McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 24 Jan 1894, p. 2

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and Pub. died from a mocassin's bite mtam exhibiting in Ford du Lac, Wis., BT«nu>ntha ago. DS TO BE WILL TALK ALL WEEK ANEWESTGLA IRACLE. ILLINOIS EBBATED CASK BANKER CHARGED WITH BIGAMY ANT> VO U ;»•*! R AO Y. *) Pay f«r RltsikUNd Cattle--Mcxteaa Sebdi the CV>nsolpupia National Bank, w3 WeUe franmroftjlly altered by Pi w. _ Teller E-aker and Receiving \'®elfer Pierson, report the defalcation Mfibpunts to $47,000. This is the sum Baker con­ fessed was stolen. Baker is in jail, not being able to secure bail. BY a rear-end collision on the Dela­ ware, Lackawanna and Western Rail­ road Monday morning ten persons either were killed outright or died a few minutes after the crash; thirty-eight were so badly hurt that several probably will die. and twenty-five others received painful shocks, bufn9, cuts, and contusions, from which they will suffer for many days to come. The accident occurred just west of the long Hackensack River drawbridge, between Harrison Station and Hobo ken, and about a half mile be­ yond the wesi entrance .to the tunnel, the eastern terminus of which is in Hoboken and onlv four or five minutes' run from the Hcb .ken ferry station. - WESTERN. •Wms a Sneeees -- AUeg*d E*-Prleit Under E!Wei*-*»w Sfotto Will Arbitrate. , v\'~ '5-l.v • ft C. Fttrot ArranM. PEBJtfRY and a conspiracy to rob and are the charges upon which Benjamin C. Faurot, the farmer Pre i- dent of the defunct Lima (Ohio) Na­ tional Bank, was arrested Friday night •. ras he was leaving Chicago _GRBX30RY, attempted to defraud a sleeper on the Pennsylva- Fort ayne, Ir.d., storekeepers by us-Road. The complainant in ing the name of Sprague, Warner & the case, which has now become 3o., of Chicago, was held in $2,000 bail, celebrated, is William Graver, a tank DR. ROSENTHAL, a prominent sur- builder with an office in the Rookery geon Gf Cincinnati, will introduce a Building. This action was taken for very queer measure in the Ohio Legis- fear Faurot would leave the city, and, , M T. ., . , perhaps the country. It is charged 'AhLh«mit^ nn„rrmnH that f aurot was instrumental in cheat- ?l the Abrahamic rite, on the ground ing Graver out of $15,0U0. The step is that th« operation cruel and un- u preliminary one in a case which oecessarj, and that it is a relic of bar- TOheme._ and undt rtak ngs bv Bon a- t^e violator to be prosecuted under the LFTIP !_/• faurot VIQICU PGHUIICU in TUO „ y J^ ^ » «I wrecking of the Lima National Ba& ' Proh*b^ cruelty to chil- and impoverishing it£ £r?i:t2r£j X?n >o B. C. Faui\>t was ti.e kingf years ago bee of th§ Lima capitalists and those of the adjoining country. He was rated at from $5lrt),000 to $1,000,000 and bcre the reputation of keen, oaring and successful financier. F* Lanpr <HW CUM. AT Peoria, I1L, an important and long-continued trial ha? just come to ss end through the dir missal of the so-called "lumpy-law" tattle cases, in which the State Board of Live Stock Commissioners were tried for ordering the killing of cattle affected witn actim mycosis. The cases were on hearing for the second time, but the disease having been proved noncon­ tagious the Live Stock Commissioners dismissed the case and agreed to pay the costs. Rebels in Foil Control, A DISPATCH to the Mayor of Juarez, Mexico, says Chihuahua is in the hands of the rebels. A first attack was made by a detachment of revolu­ tionists on the west side of the town, which called the federal garrison to that point. Immediately the insur­ gents rushed into the city on the east. The masses of the people being in sym­ pathy with Santa Ana Perez, there jmraano resistance from that source. • . BREVITIES. JotN E. DODGE was arrested by a Deputy United States Marshal at 1404 Michigan* avenue, Chicago, Monday morning. He is charged with fraudu­ lently obtaining a pension from the goverment. Dodge, it is charged, got a pension of $74 a month for total blindness from injuries re­ ceived during the war. The fraud was discovered and Government' agents set to look for the bogu3 blind man. Dodge has been in Chicago for soma time. He was a Sergeant of the Co­ lumbian Guards during the Fair and of late has been employed as an agent of the Central Relief Association in the Rookery building. He and his wife have been boarding at the hcuse on Michigan avenue where he was caught. TRAIN NO. 3 on the Kansas City, St Joe and Council Bluffs Railroad was held up at 12:20 o'clock Thursday morn­ ing by five masked men at Roy's Branch, Mo., the scene of the robbery of Sept. 25 last, when two rob­ bers were killed and four cap­ tured. The train was stopped by a red light and a torpedo placed on the track, and the engineer and fireman forced to go to the express car and de­ mand admittance. Express Messenger C. E. Baxter was overpowered and the contents, of the safe, which was open, were swept into a sack jheld by one of the robbers. The icrew of the train was ordered to march down half way the length of the THE Illinois Steel mills at Joliet will train and told to ttand there while the resume oper ations. JAMES MCCANE shot and killed John F. Morriss in Houston, Tex. W. C. CLARK was shot and killed at Re is son, La., by an unknown person. bandits made their escape in a dense growth of willow west of the road. It is not known how much was secured. Sheriff Carson and a large posse of ' deputies are in pursuit of the robbers, 1 whose description tallies with those m ;¥> • WENDELL SEARCY was killed in ! who robbed the "Eli" train on the Han- Birmnarham, Ala., by being thrown nibal and St. Joseph just a week before, from a horse. j "THE State closes its case, your BANDITS were seen near Chihuahua, honor," said Assistant State's Attorney Mexico. The authorities are search- j Bottum to Judge Tuthill at 11:30 ing for them. I o'clock Wednesday, and the fir.