decree. 1808. Spanish dynasty deposed and Joseph Bonaparte placed upon the throne. Peninsular war begun. 1824. Death of Louis XVIII. and ac­ cession of Charles X. 1821. Death of Napoleon at St. Hot ena;" V * ; * WSKGHKSmfih ' • i ' ,v- > . ' V ' * * ^ 3 j

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