-t chap- ADVICES from Brazil say that the *®r of the Coughlin trial, which has insurgent leaders are willing to settle i ^ , , . . . ° i c a g o , w a s o v e r . T h e S t a t e s h a l f o f the dispute by arbitration. the story of the murder of Dr. Cronin ; : • has been told to a jury for the second time. The explanation of the defense is yet to ccme. It is estimated that it will take as much time to introduce all the evidence for the defense as was required by the State. It took about six weeks to introduce the State's witnesses, and should the defense con­ sume an equal- period the verdict of the jury may not be looked for till about March 1. The trial has now lasted since Oct. 30. On that day it was called before Judge Tuthill, but there were delays of one kind or another and it was not until Nov. 3 that the work of im­ paneling a jury was begun. Some 83H veniremen were examined before the twelve men now in the box were selected and sworn in to try the case. There were interruptions growing out of the dis­ covery by the State of irregularities with regard to some of the jurors. Five men were dismissed from the panel after having been sworn in. The jury was completed on Dec. 4, and two days later the taking of testimony began. The State examined ninety-three wit­ nesses, twenty-six less than were pres­ ent at the former triaL This decrease in the number of witnesses for the State was due- to the exclusion of all testimony relating to Camp 20 of the Clan-na-Gael and the conspiracy formed therein. SOUTHERNS. THE Senate has rejected the nomina­ tion of J. Scott Harrison, of Kansas City, to be Surveyor of Customs at that port. JAMES W. HARTXEBS, private in Company B, Twenty-third Infantry, U. S. A., committed suicide at Fort Bliss, Texas. NATIONAL bank note circulation, Which reached $209,500,000 during the money stringency, has declined to 1204,500.030. THE liabilities of W. F. Beck & Co., of San Francisco and Chicago, who failed, are placed at $329,000, the assets at $503,000. MRS. ANNA AUSTIN has been elected Mayor of Pleasanton, Kan., by a ma­ jority of 8 in a total vote of 33S, of which women ca6t 125. THE Presidents of the rapid transit street railways of Baltimore, Md-, are to be arrested for ignoring the law re­ quiring fenders on the cars. COLA WASH INDIANS of Washington have asked government permission to burn one of their medicine-men at the stake because he failed to cure a sick chief. AN ordinance was introduced in the -Philadelphia, Pa., Common Council granting permission to the Drawbaugh Telephone and Telegraph Company to construct and operate its system with n . . .. the city limits. I Mojaaa mining camp, there were THE reserve power-house and ma­ chinery and car sheds of the Savan­ nah, Ga., Electric Railway Company were burned. The lo.-s is estimated at $50,000, partially covered by insur­ ance. The fire is supposed to be the work of an incendiary. J. V. MCNAMARA, "late priest of Rome," who caused a riot in which one man was shot and several injured by a lecture in which he denounced Cathol­ icism, the priesthood and the women of the church, is under arrest at Kansas City charged with maliciously slandering Mother Hose Vincent, of St. Tnere&e Convent. PASSENGERS on the smallpox infested steamer Sequarance were allowed to land at Vera Cruz, Mex. YANKTON SIOUX in South Dakota kave agreed to sell their lands to the : Government, and they may ba thrown ' open to settlement. WORD has been received from the Colgate relief party, which was at Hamilton's cabin, on the middle fork Of the Clearwater, 120 miles from Kendrick, Idaho, Jan. 4. The party still had hopes of finding Colgate alive. NEAR Escalon, Mex., in the Sierra WASHINGTON. DEMOCRATIC members of the Ways and Means Committee have agreed on a number of changes in the tariff bill. THE Supreme Court set aside the or­ der confirming the report of the com­ missioners in the Illinois-Iowa boundary SECRETARY CARLISLE is experienc­ ing difficulty in securing authority for an issue of short-term bonds at a low rate of interest. A BILL has been introduced in Con­ gress by Mr. Durborow authorizing the Secretary of the Navy to transfer to the Columbian Museum of Chicago the reproductions of the caravels of Colum­ bus, the Santa Maria, Nina, anjd Pinta, which were on exhibition at the "World's Fair. WASHINOTON special: It ia now cer­ tain that Secretary Carlisle will issue bonds to replenish the Treasury. He does not expect further permission from Congress. He has ample au­ thority, and besides there is little hope that Congress will grant the desired authority for issuing 5 per cents., even if the Secretary were willing to await the end of months of debate, into which the silver fight would be dragged. There 6e?g}s to be a fear that iii issuing the 5 pe? cents, the Secretary will inflict upon the country an obligation to pay an unnecessary ad­ ditional interest of 2 per cent. That fear is probably groundless, as the Secretary believes that he will be able to get enough premium on the bonds to reduce the interest to 3 per cent. True, the bonds will run for a longer term than would be the case were Con­ gress. for once in its life, to act promptly and give the Secretary of the Treasury permission to issue bonds for any time he seems fit. But that can- ¥ SECRETARY CARLISLE FOR PROPOSAL* The Total b •80,000,000 and the Secari- tlea Will Bear Interest at the Bat* of Per Cwi Redeemable fen Ten Years ---Tn nonoralaat!t>»» of #50 and Upward. Mut Be at a Frtmlnm. The long-delayed but inevitable rec­ ognition by the Treasury Department of the necessity for an issue of bonds to meet the demands of the government and to maintain its credit at home and abroad was made when Secretary Car­ lisle issued a circular inviting propos­ als for 95Q,COO.OOO of 5 per cent, bonds, redeemable at the pleasure of the United States after ten years, and to be issued In dem minatirns of $50 and upwards. The 5 per cent, bon is were finally preferred to either the 4i or the 4 per cent, bonds because of the possi­ bility of redeeming them at maturity and the convenient control over them £iven the government in case it might a desired to continue them at a lower SECRETARY- J. o. CARLISLE; SALTERN. RRE passenger strain, collided-vith a New York freight near Sunbury, Pa. Several freight cars were hurled from the track. Express Messenger John Deitz was hurt. A FIRE in the George W. Helme Company's snuff mills, at Helmetta, N. X. caused a loss of $100,000. Thp ori- "n of the £fre is unknown. The mills valued at $200,0' 0, and employ a of about 400 hands. Philadelphia, Pa., National Bank Iner E ardt and the accountants have b jen inspecting the books of number of huts located very close to­ gether. They were set on fite by a band of unknown incendiaries and'be­ fore the occupants could escape eleven men, women, and children were burned to death. Ten others were burned so badly that they will die. THE Adams Express Company re ceived information at Louisville that an attempt had been made to rob the express car of the KnoxviUe train over the Louisville and Nashville. While the train was at a standstill near Livingston, a gang of men at­ tacked the express car, but were re­ pulsed by Messenger .lames Jarvis, who fired several shots. It is not known whether any one was hit. The express car contained a large sum of money. THE limited train No. 35, from New York to Florida, on the Richmond and Danville, was run into by a Georgia. Carolina and Northern train at the Chester (S. C.) crossing at 1 o'clock Wednesday morning. Twenty-five people were either killed or injured The sleeper was full of people and was struck in the center and crushed. Not a person escaped unhurt. The day coaches wero turned upside down on the side of the track. They were nearly full of passengers, and few on board escapcd some injury. There was not a moment's warning. Those in the sleeper bore the brunt of dis­ aster. AT Chattanooga, Tenn., Harry De- long, a noted snake-charmer, who has exhibited several seasons in dime museums at Chicago, was bitten on the fi? , by a huge rattlesnake. He blasted the deadly reptile, one of the largest ever captured, out of the rocks of Lookout Mountain, and was washing it when the rattler buried its fangs in his hand. The charmer sucked the wound, but three hours later foil to the ground apparently dead, his heart ceasinsr to beat for a few momenta. He ^ w&s rovivea. ftnallv. His wife, POLITICAL* MEMBERS of the National Republican Executive Committee a-e still wrest­ ling with a $100,000 debt incurred in the last campaign. MONDAY was marked by two signifi­ cant political events. At Des Moines, Iowa, Congressman John H. Gear was nominated United States Senator, upon the third ballot, to succeed Senator Wilson: and at Washington, William B. Hornblower's nomination for Asso­ ciate Justice of the Supreme Court was beaten in the Senate by a majority of 8lX* :--' t . ;• FOREIGN* IT was the Austrian Consul at Pa­ lermo, not the American Consul, who gave the Prefect a hint of the impend­ ing trouble. SOCIALISTIC Deputies in the French Chamber have petitioned President Carnot to exercise clemency in the case of Vaillant. EARNINGS of twenty-four railroads increased $10,554,496 in 1893, while on thirty-two roads a decrease of $21,227,- 266 is shown. THE steamer City of Pekin was caught in a typhoon off the coast of Japan and nearly wrecked. Captain Searle was injured. A ROYAL decree, countersigned by all the ministers, has been issued pro­ claiming a state of siege at Carrara and , TLX„„„n j. T4.„i„ ii._ • i atstant treasurer of the United States as the Massa dl Carrara, Italy, the cities in subscriber has designated, and if not so paid which certain classes of workingmen j the proposal may be rejected. have been acting in a riotous manner for several days. General Hulsch has been nominated to execute the decree, and has been invested with plenipoten­ tiary power. rate when the ten years had expired. The following is the text of the cir­ cular: By virtne of the authority contained in thi aet entitled "An Act to Provide for the Re­ sumption of Specie Payments." approved Jan.. 14. Ih7 >, the Secretary of the Treasury hereby offers for public subscription an issue of bonds of the United States to the amount of $50,000,- uoO Jn either registered or coupon form, in de­ nominations of S50 and upward, redeemable in coin at the pleasure of the Oovernme t after ten years from the date of their issue and bearing interest payable quarterly in coin at the rate of ft per cent, per annum. Proposals for the whole or any part of these bonds will be received at the Treasury Department, office of the Secretary, until 12 o'clock noon, on the first day of February. Proposals should state the amount of bonds desired, whether registered or coupon, and the premium which the subscriber proposes to pay, the place where it is desired that the bonds shall be delivered, and the office, whether that of the Treasurer of the United States or an as­ sistant Treasurer of the United States, where it will be most convenient for the subscriber to deposit the amount of his subscription. Failure to specify the above particulars may cause the proposal to be rejected. As soon, as practicable, after the first day of February. I8'.i4 the allotment of bonds will be. made to the highest bidders therefor, but no proposal will be considered at a lower price than 117 .2'23, which is the equivalent of ail per cent, bond at par, and the right to reject any and all proposals is hereby expressly reserved. In case the bids entitled to allotment exceed the bonds to be issued, they will be allotted pro rata. Notices of the date of delivery of the- bonds will be sent to the subscribers to whom allotments are made as soon as practicable, and within ten days from the date of such no­ tice subscriptions must be paid in United States gold coin to the Treasurer or such as- IN GENERAL THE National Association of Amateur Oarsmen has adopted the proposed new definition of the intermediate sculler. A NEW projectile invented by Lieut. Alfredo Gomez, a Mexican officer, has received the commendation of P-isaj dent Diaz. ACTING SECRETARY CURTIS, of the Treasury Department, has disallowed the claim of Miss Phoebe Couzins for 000 salary as secretary of the Lady Board of Managers of the World's Fair Commission. He holds that the Treas­ ury Department lacks jurisdiction in the case. R. G. D*JN & Co.'S Weekly Review of Trade says: business has distinctly Improved since the new year came, and the gala is no longer visible only in speculative markets. It is tbe only kind of Improvement that has in it possibilit ies of lasting, because it is based upon actual increase in the pro* duction of industries. As all rejoice to see it, there is perhaps a little disposition to reckon the gain greater than it is as yet, but several large establishments have started part force hoping to increase, and mure smaller works have started than have stopped. Orders from dealers whose stocks approach exhaustion form a prominent cause; another is the widely prevalent impression that action at Washington will be more satisfactory than many have ex­ pected; and a belief that in any case tbe situation will not be changed until goods now iu the works can be marketed has weight In some trades. Whatever the causes even a moderate gain is most cheer­ ing. MARKET REPORTS. The bonds will be dated Feb. 1, 1894, and when payment is mnde therefor, as above, ao- croed interest on both principal and premium from Feb. l, 1894, to date of t ay men t at the rate of interest realized to the subscriber on MB investment will be added. All proposals should be addressed to the Secretary of tue Treasury, Washington, D. <"., and should be distinctly marked "proposals for subscriptions to 5 per cent, bonds." J. G. CARLIST.K. Secretary. Secretary Carlisle's announcement that no proposal will be considered at a lower rate than 117,233 will make the bonds pay 3 per cent, on the invest­ ment during the time they run. The premium is lower by a fraction of a cent than on the fifteen-year bonds at 4i per cent, or the thirty-year bonds at 4 per cent., reduced to a"3 per cent, ba­ sis. The price of the 4^s for fifteen years, with semi-annual payments of interest, would be 11&01, and of the 4 per cents for thirty years, 11 it.69. The present call for $o0,0<X>,0C0 will increase the Treasury balan-e, with the pre­ mium, by about $')9.000,000 and make the total $143,000,00'J. IS so • 6 00 « 00 8 78 2 35 & 4 00 M & 60 84 & 35 29 & 30 47 m 48 24 & 25 18* 60 m 60 S 00 & 5 25 3 00 A 5 75 2 00 8 75 SI 67* 86 A 3t* ivm 8a* 8 00 & 5 00 8 00 & 6 50 66 & 67 82 <9 33 S 00 S 00 2 00 88 CHICAGO. CATTLE--Common to Prime... HbOs--Shipping Grades SHEEP--Fair to Choice....; ViHEAT--No. a Bed » COBN--so. a OATS--No. 2 RYE--No. 2 BUTTER--Choice Creamery*.!!!! fcoofr-- Fresh POTATOES--Per bu INDIANAPOLIS. CATTLE--Shipping HOGS--Choice Light SHEEP--Common to Prime WHEAT-NO, a lied CORN-NO. 2 White OATS--No. 2 White CATTLK 8T; L°UI8- HOGS . WHEAT--No. 2 Bed CORN--No. 2 . ' OATS--No. 2 ' _ PORK--Mess . 1 3 7 6 CATTLE..........^NCINNATL' HOGS HHEEP WHEAT--No. 2 Bed'. .7" .7.7.".*.' CORN--No. 2 OATH -No. 2 Mixed..!.'!!!!!!!!! B*E--Ho. *2 DETROIT. CATTLE... HOGS SHEEP WHEAT--No. 2 Red tlM CORN--No. 2 Yellow 8? & OATS--No. 2 White 82 & TOLEDO. WHEAT--No. 2 Red 50 A CORN--No. 2 Mixed. OATS--No. 2 White RYE--No. 2. BUFFALO.' BEKF CATTLE--Good to Prime. HOGS--Mixed Packers WHEAT--No. X Hard... No. 2 Red i MILWAUKEE. WHEAT--No. 2 Spring CORN-NO. a.......... OATS--No. 3 White RYE--No. L . BARLEY--No. 2 _ PORK--Mess IS 36 NEW YORK. CATT a Hoos. BHEEP..-........... WHEAT--No. 2 Red CORN--NO. 2 OATS--White Western.......... BUTTER--Choice ........ SHOWS WORLD'S FAIR FACTS. President Palmer Presents His Annual Re* port to President Cleveland. The annual report of the World's Columbian Commission has been sub­ mitted to President Cleveland by Pres­ ident T. W. Palmer. Detailed state­ ments of the j-cope and various feat* ures of the Exposition are left for the final report, to be prepared by at special committee of the commis­ sion, with President Palmer at its head, and which will be a work of great magnitude, practically a history of the fair, to be completed next November. An estimate of $42,500 to complete the work of the commission, not including the committee on awards, is made, and congress is asked to make its transfer from the funds of the commit­ tee on awards and Board of Lady Man­ agers. The commission has a balanoe of $11,000 in the treasury, the Commit­ tee on awards $9fi.273. and the commit' tee on awards of the lady managers $40,539; present Board of Lady Man­ agers, $51,1)!6. CONDITION OF WESTERN BANKS. Ok 30 014 59 §5 01 5 75 <3 4 00 & W!* SB & 87 81)4® 63 0 M S 00 0 4 15 3 00 O 6U0 2 oo m 3 « *7 & 88 » 0 20* 47 0 48 280 & 5 25 4 00 M O 00 72 & 72* 68 g 64 00 9 61 84 f 88 20 & 80 47 m 49 41) & 60 18 26 (AM 75 8 00 <§ 5 60 8 16 <9 « 75 3 00 O 4 26 «7 # 68 42 @ *3 86 # 40 & & 26 14 W V- . ' r~. Comptroller Issues s Statement Based Up­ on Ket urns Made .to Him. Returns as to the condition of West­ ern banks, as made to the Comptroller of the Currency, are as follows: In the State of Colorado the reserve was 38.13 per cent.! loans and discounts, $31,420,000; tedivldnal deposit*. $18,802,000, and lawftil money reserve, .«3,yirM*»i. In the State of Nebraska the reserve was per cent.; loans and discounts, $16,779,000; fndividua.! deposits, $lM,45i,oot;; lawful money recerve, $1.220,010. In the State of North Dakota the reserve was 22.r>(> per cent.; loans and discounts. $3.- 378,000; individual deposits, $4,137,000; and law- fill money reserve, $f>io,3t:f>. In the State of Nevada the reserve was 28.47 per cent.; loan* and discounts, $S53,318; indi­ vidual deposits, |4«3,40i, and lawful money re­ serve. I79.8H7. In the Indian Territory tbe reserve was 41.93 per cent.; loans and disoounts, $518,866; indi­ vidual deposits, $63'.»,<m, and lawful money re­ serve, $-6,864. In the State of Idaho the reserve was 24.80 per cent.; loans and disoounts. $1,545,000; indi­ vidual deposits, *1,£W7,L00. and lawful gp#»ey reserve, f2«s,no. : . Adams Company Shut Out; The most important exp -ess company deal of recent years was consummated In Chicago on Wednesday, by ex-Sena­ tor Piatt, President of tne United States Express Company. By it that company will occupy the Chicago, Mil­ waukee and St. Paul Railway ahd all its branches, retiring from the Chi­ cago and Northwestern Railway in fa­ vor of the American Express Compafty. This practically shuts out the Adams Company, which has hitherto had the St. Paul's business from the northwest. The Adams Company's offices in Mil­ waukee will be closed. The agreement gpes ' Mikk ALL CORRESPONDENCE TRANS- " tilTTEO T6 CONQRESP') Jf Everything It Beat to Congress That Which. They Have Already Received •ad a Dtspatoh from Minister 0tev«*s Bated October S, 1892. All Now Laid Bar*. President Cleveland has seht to Con­ gress the correspondence in the Ha­ waiian trouble that had not previously been submitted. Mr. Cleveland makes no recommendations, contenting him­ self with a simple message of trans­ mittal, in which he explains that the dispatches hitherto withheld are now given publicity with one exoeption. His communication is as follows: To the Congress: X transmit herewith copies of all dispatches from our minister at Hawaii relating in any way to political affairs in that oountry except suoh as nave been heretofore laid before Con­ gress I also transmit a copy of the last in­ structions sent to our fbinister, dated Jan. 19, 18M. being the only instructions to him not al­ ready sent to the Congress. In transmitting certain correspondence with my message dated Deo. 18,1898,1/ withheld a dispatch from our present minister numbered 3 and dated Nov. 1C. 1893. and also a dispatch from onr for­ mer minister numbered 70 and dated Oct. 8, 1892. Inasmuch as the eontei patch of Nov. 18, 1893, are re dispatches of a more recent date now sent to Congress, and inasmuch as there seems no longer to be sufficient reason for withholding said dispatches, a copy of the same 1b here­ with submitted. The dispatch numbered 70 and dated Oct. 8. 1892, abn •till withheld for the reason Still appears to be justifiable G-BOYFB CLEVELAND. The first pie^e of correspondence is a letter from Willis to Gresham dated Honolulu, Nov. 16, 1893. Willis states that on Monday, Nov. 13, the queen visited him and he made known to her the President's regret that she had been dethroned through the unauthor­ ized intervention of the United States, and his hope that the* wrong might be redressed. He then made Known the conditions of her restoration; but she said that the persons concerned in her overthrow would 1 e beheaded and their property confiscated, as was the law. Willis then said: "I have no further com­ munication to make to you now,and will have none until I heir from my gov­ ernment." Further on Willis says: "As to the £ueen"s safety I do not have any fear at present. There is a tele­ phone in my sleeping room and I have asked her people to call me up at any hour of the night or day. She also has the privilege, as stated in previous dispatches, of coming here, or of going on one oF our war vessels." ,. He says he has had no interview with the Queen or her representative since the One of Nov. 13. The letter dated Honolulu, Dec. 14, which acknowledges the receipt of in­ structions by the Corwin, is spoken of further on. The letter is brief, and among other observations Willis says: "The excitement consequent upon the unexpected arrival of the Corwin is in­ tense throughout the city. The Presi­ dent's messi go, which was published this morning, has increased the excite­ ment, but I hope no immediate out­ break will occur." In a letter dated Dec. 18, Willis says that on Dec. 16 he had an interview with the Queen and her advisers. Under date of Dec. 20, Minister Willis in a confidential dispatch says when he secured the Queen's consent to the terms of restoration, then for the first time he made his proposition known to the Provisional Government. In a letter dated Dec. 8, Willis states thatC. B. Wilson, one of the Queen's supporters, called on him and handed him what he termed "A method of pro­ cedure upon restoration of the Queen." It provides: 1. A proclamation by the Queen's government of her reas- sumption of the control of the govern­ ment of the Hawaiian Islands. 2. The appointment of a commander-in-chief ana staff. 3. A proclamation of the martial law and the suspension of the writ of habeas corpus. 4. The calling upon all the loyal citizens and well- wishers of the government to register their names at the office for enrollment of volunteers. The final instructions sent to Willis by the Mariposa say that he has right­ ly comprehended his instructions; that the President regrets that the failure of the provisional government to ac­ quiesce in his conclusions constrains nim to reach and submit a measure of justice .to the Hawaiians and their dei posed sovereign. The instructions^ say that the President has never claimed the right to act as ar­ bitrator between the constitutional or provisional government. Wants Pay for Her Throne. . • A San Francisco paper contaiQB the following from Honolulu: A RAILROAD ENGINEER RELATES • Nit EXPERIENCE. ' TIM Wonderful Story Told by Fred C. Tow and HU Mother-in-law to m Keporter of tha Boston Herald--Both An Restored After Y«*r« rtf Afnnr, I From the Boston Herald.] The vast health-givinsr results al­ ready attributed by the news.'ajers throughout this country and Canada to Dr.^Williams' "Pink Pills fcrPale Peo­ ple" have been recently supplemented by the cases of two confirmed invalids Ex-Queen LilLnokalanl has entirely aban­ doned sll hope of ever retraining the throne of Hawaii and is now perfecting arrangements for bringing suit against the United States for an immense amount of money. This informa­ tion comes from a source which makes it ab­ solutely trustworthy. Her claim for dam­ ages will be made on the ground that she was deposed solely by the armed force of the United States, acting under the advice and direction of Minister Stevens. It is well known among the leading royalists that a represe ntative of the ex-Queen left here not long ago for San Francisco. He was instructed to open negotiation* with the State Depart­ ment concerning the payment of R large sura to the ex-Queen as partial return for the loss of hor position. What action he has taken la the natter has not been learned hen^ Bis identity is closely concealed. Thoujfht* of Great Hen. DEATH is an eternal sleep.--Fouche. Placed by his order on the gates of the French cemeteries in 1794. I LOVE men, not because they are men, but because they are not women. --Queen Christina of Sweden. ALL. these men have their price.-- Robert Walpole. Spoken of the oppo­ sition in the House of Commons. AFTER thunder follows rain.--Socra­ tes, when Xantippe emptied a basin of slops from a window on his head. FROM the summit of the pyramids forty centuries look down upon you.-- Napoleon at the battle of the Pyra­ mids. IT is only the first step that costs.-- Mme. du Deffand, in a letter to Horace Walpole. ! LOVE never dies of starvation, but often of indigestion.--Mile. Ninon de l'Enclos. I DISLIKE monkeys; they always re­ mind me of poor relations.--Henry Luttrell. WE have made a compact with death.--Claude Bazire, French Revo­ lutionist. I CAN drive a coach and six through every act of Parliament.--Daniel O'ConnolL PUT your trust in God, but be sure to lee that your powder is dry.--Oliver Cromwell. OUR country is wherever we are well off.--John Milton, in a letter to Hein- bach, 1660. THE sick man of Europe.--Nicholas I. of Russia, speaking of the Turk* ish Empire. PEACE with honor.--Beaconsfield, after his return from the Berlin con­ gress of 1878. I BESEECH your lordships to be mer­ ciful to a broken reed.--Francis Bacon, to his Judges. LIFE would be quite tolerable if it were not for its amusements.--Sir George Lewis. v\'- ' y-'<-.M* V- ' 'Vl in one household in a New England town. The names of these people a -e Fred C. Vose, his wife and hi. mother- in-law, Mrs. Oliver C. Holt, of Peter- boro, members of the same househol 1. To the Herald reportarwho was sent to investigate his remarkable cure Mr. Vose Baid: "I am 37 vears old, and have been railroading* for Ihe Fitch- burg for fifteen years. Since boyho d I have been troubled with a weak stomach. For the past seven years I have suffered terribly and constantly. My stomach would not retain food: my head ached constantly and was so dizzy w„. o I could scarcely stand; my ey s were qta vt the dip- • blurred; J had a bad hcartbu-". ^nd iferred tfiln the my breath wa? offensive. I had phv- now sent to sicians, bat they failed to help mo. My appetite gave out. and four y^ars ago I developed palpitation of the ove referred to, is heart, which seriously affected my i thatjnch» gourse pre&thmg,, Had terrible pains m mv !e and proper. back ana ha 3 to make w«tor m„ny times a day. I finally developed rheu­ matic signs and couldn't tloep nights. If I lay down my heart would go pit-a- Sat at a great rate, and many nights I id not close my eyes at all. I was broken down in b:dy a id discouraged in spirit, when some time in February last, I got a couple of boxej of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Befoie I had finished the first box I noticed that the palpitation of my heart, which had bothe.ed me so that I couldn't breathe at times, began to im­ prove. I saw that in going to my home on the hill from ti e depat, which was previously an awful task, my heart did not beat eo violently and I had more breath when I reached the house. After the second and third boxes I B*ew better in every other respect, y stomach became stronger, the gas belching was not so bad, my appetite and digestion improved, and my sleep became nearly natural and undisturbed. I have continued taking the pills three times a day ever since last March, and to-day I am feeling better than at any time during the last eight years. I can confidently and conscientiously say that they have done me more' goocl, and their good effects are more perma- ment, than any medicine I have ever taken. My rheumatic pains in legs and hands are all gone. The pains in the small of my back, which were so bad at times that I couldn't stand up straight, have nearly all vanished, and I find my kidneys are well regulated by them. • Tnis is an effect not claimed for the pills in the circular, fcut in my case they brought it about. I am feelirg 1.00 per cent, better in every shape and manner." The reporter next saw Mrs. Holt, who said: "I am 57 years old and for fourteen years past I have had an in­ termittent heart trouble. Three years ago I had nervous prostration, by which my heart trouble was increased so badly that I had to lie down most of the time. My stomach also gave out and I had continual i and intense pain from the back of my neck to the end of my backbone. In fourteen weeks I spent §300 for doctor bills and medicines, but my health continued so miserable that I gave up doctoring in despair. I began to take Dr. Will­ iams' Pink Pills last winter, and the first box made me feel ever so much better. I have taken the pills since February, with the result of stopping entirely the pain in the spine and in the region of the liver. My stomach is ag-ain normal, and the palpitation of the heart has troubled me but three times since I commenced the pills." An analysis of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills shows that they contain, in a con­ densed forth, all the elements neces­ sary to give new life and richness to the blood and restore shattered nerves. They are an unfailing specific for such diseases as locomotor ataxia, partial paralysis, St. Vitus' dance, sciatica, neuralgia, rheumatism, nervous head­ ache, the after effect of la grippe, pal­ pitation of the heart, pale and sallow complexion, all forms of weakness eitiw in male or female, and all dis­ eases resulting from vitiated humors in the blood. Pink Pills are sold by all dealers, or will be sent post paid on receipt of price (50 cents a box, or six boxes for $2.50; they are never sold in bulk or by the 100; by addressing Dr. WilUams' Medicine Co., Schenectady, N. Y., or Brockville, Ont. Cold Weather Rules. Never lean with the back upon any­ thing ths t is cold. Never begin a journey until break­ fast has be3n eaten. Never take warm drinks and then immediately go out in the cold. Keep the back, especially between the shoulder blades, well covered; also the che-t well protected. In sleeping in a cold room establish a habit of breathing through the noi=e, and neve r with the mouth open. Never go to bed with cold or damp feet. Never omit regular bathing, for unless the skin is in active condition the cold will close the pores and favor congestion and other disease?. Aft >r exercise of any kind never ride in an open carriage or near the window of a car for a- moment; it is dangerous t ) health or even life. When hoarse speak as little ea possi­ ble until the hoarseness is recovered from, else tbe voice may ba^ perma­ nently lost, or difficulties of the, throat produced. Merely warm the back by the fire and never continue keeping the back exposed to the heat after it has become comfortably warm. To do otherwise is debilitating. When going from a warm atmosphere into a cooler one keep the mouth closed, so that the air may be warmed in its passage through the nose before it reaches the lungs. Never stand still in cold weather, especially after having taken a slight degree of exercise, and always avoid standing on ice or snow, or wher^t^ person is exposed to cold wind. ^7?-*, j Interior of the Earth. A theory ha i been put forth by M. Rateau iu the French Academy of Sciences that the crust of the earth beneath the continents does net t )uch the fluid globe, but is separated from it by a space filled with gaseous mat­ ter under pressure. The continents would, therefore, constitute a sort of blister, much flattened, inflated and sustained by gases, while the bottom of the oceans is supposed to rest di­ rectly on the fiery mass. By this hy­ pothesis the author believes that many phenomena of the terrestrial crust may be explained which are not clear­ ly accounted for under the pretiesd theory.--Popular Science Monthly. Big Onion. An onion weighing over four pounds was raised last summer in the State of Washington. Lom DEBATE* ARE A5iiM> 0r CONGRESS. iTv BOOM Will Grapple vith the Tariff, and - J f the Senate with' the S'adaral KteettaB*^' lew -- Hawaii May intiude -- UMp/ Amendments Offered. SM: , Getting Down to BuslBMfc. Washington Correspondence: "f~^\EBATE and nol.4 action will marks; the proceedings? of Congress fbr\: several days. I» the House the feature will De tariff debate, aa^; in the Senate the»*r bill to repeal the # feJeral elections law. Anent the :M Hornblower nom~ f ination, it is the f1 expressed determ.-1: ination of the Sen«- ators who sustain) the majority re--* port of the Jvdi- | , ,» V ciary Committee ""-j adversa to con- firmation to insist upon final action, so-- in view of the extent to which Sena- I - vv tors have interested themselves in the: case, it may occupy the attention of ».*' the body in executive se sion far two days. ~ 'i* '• '* -v, Otherwise Senator Gray, of Dela-1 ware, will call up the elections repeaL^ bill. The bill will be made the unfErr-- > • •' T* " ished business and be kept before the; ̂ »-3§ ? Senate until parsed or defeated. It is. ^ - understood that the Democratic Sen- ^ ; ators have decided to refrain from ex- * , tended debate on this subject and will f V • content themselves with two oi' three * speeches, which may be made by Sen- 5- *?" " ators Gray, Bate and RilL The Re- ^ ,*r publican speakers will be Senators ^ Lodge, Frye, Chandler and Hoar, andL ^ : , perhaps others. The present expecta- ifc tion is that the debate will consume at. J, least two weeks. ; Coming events will cast their shact- * ows before in the shape of a tariff '< speech, to ba delivered by Senator Gallinger, of New Hampshire. Of . course there is always present a possi- ' bility of resolutions and speeches bit the subject of Hawaii during the morrt- ing hours, and this probability is re- duced almost to a certainty by the re- 1 .. cently published correspondence. But. , • * tariff will be the almost exclusive talk ft, s in the Housa. The House will take up the consideration of the t>i!V i-.,. under the five minute? rule, and ft-. \ the paragraphs will be open to-1 amendments. The desk of Chairman* | Richardson is covered with- amend- t, ments that will be proposed by various S members who want to make sure thiit*.f their propositions will teeeive proper- rv •• • II attention. m Routine Proceeding*. But little routine business was transacted by the House 1 uesday. A number of amend­ ments to the tariff bill were offered and : accepted. A long and interesting discus­ sion Was precipitated by the' renewal of Mr." Burrows' effort to secure iK , recognition to offer an amendments | The chairman annouced that ho ^ would not recognize Mr. Burrowa f*. - \ . The Senate held a short secret session, h after which House bill to repeal the federal- ^ 4 election laws was formally taken oik .-f. :r v*' House bill to amend the laws so »9 to re--' ' •„ ^ quire original receipts for deposits of post- jl masters to be sent to the Auditor of the ^ ' Treasury for the Post office Department- was taken from the calendar and passed. Mr. Gallinger addressed the fenate on thief- f ki resolution offered by him on Dec. 20 de-v . V j clarlng it tbe sense of the Senate that it Is '»• ' unwise to attempt any change in the tariff . jjj laws during the present administration. *'y. ^ J Senate bill to establish a port of entry at ^ Bonner's Ferry, Idaho, was on- motion of" fti Mr. Dubois taken from the calendar and passed. Wednesday morning the House went into committee of the whole to consider tho- Wilson bill, and the debate was character^ ized by sharp repartee. Several amend­ ments were rejected, and others offered.. The Senate in executive session re­ jected the nomination of J. Scot* Harrison, of Kansas City, to be Sur­ veyor of Customs at that port Mr. Harrison is a brother of ex-President Har-t rlson. .The fight in the Senate against his confirmation has been led by Senators Vest and Cockrell. After* an interesting discussion of civil service reform the Sen­ ate resumed as utbe unfinished business" the House bill to repeal the Federal elec­ tion laws, and the debate on that subject continued. The bill went over Without action, but with a pending nmendment to give to Congressional candidates the right to have watchers at the polls. alb iV ' I/' %: ' • m ii an Si* i-M ^3 In the Senate Thursday PelTer and Allen* Populists, introduced resolutions attack­ ing the proposed issue of bonds. By a- strlct party rote in the House it was de­ cided no . to substitute the McKinley wool schedule. The "unfinished business"--tbe House bill to repeal the federal election laVs-- was then taken up by the Senate and Mr. Vest addressed the Senate in sup­ port of the bill. A lot of minor nomina­ tions were confirmed. Both house* ad-- jourhed until Monday. Friday was a day of amusintr incldents- and excltlns debates in the Hou-e. Mr. Dalzell continued his remarks specifying certain discrepancies between the theory and practice of Mr. Johnson. Mr. Johnson briefly replied,, denying the allegations in detail and deprecating tbe policy of dragging personalities into a. tariff debate. He closed by making another plea to place steel rails on the free list. Mr. Wilson, of west Vir­ ginia, made the principal speech in oppo­ sition. He pleaded earnestly that tbe work of t.he Committee on Ways and Means should not be altered without due consid­ eration. The amendment placing £'eel rails on the free list was defeated by a voto of 70 to 100. Mr. Henderson offered as an. amendment to the agricultural sched­ ule of the Wilson bill tbe cor­ responding clause in the McKin­ ley law. _Thls gave rise to some exciting colloquies, but no action was taken. Unim- gg? portant speeches were made at the evening i! " session. lhere was a larger number of" members present than for some time past. An agreement was then entered into- whereby three hours, immediately after the House goes Into committee of the wholo .if* Monday, will be given to debate on tbe t „ ft sugar schedule, and the vote will then bo *r • <• taken on any amendments which may ba ... oSexa ;̂ ̂ Maltnm in Parvo. * "j - Ocit'-'iine needs stronger 4 %"r ^ Beethov en. >j, ~ j CONSCIENCE! Man's moss faithfuli -4 friend.--Crabbe. WHAT you dislike in another take- care Jo correct in yourself.--Sprat. ^ 1 1 THE country is both the philoso- "J pher's garden and his library.--Penn. w - CONTENTMENT is natural wealth* luxury is artificial poverty.--Socrates. . WEAKNESS on both sides is, as we , i know, the trait of all quarrels.--Voir : ; taire. ** A DESIRE to resist oppression is iia-- planted in the nature of man.--Tacitus.. GOOD will, like a good name, is got; ^ by many actions, and lost by one.-- J| Jeffrey. ^ A MAN'S opinions are usually of much; 2 more value than his arguments.--O. W.. # Holmes. jj; THE coldest bodies warm with oppo* . | sition; the hardest sparkle in collision, --Junius. SOCIETY is built upon trust, and trust * If upon confidence in one another's intesr- rity.--South. - .g A GERMAN art critic writes: "Chopin V dreamed beautiful things; Beethoven. ^ made them real.*?; ;; v y:\ . M 31 ,v «. ._»• J

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